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	<title>IrishCentral anthony hopkins - b5cc3275d518416eacb61d676e8d84d1</title>
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			<link>http://www.irishcentral.com/IrishAmerica/Irish_Eye_on_Hollywood_April_May.html</link>
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			<title>Irish Eye on Hollywood (IrishCentral)</title>
						<pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 12:57:20 PST</pubDate>							<description><![CDATA[ <img src="http://media.irishcentral.com/images/200*133/2011_the_rite_003.jpg" width="200" height="133" alt="" title="" border="0" />  </br>By: Tom Deignan <p>It&rsquo;s still early in 2011, but so far the Irish newcomer of the year has to be <strong>Colin O&rsquo;Donoghue</strong>. The Drogheda native starred alongside <strong>Anthony Hopkins</strong> in the <em>Exorcist</em>-style thriller <em>The Rite</em>, which should be out on DVD soon. It was O&rsquo;Donoghue&rsquo;s film debut, and though some critics were a bit rough on the film, <em>The Rite</em> spent a week as the number one movie in America in January. O&rsquo;Donoghue, 30, had previously starred (alongside fellow Irish thespian Jonathan Rhys Meyers) in the Showtime drama <em>The Tudors</em>. Prior to that, O&rsquo;Donoghue had simply done theater work and television shows for Ireland&rsquo;s TV network RTE. With his performance in <em>The Rite</em> (which also stars Irish screen veteran <strong>Ciaran Hinds</strong>), O&rsquo;Donoghue certainly opened some eyes and set himself up for an interesting career. What&rsquo;s next for O&rsquo;Donoghue? He&rsquo;s playing things coy. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got something else in the works,&rdquo; he told About.com. &ldquo;But I can&rsquo;t talk about it.&rdquo;</p> <a href="http://www.irishcentral.com/IrishAmerica/Irish_Eye_on_Hollywood_April_May.html">READ MORE</a> ]]></description>
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			<link>http://www.irishcentral.com/IrishAmerica/Irish-Eye-on-Hollywood-114287839.html</link>
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			<title>Irish Eye on Hollywood (IrishCentral)</title>
						<pubDate>Thu, 20 Jan 2011 09:45:30 PST</pubDate>							<description><![CDATA[ <img src="http://media.irishcentral.com/images/200*134/Brendan_Gleeson.jpg" width="200" height="134" alt="" title="" border="0" />  </br>By: Tom Deignan  <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When the bigwigs of the movie industry gathered in Park City, Utah, at the end of January for the annual Sundance Film Festival, the Irish were well represented.<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Brendan Gleeson&rsquo;s new film <em>The Guard</em>, which also stars Fionnula Flanagan, Don Cheadle and Mark Strong, opened up the festival&rsquo;s World Dramatic Competition. &nbsp;<em>The Guard</em> was directed by John Michael McDonagh &ndash; brother of acclaimed Irish playwright Martin McDonagh.<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <em>The Guard</em> features the always-brilliant Gleeson as a small-town Irish cop known for his bad attitude and dark humor. &nbsp;His mother is dying, and he may be involved in a drug-smuggling ring, which has attracted the attention of an FBI agent (Cheadle).<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <em>Guard</em> producer Ed Guiney recently said: &ldquo;I&rsquo;m delighted that Sundance has selected <em>The Guard</em> as the opening film of the world competition this year. It&rsquo;s the most high profile slot in one of the world&rsquo;s great festivals and we cannot think of a better way to launch the film.&rdquo;<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Meanwhile, Sundance&rsquo;s World Cinema Documentary Competition featured <em>Knuckle</em>, an intimate look at the brutal world of bare-knuckle boxing among Irish Travellers. &nbsp;Travellers, of course, are the nomadic tribe of people who wander through Ireland and other countries and live by their own set of rules.<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Director Ian Palmer followed a group of Travellers for over 10 years and focuses on James, a member of a group known as the Quinn McDonaghs. James often finds himself asked to defend his clan against the rival Joyces.<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; At Sundance, <em>Knuckle</em> was described as follows: &ldquo;Disturbingly raw, yet compulsively engaging, <em>Knuckle</em>&nbsp; offers candid access to a rarely seen, brutal world where a cycle of bloody violence seems destined to continue unabated.&rdquo;<br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Two Irish shorts, meanwhile, were among the 81 short films featured at Sundance. <em>Small Change</em>, starring Nora Jane Noone (<em>The Magdalene Sisters),</em> is about a bored, young Mom while the animated <em>The External World</em> is about a little boy learning to play the piano.</p> <a href="http://www.irishcentral.com/IrishAmerica/Irish-Eye-on-Hollywood-114287839.html">READ MORE</a> ]]></description>
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