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Oranges & Sunshine Review

31 Mar 2011
Critics rating: 4 stars out of 5
Reviewed by Tom Seymour , LOVEFiLM
Oranges & Sunshine

Who do we blame when hurt is caused by good intention? Who do we hold to account when things done with noble intent go horribly wrong?

These questions lie at the heart of Oranges and Sunshine, the based-on-a-true-story directorial debut from Jim Loach.

Cast details

As if the pressures aren’t already enough, there’s the added expectancy placed on this debut, thanks to the director’s father - Ken Loach, of course. And Loach Junior has taken on a story that at first glimpse seems mired in his father’s time and place - Nottinghamshire in the 1980s - but is actually searingly of its time.

In February last year Gordon Brown attempted to explain why tens of thousands of British children were plucked from an over-wrought welfare system, told their mothers and fathers were dead and shipped off to work in the Australian colonies, often ending up as the victims of institutional abuse. Brown offered to help these displaced orphans trace their lost families. Then, on behalf of the country, he apologised unreservedly.

His actions were largely due to the campaign of social worker Margaret Humphreys, played here with characteristic discretion by the lovely Emily Watson. Humphreys, with the initial backing of the local authorities, spent 23 years listening to the stories of child migrants before searching for their lost parents, and has been gifted a CBE and a biopic for her efforts.

As Loach’s film shows, some of these people have to learn how to live with fathers who walked out, with women who bore them but could not raise them. For others, they had stone graves and hazy anecdotes waiting for comfort; their reunion came too late.

Hugo Weaving and Emily Watson

At its worst, we see slow montages of older Australian men, stuttering and choking as they recall the years of abuse they suffered at the isolated orphanage in which they were raised. This abuse was physical and sexual and to exhume it places the film on precarious ground. Pity can go too far, and misery is cheap and easy; a perishable commodity.

But Loach, in his father’s best tradition, manages to steer the film to the fault-lines of broken restraint, showing wounds that open and close just as quickly. These moments reach out from the screen, particularly through performances from Hugo Weaving and David Wenham.

As the film rushes to its climax, it begins to veer from knock-out scene to knock-out scene

Oranges and Sunshine  is softly rendered, and not exactly interrogative. Margaret Humphreys is held aloft in her simple goodness (“I don’t ever lie,” she says to a heckling woman), and as the film rushes to its climax, it begins to veer from knock-out scene to knock-out scene, unraveling some of the sensitivities and carefully posed questions of its earlier acts.

But no matter. This is a film of brevity, depth and regard; desperately sad, but as clear and honest as a voice across water. Ken, the boy’s done good.

Oranges & Sunshine Reviews

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LOVEFiLM Review Oranges and Sunshine

  • 4 stars out of 5  

    By Tom Seymour from LOVEFiLM

    Jim Loach shows it runs in the family with this quiet, searing drama.

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Most helpful review Oranges and Sunshine

  • Could have been better

    Rated - 2.5 stars  
    By crispin40 (553 reviews) from Stirling, Scotland , 15 Aug 2012

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    I think this story has been told better and I read a super children's book by Michael Morpurgo on the subject years ago. My copy stuck towards the end but I managed to fast forward it and finish it off.
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All reviews

(107)
  • a well told story

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By vickig0306 (429 reviews) from Halifax , 19 May 2013
    I was quite moved by this film. I had vaguely heard about this case but was a little naïve. I am glad I watched this film & I do feel that the story was well told & well acted
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  • dodge this bullet!

    Rated - 0.5 stars  
    By markgfish (1 review) , 23 Feb 2013
    terrible, truly terrible. Poorly written and shot and painfully over acted. Had high hopes: Loach etc but if you're looking for a character driven, thought provoking film this IS NOT IT. shame.
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  • Nice n easy

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By a customer , 19 Feb 2013
    This film kept me gripped, but most films based on true stories do. I enjoyed the acting and the pace of the film.
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  • It really happened here.

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By a customer , 15 Feb 2013
    Jim Loach has handled this film in much the same way Margaret Humphreys handled her assignment - with dignity, professionalism and just the right amount of emotion. This film goes further than merely informing but stops short of sensationalism. With a subject such as this it would have been easy to mine that emotional seam to extremes; instead Jim Loach has left us touched, but not traumatised - and with enough information to leave us shaking our heads in astonishment that this could ever have taken place in Britain. A nicely-handled, thought-provoking film with an outstanding and believable performance from Emily Watson.
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  • moving and thought provoking

    Rated - 5.0 stars  
    By a customer , 06 Feb 2013
    this was such a moving film. really lifted the lid on something shameful but not so well known about. 130,000 british kids lives were torn apart and right up until 1970.
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