Some Mother's Son review

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

Terry George and Jim Sheridan's screenplay for In The Name Of The Father earned them an Oscar nomination, but in trying to do for the IRA hunger strikers what their last film did for the Guildford Four, the pair have come up about five numbers short of the jackpot.

Some Mother's Son uses two fictional families to tell the story of the 1981 Maze Prison protest that left Bobby Sands and nine other IRA men dead. Helen Mirren plays Kathleen Quigley, a widowed, apolitical schoolteacher; Fionnula Flanagan is Annie Higgins, the angry Republican farmer whose youngest son is dead, shot by the British.

The two women's elder sons, both IRA members, are thrown into gaol after a late-night Christmas shootout. When the men join the Maze hunger strike - begun and led by Bobby Sands (John Lynch) in response to the Thatcher government's refusal to recognise IRA inmates as political prisoners - two very different mothers find themselves drawn together, Mirren even changing her stance and adding her voice to the Republican cause.

It's a powerful premise: men of violence willing to die for their beliefs, and women torn between pride, hatred and maternal love (they can save their sons' lives by agreeing to the dying men's force-feeding). Yet the script gives us an unfocused version of events and, in his directorial debut, George musters only minimal tension and emotive force.

Flanagan shows why she's regarded as one of Ireland's finest actresses, but Mirren, her accent hovering somewhere between Armagh and Arkansas, never gets out of first gear. Worst of all is Tom Hollander, who pops up too often as Farnsworth, a shady government "representative" (does he work for the Northern Ireland office? MI5? MI6? MFI?). The boyish Hollander (he played Saffy's filthy rich fiancé in Absolutely Fabulous) is disastrously miscast as baddie-in-chief, most of his scenes looking like they've been lifted from a particularly cheesy episode of The Professionals.

If you want to see Mirren and Lynch in a gripping and moving film that speaks eloquently about the human cost of The Troubles, skip Some Mother's Son and seek out the superb 1984 movie Cal on video.

The Schindler's List-style poster promises heart-rending drama, but this flat, slow tale ultimately fails to deliver.

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

Latest in Drama Movies
Claire Danes as Juliet and Miriam Margolyes as Nurse in the movie Romeo + Juliet.
The 33 greatest movies based on Shakespeare
Bloodsport
The 32 greatest '80s action movies
Cosmo Jarvis
Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey adds Shogun star to its massively star-studded cast, and I'm getting Oppenheimer vibes all over again
Adrien Brody in The Brutalist
This year's Best Actor Oscars speech broke a record that was over 80 years old
Adrien Brody as László Tóth in The Brutalist
Oscars 2025 live coverage: All the winners, red carpet, and the 97th Academy Awards' biggest moments – as it happens
The Last Showgirl
Beneath the glitz and glam of The Last Showgirl is a heartbreaking story about what mothers give up
Latest in Reviews
Lenovo Legion Go S with FlyKnight gameplay on screen featuring player character holding bow and arrow with enemy ant in backdrop.
Lenovo Legion Go S Windows 11 review: “my heart aches for this mixed up handheld”
Talisman 5th Edition game components
Talisman 5th Edition review: "The characterful imperfections of the original game remain clear to see "
WWE 2K25
WWE 2K25 review: "A colossal package even if you never go anywhere near Virtual Currency"
Altered: Trial by Frost booster box and packs on a playmat
Altered: Trial by Frost review - "Satisfying enough to offer highly varied gameplay"
Three SteelSeries QcK Performance mouse pads on a wooden desk
I didn't expect to prefer a coarser mouse pad, but SteelSeries' new QcK Performance range has changed my mind
Boro and Alta sit on a bench together in Wanderstop
Wanderstop review: "Exalting the transformative power of tea"