BROOKLYN – Own it NOW on Blu-ray, DVD and EST – Saoirse Ronan Retrospective | The Fan Carpet Ltd • The Fan Carpet: The RED Carpet for FANS • The Fan Carpet: Fansites Network • The Fan Carpet: Slate • The Fan Carpet: Theatre Spotlight • The Fan Carpet: Arena • The Fan Carpet: International

BROOKLYN – Own it NOW on Blu-ray, DVD and EST – Saoirse Ronan Retrospective


07 March 2016

A young woman must make the difficult choices that will define the rest of her life as the BAFTA and Academy Award®-nominated BROOKLYN arrives on Blu-ray, DVD and EST from February 29th, courtesy of Lionsgate Home Entertainment.

Based on the award-winning novel by Colm Tôibín and transformed into a BAFTA and Academy Award® nominated screenplay by Nick Hornby, BROOKLYN stars 2016 BAFTA and Academy Award® nominee Saoirse Ronan (Hanna, Atonement) as Eilis, a young woman who moves from small town Ireland to Brooklyn, where she has the opportunity for work, for a future - and love, in the form of Italian-American, Tony (Emory Cohen; The Gambler, The Place Beyond The Pines). When a family tragedy forces her to return to Ireland, she finds herself drawn back into the life she left behind. As a secret threatens to reveal itself, Eilis has to confront a terrible dilemma - a heart-breaking choice between two men and two countries. 

2016 BAFTA Best Supporting Actress nominee Julie Walters (Mamma Mia, Harry Potter franchise), Academy Award® Winner Jim Broadbent (TV’s London Spy, The Lady in the Van, Iris), and (Domhnall Gleeson; About Time, Star Wars: The Force Awakens) also star in this beautifully told story. Surprisingly funny and yet deeply moving, BROOKLYN is about the meaning of ‘home’ and the intricacies of the human heart and is an emotional tour de force that has already garnered plenty of awards attention including Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild nods, five British Independent Film Award nominations and a Best Actress Award for Ronan from the New York Critics’ Circle. 

As noted, the film is now also fresh from receiving three Academy Award® nominations for Best Film, Best Actress and Best Adapted Screenplay. Add to that those BAFTA nods for Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, Outstanding British Film, Adapted Screenplay along with nominations for Make-up & Hair and Costume Design and BROOKLYN is firmly cemented as the year’s first essential home entertainment title as awards season gets into full swing.

Brooklyn has been singled out as one of those rare features that strikes the elusive balance between being a perfectly pitched, beautifully shot mainstream romantic drama and a film that has Awards panels champing at the bit from the outset. The film’s Outstanding British Film BAFTA win and three Academy Award® nominations are testament to this. Chief amongst a sea of stand-out performances is the central role of Eilis, played by Saoirse Ronan.

With Brooklyn available on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD from Monday, February 29th, what better time to re-live some of the remarkably talented 21 year old’s career highlights to date...

 

saoirseretrospectivebrooklyn1

 

Brooklyn (2015)
This adaptation of Colm Toibin’s award-winning novel, with an Academy Award®-nominated screenplay by Nick Hornby, needs little introduction but for many it was their first glimpse of the talent that is the BAFTA and Academy Award-nominated Saoirse Ronan. As the homesick Eilis, who ships out to America in the hope of a life filled with better prospects than her home in Ireland can offer her, Ronan delivers an affecting, career-best performance defined by its subtlety and restraint. This didn’t go unnoticed with voters at the Screen Actors Guild, London Critics’ Circle, British Independent Film Awards, Palm Spring International Film Festival and the Hollywood Film Awards – all of whom awarded gongs for her performance.

 

saoirseretrospectivebrooklyn2

 

How I Live Now (2013)
Ronan stars as Daisy in this coming-of-age drama centring on what happens to a young American girl who finds love (with George MacKay – Pride, Sunshine On Leith) while holidaying with relatives in England. It is the combination of an unexpected global war breaking out and Ronan’s unique screen presence that elevates this to something a lot more interesting than the average drama, despite budgetary constraints limiting the apocalyptic parts to some slight charring of the English countryside. Ronan’s chemistry with MacKay, however, is a lot more incendiary.

 

saoirseretrospectivebrooklyn3

 

Hanna (2011)
Perhaps the first film to cement Ronan’s range and adaptability, Hanna sees the young star playing the eponymous ‘perfect assassin’, who has been trained for the role since birth by her father (Eric Bana – Munich, Hulk). Sent on a mission that has her tracking a target across Europe, Ronan still manages to imbue the tortured, soulless killer with a range of delicate emotions that belie the film’s action cinema tropes. That she holds her own opposite not only Bana but also the ever impressive Cate Blanchett (Carol, Cinderella) is testament to both the young star’s skill and range.

 

saoirseretrospectivebrooklyn4

 

The Lovely Bones (2009)
Peter Jackson’s adaptation of Alice Sebold’s international best-seller in which a young girl copes with her own death at the hands of a local paedophile, whilst also dealing with her parents’ grief as she observes them from heaven might not sound exactly like a laugh riot – because it’s not. However, Sebold’s novel elicited almost universal praise on its release and Peter Jackson, riding high on the success of his Lord of the Rings trilogy, crafted a beautifully realised fantasy drama, at whose heart beats the force that is Ronan – tasked with displaying every possible emotion, often all at once. An arresting film that arguably, and certainly critically, didn’t achieve the heady heights of its ubiquitous source novel but that once again caused audiences everywhere to sit up and notice its faultless star.

 

saoirseretrospectivebrooklyn5

 

Atonement (2007)
The film that really brought Ronan to prominence, Atonement may have been the door opener for her career but it was also a cruel mistress given the character of Briony Tallis is amongst the most reprehensible kids in cinema history. Solely responsible for the downfall of James McAvoy’s (Filth, The X-Men franchise) Robbie – and all as the result of a childish pique from which she never has the courage to climb down – Ronan is called upon to channel an endless level of demure spite; something she manages with an aplomb that easily explains the career that opened up as a result.

Brooklyn Film Page | Brooklyn Review | Win Brooklyn Novel

BROOKLYN arrives on Blu-ray, DVD and EST from February 29th, courtesy of Lionsgate Home Entertainment

No Comment

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Mashable is a global, multi-platform media and entertainment company

For more queries and news contact us!

X