The Brylcreem Boys

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The Brylcreem Boys
The Brylcreem Boys FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed by Terence Ryan
Written byJamie Brown, Terence Ryan
Produced by Gabriel Byrne, Jamie Brown
Starring Billy Campbell
Angus Macfadyen
Jean Butler
Gabriel Byrne
Joe McGann
John Gordon Sinclair
Cinematography Gerry Lively
Edited by Emma E. Hickox
Music by Richard Hartley
Distributed byGuerilla Films
Release date
  • 1998 (1998)
Running time
124 min.
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget$6 million

The Brylcreem Boys is a 1998 romantic comedy film set in Ireland during the Second World War. The film, which stars Billy Campbell, Angus Macfadyen, Jean Butler and Gabriel Byrne, was directed and co written by Terence Ryan. The story is set against the extraordinary neutrality arrangements in Ireland during World War II.

Contents

The title comes from a popular nickname for the RAF personnel during the period. [1] Not to be confused with the identically titled 1979 BBC2 TV play about RAF Bomber Command. [2]

Plot

During World War II, all Allied and Axis service personnel that end up in Ireland are to be interned for the duration of the conflict. Two pilots, one from the Royal Canadian Air Force, Miles Keogh, portrayed by Campbell and one from the Luftwaffe, Rudolph von Stengenbek, portrayed by Macfadyen, both fall in love with a local Irish girl, Mattie Guerin played by Butler. The relationship is further complicated by Byrne, who plays the unceasingly vigilant internment camp commander, Commandant O'Brien.

Cast

Production

Although set in Ireland, the film was made on location in the Isle of Man. It was the first major production to use the island since George Formby's No Limit in 1935. The film established the Isle of Man Film Commission. [3]

Casting was by Jo Gilbert.

See also

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References

  1. Room, Adrian (1983). Dictionary of trade name origins. Routledge. p. 47. ISBN   978-0-7102-0174-4.
  2. "The Brylcreem Boys (1979)". Archived from the original on 24 August 2017.
  3. "Isle of Man Government DTI - - Isle of Man Film Commission Welcome". Archived from the original on 10 December 2003. Retrieved 10 December 2003.