courierposter2-1

The Courier.

The Irish comedy crime thriller filled with soon to be famous stars.

Infuriatingly unavailable online.

Arno Brekkie writes:

“Would your readers know where I can legally download [and not a VHS rip please] Dublin crime caper The Courier (1988)? OK, even illegally…whatever….sue me.”

Anyone?

The Courier – New York Times review

90365922Charles Haughey at Abbeville, Kinsealy, Co Dublin in September 1995

Really?

Yes.

Did not some great French sage say: “Le style – c’est l’homme”? And although Mr Haughey’s politics were not always admirable, there was something human and even shrewd about my mother’s instinctive attraction to the “Duce”, to reference to PJ Mara’s renowned allusion. Above all, there was something that spoke to the historical collective memory of the Irish people.

And it’s something ancestral which, strangely enough, Charles J Haughey shared with – of all people – Mary Robinson. When Charlie acquired Kinsealy, drank Montrachet, and sat on his hunter, he was vindicating the collective Irish unconscious in a parallel version of “the risen people”. This was not “the risen people” of wild rebellion, but the “risen people” who were now as good as their lords and masters had once been – who could be as grand, as stylish, as upper-class as any belted earl who had gained land and estates from selling out at the Act of Union, or who had exchanged an ancient chieftain’s role for an endowment by a Tudor monarch.

Charlie was proof that the “risen people” had arrived. And so, in a different way, was Mary Robinson – the very embodiment of the “Catholic gentry” who showed the world that we were no longer the wild Irish so unfavourably portrayed by cartoons in ‘Punch’ and the hostile London ‘Times’.

My mother’s generation – born before World War I – has now passed away and the folk memory which propelled their hunger for style, confidence and even upper-class taste in leaders has perhaps faded. She had been born into a Galway family where old people could remember the Famine, not only the lesser famines of the 1870s and 1880s, but the Great Famine of the 1840s, too. Eamon de Valera represented austerity and sacrifice, but Charlie brought panache, elan and glamour. And, for the vicarious pleasure he gave in that regard, I do not retrospectively begrudge him the Mercedes cars, the Charvet shirts or the wine cellar stuffed with Chateau Margaux.

Fight!

He loved a Merc and a Margaux – which made Charlie my mother’s darling (Mary Kenny, Independent.ie)

(Eamonn Farrell/Photocall Ireland)

FINAL Life Style Sports Running Fitness Infographic

Run!

An infographic depicting the often disturbing results of a dumbell dropping, pant-splitting survey into YOUR New Year fitness resolutions and January gym habits.

Compiled by the boffins at Life Style Sports to celebrate a 20 per cent sale on all running and fitness, footwear and equipment at the sports giant’s retail chains around the country.

They have generously given us TWO (yes, a pair!) €50 vouchers to spend at your leisure on leisure wear and whatnot.

To enter, complete this sentence.

‘My most unpleasant gym experience involved…’

Lines MUST close at 6pm MIDNIGHT.

Life Style Sports

Thanks Joanne and Karen

corrections

Try it sometime.

Judith Goldberger writes:

From the Irish Times over the weekend (Dec 27). It [clerical error] is  still up there…

Sporting soutane UPDATE:

Bishop Road Bowling

Hello you.

Robinaldo writes:

The Bishop must have forgotten this (above) From a A Day In The Life Of Ireland (US Edition), P184  – Bishop John Buckley….

FIGHT!

Broadsheet.ie