Love and Savagery explained

Love and Savagery
Director:John N. Smith
Producer:Barbara Doran
Kevin Tierney
Lynne Wilson
Screenplay:Des Walsh
Starring:Allan Hawco
Sarah Greene
Martha Burns
Nicholas Campbell
Cinematography:Pierre Letarte
Country:Canada
Ireland
Language:English

Love and Savagery is a Canadian-Irish drama film directed by John N. Smith and released in 2009.[1]

The film stars Allan Hawco as Michael, a geologist from Newfoundland and Labrador who travels to Ballyvaughan, Ireland to study limestone, and causes a scandal when he enters a romantic relationship with Cathleen (Sarah Greene), an orphan girl from the village who is about to enter the convent as a Roman Catholic nun.[2] The film's cast also includes Martha Burns, Nicholas Campbell, Andy Jones, Louise Nicol, Mack Furlong and Sean Panting.

Awards

The film garnered four Genie Award nominations at the 30th Genie Awards in 2010:

Martha Burns

Claude Hazanavicius, Daniel Bisson, Jean-Charles Desjardins and Bernard Gariépy Strobl

Bertrand Chénier

Burns won the award for Best Supporting Actress.[3]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2009/11/13/love_and_savagery_looks_good_but_goes_nowhere.html "Love and Savagery: Looks good but goes nowhere"
  2. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/love-and-savagery/article792641/ "Boy meets girl, but God, Science and Art get in the way"
  3. http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/polytechnique-sweeps-genies-1.969085 "Polytechnique sweeps Genies"