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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Watch The Angels' Share Movie Online Streaming Megavideo

Watch movie theater The Angels' Share


Winner of the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film festival, legendary director Ken Loach , one of Britain's most distinguished and respected filmmakers, who makes tough, uncompromising films about a beleaguered working class with poetry and humor, and longtime writing partner Paul Laverty (The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Bread and Roses and My Name is Joe), present an engagingly off-kilter new film, The Angels' Share. Robbie, a young ne'er do well (Paul Brannigan), a broke new father with a good heart is in serious trouble with the law. When he holds his newborn son for the first time, roguish Robbie is determined that the boy will have a better life, one with more opportunities than he has been offered in this insular, blue collar world. But first Robbie must sort out a variety of pressing problems --his girlfriend's family wants to do him harm and run him out of town being first and foremost among them. He is given a lucky break by a judge who shows mercy, granting him community service instead of jail. Here he meets Rhino, Albert and Mo, former petty criminals also down on their luck. (c) IFC Films
You Can Watch Movie Online Streaming in HD from HERE
Release Date The Angels' Share Apr 12, 2013 Limited
Genres The Angels' Share
: Drama,Comedy

The

Story Line For The Angels' Share

Total Vote User The Angels' Share : Visitor
User Ranting The Angels' Share : 3.8
User Percentage For The Angels' Share : 80 %
User Count Like for The Angels' Share : 3,256
All Critics Ranting For The Angels' Share : 7
All Critics Count For The Angels' Share : 60
All Critics Percentage For The Angels' Share : 90 %

Actors For The Angels' Share

Paul Brannigan,John Henshaw,Gary Maitland,William Ruane,Jasmin Riggins,Roger Allam,Siobhan Reilly,Charlie Maclean,Daniel Portman,Paul Donnelly

Genres The Angels' Share : Drama,Comedy


Review For The Angels' Share

The film itself vaporizes before your eyes, but it's likable. Given its unstable mishmash of thuggery and whimsy, that's something of an achievement.
Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor

Like the spirit it celebrates, "The Angel's Share" is a neat little jolt of pleasure - and guaranteed to leave you feeling just a mite warmer.
Stephen Whitty-Newark Star-Ledger

While a few farcical moments fizzle, it's mostly charming.
Farran Smith Nehme-New York Post

"The Angels' Share" leaves a warm glow.
Betsy Sharkey-Los Angeles Times

[Mr. Loach] has gone and directed a comedy from a script by his longtime collaborator Paul Laverty, and it's so delightful that his fans will be clamoring for more.
Joe Morgenstern-Wall Street Journal

Watching it is like receiving a hard slap in the face from someone who expects you to laugh it off, even though the sting lingers.
Stephen Holden-New York Times

With The Angels' Share, Ken Loach expertly combines a handful of genres which congeal into an often funny, always charming affair that serves as a salute to whisky to boot.
Simon Brookfield-We Got This Covered

Loach films have been funny while making their point before (see "Riff Raff"), but this one is imbued with a little bit of magic...Those offended by four letter words should be warned that even the voice of God slings a heavy dose of them here.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews

Ken Loach comedy about young Glaswegian reprobates fighting for a second chance has charm aplenty, but suffers from occasional portions of cheese and a hard-to-swallow premise (whisky-tasting as gateway to a better life).
Chris Barsanti-Film Journal International

I'm not suggesting The Angels' Share is a chock full of bellylaughs, but it's the first Loach film in some time that lacks the sensation of having a plastic grocery bag pulled over one's face.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com

Some good laughs and a passable air of bonhomie do nothing to cover up the fact that The Angels' Share is totally lightweight and distractingly underdone.
Simon Abrams-The Playlist

Loach's best film since The Wind That Shakes the Barley.
Edward Douglas-ComingSoon.net

Scent, fine acting, plus superb cinematography carry you through. However, you can't help but feel you've been cheated out of a truly devastating drama by folks in search of something more commercially palatable and, consequently, less plausible.
Brandon Judell-CultureCatch

Ken Loach's breezy scribble about lowlife redemption and drunken buffoonery isn't so much heavy-handed as it is charmingly weightless.
Glenn Heath Jr.-Slant Magazine

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