The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
Get ready for a tense ride because writers/directors Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor’s Rose Plays Julie never relinquishes its sense of brooding until the very last frame’s welcome exhale of relief.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Ireland · 2021
1h 40m
Director Joe Lawlor, Christine Molloy
Starring Ann Skelly, Orla Brady, Aidan Gillen, Annabell Rickerby
Genre Drama, Thriller
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
She was given the name Rose by her adoptive parents, but her birth certificate says otherwise. Now a university student in Dublin, Rose sets off for London to find her biological mother, the woman who named her Julie at birth.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
Get ready for a tense ride because writers/directors Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor’s Rose Plays Julie never relinquishes its sense of brooding until the very last frame’s welcome exhale of relief.
The most disturbing thing about the impressively disturbing Rose Plays Julie may just be how satisfying it is.
The New York Times by Kristen Yoonsoo Kim
Amid the lush greenery of the setting, the atmosphere is perpetually bone-chilling — complete with an ominously high-pitched score — making the film seem distant and difficult to fully embrace
Rose Plays Julie is an emotionally cathartic thriller.
Its emotional dilemmas, depictions of trauma, revenge and fractured family ties are handled with such skill and sense of purpose, it is truly exemplary film-making.
Layering its fairly straightforward story of an adopted Irish girl who tracks down her birth mother with immersive visual and aural motifs, it plays more like modern operatic tragedy than run-of-the-mill social drama.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
It is a really powerful film and Brady’s final dialogue scene exerts a lethal grip.
Los Angeles Times by Sarah-Tai Black
A deeply aware film, Rose Plays Julie allows for the fantastic as a means and space of catharsis.
RogerEbert.com by Sheila O'Malley
Rose Plays Julie is very controlled in its style: this control reaps huge rewards.
The film is strong enough in performance and direction to survive any discrepancies between the social drama it begins as with the revenge thriller it becomes. Still, Rose Plays Julie's sudden turn of events feels like an intrusion on a better story.