Ray McAnally
7 titles
Filmography
7 results

A Very British Coup
A radical left-wing politician pens a popular manifesto, is elected prime minister, and soon realizes that he not only has fans, but powerful enemies.

Taffin
(1988)When an Irish debt collector with martial arts chops takes on developers and their toxic plan for his town, he uncovers a high-level conspiracy.

The Mission
(1986)A visually stunning epic, The Mission recounts the true story of two men - a man of the sword (Robert De Niro) and a man of the cloth (Jeremy Irons).
No Surrender
(1985)A scheduling mixup means two groups of old-timers have reserved the same bar for a party on the same night. One group is Protestant die-hards while the other consists of Catholics hard-liners.

Cal
(1984)Similar to "The Crying Game," this film tells a powerful and unusual love story set against the backdrop of war-torn Northern Ireland. John Lynch ("Some Mother's Son," "Sliding Doors") is Cal, a young man on the fringes of the Irish Republican Army, who falls in love with the widow of a man he helped murder in an IRA attack (played by Academy Award-winner Helen Mirren - "The Queen," "Raising Helen"). Academy Award-winning producer David Puttnam ("Chariots of Fire," "The Killing Fields") and director Pat O'Connor ("Inventing the Abbotts," "Circle of Friends") provide stylish and thought-provoking entertainment in this nominee for the Cannes Film Festival Palm d'Or for Best Picture.

Fear Is the Key
(1972)Following the death of his family in an aeroplane crash, a man plots an elaborate revenge scheme on those responsible. By setting himself up as a criminal, he plans to get close to a certain tycoon who has been approached by the culprits to help them retrieve the cargo of the lost plane.

We're No Angels
(1989)There's something funny about those two new priests. In fact, there's something downright hilarious. Because Robert De Niro and Sean Penn aren't clergymen at all.