Resistance (miniseries)

Resistance (released as Rebellion Season 2 on Netflix) is a 2019 television miniseries written by Colin Teevan for Irish broadcaster RTÉ, dramatising the events surrounding the Irish War of Independence.[1][2]

Resistance
Title card
Also known asRebellion Season 2
GenreHistorical fiction
Spy fiction
Created byColin Teevan
Written byColin Teevan
Directed byCatherine Morshead
StarringBrian Gleeson
Aoife Duffin
Simone Kirby
Natasha O'Keeffe
Gavin Drea
ComposerVince Pope
Country of originIreland
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes5
Production
ProducersCatherine Magee
Catherine Dunne
CinematographyDavid Marsh
EditorJustin Krish
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time52 minutes per episode
Production companiesZodiak Media Ireland
Touchpaper TV
RTÉ
Release
Original networkRTÉ One
Picture format1080i 16:9
Audio formatStereo
Original release6 January (2019-01-06) 
3 February 2019 (2019-02-03)
Chronology
Preceded byRebellion
External links
Website

Set during the time of Bloody Sunday in 1920, it is a sequel to the 2016 miniseries, Rebellion, which was set during the 1916 Easter Rising.[3]

Production

Filming began in October 2016.[4]

Cast

Characters returning from Rebellion

  • Brian Gleeson - Jimmy Mahon, a 1916 veteran now serving with the IRA.
  • Jordanne Jones - Minnie Mahon
  • Jaeylynne Wallace Ruane - Sadie Mahon
  • Millie Donnelly - Gracie Mahon
  • Michael Ford-FitzGerald - Harry Butler, wealthy banker from whom the rebel government seek funds.
  • Gavin Drea - Michael Collins, IRA Director of Intelligence, a charismatic and headstrong leader. (Collins was played by Sebastian Thommen in Rebellion)

New characters

Episode list

No.TitleOriginal air date
1"Episode 1"January 6, 2019 (2019-01-06)
2"Episode 2"January 13, 2019 (2019-01-13)
3"Episode 3"January 20, 2019 (2019-01-20)
4"Episode 4"January 27, 2019 (2019-01-27)
5"Episode 5"February 3, 2019 (2019-02-03)

Reception

The first episode was criticised for departure from historical fact; Teevan had already resigned himself to such, he admitted in an interview with The Irish Times.[5][6]

The Irish Catholic criticised what they called the "nasty nuns" subplot; in the historical event that the adoption storyline was based on, Josephine Marchment Brown, a widow working in Victoria Barracks, Cork lost custody of her son to her in-laws who took the boy to Wales. The IRA kidnapped the boy back for her in return for her passing information to them.[7] Foreign adoptions from mother-and-baby homes, of the kind depicted in Resistance, did not begin until the 1940s.[8][9]

Chris Wasser of the Irish Independent awarded the first episode three stars, saying "What we have here is a reasonably capable and competent drama that, though rough around the edges, suggests we may be in for a stronger and tighter run than last time. […] It isn’t nearly as vital or as thrilling as it needs to be, and Catherine Morshead’s flat direction doesn’t help. But there is something here."[10]

Website IrishCentral was more positive, saying "The first episode of Resistance is deliciously plotted with loyalty, betrayal, irony, but most of all, the bravery of ordinary Dubliners taking on the greatest intelligence service in the world and, as history tells us, eventually winning. Resistance is not to be missed."[11]

References

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