Oranges & Sunshine is a very impressive debut feature, looks like it runs in the family as Jim Loach seems to be a chip off the old block. I very glad to hear it too, although this film isn't in the same style as one of his fathers, it's as good as one of his and it has the heart... read more
Hugo Weaving,
David Wenham,
Aisling Loftus,
Stuart Wolfenden,
Lorraine Ashbourne
... see more
Oranges and Sunshine tells the story of Margaret Humphreys (Emily Watson), a social worker from Nottingham, who uncovered one of the most significant social scandals of recent times; the mass deportat... read more
DVD Release Date: July 25, 2011
Stats: 162 reviews
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Flixster Reviews (162)
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December 9, 2011
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September 19, 2011
There have been a number of young directors coming through recently who have gained attention not just through their talents but through the reputation of their fathers. We have Nicolas Winding Refn, son of acclaimed editor Anders Refn, whose recent feature Drive could translate ... read more
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July 8, 2011
'Oranges and Sunshine'. Emily Watson brilliant as an unduly guilt burdened, relentlessly driven woman, trying to write the wrongs of the 100,000+ kids involved in the organised deportation between the U.K. and Australian governments, bringing them some level of closure and connec... read more
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November 15, 2011
In "Oranges and Sunshine," Margaret Humphreys(Emily Watson) is a social worker in Nottingham, England in 1986 who is first seen in assisting in taking a baby away from a mother unable to care for her. One night after a group therapy session, she is accosted by a woman who claime... read more
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June 16, 2011
I needed three days to write this review... Jim Loach's sombre, painful film hit me really hard, much harder than you'd expect from the soft-focus poster.
This eye-opening film looks back from the viewpoint of the late 1980s at the forced migration of children in care from Br... read more
Critic Reviews
Emily Watson, who always brings a special grace to the screen, gives a multilayered performance to the role of Margaret Humphreys, who not only puts her own family dynamic at risk but finds herself ph... Full Review
The result is a problem drama with more problem than drama. Full Review
Emily Watson, a delicate English rose, has never seemed more sturdy than here. Full Review
The most powerful sequences in the movie are the linked vignettes involving Margaret and the various grown-up children whom she attempts to help in their search for -- what, exactly? Closure? Catharsis? Full Review
Once, very early on, the secret deportations have been exposed there aren't many new places for the film to go - just more scenes of an increasingly tired-looking Emily Watson trudging around with an ... Full Review
It's powerful, gut-wrenching stuff, and it doesn't need tarting up. Full Review
Making a true story of social injustice into a gripping narrative requires more imagination than is contained in this well-intentioned but uninspired effort. Full Review
Well-meaning but blandly executed, smothering potentially powerful scenes with earnest do-gooder-film moments. Full Review
As the story ricochets between Britain and Australia, the film often loses track of time and becomes fragmented as it struggles to integrate too many subplots. What holds it together is Ms. Watson's c... Full Review
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