Route Irish

E894393

Route Irish is a 2010 political thriller film directed by Ken Loach that explores the moral and psychological fallout of private security work during the Iraq War.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Route Irish canonical 3

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf film
political thriller film
awardNomination Palme d'Or nomination at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival
basedOn Iraq War NERFINISHED
castMember Andrea Lowe NERFINISHED
John Bishop NERFINISHED
Mark Womack NERFINISHED
Talib Rasool NERFINISHED
Trevor Williams NERFINISHED
character Fergus Molloy NERFINISHED
Frankie NERFINISHED
Rachel NERFINISHED
cinematographyBy Chris Menges NERFINISHED
competitionSection In Competition at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
director Ken Loach NERFINISHED
distributor Artificial Eye NERFINISHED
editedBy Jonathan Morris NERFINISHED
festivalScreening 2010 Cannes Film Festival NERFINISHED
filmingLocation Liverpool NERFINISHED
genre drama film
political thriller film
hasTagline The most dangerous road in the world
hasTitleReference Baghdad airport road known as Route Irish NERFINISHED
language English
mainSubject Iraq War NERFINISHED
moral responsibility
post-traumatic stress disorder
private military contractors
war crimes
musicBy George Fenton NERFINISHED
narrativeFocus moral and psychological fallout of private security work during the Iraq War
portrays corruption in private security industry
cover-up of civilian deaths
impact of war on veterans
producer Rebecca O'Brien NERFINISHED
productionCompany Sixteen Films NERFINISHED
releaseDateUK 2011
releaseYear 2010
runtimeMinutes 109
screenwriter Paul Laverty NERFINISHED
setting Iraq NERFINISHED
Liverpool NERFINISHED
title Route Irish NERFINISHED

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sixteen Films produced Route Irish
Paul Laverty wroteScreenplayFor Route Irish
Rebecca O'Brien notableWork Route Irish