The Yank (2014) Poster

(2014)

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1/10
Wack
aidan-ralph21 March 2015
What a massive pile of rubbish. Badly acted, badly shot and Colm Meaney is in it for a really small portion of the film, despite having top billing. One very annoying flaw was the fact that the camera kept moving to the point where it was cutting the top of the actors heads. Also, how did they get Fred Willard? He's far better than this carry on! The one redeeming feature was Martin Maloney (Eddie Durkin from The Hardy Bucks). His cameo was hilarious, although it was disappointing when he didn't bate the head off Sean Lackey's character. In conclusion, avoid. How it's rated as highly as it is on here is beyond me. Utter scutter.
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1/10
Only a few redeeming points for this one
professorjeffreypbrown5 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Yes, the family in this movie is Irish. At the party, the house and everyone is decked out in green, even the mention of Ireland is revered as sacred. My dad's Irish, and I can't even remember one time that he's mentioned the fact. Most families don't go around every day focusing on their ethnicity and the "holy land" every waking moment. Only in movies does this happen. Just as lame as Fever Pitch where every item of clothing and piece of furniture is about the Red Sox, every thought, word, action, and deed about the Red Sox. My family couldn't be bigger Red Sox fans but none of us wear Sox paraphernalia and only occasionally talk Sox. We DO have a life, ya know. All this supporting my point that most of these "ethnic theme" movies WAY over do it.

As far as the story goes, ridiculous and cliché. HEY! guess what? The girl that Farley's character hates at the beginning is the one he ends up falling in love with, after chasing several women, of course.

The jokes are lame and story only half decent. But worst of all is the cliché dialogue and the terrible acting of the leads. Fred Willard and Colm Meaney are the only saving graces. I wonder sometimes why movies like this are made. Did the director owe some of the actors a favor? Was the director under obligation to get a film out quickly to satisfy a contract? That being said, you can skip this one. Don't waste your time.
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7/10
Pretty Interesting
dallasryan27 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
You can never go wrong with Fred Willard. He's hilarious and he doesn't disappoint in this movie either. Colm Meaney is great in this movie, as he is a great actor, fantastic in everything he's in. Well acted all around and actually a decent little love story which develops throughout the movie.

I enjoyed the banter and anticipation as the love story developed between the two leads. Good chemistry. A low budgeted film, but that doesn't matter because The Yank is a fun movie all around, and worth the watch.

This film will also make you thirsty for some beerski afterwards.
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7/10
'The Yank' Lampoons Ethnic Self-Stereotypes
stu-0032918 April 2015
Ethnic pride is part and parcel of American society. So much so that people drop the "-American" in daily conversation. Filmmaker Sean Lackey reminds us in The Yank, his farcical take on cultural identity, that there is a difference between Irish and Irish-American, Korean and Korean-American – just about any nationality and its hyphenated-American spawn.

Lackey multitasked on The Yank, writing, directing and acting. He plays the male lead, Tom Murphy, a union painter in Cleveland.

An awkward opening scene at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has Tom getting dumped by his girlfriend over his obsession with Irish band U2, making an ass of himself and getting thrown out – but not before costing curator Vanessa (Niki Spiridakos) her job.

Back at the pub, Tom's friend Marty (Allen Kellogg) introduces his Irish bride and says they are getting married in Ireland. The best man will be Tom, and the maid of honor will be – shock! – Vanessa, who walked in moments before.

When a movie telegraphs its destination in the second scene, it's incumbent upon the filmmaker to make sure the audience remains entertained. Somehow – despite the multitasking and despite this being his first big film project – Lackey pulls it off!

The forced proximity of the wedding cycle keeps Tom and Vanessa together through pre-wedding festivities in Cleveland, the ceremony in Dublin and the free time afterward in County Clare on Ireland's West Coast.

The thing about Tom is: His family really, really celebrates its Irish heritage. Never mind that fact that neither he nor his parents (comedy veteran Fred Willard and Maryann Nagel) has been to the Emerald Isle. Willard runs with his role, hosting a Six-Months-'Til-St. Patrick's Day party and gleefully making up Irish and Irish-American history.

Tom's folks not only embrace every Irish-American stereotype but also pressure him to marry an Irish girl. Willard waxes hysterically on this over lunch with Tom's friends Marty, Fred (Kevin Farley, Chris Farley's brother), Steve (Cody Dove) and Ricardo (Spencer Jay Kim). Much of that deli scene was improvised, Lackey said during a Q&A at the 2015 Sedona International Film Festival. That's not surprising; Lackey met Willard while doing improv comedy with Second City's Cleveland troupe.

Tom's mother is less tolerable. She is a bit of a harpy and is rude to Vanessa – "that Greek girl" – when she visits the Murphy home.

As for Vanessa, a Greek-American who befriended the bride while actually living in Ireland for a time, she admits to Tom that she left a really serious boyfriend because her Greek father didn't approve. Spiridakos plays her with a wonderful range of emotions – from exasperated to amused to intrigued.

Arriving in Dublin, the boys' first stop is the Guinness brewery, where the guys – particularly Fred – are put out to discover that the tour includes just one free draft.

Marty then drops off Tom at a bed and breakfast that's no pastoral idyll. Irish-born Clevelander Derdriu Ring is hysterical as the over-the-top, domineering innkeeper who appears to see, and treat, Tom like her estranged son, who found a job far away on other side of Ireland.

By this point, Tom is realizing that Ireland isn't what Irish-Americans in Cleveland believe. If any doubts remain, they are erased when he looks up a distant relative, cattleman Fintan McGuire, played by Colm Meaney (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and The Next Generation, Layer Cake and Under Siege). Over the course of a few days, Fintan helps separate the reality from the fantasy of Ireland.

"It's a melting pot, like all of Europe," Lackey said in Sedona. "But a lot of Americans don't realize that." For him, the tool to make that point was a joke, not a sledgehammer. "The whole movie is a farce. The message is there, but it's a farce."

At one point, Tom thinks he might have found his Irish lass in Molly Sweeney, the vivacious clerk at a store he visits. Molly is portrayed by Lynette Callaghan, who appears in only a few scenes but steals them all. But she can't steal Tom's heart; his attempts to woo her are distracted by his emerging feelings for Vanessa. He does make Molly mad, though – sparking a confrontation at the pub with her intimidating brother. A brawl appears inevitable, but Farley's impulsive Fred, of all people, steps in to defuse the situation.

Even while satirizing ethnicity, "You don't want to give in to the stereotype," Lackey said.

In the end, Tom wins over Vanessa without even realizing it – through a seemingly unrelated act that goes to the core of who he is.

Lackey filmed not only the first half of the movie in greater Cleveland but also many of the indoor scenes set in Ireland. Like many states, Ohio offers financial incentives for filmmakers. On top of that, in Lackey's case, Cleveland officials went out of their way to help a local guy. They enabled him to film at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, on blocked off city streets – even on the tarmac at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport.

"They wanted to help," Lackey said. "I just asked." Usually, he said, they gave him what he wanted for free – no small consideration for an independent filmmaker.

For the Irish exteriors, Lackey and cinematographer Keith Nickoson do a nice job of showcasing the beauty of County Clare, where towns and countryside extend from central Ireland west to the coast. They use sweeping shots of the beaches and cliffs in comparison and contrast to the movie's opening shot, a flyover shot of downtown Cleveland from Lake Erie.

The Yank, which was named Best Comedic Feature at the 2014 Manhattan Film Festival, is a good-natured romcom with a message about broadening one's horizons and managing expectations.
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6/10
Better than it's rating
jordan224023 July 2019
It's not a great movie. Characters seem to appear and disappear with little explanation or reasoning, the story isn't exactly original, and Guinness must have funded the film, but I found it amusing enough to keep watching, and, having been to Ireland, enjoyed the cinematography. I've seen far worse movies with ratings under 5, so think this one should't be in that category. I think, at the very least, those who tend to like movies featuring Ireland will enjoy 'The Yank.'
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