The Irish Whiskey Rebellion

1972 film directed by Chester Erskine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Irish Whiskey Rebellion (also known as A Change in The Wind)[2] is a 1972 crime drama, directed by Chester Erskine and starring William Devane, Anne Meara, Richard Mulligan, John Pleshette, David Groh, Stephen Joyce, and William Challee. It is based on a 1969 novel by Leslie Waller "A Change in The Wind." The film is set in Prohibition Era and shows a story of an IRA member who tries to land a shipment of contraband whiskey.

Directed byChester Erskine
Written byLeslie Waller
Based on"A Change in The Wind" (1969) by Leslie Waller[1]
Produced byGeorge Manasse
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
The Irish Whiskey Rebellion
Directed byChester Erskine
Written byLeslie Waller
Based on"A Change in The Wind" (1969) by Leslie Waller[1]
Produced byGeorge Manasse
Starring
CinematographyMinervino Rojas
Music byLeonard Rosenman
Production
companies
GSF Productions, Inc.[1]
Distributed byCinerama Releasing Corporation[1]
Release date
  • October 1972 (1972-10)
[2]
Running time
93 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
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Plot

The film is set in 1927 on Fire Island. IRA veteran Harry Regan (Stephen Joyce) arrives to the US and wants to arrange a shipment of contraband whiskey to support the struggle for independence.[3] He is being chased by a brutal Coast Guard Lt. Commander Ashley (William Devane) and confronts local crime syndicate member Maxie (David Groh).[4]

Production

The Irish Whiskey Rebellion was filmed in September—early November 1971 on Fire Island, New York, mostly in Saltaire, Long Cove and Skunk Hollow.[1][5] It is believed that director Chester Erskine used the pseudonym of "J. C. Works" on the film's credit (as author).[1][6] The film featured newsreel footage from the 1916-1921 period in Ireland and of events associated with Charles Lindbergh's Atlantic crossing.[4]

Critical response

TV Guide gave the film 2 starts out five with the verdict “Devane's performance is up to his usual high standard, and the period atmosphere is believable; but that's still not enough to raise the film above mediocrity”.[7]

References

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