Key visual of A Sense of Loss
maimovie

A Sense of Loss

1973-01-01 | Documentary
321 AI "Keytalks" from People:

Click "Keytalk" you liked to discover Movies of you taste

Shot over six weeks in December 1971, and January 1972, the film consisted of interviews with Protestants, Catholics, politicians, and some soldiers, combined with TV news clips of bombings and violence. The deaths of four individuals formed the central focus of the film, which Ophüls described as ‘an old, middle-aged, humanistic, social-democratic attempt to give people an idea that life after all is not that cheap’. The BBC refused to transmit the completed film on the grounds that it was ‘too pro-Irish’ (Sunday Times, 5 Nov. 1972). (via http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/media/docs/freespeech.htm)

Streaming Services

Ratings

8.1
-
-

People's review rating

Positive 100%
Negative 0%

321 Movie prompts Related to A Sense of Loss

Maimovie AI learns movie taste from social media, search keywords, and other diverse crowd data. As a result, our AI has characterized this movie with the following movie tastes:

Cast

Acting & Cast

Character

View Live Cast Profile

Visual & Sound Taste from Video

What people actually say about
icon Visual & icon Sound

“Key Talks” from People

  • Ranked #71,309 / 90,283 Movies

  • Ranked #73,599 / 95,205 Movies

  • Ranked #86,352 / 108,451 Movies

Search Keywords

Touch to Google the following Keywords:

Top 20 Movies Similar to A Sense of Loss

Movies Similar to A Sense of Loss

A Sense of Loss FAQ

On October 04, 2024, there were 321 public reaction to A Sense of Loss including archival footage, puff piece, balanced view, fair and balanced, masterfully crafted.
The genre of A Sense of Loss is Documentary.
The runtime of A Sense of Loss is 135 minutes.
On October 04, 2024, the IMDB rating of A Sense of Loss is 8.1/10, Rotten Tomato rating is 0/100, Metacritic rating is 0/100, TMDB rating is 0.0/10.
Shot over six weeks in December 1971, and January 1972, the film consisted of interviews with Protestants, Catholics, politicians, and some soldiers, combined with TV news clips of bombings and violence. The deaths of four individuals formed the central focus of the film, which Ophüls described as ‘an old, middle-aged, humanistic, social-democratic attempt to give people an idea that life after all is not that cheap’. The BBC refused to transmit the completed film on the grounds that it was ‘too pro-Irish’ (Sunday Times, 5 Nov. 1972). (via http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/media/docs/freespeech.htm).
The director of A Sense of Loss is Marcel Ophüls.
The release date of A Sense of Loss is January 01, 1973.