📢 Join our Telegram channel for latest movies and TV show updates📢 Join our Telegram channel for latest movies and TV show updates📢 Join our Telegram channel for latest movies and TV show updates
CineFlix
Four Days in July

Four Days in July

6.6 (14)1984-11-291h 36m
DramaTV Movie

Overview

Two couples, one Catholic, one Protestant, exist on two sides of the chasm that is everyday life in Northern Ireland.

Production
BBC

Watch Four Days in July Online

Video player provided by a third-party service. CineFlix does not host any content.

Official Trailer & More

No trailers available in your region.

Cast

Crew

Director
Mike Leigh
Writers
Mike Leigh
Producers
Kenith Trodd
Cinematography
Remi Adefarasin

Where to Watch

Criterion Channel

Streaming availability data provided by JustWatch via TMDB. Click a logo to visit the provider's official website.

Recommendations

User Reviews (0)

Sign in with Google to post a rating and review.

  • No reviews yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.

User Reviews from TMDB

Peter McGinn

Peter McGinn

January 13, 2024

9/10

I realized I had watched this movie many years ago, as we have a lot of Mike Leigh's films, but though there were a few spots that sparked a memory, I didn't recall enough to spoil the pleasure of watching it this time. It is a quiet movie, especially considering that it takes place during the Irish "Troubles," and that seems to have ruffled some reviewers' feathers. Me, I am always up for a slow-paced movie as long as I like the characters and there is some subtle wit and humor included, whi…

S

SPDonlan

July 20, 2024

A brief review, given the electoral changes that’re in it, in Norniron. With the last of his accomplished television films for the BBC, Leigh directs and, more impressively, writes with nuance on the sectarian divides of 1980s Belfast. Two couples – one unionist, one nationalist – are presented with evenhanded understanding, if not necessarily sympathy, before and after The Twelfth. With the best of British social realism, Leigh avoids the more romantic, didactic dualism of Loach/Laverty’s Ir…