Some months back, TCM ran the Oscar-winning movie My Left Foot. I figured it was going to get another airing during 31 Days of Oscar, but it isn't on the schedue. Still, since I have to watch it before it expires, I figured that doing a post on it during 31 Days of Oscar would be appropriate.
The movie tells the story of Irish writer/artist Christy Brown, played by Daniel Day-Lewis in the first of his Oscar performances. As the movie opens, Christy is somewhat later in life, after the publication of his book My Left Foot (the book was published in 1954, but the movie implies this scene is set somewhat later). The book has been a success, and Christy is invited to a big Irish manor house owned by Lord Castlewelland (Cyril Cusack in a cameo performance) to give a speech. He's brought in in his wheelchair and kept in a separate room for the musical performances that precede his speech, because he can be a difficult person to be around.
As we see, and the fame of the movie version makes most viewers probably know going into the movie already, Christy is in a wheelchair and has difficulty speaking because he was born with cerebral palsy, and it's not long before the action dissolves from the Castlewelland estate to a flashback starting with Brown's childhood. Brown was born in 1932 into a very large family with mother Bridget (Brenda Fricker, who also won an Oscar), father Patrick, and a bunch of siblings -- I'm not quite certain how many siblings survived infancy and where Christy was in the birth order. Suffice it to say that having an exceedingly large family left the Browns impoverished in the Ireland of the era. It's suggested that he be put in an institution and that he'll never amount to much, but Bridget won't do this. (From what I've read, the Irish Catholic institutions of that time were brutal.)
Christy may have been born with a fairly limited physical capacity, but his mind does work, and eventually the one part of his body that he is able to exert reasonable control over is that left foot, as we see in a scene where he tries to write numbers from one of his siblings' math exercises. He begins to show more capacity, and the rest of the family loves him, although of course he still has the substantial physicial limitations brought about by cerebral palsy. He's able to draw, however, and that drawing is going to bring him fame.
In the movie telling of the story, he's introduced to an Eileen Cole (Fiona Shaw), who works at a special school for those with cerebral palsy. She helps him, and he falls in love with her, but she's already got a boyfriend, which is going to break Christy's heart when he finds out. She still helps publicize his art, and that's what makes Christy famous as well as leading him to write those memoirs. Some years after the honors at the Castlewelland estate, Christy does get married. The movie does not inform us, however, that the marriage wasn't happy or that Christy died before his 50th birthday in the early 1980s.
My Left Foot is well known in part because of the story it tells which is a memorable one, and in part because of Daniel Day-Lewis' astonishing performance. The other supporting actors also give very good performances. I suppose you could criticize the movie for the feeling that it sugarcoats how things would have been in the Ireland of the 1940s and 1950s. While it's not doe-eyed in the way that Hollywood would have treated the Ireland of that era, not mentioning the later life difficulties Brown faced does feel like a bit of a cop-out.
Regardless, My Left Foot is a fine movie and one that you should definitely see if you haven't seen it already.