Why I love Stephen Rea’s performance in The… | Little White Lies

In Praise Of

Why I love Stephen Rea’s per­for­mance in The Cry­ing Game

15 Jun 2022

Words by Eleanor Brady

Close-up of a person with dark curly hair and a pensive expression, wearing a black jacket.
Close-up of a person with dark curly hair and a pensive expression, wearing a black jacket.
Three decades since its release, Neil Jor­dan’s thriller about The Trou­bles remains a cru­cial and com­plex piece of Irish cinema.

Neil Jordan’s 1992 The Cry­ing Game is a film that was almost not made at all. At the time nobody want­ed to back it,” said Jor­dan in an inter­view with the Irish Times in 2017. It was about polit­i­cal vio­lence and ter­ror­ism. And gen­der.” Set against the back­drop of con­tin­ued polit­i­cal unrest and ten­sion in North­ern Ire­land at the time, The Cry­ing Game is far from a con­ven­tion­al polit­i­cal thriller, rather an explo­ration of human nature in the dark­est of cir­cum­stances told through the lens of the main pro­tag­o­nist Fer­gus, played by Stephen Rea in a career-defin­ing performance.

The film fol­lows the char­ac­ter of Fer­gus, a mem­ber of the Irish Repub­li­can Army who is tasked with guard­ing cap­tured British sol­dier Jody (For­est Whitak­er) and the two strike up an unusu­al friend­ship despite their obvi­ous dif­fer­ences. Albeit brief, their inti­mate encounter leads Fer­gus on a jour­ney to Lon­don, where he trav­els to ful­fill his promise to Jody to take care of his lover Dil (Jaye David­son.) Ulti­mate­ly as he begins to fall in love with Dil and as the IRA cell tracks his every move, Fer­gus is forced to decide between what he wants and what his nature dic­tates he must do.

Rea’s per­for­mance as Fer­gus is immense­ly thought­ful and sen­si­tive and the audi­ence watch­es as he slow­ly begins to ques­tion the vio­lent actions of his fel­low IRA sol­diers through his blos­som­ing friend­ship with Jody. Their brief exchanges soon devel­op into mean­ing­ful con­ver­sa­tions as they talk about nature, race, pol­i­tics and love. The hostage sit­u­a­tion also neces­si­tates a phys­i­cal inti­ma­cy that The Cry­ing Game dwells on through­out. There are mul­ti­ple scenes where Fer­gus feeds Jody because his hands are tied up and at one point even has to help him uri­nate, which makes for some light com­ic relief amidst grim real­i­ty. Phys­i­cal close­ness is empha­sised by close-angle cam­er­a­work: Fer­gus reach­es into the inside pock­et of Jody’s jack­et because Jody wants to show him a pic­ture of Dil in his wal­let, and the cam­era dol­lies in on a Dutch angle of Fer­gus stand­ing next to Jody, his hand in Jody’s pock­et and his gun at Jody’s tem­ple, high­light­ing the unspo­ken pow­er imbal­ance which under­pins their relationship. 

It soon becomes clear to the audi­ence that Fer­gus does not fit the mold of hos­tile ter­ror­ists like his coun­ter­parts and the vio­lence dis­played seem­ing­ly goes against his nature. The film telling­ly uses the fable of the scor­pi­on and the frog through­out to high­light the innate nature of human­i­ty, as told by Jody to Fer­gus in one of their late-night con­ver­sa­tions. A frog was going to cross a riv­er when a scor­pi­on asks if he can ride on his back. You’ll sting me,” says the frog, but the scor­pi­on promis­es not to. Halfway across, though, the frog feels a hot spear” in his side. Why did you sting me? Now we’ll both drown.” I couldn’t help it,” explains the scor­pi­on. It’s my nature.” In con­text of the scor­pi­on sto­ry, cross­ing the riv­er” is anal­o­gous to fit­ting in with a divid­ed North­ern Ire­land. Through this for­bid­den friend­ship, Fer­gus has there­fore blurred the bound­aries of per­ceived good’ and bad’, upset­ting the equi­lib­ri­um of a deeply politi­cised soci­ety as he ques­tions philo­soph­i­cal con­cepts of nation­hood, pol­i­tics and love and the very essence of human­i­ty itself. 

Two individuals embracing and kissing on a bed.

The sec­ond act fol­lows Fer­gus as he attempts to nav­i­gate a new life and iden­ti­ty in Lon­don, as Jody con­tin­ues to haunt his dreams. Assum­ing a fake Scot­tish iden­ti­ty, he tries to break his IRA ties and make true his promise to Jody. After track­ing Dil down at a bar in East Lon­don, Fer­gus soon begins to devel­op roman­tic feel­ings for her, which leads to one of the most infa­mous cin­e­mat­ic twists in any film of the decade – Dil is a trans woman. 

In many ways it is easy to reduce the film to this sin­gle scene, which shocked audi­ences and became cen­tral to the mar­ket­ing cam­paign that made The Cry­ing Game such a hit in the US. Revis­it­ing the film now, this reveal’ reflects the lack of under­stand­ing and accep­tance of trans and queer peo­ple in the 1990s. When Fer­gus realis­es that Dil is not bio­log­i­cal­ly a woman, his ini­tial reac­tion is one of upset and pan­ic, bor­der­ing on vio­lence, which reflects many sim­i­lar cas­es of vio­lence against trans and gen­der-non­con­form­ing peo­ple around the world. By fram­ing this scene as a shock­ing rev­e­la­tion, the audi­ence is encour­aged to gasp at Dil’s gen­der iden­ti­ty rather than focus on the rela­tion­ship that ulti­mate­ly devel­ops between the two main characters. 

Despite its clum­sy exe­cu­tion, the rev­e­la­tion which dom­i­nates the sec­ond part of the film can also be viewed as anoth­er means by which The Cry­ing Game explores themes of nature and iden­ti­ty, as Fer­gus begins to ques­tion his own gen­der iden­ti­ty and flu­id con­cepts of sex­u­al­i­ty. In an inter­view with film crit­ic Mari­na Burke in 1993, Jor­dan drew par­al­lels between moral choic­es and gen­der iden­ti­ty, explain­ing that Fer­gus only sur­vives … by tak­ing on what you would think of as fem­i­nine virtues … [being] more under­stand­ing, com­pas­sion­ate”. This deep sense of empa­thy and loy­al­ty to those he loves is reflect­ed in Fer­gus’ con­tin­ued attempts to pro­tect and dis­guise Dil from what he per­ceives to be his own cru­el and inescapable identity. 

Rea’s per­for­mance as Fer­gus marked a land­mark moment with­in the wave of cease­fire cin­e­ma’ of the 1990s which sought to delve into the com­plex nature of 20th-cen­tu­ry Anglo-Irish con­flict, blur­ring bound­aries of polit­i­cal, sex­u­al, and nation­al iden­ti­ty. Fer­gus’ sex­u­al­i­ty and his Irish­ness mir­ror one anoth­er, both exist­ing in these in-between spaces, both parts of his nature but with com­pet­ing def­i­n­i­tions of them­selves. An Irish­man in Eng­land occu­pied a dou­ble exis­tence, legal­ly, social­ly, and polit­i­cal­ly. In Lon­don, Fer­gus is both a for­eign­er – cor­rect­ing calls of pad­dy’ – and not, as he gains accep­tance from Dil and the queer com­mu­ni­ty. Fer­gus spends the major­i­ty of the film deny­ing things about him­self that ulti­mate­ly can­not be denied.

The Cry­ing Game is a cru­cial piece of Irish cin­e­ma as it is one of very few films to tack­le the Trou­bles from the point of view of an IRA vol­un­teer. This per­spec­tive would be bold today, but in 1992, a full six years before the Good Fri­day agree­ment began the end of hos­til­i­ties, it was near enough rev­o­lu­tion­ary and per­haps an expla­na­tion for ini­tial low box office rat­ings, as many did not want to be seen to be sym­pa­thiz­ing with Rea’s remark­ably human­is­tic per­for­mance. The film even­tu­al­ly received crit­i­cal acclaim, with six Oscar nom­i­na­tions includ­ing best actor, and a win for best orig­i­nal screenplay. 

While The Cry­ing Game has a deft touch for the com­plex nuances of gen­der and sex­u­al­i­ty, it is ulti­mate­ly about much more than that. It’s a film about shift­ing iden­ti­ties, queer bod­ies, and over­com­ing bar­ri­ers and at its heart is a char­ac­ter whose iden­ti­ty is in con­stant flux: Fer­gus. Thir­ty years on The Cry­ing Game is a film that con­tin­ues to tran­scend bor­ders in terms of both coun­try and con­tent, as vio­lence and bru­tal sets of beliefs are chal­lenged by Fer­gus’ innate good­ness mak­ing the mes­sage of The Cry­ing Game, despite being a film about the IRA, a remark­ably pos­i­tive one. The film ends with Dil ask­ing Fer­gus why he fell for her, and he tells her the sto­ry of the scor­pi­on and the frog. It’s in his nature.

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