No Surrender (1985)
September 11, 1985Release Date
No Surrender (1985)
September 11, 1985Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
Michael Angelis
Mike
Bernard Hill
Bernard
Ray McAnally
Billy McRacken
Tom Georgeson
Mr Ross
Joanne Whalley
Cheryl
James Ellis
Paddy Burke
Avis Bunnage
Martha Gorman
J.G. Devlin
George Gorman
Elvis Costello
Rosco De Ville
Michael Ripper
Tony Bonaparte
Vince Earl
Frank
Mark Mulholland
Norman
Ken Jones
Ronny
Joan Turner
Superwoman
Mamoun Hassan
Producer
Marjorie Sudell
Barbara
Ina Clough
Infirm Woman
Paul Connor
Infirm Man
Kevin Brownlow
Editor
Lovette Edwards
Infirm Woman
Rodney Holland
Editor
Dean Williams
Real Menace
Andrew Mollo
ProductionDesigner
Ian Hart
Uncertain Menace
Joey Kaye
Driver, Catholic Party
Eric Granville
Donald Duck
Harry Goodier
Cleanshaven Veteran
Gerry Fogerty
Moustached Veteran
Al T. Kossy
Bobby
Robert Hamilton
Special Branch Officer
Gerard Hely
Senior Policeman
Joe McGann
2nd Policeman
Penny Leatherbarrow
Mrs Morgan
Doc O'Brien
Driver, Protestant Party
Tony Rohr
McCarthur
Andrew Schofield
Macker
Tony Scoggo
Merc Driver
Linus Roache
Ulster Boy
David Doyle
Ulster Boy
Pete Price
Comedian
James Culshaw
Gorman's Cab Driver
Mark McGann
Rock Group Leader
Michael Starke
Member of Rock Group
Paul Codman
Member of Rock Group
Vera Kelly
Infirm Woman
Phil Kernot
Stan
Georgina Smith
Ollie
Arthur Spreckley
Matthew
Media.
Details.
Wiki.
No Surrender is a 1985 British comedy film written by Alan Bleasdale, directed by Peter Smith and produced by Mamoun Hassan.
Describing the commissioning process, Bleasdale said, "I went to the National Film Finance Corporation and told them I was never going to write Star Wars or Rambo Revisited or anything like that, so I just went ahead and wrote the film I wanted to write".The film is set in Liverpool during New Year's Eve. A man has been hired as the new manager of a function hall, and has to deal with the last arrangements made by his disgruntled predecessor. The hall has been simultaneously booked by rival groups of militant Catholics and Protestants from Ireland, the entertainers hired for the night are inept and their acts are likely to infuriate the clients, and a marching band of the Orange Order has been hired to play sectarian tunes for the audience. When brawls break out within the hall, the manager has to find a way to diffuse the situation.