“We can never truly move forward as a nation if we continue to refuse to acknowledge the painful shadows of the past.” With this stark declaration, Cillian Murphy framed not just a film project, but a moral reckoning. His decision to produce and star in Small Things Like These marks a defining moment in contemporary Irish cinema—one where storytelling becomes a vehicle for justice and remembrance.
Murphy has long been celebrated for his transformative performances, from the steely resolve of Peaky Blinders to the tortured brilliance of Oppenheimer. Yet this latest work represents a conscious pivot away from spectacle toward social responsibility. In portraying Bill Furlong, an ordinary coal merchant in 1980s Ireland, Murphy asks audiences to confront a collective failure: the decades-long silence surrounding the Magdalene Laundries.
The Magdalene Laundries operated for more than a century, incarcerating women and girls deemed “morally fallen.” Between 1922 and 1996, an estimated 10,000 were confined within these church-run institutions, forced into unpaid labor, subjected to psychological abuse, and, in many cases, separated from their children through coerced adoptions. These practices were an open secret, tolerated by society and shielded by the immense authority of religious institutions.
Public awareness only began to shift in 1993, when a mass grave containing the remains of 155 women was uncovered on convent grounds in Dublin. Even then, justice came slowly. It was not until 2013 that the Irish state formally apologized to survivors. Murphy’s words resonate precisely because they address this delay: acknowledgment, he argues, is the first step toward genuine national healing.
Directed by Tim Mielants and adapted from the novel by Claire Keegan, Small Things Like These focuses on complicity as much as cruelty. When Furlong discovers a young girl imprisoned in a convent coal shed, he is forced to choose between personal safety and moral action. The film captures how fear of social and economic exclusion kept entire communities silent.
Murphy’s effort builds upon a lineage of artistic resistance. Films such as The Magdalene Sisters and Philomena challenged official narratives long before state institutions were willing to listen. His activism also echoes the courage of Sinéad O’Connor, who used her platform to confront institutional hypocrisy at great personal cost.
By leveraging his global influence, Murphy has transformed cinema into a sharp weapon against historical amnesia. Small Things Like These does not offer easy catharsis; instead, it insists on remembrance. In doing so, it affirms a difficult truth: only by facing the darkest chapters of the past can a society hope to move forward with integrity.