Set in Ireland, beginning in 1964, so-called "fallen" women were
considered sinners who needed to be redeemed. The film follows the
stories of four young women - Margaret (raped by her cousin), Bernadette
(too beautiful and coquettish), Rose (an unmarried mother) and Crispina
(an intellectually disabled unmarried mother) - who are all forced by
their families or caretakers into the Magdalene Asylum. The film details
the disastrous lives of the four girls whilst they are inmates,
portraying their harsh daily regimen and their squalid living conditions
put on at the laundries.
Each woman suffers unspeakable cruelty and violence from the Mother
Superior, Sister Bridget, despite her gentle-faced appearance and
outwardly soft-spoken demeanour. She is characterised as sadistic and
almost inhuman at times, as conveyed through her merciless beating of
Rose in full view of Bernadette, or when she mockingly laughs at Una as
she hopelessly clutches at her fallen hair locks.
The film also criticises the hypocrisy and corruption within the
staff of the laundries. Sister Bridget relishes the money the business
receives and it is suggested that little of it is distributed
appropriately. Those who liken themselves to Mary Magdalene,
who deprived herself of all pleasures of the flesh including food and
drink, eat hearty breakfasts of buttered toast and bacon while the
working women subsist on oatmeal. In one particularly humiliating scene,
the women are forced to stand naked in a line after taking a communal
shower. The nuns then hold a "contest" on who has the most pubic hair,
biggest bottom, biggest breasts and smallest breasts. The corruption of
the resident priest, Father Fitzroy, is made very clear through his
sexual abuse of Crispina.
Three of the girls are shown, to some extent, to triumph over their
situation and their captors. Margaret, although she is allowed to leave
by the intervention of her younger brother, does not leave the asylum
without leaving her mark. When she deliberately asks Sister Bridget to
step aside for her to freely pass and is sharply shot down, Margaret
falls to her knees in prayer. The Mother Superior is so surprised, she
only moves past her after the Bishop tells her to come along. Bernadette
and Rose finally decide to escape together, trashing Sister Bridget's
study in search for the key to the asylum door and engaging her in a
suspenseful confrontation. The two girls escape her clutches and are
helped to return to the real world by a sympathetic relative, their
story optimistically ending when Rose boards a coach bound for the ferry
to Liverpool
and Bernadette becomes an apprentice hairdresser. Crispina's end,
however, is not a happy one; she spends the rest of her days in a mental
institution (where she was sent to silence her from revealing the
sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of Father Fitzroy) and dies of anorexia at age 24.
The epilogue to the film gives a brief description of the lives of
four of the inmates after the girls leave the asylum by the late 1960s.
It is noted that the last Magdalene asylum closed in 1996.
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