This clip starts approximately 44 minutes into the documentary.
This clip shows a group of men sitting around a table in a park on Christmas Day, drinking and smoking as they listen to previously recorded interviews with themselves on the radio. The men’s voices are heard as they talk about a variety of issues, including the meaning of Christmas and their relationships with their families. The voices overlap and Christmas carols play as the men are filmed from a variety of different angles and distances.
Man Only because of my family. They’re over in England. They’re in Cambridge.
Paul Makin Really? There’s nothing for you to look forward to?
Man Make sure we’ve got our flagons for Christmas Day. They’ve just lost everything and they’ve got nothing to live for. They’ve got nothing to live for, nothing whatsoever.
Paul Makin Have you got anything to live for?
Man Not now, no.
Paul Makin Don’t you think life’s precious?
Man No, not now. No. I was going to drink meself – wherever they bury me, I don’t know whether they’ll bury me or throw me in the pigsty or anywhere, but as long as they throw the flagon on top of me.
Paul Makin Fair enough.
Man 2 Well, Christmas means just another day to me, but for the kids, it’s great.
Paul Makin Do you believe there’s a God up there?
Man 2 Yes, I do.
Paul Makin Does it bring back memories to you about something?
Man 3 Yeah. A poem.
Paul Makin Back in Ireland?
Man 3 Yeah. Yeah. Sentimental time of the year, isn’t it.
Paul Makin Why would you – why would that break you up? Obviously something was pretty close to you back in Ireland to do with that.
Man 3 Oh, shut up. Christmas – the poem is something unbelievable always. Cuts me up a little bit. I’m sure you can understand that.
Paul Makin I can understand it and I can see your eyes getting a little watery as I speak to you. I don’t want to upset you. But from what you’ve told me, you don’t like it to happen.
Man 3 Say a couple of prayers on Christmas Day and go back to the flagon and, uh…
Man 4 Back to the flagon. Sounds good, doesn’t it.
Paul Makin So you say a couple of prayers on Christmas Day. What sort of prayers would you say?
Man 3 Oh, the rosary, a couple of things like that.
Paul Makin You remember the rosary?
Man 3 The rosary? Yeah.
Paul Makin How’s it go?
Man 3 Well, that’d be the Glorious Mysteries.
Man 5 Do you know that one?
Man 6 Glorious what?
Man 3 Mysteries.
Man 7 Oh, yeah. No.
Man 6 How about Doris Day?
Man 7 Oh, she was beautiful. Doris Day.
Man 6 I can imagine what (inaudible) would be singing. “I’ve got my tweeds for you, a-ra-pa-pum-pum.
Man 5 I went to see my daughter the other day. She’s 28.
Man 6 Yeah, well, mine’s only 3 years of age.
Man 7 Your daughter is?
Man 5 I said, 'I’ve got nothing to give you.’ You know what she said to me? 'You’re the best present I’ve had all day.’ She said – she said to me…
Man 7 Oh, beautiful, yes.
Man 5 That was the present, me. Just – she got a handful of presents and she said, 'You’re the best present I’ve had all day’, and I thought of her on 19 November. It was her birthday. She knows I’m an alci. For me to think it was her birthday, to her, that was a good present to her, that a dickhead like me…
Man 7 Did you turn up sober?
Man 5 Yeah, course I did.
Man 7 Goodo.