The Secret of Kells

The Secret of Kells

Movie |

Celtic Mythology | Mythology

  • Duration: 1h 15min
  • Music: Bruno Coulais,Slim Pezin,Fabien Devillers,Alexandre Fleurant,Dee Armstrong
  • Award(s): Audience 2009 (Won)
    Oscar 2010 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: Plankton: The Movie, Dog Man
  • Story:
    Adventure awaits 12 year old Brendan who must fight Vikings and a serpent god to find a crystal and complete the legendary Book of Kells. In order to finish Brother Aiden's book, Brendan must overcome his deepest fears on a secret quest that will take him beyond the abbey walls and into the enchanted forest where dangerous mythical creatures hide. Will Brendan succeed in his quest?
    Full Story
7.5/10
IMDb

The Secret of Kells - Where to Stream?

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

The Secret Of Kells - Crew

The Secret of Kells - IMAGE GALLERY

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
Adventure awaits 12 year old Brendan who must fight Vikings and a serpent god to find a crystal and complete the legendary Book of Kells. In order to finish Brother Aiden's book, Brendan must overcome his deepest fears on a secret quest that will take him beyond the abbey walls and into the enchanted forest where dangerous mythical creatures hide. Will Brendan succeed in his quest?
Ratings

7.5/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Won
Audience Award

Feature | 2009 | Tomm

2009 | Tomm

Best Irish Film | 2009 | Tomm

IFTA Award

Best Animation | 2010 | Tomm

BIFF Award

Best Animated Film | 2010 | Tomm

Show more
Nominations
Oscar Award

Best Animated Feature Film of the Year | 2010 | Tomm

European Film Award

European Animated Feature Film | 2009 | Tomm

Chlotrudis Award

Best Production Design | 2011

IFTA Award

Best Film | 2010 | Tomm

Annie Award

Best Animated Feature | 2010

Cristal Award

Best Feature | 2009 | Nora

DFCC Award

Best Irish Film | 2009

BOX OFFICE

Budget 8,000,000 USD

Box Office Collection 1,803,412 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

Aisling, the fairy girl, is named after a 17th-century genre of Irish poetry. Aisling is Irish for "dream vision." In an Aisling poem, the poet would describe receiving a vision of the spirit of Ireland, who appeared to him in the form of a beautiful young woman. The female spirit of Ireland would inspire the poet to write about his homeland, and serve as his guide in creating the poem (much as Aisling serves as Brendan's guide in the film).

Although the characters, fantasy elements, and plot specifics of this movie are fictional, there is a real Book of Kells, an illuminated, heavily illustrated rendering of the Four Gospels of the Christian Bible, that dates from the Early Medieval period (probably the early Eighth Century) in Ireland. The best historical and archaeological evidence suggests that, starting shortly after it was finished, the book was moved several times (including, as depicted in the movie, during an Viking invasion) and lost for various periods. It has been housed at the library of Trinity College, Dublin, since the 17th century, and is considered perhaps the single most valuable cultural artifact of Irish history that has ever been discovered. Some of the design concepts for the movie echo aspects of the original Book of Kells; for instance, the shapes of the repeated tree patterns as Brendan enters the forest are quite similar to the arrangement and shapes of the columns and arches in the "Eusebian Canons, Folio 5R" page of the real book.

Pangur Ban is named for a cat who appears in an 8th Century Old Irish poem written by a monk to his pet cat. Aidan (Mick Lally) can be heard reciting a condensed rendition of the poem in modern Irish in the credits.

The oak "berries" Brendan collects are actually oak tree marble galls, formed by a gall wasp laying eggs in the tree, which are then used to make iron gall ink. Traces of iron gall ink have been found on the Dead Sea Scrolls and the "lost" Book of Judas.

Brendan is 12, and the prequel comic included in the Blu-Ray version indicates that he was rescued from the Vikings as an infant by his uncle Cellach in 790 AD. The movie therefore takes place mostly in 802 AD. This was the actual date of a real-life Viking raid on Iona, the event that drove Aidan and the book to Kells for safety.

Popular Dialogues

"[first lines] Aisling: I have lived through many ages, through the eyes of salmon, deer, and wolf. I have seen the Northmen invading Ireland, destroying all in search of gold. I've seen suffering in the darkness. Yet I have seen beauty thrive in the most fragile of places. I have seen the book. The book that turned darkness into light."

"Brendan: You can't find out everything from books, you know. Aidan: I think I read that once."