Gaza depicts a people plagued by conflict but not defined by it and as the camera journeys through the physically broken and battered landscape, the cast of characters speak for themselves. Through them we gain a nuanced understanding of what life is really like for its citizens and by extension, grow and foster a rare familiarity and affinity with this truly unique place.
A cinematic yet intimate and complex portrait of Dolours Price, militant IRA activist, hunger striker and dissident Republican. Two years before she died gave a filmed interview on condition that it would not be broadcast in her lifetime. Now for the first time her story can be told in full and entirely in her own words.
Katie follows Irish champion boxer Katie Taylor as she tries to rekindle her career after a year of setbacks.
Thomas Reid lives a solitary life on the fringes of mainstream society. Beyond the walls of his 17th century farm looms a vast American factory - vital to the national economy but long an unsettling presence in Thomas's life. Suspicious of intrusion, Thomas does not welcome the State agents who come to forcibly purchase his house and lands. He vows to resist.
A film about rural life in the midst of great local, national and global change. It is 2010 and a new motorway ploughs through a community in the west of Ireland. Over the next 7 years the film weaves an epic tapestry of reflections from bog-lands, fire-sides, race tracks and hurling pitches; all while the country is hit by an economic crisis and the climate crisis looms.
An Irish filmmaker grapples with the legacy of his estranged father, the late American documentarian Arthur MacCaig, through MacCaig's decades-spanning archive of the conflict in Northern Ireland. Drawing on over 30 years of unique and never-seen-before imagery, The Image You Missed is a documentary essay film that weaves together a history of the Northern Irish Troubles with the story of a son's search for his father. In the process, the film creates a candid encounter between two filmmakers born into different political moments, revealing their contrasting experiences of Irish nationalism, the role of images in social struggle, and the competing claims of personal and political responsibility.