Yesterday I was recalling the late Albert Reynolds's involvement with the film industry back in the day... The Film Production Industry in Ireland, Report to the Taoiseach, Mr. Albert Reynolds, T.D. [Dec. 1992]. Then today I remembered these excerpts from accounts for the Film Board's 'hiatus years', 1987-1992.
I wonder what such a list would look like today?
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Sunday, April 6, 2014
The Irish Frock & Tuxedo Awards (IFTAs)
I wasn't at last night's Irish Frock & Tuxedo Awards, although I have been an attendee in the past when asked to do jury duty on a few occasions (Best Short Frock, best new talent in a Frock or Tuxedo etc).
Nor did I see the televised (as live) version of the show on RTÉ last night. If Twitterland is any measure then it was not a success. At all. Much talk of inadequate stage management and a complete disregard among chattering attendees for what was happening on the stage.
This should not come as a surprise. It's been a feature of the awards ceremony that has been becoming more evident each year.
But don't forget, these are people who know how to be quiet on set. In fact not just quiet, but absolutely and completely silent. No rustling papers, no stepping on a creaky part of the stage, no whispering to the crew or cast member beside you. If a 2nd AD says "Quiet on set!" even the mightiest ego will be stopped in their tracks, silenced.
So, what's going on? I believe it's a demonstration of complete disrespect for and lack of faith in the whole IFTA process. It's not about the presenters, award winners or fellow professionals, it's an unspoken determination to turn a charade into a knees-up and thumb the nose at the organisers.
If the event is to survive this year's nadir the 'Academy' will have to take ownership of the entire process and lay down some standards of transparency and accountability. Otherwise the IFTAs party is over.
(another view... Irish Times 7 April)
Nor did I see the televised (as live) version of the show on RTÉ last night. If Twitterland is any measure then it was not a success. At all. Much talk of inadequate stage management and a complete disregard among chattering attendees for what was happening on the stage.
This should not come as a surprise. It's been a feature of the awards ceremony that has been becoming more evident each year.
But don't forget, these are people who know how to be quiet on set. In fact not just quiet, but absolutely and completely silent. No rustling papers, no stepping on a creaky part of the stage, no whispering to the crew or cast member beside you. If a 2nd AD says "Quiet on set!" even the mightiest ego will be stopped in their tracks, silenced.
So, what's going on? I believe it's a demonstration of complete disrespect for and lack of faith in the whole IFTA process. It's not about the presenters, award winners or fellow professionals, it's an unspoken determination to turn a charade into a knees-up and thumb the nose at the organisers.
If the event is to survive this year's nadir the 'Academy' will have to take ownership of the entire process and lay down some standards of transparency and accountability. Otherwise the IFTAs party is over.
(another view... Irish Times 7 April)
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Required reading...
Some required reading...
Irish Film and TV Review 2013.
Introduction
Roddy Flynn, Tony Tracy
And separately (but related)...
Irish Film and TV Review 2013.
Introduction
Roddy Flynn, Tony Tracy
The Concrete Manifestations of Emotional Eternity in Brendan Muldowney’s Love Eternal (2013)
Barry Monaghan
Pilgrim Hill (Gerard Barrett 2012)
Laura Canning
The Last Days on Mars (Ruari Robinson, 2013)
Roddy Flynn
Amber, Screenworks and the production of culture
Dennis Murphy
I wanna destroy the passer by: Nihilism, Narcissism and Authority in Love/Hate Series Four
Angela Nagle
New Voices in Irish Experimental Cinema
Donal Foreman
And separately (but related)...
The dispensation for those foreign 'Artistes' eligible for payment from the new tax credit being brought in next year - Finance (No. 2) Act 2013 - see Section 25 'Film Withholding Tax'
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Figures
Always handy to get a look at what's happening to cinema audiences at home and elsewhere in Europe. This chart was prepared by the European Audiovisual Observatory for a press conference at the Berlinale. Their regular complete overview of 2013 will be presented at Cannes in May.
I did enquire what 'NC' denotes (as regards Ireland and Belgium) and was told "NC signifies 'not communicated' ie we didn't get these figures." Further information on numbers of national titles etc. can be found here.
As regards the current state of Irish cinemagoing I suspect admission numbers have been sliding for the last few years. It's difficult to be certain of this because several contributory factors have impacted the collection of Ireland-only data. Theres the growth in importance of new entrants in the UK distribution market; the increasing number of non-film screenings (opera, theatre etc) with figures hard if not impossible to get (while these aren't movies they do have an important bearing on the market); and the knowledge that a lot of non-mainstream, one-off screenings are taking place in arts venues, 'pop-up' venues, and at festivals for all of which there is little or no data.
Another factor in terms of evaluating market trends here is that it is nigh impossible to obtain reliable figures for the newer services competing for the cinema audience. Even where films have been released at the same time theatrically and online (VOD), and/or on a platform such as Sky Box Office, the figures have never been published. Figures for VOD services in Ireland are effectively below the radar and I would guess that adequate service provision and take up is largely limited to densely populated urban areas. And the traditional feature film DVD rental/purchase market seems to have collapsed except
for the Christmas trade and cheap back-catalogue titles but, again, figures for the Irish market are very hard to come by.
Anecdotally there is at the very least a plateau in total BO revenues here since 2011 - I would guess there's actually been a drop of about 10% in the gross before tweaking for price changes and inflation. One
would also have to look at the demographics - who is going the cinema, and when - to see if there the nature of the admissions (and not just the over-all numbers) is having an effect on total box office earnings.
Also, since 2008, there has been significant unemployment and/or emigration in the 18-25 age cohort which may be a factor in any fall in admission numbers.
There are those in the industry who are, in my opinion, too ready to blame illegal downloading for a drop-off in Irish cinema attendance. The truth is that Ireland is behind significantly on high-speed broadband roll-out and that the infrastructure is not yet capable of supporting anything like universal legal (VOD) or illegal downloading.
I did enquire what 'NC' denotes (as regards Ireland and Belgium) and was told "NC signifies 'not communicated' ie we didn't get these figures." Further information on numbers of national titles etc. can be found here.
As regards the current state of Irish cinemagoing I suspect admission numbers have been sliding for the last few years. It's difficult to be certain of this because several contributory factors have impacted the collection of Ireland-only data. Theres the growth in importance of new entrants in the UK distribution market; the increasing number of non-film screenings (opera, theatre etc) with figures hard if not impossible to get (while these aren't movies they do have an important bearing on the market); and the knowledge that a lot of non-mainstream, one-off screenings are taking place in arts venues, 'pop-up' venues, and at festivals for all of which there is little or no data.
Another factor in terms of evaluating market trends here is that it is nigh impossible to obtain reliable figures for the newer services competing for the cinema audience. Even where films have been released at the same time theatrically and online (VOD), and/or on a platform such as Sky Box Office, the figures have never been published. Figures for VOD services in Ireland are effectively below the radar and I would guess that adequate service provision and take up is largely limited to densely populated urban areas. And the traditional feature film DVD rental/purchase market seems to have collapsed except
for the Christmas trade and cheap back-catalogue titles but, again, figures for the Irish market are very hard to come by.
Anecdotally there is at the very least a plateau in total BO revenues here since 2011 - I would guess there's actually been a drop of about 10% in the gross before tweaking for price changes and inflation. One
would also have to look at the demographics - who is going the cinema, and when - to see if there the nature of the admissions (and not just the over-all numbers) is having an effect on total box office earnings.
Also, since 2008, there has been significant unemployment and/or emigration in the 18-25 age cohort which may be a factor in any fall in admission numbers.
There are those in the industry who are, in my opinion, too ready to blame illegal downloading for a drop-off in Irish cinema attendance. The truth is that Ireland is behind significantly on high-speed broadband roll-out and that the infrastructure is not yet capable of supporting anything like universal legal (VOD) or illegal downloading.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
'Is glas iad na cnoic i bhfad uainn'
This is a talk I gave during the year at the 'Dialogues Through Literature' event in Ballinamore, Co. Leitrim. If you can stick with it you'll get to the film bit eventually. The talk is intended to question of the drift in our policy assumptions, and the loss of audiences, rather than as a call for some sort of prescriptive, chauvinistic approach.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Local / Place
When I was contacted about taking part in this event I had no idea that it had been
initiated by and was being held at the local GAA club here in Ballinamore. I’m not really a GAA man, being originally
from Limerick – heartland of Munster rugby
– and having spent most of my formative years and working life in Dublin. I wondered, thinking about
‘the local’ and ‘place’, if there might be a bigger divide to cross than the
Shannon at Drumsna when I made my way here from home amongst ‘the
Rossies’ in north Roscommon.
I may have had
this anxiety because we live at a time in Ireland – in the realm of what
passes for public discourse, at any rate – when what separates us is amplified to
such an extent that it suppresses what unites us. Divisions are fomented between urban and
rural, between old and young, between ‘up there’ and ‘down here’, and, most of
all - between ‘them’ and ‘us’, however and by whom ‘them’ and ‘us’ may be
defined.
Perhaps this is part
of a national preoccupation with ‘who’ we are and ‘where’ we come
from. But if this is how we ground our
sense of ourselves then the danger is that it all too easily may become a barrier
between us.
I live now in
the townland of Cuilmore. Our nearest
neighbours live in the townland of Creta, on the other side of a hedge and
ditch that almost certainly predate our house, itself around 200 years
old. So, although our neighbours live less
than 150 metres away they have a different address. They are from a different
place.
That said, we
have more in common with our neighbours than the boundary between us. Just as my having been raised and schooled at
the heart of Dublin 4 might be, as they say, ‘a long way from here’, I can at
least tell you that I grew up on the same road and went to the same national
school as the captain of the 1994 Leitrim Connacht
Championship-winning football team. He
grew up in number 22, I grew up in number 46, albeit fifteen years ahead of
him.
It is, I think we
can all agree, a small country. Once
while on holiday in my teens, slouching along on my own into the centre of Limerick city, I was stopped by a complete stranger on O’Connell Avenue. “You must be one of the Sheehys,” he
said. “Which are you?” Although I saw myself as a Dubliner on
holiday it seems I was in fact in my native place.
But others knew
that better than I did myself. Or had they the right to claim me? As a callow teenager I felt I’d been ‘placed’
in the sense of being identified or labeled – a feeling that at my age was more
than semantically close to feeling being ‘put in my place’, or to the social
convention of ‘knowing one’s place’.
If we do have at
once both a simple and a complicated relationship with place in real life, then
our relationship with our own place as it is imagined is arguably even more
complex.
The first film I
saw as a child that showed me the place I was living was a film called Rooney which I saw on black and white
television sometime towards the end of the 1960s. It’s a story about the love life and travails
of a Dublin
bin-man, filmed in 1957. It even includes
footage of the 1957 All-Ireland Hurling Final between Kilkenny and Waterford because the lead
character wins an all-Ireland medal during the course of the film.
Not only was Rooney filmed on roads like the one I
lived on, but the bin truck in the film was the same as the one that collected
our rubbish every Monday. And, to top it
all, one of the bin crew hefting the bins was played by the actor Noel Purcell
– you might have seen him in the 1962 Mutiny
on the Bounty with Marlon Brando – who lived just up the road from our
house. It amazed me then that a film
could be made about people and places that were so familiar to me in real life.
Two decades
later, and now writing about film, I tracked down Rooney again and made an unexpected discovery. It wasn’t really a Dublin, or even an Irish story at all. It was based on a book with the same title by
Catherine Cookson, published in 1956, and set in the writer’s birthplace, South
Shields, Newcastle-on-Tyne in north east England. Needless to say, Catherine Cookson’s
protagonist didn’t go anywhere near Croke
Park, let alone win an all-Ireland
hurling medal.
So where did
this leave me? I felt somehow that I had
been duped – that this Irish film wasn’t in fact an Irish film at all. But then isn’t it the function of every
fiction film to dupe its audience, to have them believe that something that is
not true, might be true? To make a place
– be it our own place, or a foreign place, or a futuristic place, or an alien place
– believable? To construct a fiction so
powerful that the screen, or the page, cannot contain it?
The answers here
are undoubtedly Yes, Yes and Yes, but there remains a compelling, if
recessive anxiety involving the soul and the captured image when the story
being told, the pictures that represent us, is close to the place we know as
home. The functional reasons for Rooney
being filmed in Ireland and
adapted as an Irish story are fairly simple – there was a financial inducement
for British film producers to come to Ireland to make films in the late
1950s and early 1960s, just as there is today.
But the result then as now was a number of Irish films that were Irish
in every respect except for their authorship.
There is a
memorable line at the bottom of the first page of the first chapter of Dermot
Healy’s memoir, ‘The Bend for Home’. He writes, “It’s in a neighbour’s house fiction begins.” It is a great line, and all the better for
being open to various interpretations. One
interpretation being perhaps that our neighbours make up stories about us. However, if it is our lives that give rise to our neighbours’ fictions, whether
they are 150 metres away, or several thousand miles away, might we begin to
think they were bad neighbours? Might we
begin to assert our right to tell our own stories? Might we in turn make up stories about them,
or might we begin to tell stories for them rather than for ourselves?
This year a film, ‘Jimmy’s Hall’, is being
made about one of Leitrim’s historical figures, the politically radical James
Gralton. He built a dance hall at
Effernagh, not far from Carrick-on-Shannon, in the 1920s, and challenged the
religious and political authorities of the day.
The hall was shot at and later firebombed and razed to the ground and, although
an Irish citizen, Gralton was deported in 1932. He died a doorman in Manhattan in 1945.
The film is directed by Ken Loach – who made ‘The
Wind that Shakes the Barley’ in County
Cork some years back –
and it will be produced by the same companies responsible for that film. Like as not this will be identified as an
Irish film, a film very much of Leitrim and dramatising a historically
important story. However, and without
doubting the bona fides of all
involved, I can’t help but feel again that recessive anxiety involving the soul
and the captured image.
Is this a form
of cultural sleight of hand or are all our stories fair game for whoever wants
to discover them or make them up? Will
Ken Loach’s version of historical Leitrim be any different, any less accurate
or any less sensitive to local nuance than that created by an Irish director?
If an Irish
story is essentially a product that may be told by anyone, then is it
any wonder that films like ‘Leap Year’
get made, or the earlier ‘Waking Ned’
which didn’t even film in Ireland, they went the whole hog and faked it on the
Isle of Man.
More seriously,
one has to wonder why historical Irish stories like the Gralton project are not
being brought to production by Irish writers and directors. Why is it that they seem mostly to be engaged
in telling stories that have much of the particularity of their origins reduced
so that they become ersatz Anglo-American films. And do I sense also that many Irish writers
of genre fiction are now writing stories ‘for the international market’ that
are set outside Ireland?
If this is a
trend, then should we be worried that our collective imagination is losing the
spark it found in the traditional geographical space we think of as ‘local’? That it has exchanged the universality of what
is local and slipped or shifted into a globalised cultural ‘place’ where the
reference points are those places to which we have for so long escaped in our
imaginations that they now seem as much or more like home than home itself?
This might
explain how it is that Irish films are pretty much foreign to Irish cinema
audiences. New York and
LA are more familiar than, say, Galway on an
Irish cinema screen. It is as if
the metaphorical mirror that we hold up to life twists uncontrollably in our
hands, allowing us to see in it only the oblique reflection of others, and less
and less often ourselves.
We are left then
with Wilde’s dictum, that "Life imitates art far more than art imitates
Life". Unfortunately the art we imitate
in our lives in this age seems increasingly less likely to be our own art.
It has to be said,
too, that the creative process does not take place in a vacuum, it takes place
in a context that has a bearing not just on the author’s subject material but
that also influences the commercial decision-making of intermediary businesses between
authors in all mediums and their audiences. This is a world in which
consolidation, contraction and new economies of scale make it harder and
harder for niche films and niche books to find audiences. Or, even when
those audiences can be discovered, there may be insufficient
financial return to the writers and film makers to enable them to
continue writing and making films.
Right now it is difficult
now to see how things will work out. We have to hope that new
and distinctive voices and willing audiences will be able to find each other,
even as this dramatic change is underway. Better still that we find new, active and participatory ways in which authors
and audiences can encounter and relate to each other ‘in the moment’, ‘live’, at local events
such as this, and in places such as this.
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