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1-7 of 7
- A surprising and uplifting coming-of-age movie following the young female...and male athletes of Team Ireland to intimately explore questions of gender, strength, performance, sexuality and what it's like growing up in the world today.
- In 1984 a tiny anonymous Tipperary village was thrust in to the world's spotlight when US President Ronald Reagan arrived to visit his ancestral home. It was said that Ballyporeen would never be the same again...
- The story of Ireland's best loved foods.
- In 1997 two record shop employees, frustrated with the lack of available vinyl records & inspired by the music being created all around Ireland, decided to open a small independent record shop in Dublin. Over the course of the next 13 years Road Records became a much-loved fixture in Dublin & gained the attention & trust of the Irish & international music scene, helping many artists to find their feet and grow.
- In their sixties seven unlikely sages have decided to learn how to swim. Taking themselves out of their comfort zone, they reveal what it is that drives them to keep striving for more, for survival, understanding, belonging and for purpose. Bobbing up and down in the water, they offer their observations on how they've changed over the years both physically and mentally. The wisdom of these straight talking ladies juxtaposed with visually arresting underwater imagery elevates the world of a swimming pool and the banality of learning to swim to the beauty of a quotidian plenty. Learning to swim is often perceived as a small victory but for these women it is much more than that, it is freedom.
- Observational documentary following a crucial season in the lives of the perennial underdogs of Dublin GAA, the Dublin Senior Camogie team.
- 20 Harelawn Grove, Clondalkin, Dublin was the Doyle family home. In 2007 the house was sold, 8 years after the death of their mother, an alcoholic. In the time between their mother's death and their father leaving, the house became the only icon of security Tanya, her 3 sisters and her brother could depend on. After making the decision to sell the house, and in the days before vacating, the filmmaker brought each family member to the house to tell their own story. In a brave and personal way, this autobiographical documentary explores how themes of alcoholism, abandonment, grief, identity, money and security weave into the tapestry of a family dynamic.