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September 21st 2020: The 18th IFI Documentary Festival begins tonight, online nationwide at IFI@Home, with the Irish premiere of Ron Howard’s Rebuilding Paradise. The film, which focuses on the devastating 2018 Camp Fire that almost destroyed the Californian town of Paradise, includes an exclusive virtual Q&A with Oscar winner Howard. Festival films cost just €7.50 each for a three-day rental with great value multi-film packages also available. Full details from www.ifihome.ie.
Following the closure of the IFI in Temple Bar last weekend due to the Level 3 COVID-19 restrictions, the festival has moved online, meaning film fans across the country can now enjoy the best of new Irish and international documentary filmmaking. A number of films in the festival will have filmmaker Q&As included as bonus material.
Irish films to feature as part of this year’s selection include two World Premieres: the Director’s Cut of Gillian Marsh’s charming The Funeral Director, featuring Sligo undertaker David McGowan; and Christopher Kepple’s A Call to Arts, focusing on the life and artistic legacy of artist Helen Hooker and her husband, Irish revolutionary and historian, Ernie O’Malley.
Also showing will be the Irish Premiere of Outcry and Whisper, a new film from directors Trish McAdam, Wen Hai, and Zeng Jinyan, which examines women’s struggles in the private and public spheres in both China and Hong Kong. Pat Collins’s portrait of the renowned American folklorist and ethnologist, Henry Glassie: Field Work, will also screen, as will Gretta Ohle’s Tomorrow is Saturday, an intimate portrait of acclaimed artist Seán Hillen. Dublin-based director Nino Tropiano’s Samira’s Dream follows a young Zanzibari woman whose dreams of becoming a primary school teacher are challenged by wider cultural obligations.
Deirdre Fishel’s Women in Blue focuses on Minneapolis’s first female police chief, Janeé Harteau, as she tries to reform the city’s force. Davy Rothbart’s 17 Blocks follows the life of a family in one of America’s most dangerous neighbourhoods, situated just 17 blocks from the US Capitol, while Elegance Bratton’s Pier Kids centres on a number of transgender people of colour at Christopher Street Pier in New York City.
Maite Alberdi’s The Mole Agent is the charming and irreverent story of an elderly man asked to go undercover in a Chilean nursing home; Benjamin Ree’s The Painter and the Thief examines the unlikely friendship between a Czech artist and the thief who stole two of her paintings; and Gentle Warriors, from director Marija Stonyte, follows three Lithuanian girls who voluntarily enlist in the country’s male-dominated military. Two films, Love Child and Stray, focus on very different experiences of life in Istanbul, one from the standpoint of a migrant couple who find themselves in bureaucratic limbo, and the other from the point of view of three stray dogs wandering the streets for food and shelter.
Elsewhere in the programme, director Ric Burns interviews Oliver Sacks, the late renowned neurologist in Oliver Sacks: His Own Life; Iryna Tsilyk’s turns her camera on a film-obsessed family in Ukraine for The Earth is Blue as an Orange; Réka Szabó’s intensely moving The Euphoria of Being features 90-year-old Holocaust survivor Éva Fahidi as she prepares a dance recital about her life; Martin Vetter goes behind-the-scenes at the World Economic Forum in Davos for The Forum; and Britni Harris’s Goff looks at the oft-forgotten legacy of one of America’s great 20th century architects, Bruce Goff.
The highly anticipated Irish shorts programme on Saturday 26th will feature powerful narratives and revealing film portraits in new work from Fiona Breen, Bryony Dunne, Jamie Goldrick, Paddy Hayes, Cara Holmes, Iseult Howlett, Ross McClean, and Gar O’Rourke; and a panel discussion, Something Old Something New: Use of Archival Extracts in New Work, will explore ethical, legal, artistic, and archival issues facing filmmakers.
Online screenings cost just €7.50 each for a three-day rental; great value multi-film bundles are also available – they can be found at https://www.ifihome.ie/collection/film-packages/. Registrations for the online archive panel are available at www.ifi.ie/docfest.
For more information on interview availability and high-res images, please contact Frances Wilde at the IFI Press Office (01 679 5744) or fwilde@irishfilm.ie.
The IFI is principally funded by the Arts Council. The IFI Documentary Festival is supported by RTÉ Supporting the Arts, Screen Scene, and the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI).
FULL SCHEDULE
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21st 18.30 Opening Film: Rebuilding Paradise + virtual Q&A 20.30 The Earth Is as Blue as an Orange
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22nd 18.00 Gentle Warriors 18.30 A Call To Arts + virtual Q&A
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23rd 18.00 Samira’s Dream + virtual Q&A 18.30 Stray + virtual Q&A
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th 18.00 The Forum 18.00 Goff 20.00 Outcry and Whisper + virtual Q&A 20.30 Love Child + virtual Q&A
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th 15.00 Panel: Something Old, Something New 18.00 Pier Kids + virtual Q&A 18.00 Oliver Sacks: His Own Life + virtual Q&A 20.30 The Painter and the Thief + virtual Q&A
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th 13.00 Irish Shorts Programme 14.30 Women in Blue 16.00 The Funeral Director + virtual Q&A 18.00 Henry Glassie: Field Work 20.30 17 Blocks + virtual Q&A
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27th 14.30 The Euphoria of Being 15.30 Tomorrow is Saturday + virtual Q&A 18.00 The Mole Agent
ANORA 15:30
BIRD 11:10
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL – IFI FAMILY: SAUVAGES 11.00
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: AGATHA AND THE LIMITLESS READINGS 14.10
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: BEING MARIA 15.10
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: JIM’S STORY 17.30
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: MARCELLO MIO 19.50
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: SCÉNARIOS + EXPOSÉ DU FILM ANNONCE DU FILM ‘SCÉNARIO’ 12.10
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL: SOULEYMANE’S STORY 13.00
HOUSEWIFE OF THE YEAR 13:40, 18:20
SMALL THINGS LIKE THESE 16:20, 18:30
SOUNDTRACK TO A COUP D’ETAT 20:10
THE ROOM NEXT DOOR 20:40
The IFI is supported by The Arts Council
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