Fintan Connolly is an Irish film director, screenwriter and producer living in Dublin. [1] Much of his earlier work was in television documentaries which explored social issues in Ireland. He has also made films, including Flick (2000), Trouble with Sex (2005), Eliot & Me (2012) and Barber (2023) through his production company Fubar Films. [2]
Connolly directed the short film Angel on the Rocks in 1985. He co-produced, with Helen Fahy, the short movie Horse (1993) directed by Kevin Liddy. [2] This film won an award for "Best European Short" at the Premiers Plan Festival in Angers, France in 1994. [3] Working with co-director Hilary Dully, he worked on several television documentaries for RTÉ, Channel 4 and TG4. These include Framed! (1987), No Comment (1988), ...and finally France (1988), For Better Or Worse (1989), No Comment II (1991), Notice To Quit (1992, rights of older tenants), 50,000 Secret Journeys (1994, abortion), and Comely Maidens (1995). [4] As a single director, Connolly directed the documentaries Sisters (1998), Priests (1998), Out of Nowhere (2000, asylum seekers), Ainé's Journey (2000) and Singleton (2002). [2] [5]
Connolly made his feature film directorial debut with Flick in 2000 in conjunction with producer Fiona Bergin. [6] The film starred David Murray, Isabelle Menke, David Wilmot, Gerard Mannix Flynn, Catherine Punch and Alan Devlin. [7] [8] [2] Connolly wrote the film's script and it was shot in 18 days with no budget. [9] Flick had its premiere at the Cork Film Festival in October 1999. [10] A reviewer in the Sunday Independent said "In many ways, Fintan Connolly's first film, Flick is a breath of fresh air. We get to see Dublin on the screen – a very contemporary Dublin, too. It's about time. In Flick, there are no horses in lifts. You won't spot the Chieftains playing trad on Moore Street. This is real Dublin – and what first strikes you about the film is that Flick is a love letter to Connolly's native city." [11]
In 2005, Connolly made Trouble with Sex , starring Aidan Gillen and Renée Weldon, [12] for which he received two Irish Film and Television Awards nominations. [13] [14] The film was premiered at the Dublin International Film Festival in February 2005. Trouble with Sex was the second feature created through a director/producer partnership between Fintan Connolly and Fiona Bergin. [13] Connolly told the Galway Advertiser that "only 20 per cent of directors get to make a second feature, so I've been really lucky". [15]
In 2012, Connolly made Eliot & Me , a children's adventure drama, co-written with Fiona Bergin and featuring his daughter Ella. The movie had its world premiere as the opening film at the Film Festival Zlin in May 2012. [16] He also completed a documentary about Aosdána, an affiliation of Irish artists, called The Art Tribe. [17] [18]
He later made observational documentaries for RTÉ’s children's channel RTÉjr, including Zara World (2014), Circus World (TV series), (2016) and All Aboard (TV series) (2018). [19] [20]
His film Barber , with Aidan Gillen, premiered at the 2023 Dublin International Film Festival. [21]
50,000 Secret Journeys , which, along with all Connolly's early documentary work, was co-directed with the documentary filmmaker Hilary Dully, is a film in which three women who had abortions tell their stories intercut with news clips recounting events in a legal struggle between pro and anti abortion campaigners. [22] A decision to pull the film from the RTÉ schedule, on 29 March 1994, provoked strong protest from several film-makers. A statement issued by SIPTU, on behalf of the TV producer/director and director grades, said that it was "a matter of serious concern to TV producers and directors that such a programme should be deemed unsuitable for inclusion in one of RTÉ's main current affairs programmes". An RTÉ spokesperson said the decision had been taken "for internal RTÉ reasons which we don't want to go into". [23] The documentary was ultimately screened on RTÉ on 27 October 1994 and followed by a studio debate on abortion in Ireland chaired by Marian Finucane. [24]
Writing on the release of Connolly's debut film, Flick (2000), Ciaran Carty in the Sunday Tribune said "What's exciting about this new crop of directors is that they've broken away from the preoccupation with theory and ideology that for so long bedeviled Irish independent film-making. They're not interested in using movies as part of an argument about the nature of Irish identity: instead they show Irish life as it is – or was – and let the audience make what they like of it. Their movies are movies, not statements or messages". [25] Michael Dwyer, of the Irish Times , described Flick as "a lean, tightly coiled contemporary drama resourcefully achieved on a remarkably low budget". [26] Pete Walsh, programmer at the Irish Film Institute, wrote that "Connolly's impressive first feature makes a welcome addition to the relatively small band of truly independent low-budget Irish films. Written by Connolly himself, and developed with producer Fiona Bergin, the finished work has a genuinely "indie" feel and a strong sense of its makers' commitment to a vision". [27]
The Sunday Times referred to the films Flick and Trouble with Sex as "Irish noir fiction", saying that "Fintan Connolly's movies [..] depict a thoroughly noir-looking Dublin full of moody shadows and drenched in blue light, but there is no corresponding heart of darkness in the plot". [28] Another reviewer said that Trouble With Sex "vacillates between modes of melodrama and avant-gardism, unsure what kind of film it is". [29]
Of Trouble with Sex, Yvonne Hogan in Irish Independent stated that "The ennui of single thirty somethings in the newly wealthy Ireland is a field ripe for cinematic interrogation and Connolly is to be commended for grappling with it". [30]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Angel on the Rocks | Director, co-writer | 20 minutes short film [31] |
1993 | Horse | Producer | 30 minutes short film [32] |
2000 | Flick (2000 film) | Director, writer | 82 minutes crime drama [33] [34] |
2000 | Country | Associate producer | 92 minutes drama [35] |
2005 | Trouble with Sex | Director, co-writer | 89 minutes drama [36] |
2012 | Eliot & Me | Director, co-writer | 60 minutes drama [37] |
2023 | Barber | Director, co-writer | 90 minutes drama [38] |
The Jacob's Awards were instituted in December 1962 as the first Irish television awards. Later, they were expanded to include radio. The awards were named after their sponsor, W. & R. Jacob & Co. Ltd., a biscuit manufacturer, and recipients were selected by Ireland's national newspaper television and radio critics. Jacob's Award winners were chosen annually until 1993, when the final awards presentation took place.
Cathal O'Shannon was an Irish journalist and television presenter. He was a reporter with The Irish Times, and television reporter/presenter and documentary film maker with RTÉ.
Trouble with Sex is a 2005 Irish drama film set in Dublin and co-written by Catriona McGowan and Fintan Connolly. It stars Aidan Gillen and Renée Weldon, who won an Irish Film and Television Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her performance.
Margo Harkin is an Irish filmmaker. Best known for the drama Hush-a-Bye Baby and the documentary Bloody Sunday: A Derry Diary, Harkin produced the surfing documentary Waveriders in 2008.
The following is a list of events relating to television in Ireland from 2012.
Conor McAnally is an Irish television writer, producer and director. He worked in Ireland up to 1989, moved to London and worked in the United Kingdom until 2004 when he moved to the United States. He is based in Austin, Texas. His productions have won more than 20 awards including 5 British Academy Awards and 3 from the Royal Television Society. He is best known for music and entertainment programs and is an expert in live broadcasts.
Flick is a 2000 Irish film. The plot is centres on a small-time drug dealer as he goes about his business in the bars and clubs of Dublin. The film is written and directed by Fintan Connolly and features David Murray, Isabelle Menke, David Wilmot and Gerard Mannix Flynn.
Eliot & Me is a 2012 Irish drama film. The plot follows the adventures of a young girl trying to find her dog in Dublin. The film is directed by Fintan Connolly and features his then 10-year-old daughter Ella Connolly in the lead role.
When Ali Came to Ireland is a 2012 Irish documentary film directed by Ross Whitaker. It tells the story of how Killorglin-born circus strongman and publican Michael "Butty" Sugrue put up £300,000 and persuaded the renowned American boxing champion Muhammad Ali to make his first visit to Ireland to fight against ex-convict Alvin Lewis in Croke Park, Dublin in 1972.
Fubar Films is an Irish film and television production company based in Dublin, Ireland. Fubar Films has been responsible for the production of Flick, Trouble with Sex, Eliot & Me, and comedy series On the Couch. Key people in the production company include producer Fiona Bergin and director Fintan Connolly.
The Walshes is an Irish comedy television series that was first broadcast on RTÉ One on 6 March and BBC Four on 13 March 2014. The three-part series was written by Graham Linehan and the comedy group Diet of Worms, and is based on the group's 2010 web series The Taste of Home. The show follows the Walshes, a tight-knit family living in the fictional West Dublin suburb of Strollinstown. Diet of Worms portray the family, reprising their roles from the web series.
Paul Mercier is an Irish playwright screenwriter, film and theatre director. Born in Dublin and living in An Cheathrú Rua he was the founder member and Artistic Director of the Passion Machine Theatre Company, and is a Director with Anne Gately of the film production company An Pointe Productions. His work is known for its gritty poetic realism and examination of ordinary, contemporary Irish life.
Neasa Hardiman is an Irish director of both fiction and nonfiction, predominantly known for her television work.
Zara World is an Irish documentary series, produced by Fubar Films and screened on RTÉjr. The series premiered on Monday 13 October 2014. It features a seven-year-old girl called Zara who lives with her family in Dublin city. Filmed over six months, each episode features a small snapshot of Zara's life. The series is produced by Fiona Bergin and filmed and directed by Fintan Connolly.
Circus World is an Irish documentary series, produced by Fubar Films and screened on RTÉjr. The series premiered on Monday 4 July 2016. It follows the adventures of three children as they travel around Ireland with their mum and dad's circus. The series is produced by Fiona Bergin and filmed and directed by Fintan Connolly.
All Aboard is an Irish documentary series, produced by Fubar Films and screened on RTÉjr. The series premiered on Monday 26 March 2018. It follows two sisters and their parents on a barge journey down the Grand Canal from Dublin to Shannon Harbour in Co. Offaly. The series is produced by Fiona Bergin and filmed and directed by Fintan Connolly.
50,000 Secret Journeys is an Irish documentary made by Fintan Connolly and Hilary Dully for RTÉ One in 1994. The documentary comprised interviews with three Irish women about their experiences of abortion. The 25-minute film was interspersed with news archive footage giving historical context to the abortion debate in Ireland.
Barber is a 2023 Irish thriller film starring Aidan Gillen. The film is written by Fiona Bergin and Fintan Connolly, produced by Bergin and directed by Connolly. It premiered at the 2023 Dublin International Film Festival.
Gary Lydon is a British-Irish stage and screen actor from Northolt in England. He is known for playing the Garda Peadar Kearney in The Banshees of Inisherin.