Tag: irish film

  • Alfonso Films is the all-female production company that’s smashing the glass ceiling

    Alfonso Films is the all-female production company that’s smashing the glass ceiling

    Alfonso Films – Jo Halpin (left), Claire Byrne (centre) and Emma Wall (right) make up the tenacious multi-talented team.

    Until recently, it was commonplace to see women exclusively in acting roles, with very few able to break the glass ceiling into the male-dominated roles of writing, directing, and producing.

    Thankfully, the representation of women in these roles is growing, and Alfonso Films is a prime example. 

    Alfonso films is run by three women: producer Jo Halpin, director Claire Byrne and writer Emma Wall. They have been working together since 2017 on a variety of short films and are now in the development stage of their debut feature.

    Rather than a conscious decision to form the group, Jo Halpin gives me the impression that it fell together through happy circumstances.

    “We went to this mixer I think it was in maybe 2016 or 2017, it was to give you funding to make your idea, your short idea or whatever, and what they did was everyone had to hold up a sign and say what you were, a writer, a director producer or whatever. They wanted people to team up,” Halpin tells me.

    Byrne and Wall had already been familiar, and Halpin and Wall knew each other from university, so the three got chatting.

    “Emma had an idea that she was going to write, Claire’s prerogative was to direct, and so I kind of landed in the role of producer,” Halpin says.

    While they were unsuccessful in acquiring funding for their idea at the mixer, the team knew they were onto a good thing.

    Over the next few months, they went on to hold fundraising campaigns, events, pub quizzes and online crowdfunding.

    “It was brilliant because [hosting the events] got the three of us working together for months, by the time we went to make the film we were already so close,” Byrne tells me. 

    Eventually getting their film over the line, the team now had a hunger to keep the group going.

    “It just snowballed into ‘we’re addicted now, let’s make another one’, we made a couple of short films, music videos and then we started submitting applications to bigger stuff, and then stuff started going to festivals,” says Halpin.

    Their debut short Spent, screened at over 20 festivals worldwide and was winner of Women In TV & Film Ireland’s short of the year.

    It wasn’t until the inception of their latest short film PAT when the team transitioned into a limited company. 

    Incredibly, this transition was made possible due to an initiative set up by the dating app Bumble.

    In 2018, Bumble announced they would be moving into the world of film by introducing their own funding scheme aimed toward UK and Irish based female filmmakers: Bumble Presents… The Female Film Force.

    The initiative intended to give five female filmmakers across the UK and Ireland £20,000 (€22,500) to help finance their projects.

    This is when Emma Wall wrote the script for PAT and the team submitted it to Bumble.

    PAT, the story of an elderly Dingle woman and her relationship with her New York based son, connected from 3000 miles away by the village’s only telephone, is said to have blown the judges away, securing the grant. 

    To accept the funding however it was not enough to be an ambitious team of budding filmmakers, they needed to be a limited trading company – and so, Alfonso Films was born.

    “When you’re a limited company, you feel like you can’t give up now”

    Jo Halpin

    PAT went on to win Best Short at the Chicago Irish Film Festival 2020, as well as being nominated for Best Short at the Irish Film Festival London 2019.

    Wall (left), Halpin (centre) photographed on set with actor Roseleen Lenehan playing the titular PAT. Image courtesy of Alfonso Films

    “Especially in the last year we’ve really gone and grown in our own practices,” Byrne explains, telling me that the three women have spent 2020 focussing on their individual careers due to both the pandemic and new opportunities presenting themselves.

    While directing other projects outside of Alfonso, Byrne also does work on the post-production side of the industry as an editor.

    While Wall is holding down a day-job for casting company Spotlight.

    Halpin has worked as an assistant director on big-budget productions like Ridley Scott’s latest project and upcoming Apple TV sci-fi series – all while completing the advanced producing postgraduate course at TU Dublin.

    “I think at the moment we’re gearing up to kind of move forward together and we’re writing our first feature,” Wall tells me, explaining that individual success has not quelled their desires to push Alfonso films to the next level. 

    “It feels like the next natural step for us, it doesn’t feel massively daunting. I think we know we can do it and do it well,” she continues.

    “When you’re a limited company, you feel like you can’t give up now,” says Halpin.

    The process for acquiring the funding for a feature film is an arduous task: the team will have to submit proposed budgets, look books, treatments, a synopsis, and a vision for sales.

    Even after this, it is difficult to stand out from the crowd, even with high quality material – but being an all-female company could give them an edge.

    While historically the percentages of people in roles like producer, writer and director have been overwhelmingly male, now more women than ever before are securing and excelling in these positions.

    Organizations like Screen Ireland are now consciously striving toward a 50/50 gender balance.

    “It definitely helps when you put an application in and it says this is from a female, it feels exciting, it feels like loads more female stories are being told,” Halpin says.

    While it is still a male dominated industry and there is still massive room for change, the struggles of women in the industry over the past few decades has helped pave the way for a young batch of highly skilled, highly trained and educated female filmmakers.

    Byrne operates the camera on set in picturesque Kerry coast. Image courtesy of Alfonso Films

    “I think I’ve benefited from being a woman,” Byrne says. “It’s the time that I’m coming up at the moment. It does help get your name out there when there’s all these incentives.”

    “Irish women in the industry have built a great community who are supportive but also shining a light on women coming though,” Wall tells me. “There’s a sense of community and a sense that women are now having the same opportunities, but that’s only because of incredible work women have done before us in this industry.”

    At home and across the world, female filmmakers are beginning to break through within the industry and gain recognition not just as great female filmmakers, but as great filmmakers in their own right.

    And at Alfonso Films, there’s the feeling that things are only getting started.

  • Green Screen: The impact of the pandemic on the Irish Film Industry

    Green Screen: The impact of the pandemic on the Irish Film Industry

    Daithi Ó’Cinnéide on camera and in his element. Image courtesy of Daithi Ó’Cinnéide

    The year 2020 has provided highs and lows for the Irish film industry, and 2021 is already calling into question the future of our domestic productions.

    This time last year it seemed Ireland was reaching new heights in the domestic film and television industries. Ridley Scott had begun shooting his next blockbuster with Matt Damon – who was spotted ‘slumming it’ in Dalkey – and Normal People was hitting screens worldwide, with Paul Mescal engrossing audiences in O’Neill’s shorts.

    Like everything else, the Irish entertainment industry came to a crashing halt in March when Covid-19 struck.

    The production hiatus, which at the time of the first lockdown was indefinite, meant that up to 12,000 jobs in Ireland were put on hold and some were gone for good.

    Grip assistant Michael Nardone was hit hard by this hiatus.

    “Everything seemed to be going great, I was hopping from project to project, then like most people I’m sitting at home wondering what to do,” said Nardone.

    “Everything seemed to be going great, I was hopping from project to project, then like most people I’m sitting at home wondering what to do”

    Micheal Nardone

    Nardone has worked as a part of the crew in television series like Vikings, Dublin Murders, and Normal People. He had just begun exploring a new avenue, working with some fellow crew members on their own short film, when suddenly everything changed.

    “It was all out the window really, and without the backing that the big productions have, it seemed like it might never happen.”

    Nardone packed his bags for New Zealand.

    “I had been thinking about going for a long time, but I always had a reason to stay [in Ireland].”

    Productions had also been halted in Auckland, which gave him the time and opportunity to apply for work on bigger projects: “All the big productions were miles behind schedule, they were ramping up everything, preparing for reopening.”

    He is currently working on a new series for Amazon and has a full schedule right up to 2022.  

    “It’s mad hearing stories from back home, it feels like the whole pandemic has come and gone here.”

    One project, Paperboy, an independent feature film set in Belfast during the Troubles, was to begin filming in September.

    The project had attracted stars Bridget Moynahan (I Robot) and Colm Meaney (Law Abiding Citizen, The Snapper), with Donald Petrie (Mystic Pizza) attached to direct.

    Producer Kevin Murphy had spent the best part of two years trying to get the film made.

    Unfortunately, the lockdown proved too strenuous an obstacle and the project has since ceased indefinitely.

    “We are not doing much at the moment,” Murphy said in relation to production.

    An uncertain future has proved detrimental to independent filmmaking in Ireland. Filmmaker’s reliance on procuring funding from multiple sources is unstable in a time when producers and companies are keen to watch their expenditure.

    This is something that organizations like Screen Ireland and Screen Producers Ireland were aware of from the beginning.

    Screen Ireland acted quickly, first in making sure professionals were still getting paid – repurposing funding to support writers, producers and directors. 

    Screen Ireland and The Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht have implemented funding initiatives to cope with the expanding crews and assisting in the hiring of “Covid Departments” working on set.

    The Covid Department monitors the sets to make sure people comply with rules like wearing masks and social distancing.

    “It’s mad hearing stories from back home, it feels like the whole pandemic has come and gone here”

    Nardone

    This has helped to keep bigger budget films operating in the country and it was these initiatives that allowed assistant director, Daithi Ó’Cinnéide to get back to work by late august and stay there until very recently.

    “The film industry seems to follow the construction industry, if they stay open, we stay open.”

    The diligence of these newly-proposed crews working in Covid departments has proven the real trick in allowing the productions to carry on while most other professions remain at home.

    The introduction of these protocols has helped to keep the industry running as smoothly as possible. However, at the drop of a hat operations can be shut down.

    “At the moment, I had work on another TV series coming up, 12 weeks work, but that seems to be pushed back until April, just with everything going on.”

    While film crews on the other side of the world get back to full swing, the future of the Irish film industry is called into question again. It may be awhile before independent Irish films grace our screens again, but the work of the governing bodies and industry professionals may provide a light at the end of the tunnel.

  • Another Stunning Irish Film for 2015: Patrick’s Day

    Another Stunning Irish Film for 2015: Patrick’s Day

    Terry McMahon's film, Patrick's Day.
    Terry McMahon’s film, Patrick’s Day.

    Terry McMahon has brought Irish audiences a stunning piece of work that continues to push the boundaries for Irish cinema. The piece comes after a hugely successful 2014 for Irish film with the likes of John Michael McDonagh’s dark comedy, Calvary, and Lenny Abrahamson’s  quirky hit, Frank. The pressure is on this year for films that live up to such predecessors.

    Patrick’s Day certainly sets the tone for Irish film in 2015 and grabs your attention from the first scene. Irish actor Moe Dunford gives a stunning and heartbreaking performance as schizophrenic 26-year-old Patrick Fitzgerald. Patrick’s world takes on new meaning when he meets a depressed air hostess Karen Prescott (Catherine Walker), but his mother Kerry Fox refuses to loosen the tight grip she has on her adult son.

    Following the development of Patrick and his first real experience of love, sex and independence, his controlling and protective mother does everything in her power to break up the union, with the help of a jaded garda, John Freeman (Philip Jackson). Dunford’s portrayal of  a naïve and troubled young man living in a mental institution is truly breathtaking and devastating. The supporting cast adds to the rawness of the film.

    The striking cinematography by Michael Lavelle captures the essence of the story and brings it to life. Patrick’s journey is one that will make you laugh, cry and inspire you. Patrick’s Day brings mental health issues to the forefront and does so in a respectful, realistic and highly emotive manner. The message of this film certainly comes to life.

    It is safe to say the bar has been raised for 2015 Irish film and I urge you all to see this spectacular film this year.

    By Rachael Hussey