Wednesday, 29 October 2025

October 30th  2025

Bugonia
Deeper
Happyend
Journey Home: David Gulpilil

Two feature films and two excellent documentaries grace our screens this week. Greek auteur Lanthimos is back with a stunning new film, the Japanese film  Happyend is highly original, while the thrills and terror of cave-diving featue in the doco Deeper, and the funeral of our beloved David Gulpilil gives a rare insight into Yolgnu culture. 

Bugonia
Dir: Yorgos Lanthimos
© Universal - funny and disturbing with
top-notch performances
Teddy (Jesse Plemons) is knee deep in conspiracy theories, believing that aliens from the Andromeda galaxy are here and are out to destroy planet Earth. Along with his none-too-smart cousin Don (Aidan Delbis), he plans to kidnap Michelle Fuller (Emma Stone), the highpowered CEO of a pharmaceutical company, convinced she is one of the aliens. To say too much more plot-wise would be to give away too much. Based upon the Korean film Save the Green Planet, t
his extraordinary film can be interpreted on many levels. It is biting as a commentary upon modern day corporate gobbledy-gook  and manipulative speak, as epitomised by Michelle. It is an even more chilling look at the rabbit hole down which many people today have gone - believing in all manner of conspiracies, and following through to commit criminal acts, believing them to be for a valid reason. It also mercilessly condemns what humans have done to the planet, taking us on that path from the tranquil opening scenes of bees, with their vital importance explained.  Bugonia walks a delicate fine line between satire, humour, fantasy, whip-smart dialogue, tension and gore. Lanthimos favorites Plemons and Stone give career best performances as two characters so opposite in style and nature. Their debates and physical confrontations are mesmerising. Settings, color pallettes and clever camera angles all heighten the effects of both humour and drama, which constantly play off each other. W
ith a couple of amazing twists to blow viewers' minds at the end, this is a film to relish for its imaginative, funny and shocking take on so many of today's most disturbing issues.
4.5 - wholeheartedly recommended

Deeper
Dir: Jennifer Peedom
© Garage - bravery or lunacy? Cave-diving
taken to a new level
No-one can forget the extraordinary rescue of 13 people from a flooded Thai cave in mid 2018. Nor the fact that an Australian anaesthetist Dr Richard "Harry" Harris was largely responsible for the amazing success of that mission. Now this film dedicates itself to that man, and his quest to dive 230 meters into a cave known as the Pearce Resurgence in New Zealand. With his buddy Craig Challen (also pivotal in the Thai cave rescue), they prepare for a dive that requires inventing a totally new breathing system involving hydrogen tanks. For me the film felt like a horrifying edge-of-the-seat thriller, so tense and claustrophobic did I find the setting, and so oppressive the suits they were kitted out in. But it is also about one man's quest to prove something to himself (God knows why - he already proved himself a hero!) Director Peedom is known for films that follow people doing challenging things (Mountain, Sherpa), and here she captures beautifully just what it means to put your life on the line to pursue an obsessive quest. As a real-life thriler, this is a winner. 
3.5 - well recommended

Happyend
Dir: Neo Sora
© Plainwater Films - a very different take on
graduating high-school in authoritarian Tokyo
A highly-awarded film, especially in Asian festivals, Happyend is set in a slighly futuristic Tokyo. Best friends Yuta (Hayato Kurihara) and Kou (Yukito Hadaka) are rebellious, share a love of music, and are about to graduate high school. When they pull a prank on the principal, the school ends up installing a surveillance system. Their extended group of friends and school community end up with divergent views on the system, and society in general, which starts to fracture the harmony of the friendships. At the same time Tokyo is under constant threat of earthquake, and experiencing an increasingly oppressive policing system. Director Sora manages to strike a lovely balance between adolescent drama, social commentary and slightly futuristic tale. The actors playing all the students capture perfectly that state of adolescence that is on the cusp of adulthood, and the friendships all feel very believable. There is subtle humor in the portrayal of the school's authoritarianism, and the fact that the students feel compelled to stand up to it brings in a sense of hope for the future. With a lovely soundtrack backing it, this is a surprisingly complex and engaging coming of age story.
4 - highly recommended

Journey Home
Dir: Maggie Miles, Trisha Morton-Thomas
Length: 88 mins
Locations: Cameo, Nova, Classic and select Palace Cinemas
© Madman - David Gulpilil's journey to his
final resting place - amazing insight into
Yolgnu culture
David Gulpilil is an iconic name in the pantheon of Aussie actors. He started his career in 1971 as a teenage boy in Walkabout, having been discovered in his homeland of Arnhem Land by director Nicolas Roeg, scouting for a dancer and actor.  After an incredible career of nearly 20 films to his name, David died in 2021. He had asked his family to bury him on his homeland, near the remote community of Gupulul. This meant a 4000 km journey, with extraordinary logistical challenges. This film chronicles that journey, as David's body is driven, flown, helicoptered and driven clear across the country, while his family faces the same challenges, including navigating crocodile-infested rivers and trekking days on foot. Beside the logistics of this final journey, the film highlights in depth the complexity and importance of traditional Yolgnu culture to David and his vast extended family. Viewers get a rare insight into the beautiful ceremonies of song and dance that accompany the days-long funeral ritual, and we learn about songlines and mythology, all complemented by a lovely soundtrack. Allan Collins cinematography lights up the screen, reflecting the vastness and beauty of remote Arnhem Land, counterbalanced with many close-up shots and interviews with people from family and local clans. This is a precious and privileged insight into a man who walked between two worlds, and into his spiritual world and the Homeland where he is finally laid to rest. A moving, enlightening and important film. 
4 - highly recommended

Thursday, 23 October 2025

October 24th  2025

Irish Film Festival - this weekend only in Melbourne
Familiar Touch
Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere
National Theatre Live: Mrs Warren's Profession

An excellent weekend for great films. From the intimate story of the challenges of aging, to a searing look at the creative process of an iconic musician, to a wonderful rendition of theatre on film, there's plenty to enjoy! 

Reminder: the Irish Film Festival is on this weekend in Melbourne. It's well worth catching. If you didn't already make plans for it, revisit my review from a couple of weeks ago:

Familiar Touch
Dir: Sarah Friedland
© Potential - delicate and heartbreaking -
how to cope with a new life in old age
Ruth (Kathleen Chalfant) is 80 and still living by herself, but small, once familiar activities are becoming challenging. She is unable to recognise her son Steve (
H Jon Benjamin), mistaking him for her date. After a last meal together at home, Steve delivers her to an assisted living home, one she had chosen some time before. Initially Ruth finds herself adrift, then gradually settles in to the routine, finding warmth and friendship amongst the staff there. The subject of ageing and dementia is often a disturbing one, and something society easily turns away from. But this gentle and quite sublime film puts a compassionate spin on the story of a woman who refuses to be defined by what is happening to her. Chalfant's astonishing performance embodies both the witty, clever, charming Ruth she once was, and the now often confused and troubled woman she is becoming, but still with a strong sense of self.  Director Friedland manages to inject warmth and humor into the sadness we inevitably feel for someone whose mind is betraying them. Many of the staff and residents are playing themselves, but notable are nurse Vanessa (Carolyn Mitchell) and wellness director Brian (Andy McQueen), whose many heart-breaking yet uplifting scenes with Ruth are memorable. This small but utterly relevant film is deserving of the 11 wins to its name, incuding best debut film at Venice Film Festival.
4.5 - wholeheartedly recommended

Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere
Dir: Scott Cooper
© 20th Century Fox - White captures the 
essence of the Boss
Being a huge fan of Jeremy Allen White in the series The Bear, I couldn't wait to see what he would do with the role of Bruce Springsteen. I'm not disappointed, in fact I'm blown away by his performance, which appears to inhabit the singer, not simply impersonate him. This is very much the story of the journey, and agonies, of a songwriter, not merely a by-the-numbers biopic of a famous person. The film alternates time frame, revisiting Bruce's childhood in Nebraska, in the late '50s, with a loving mother and a drunken bullying father (Stephen Graham). The "current day" is 1982, when Bruce is writing the songs for his album Nebraska, inspired by his troubled childhood, and also recording Born to Run, the song that propelled him to worldwide stardom. There are several excellent reneactments of concerts, with sweat-riddled bravura performances (and White doing his own singing!), scenes of in-studio recording sessions,  along with many moments of tortured introspection, capturing Bruce's intense need to express himself with this album, not merely create hits to please the record company. Jeremy Strong as Bruce's manager Jon Landau  - a true friend who understands the singer's need to express himself - 
is equally compelling in his role. It's a sensitive protrayal of deep male bonding. When it comes to Bruce's relationship with girlfriend Fay (Odessa Young) and her young daughter, things get a bit formulaic, with a few too many tropes, but aside from that minor criticism, the film pays worthy tribute to one of the great modern singer-songwriters, giving us a deeply authentic and moving insight into his demons, and his genius.
4 - highly recommended

National Theatre Live: Mrs. Warren's Profession
Dir: Dominic Cooke
Length: 120 mins
Limited sessions over weekend - check Palace site, Classic, and Sun Yarraville for session times
© Sharmill - new lfe and relevance in an old play
with stunning mother/daughter performances
For 16 years now National Theatre Live has been filming theatrical productions, featuring the cream of British acting talent, and giving audiences a new up-close and personal experience, via film, of those actor's performances. So, comments upon these films are in many ways more about the performances and staging than about film per se. George Bernard Shaw wrote this play in 1893, yet amazingly it still feels very relevant today. Vivie Warren (Bessie Carter) is a young women striving for independence, and aiming to move into the field of actuarial mathematics. She has a reunion with her estranged mother Mrs Warren (Imelda Staunton), and gradually some home truths abut Mrs Warren's past life surface. I'll avoid spoilers, but let's just say the story has much to say abut the role of women, men's expectations of women, societal attitudes to sex work, and the expectations a mother and daughter have of each other. Beautifully staged initially in a minimalistic garden setting, then indoors, this features stand-out performances from Carter and Staunton (a real mother-daughter team). All the men acquit themselves wonderfully too - a real role-call of engaging characters from rich financial backers, to a dubious reverend, and a couple of potential suitors for Vivie. Watching Staunton is a master-class in acting, and I found myself totally captured and impressed by this excellent film.
4 - highly recommended

Monday, 20 October 2025

October 21st 2025

JIFF - Jewish International Film Festival
Among Neighbors
Avenue of the Giants
Bad Shabbos
Claude Lelouch, la vie en mieux
Come Closer
The Eichmann Trial
Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire
Holding Liat
Outsider. Freud
The Property
Riefenstahl
Soda
The World Will Tremble

A special edition for a wonderful festival!  Time to plan what you will see over the next month. 

Jewish International Film Festival
Now until November 26th
Classic Elsternwick, Cameo Belgrave, Lido Hawthorn 
For all you need to know, visit www.jiff.com.au

As always JIFF is the biggest selection of Jewish-themed films in Australia, featuring more than 50 films from around the world. Powerful documentaries focus upon such iconic Jewish figures as Freud, Eli Wiesel, Claude Lelouche and more. Israeli films that have won awards at many festivals world-wide abound, along with films featuring Yiddish culture (including Yiddish horror shorts!) And of course there are many films (narrative and documentary) offering new perspectives on the Holocaust, including a new digital print of the epic Shoah. That's only a taster of a festival that always gives movie-goers the chance to immerse in and learn about the Jewish experience. Here's a selection I've previewed. All excellent!

Among Neighbors: Imagine surving the horrors of a concentration camp, only to be murdered by your neighbors once the war is over. This is the dark secret that director Yoav Potash reveals in this compelling film. 
An elderly gentile woman, Pelagia, talks of her experience as a witness to the Nazi atrocities in Poland, and of her love for a Jewish boy, Janek, whose fate she never knew. They had lived in the town of Gniewoszów where Jews and Catholics once co-existed in relative harmony but the war brought all the simmering anti-Semitism to the surface. The film seamlessly blends archival footage, interviews, and beautiful animations that represent a child's memories. The larger horrors and the more intimate tragedies weave well together. 

Avenue of the Giants: Herbert Heller grew up in Prague, the son of a loving, optimistic father who never believed things would get as bad as they did after the Nazis invaded. His entire family ended up in Auschwitz, with Herbert's parents and siblings killed. Fifty years later, Herbert has still never told his story to anyone, including his family. When in hospital, he connects with Abby, a troubled young woman with her own traumas, and the two open up to each other. The time frame then toggles between Herbert's recounted memories and the present day. What's not to love about a gentle story of an unexpected intergenerational friendship, especially when it is true? Beautifully scripted and acted, the film is, despite the trauma both main characters have experienced, strangely uplifting. 

Bad Shabbos: Need a good laugh after all the serious films? This is the one to see! Harking back to the old days of semi-farce, and with Woody Allenesque overtones, this is a wonderful, whacky black comedy. David and fiance Meg are anticipating Shabbos dinner with his parents. Meg is undergoing conversion to Judaism, and her Catholic parents are coming to meet David's family. An unfortunate incident results in a dead body in the bathroom, leading to a series of madcap ploys to cover-up the situation. The film sports a host of well-known faces, and a hilarious turn from rapper Cliff Smith as the doorman with a solution to everything. Everything is laced with archetypal Jewish humor, making for a fast-paced, totally enjoyable and crowd-pleasing film. 

Claude Lelouch, la vie en mieux: Part of a Jewish Algerian family, four-year-old, Claude was hidden by his mother in a Parisian cinema to avoid being rounded up by the Nazis. At that age film not only saved his life, but would become his life. In 1966 he won the Palme D'Or and an Oscar for A Man and a Woman, and went to make more than fifty more films. This engaging documentary gets deeply into the mind of a filmmaker - featuring the man himself talking of his life, his philosophies on film, and the highs and lows of his frenetic career.  The doco also features interviews with several actors who have been in his films over the years, as well as clips of the making of many of Lelouch's films. As an insight into the passion and obsession of a filmmaker, this is worth seeing, especially for cinephiles. 

Come Closer:
 This very modern narrative looks at loss, grief and friendship from the viewpoint of two young woman who were close to the same young man. Nat is killed in an accident in the opening scenes. His sister Eden is wild with grief, and then discovers that Nat had a secret girlfriend, Maya, who he had never revealed to his friends or family. As Maya and Eden draw closer it must be asked if this is a true love connection, or something borne only out of shared grief and the desire to keep Nat's memory alive. The lead actresses are impressive, and with its fresh vibrant script the film feels very authentic. It won Best Film, Director and Lead Actress at the Israeli Oscars in 2024. 

The Eichmann Trial: Director Elliott Levitt has been an editor for most of his film career, until now, where he directs this confronting documentary, constructed entirely from archival footage, with not a word of voice-over. That's what makes this such a brilliant and compelling documentary. Because Eichmann's trial was broadcast worldwide for four months, there are countless hours of footage in many languages. Levitt assembles selected pieces of this, so that we feel we are watching the trial take place in real time, with courtroom excerpts, newsreports, interviews and more. The many close ups of Eichmann in his glass booth are confronting, while the entire documentary is a rare insight into a legal trial, with its pervasive issue of personal culpabiliy versus "just following orders". Thought-provoking and horrifically mesmerising. 

Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire: Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 for his tireless campaigining against racism, violence and oppression. His 1960 autobiographical book Night was a seminal text, recounting his experiences as a teenage survivor of Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Now the life of a very private man is portrayed in this excellent doco, using extensive archival footage and many interviews with the man himself, at various stages in his life. Much of the narrative is portrayed through powerful expressionistic black and white paintings. This is yet another vitally important film that bears first-hand witness to atrocities, coming from the burning passion and commitment of an unforgettable man.  

Holding Liat: When the horrific events of October 7th occured, director Brandon Kramer made a quick decision to chronicle the events by following the family of his American-Israeli friend Liat, who had been kidnapped from Kibbutz Oz by Hamas, 
along with her husband Aviv. This confronting and deeply affecting documentary brings a perspective and deep compassion to the horrific events. We follow Liat's family, especially her father, and their efforts to convince the US government to put pressure on Hamas to release their daughter. Combining political perspective with deeply intimate, open and personal drama, this is an important and eye-opening film. 

Outsider. Freud: At a mere 66 minutes, this terrific doco manages to pack in plenty of information about the world's most famous psychiatrist. Combining  creative animation sequences, readings from Freud's letters, and many interviews with contemporary psychoanalysts, the film gives an excellent insight into the man and his theories. It also examines how his growing up as a Jew 
in Austria as Hitler came to power affected his thinking and theories. 

The Property: Nominated for four awards at the Israeli Oscars, this Israeli/Polish co-production, is a delight, tackling a serious theme with a light touch and a hefty dose of romance. Regina (
Rivka Michaeli), now 83, travels to Poland, hoping to reclaim a property that was seized from her family during World War II. Her travelling companion is her granddaughter Mika. Michaeli is an iconic figure in the Israeli theatrical scene, and she brings a heart-breaking charm to the old woman who is really seeking to connect with Roman, the love of her life from her youth. Romance enters Mika's life unexpectedly in the form of a Gentile boy, Tomas, who is a guide for Holocaust tours of Warsaw.  Every aspect of the film balances out beautifully - humor and pathos, the mystery of the property, the revelations of Regina's past, the lovely relationship between grandmother and granddaughter and the uneasy relationship of modern Poland with its Jewish history. Fresh and engaging, authentically scripted, this is a treat to watch.

Riefenstahl: This remarkable documentary  features a woman whose middle name is surely "controversy". Leni Riefenstahl started life as a  performer and actress who then went into directing, allying herself with the Nazi regime for whom she made one of its best-known propaganda films, Triumph of the Will, followed by Olympia. The two-hour doco is based upon films, letters, recordings and photos from Riefenstahl's estate. In the many old TV interviews used in this film, it's amazing to note how she always denies having had close ties to the Nazi regime, yet so much other evidence points otherwise. The interweaving of all the material with the commentary makes for a totally thought-provoking and revelatory film, in which we must ask ourselves whether Riefenstahl's gifts as a filmmaker (yep, she was good!) can ever begin to counterbalance the evil of the people for whom she filmed. The filmmaker Andres Veiel doesn't pass judgment, but gives his subject enough rope to hang herself.  

Soda: Israel in the 1950s was home to many Holocaust survivors. This feature narrative, inspired by the story of the director's grandparents, tells of one such man, Shalom (played by Lior Raz of Fauda fame), who lives in a closeknit community, and is attracted by a beautiful new arrival, Eva. Shalom and his wife Ghita had been partisans during the war, hiding and fighting in the forest. Now other community members recognise Eva and denounce her as having been a Kapo in a concentration camp. So begins a story of guilt, recriminations, and intergenerational trauma, as Shalom's daughter Esti is affected by what is going on around her. Nominated for several awards by the Israeli Film Academy, this is strong filmmaking that feels disturbingly real. It nicely balances romance with themes that are a constant in so many lives, still today. 

The World Will Tremble
: Films about the death camps abound, but this true story is a real stand-out. Michael Podchlebnik and Solomon Wiener were gravediggers at the horrific Polish death camp Chelmno, where Nazis first trialled mass extermination, forcing prisoners into trucks then gassing them and dumping the bodies in mass graves. The two men hatch a daring escape plan, as they are determined to get the message out to the world, exposing what the Germans were really doing to the Jews. Harrowing is the only word that comes to mind for this movie - it's really hard to watch, but it is so well shot, magnificently acted, and as much as any movie can immerse you in the horrors of a death camp, this one manages to do it. It's the sort of film that must be seen to remind us of what hate and prejudice lead to.  

JIFF is, as always, wholeheartedly recommended


Wednesday, 8 October 2025

October 9th 2025

Sovereign (streaming on digital platforms)
The Lost City of Melbourne (streaming on Netflix)
Irish Film Festival - Sydney this weekend (9-11 Oct), Melbourne 23-26 Oct

I've missed a few of the latest releases, but things come so quickly to streaming these days, one can usually catch up. However, the many festivals we are lucky to have afford an opportunity to catch films that may never come to cinemas or streaming, so I feel most fortunate to see some real gems. One small and short  festival with such gems is the Irish Film Festival. Sydneysiders can catch it this weekend, and Melbournites can check it out and prepare for it in two weekends' time. 

Sovereign
Dir: Christian Swegel
Length: 100 mins
Available to buy or rent on digital platforms: Apple, Prime, YouTube, Google, Fetch
© Rialto - a most timely true story of 
a man and his son caught up in the 
"sovereign citizen" rabbit hole
Jerry Kane (Nick Offerman) is out of work, and in arrears on his house payments, bringing on foreclosure. He is a single father and home-schooler to teenage son Joe (Jacob Tremblay). Jerry is becoming more and more enmeshed in the "sovereign citizen" ideology, in which people believe they are not subject to government laws and any authority. He tries to inculcate his son with the philosophy, but Joe is starting to question things. Father and son tour the country giving talks to like-minded people, training them in how to get out of debt by employing the quasi-legalese speak of the movement. But as Jerry goes progressively down the rabbit-hole, he ends up in confrontation with the police and things turn tragic. I'm puzzled as to why this fine film, based on true events,
 isn't getting a cinematic release. It is so prescient, especially considering the recent events in Porepunkah, Victoria. It is a salutory commentary on the dangers of conspiracy theories and radical beliefs. At its heart Sovereign also has a powerful and moving father son story, with another father-son pair featuring in the narrative. Dennis Quaid plays police officer John Bouchardt whose son Adam has recently graduated from police college. While Adam is a gentle soul, we also are privy to the tough police training that sometimes leads to deadly interactions between police and citizens. Offerman is scarily compelling as a loving but disturbed father, Tremblay exceptional as Joe, and with its strong themes and tense psychological drama and action, this is an impressive film.
4 - highly recommended

The Lost City of Melbourne
Dir: Gus Berger
Length: 80 mins
Streaming on Netflix (2022)
© Madman / Netflix - time changes so
much - and not always for the better
Anyone of my age who grew up in Melbourne will remember the sad and sorry decades from the 50s to the 70s, when huge signs boasted "Whelan the Wrecker is Here". It was a time when countless glorious old buildings were bulldozed, starting in 1956 when the Olympic Games came to Melbourne and the authorities wanted to showcase a "modern" city. Fortunately filmmaker Gus Berger loves the city enough to put it up on the big screen, in all its glory, before the annihilation began. Featuring fabulous archival images and footage, the film highlights a time in the 1850s when Melbourne was the world's fastest growing city. It then traces the wanton destruction of so many beautiful buildings, with historians and even members of the Whelan family giving their perspective. As a tribute, the doco is  mesmerising; surprising is the emotional impact the film had on me. And so I cried at this film, but also accepted Gus's optimistic "glass half full" approach, that we are still fortunate to have  a few of the grand old edifices left - the Exhibition Buildings and such wonderful movie houses as the Regent, the Astor, the Forum and the Sun, along with pockets of the city here and there that remain, thanks to recent attitudes towards heritage and preservation. 
I believe cities are only as glorious as their history, and the relentless push to update (including the demolition of mid-century housing that goes on today), can only impoverish a city, so let's hope this marvellous doco helps to drive the lesson home.
4 - highly recommended

Irish Film Festival
Australia-wide 9 Oct - 10 November
Sydney 9-12 October, Melbourne 23-26 October (Palace Kino)
For all states, film synopses, visit https://irishfilmfestival.com.au/

With 16 films to choose from, this Festival showcases the vibrancy of today's Irish film industry. As well as documentaries, dramas, comedies, and thrillers, there is plenty to enchant music fans. Here's a chance to see some excellent movies that will possibly not find a mainstream release. Great to hear the Irish Gaelic language being used in quite a few of the films too! 

Keoghan and Abbott  - generations 
at loggerheads
Bring Them Down
: On a remote rural farm in Ireland life is bleak, and made bleaker by what happens in the opening scene: Michael (Christopher Abbott) drives recklessly, killing his mother and injuring his girlfriend Caroline who later marries neighbor Gary. Their son Jack is played by the always-excellent Barry Keoghan. Michael cares for his obnoxous infirm father Ray (Colm Meaney), who endlessly harangues him. As the film progresses, neighborly relations deteriorate. When Michael's sheep are found mutilated these resentments reach boiling point. The film is a dark and broody psychological thriller, made all the more tense by the percussive soundtrack, and the dark and ominous settings, both in the windswept Irish hills and often shot at night. It can also be rather disturbing with the level of implied animal cruelty. However, with strong scripting, important themes and an excellent cast, the film is a worthy recipient of the awards it already has, and deserves a wider release.

Fidel Ghorm: (The Blue Fiddle). Winner of the Best Debut Irish Feature, this is the heart-warming story of eleven-year-old Molly,  an aspiring violin student, who is learning from her father. But when the family is involved in a car accident, her dad falls into a coma, and Molly's little brother Jack refuses to speak another word. Molly becomes convinced that if she can win the All-Ireland Music Championship her father will wake from his coma. In the nursing home where her Dad is cared for is an old man Malachy, who plays a blue fiddle, and takes Molly under his wing, teaching her how to "feel the music".  Totally in the Gaelic language, the film features winning performances from Edith Lawlor as Molly and Barry McGovern as Malachy. It is guaranteed to bring a tear to your eye, as you revel in the gorgeous Irish fiddle music, and a story of hope love and family. (Breaking news: the film has just won the European Children's Film Award in Germany!)

David Keenan - Words on Canvas: Many of us may not know of this musician in Australia, but the documentary is an insightful portrait of what it means to be just that - a singer/songwriter. Moving away from his first musical outings with a rock band, Keenan explains how he wanted to return to a more emotional and truthful expression of himself. As he describes his journey and his process, it becomes a story that many musicians will be able to relate to. The doco also features some beautifully creative cinematography, in parts a bit like a music video clip, and of course a great selection of Keenan's music and reflective lyrics. 

Chasing the Light: In 1973 Peter Cornish bought land and set up a Buddhist retreat on the Atlantic coast of County Cork. People flocked from all over Europe and Ireland to immerse themselves in tranquility, Buddhist teachings, and the majestic coastline.  Some years later the centre, called Dzogchen Beara, employed a Tibetan lama, Sogyal Rinpoche, as their spiritual leader. This engaging, visually stunning doco tells the story of Peter, the tragic death of his wife, and also the scandal that then enveloped the centre when Rinpoche was accused of sexually abusing some of his followers. With a mix of archival footage and present-day interviews, the film blends nicely one man's personal story, that of a wider spiritual community, and the endless human contradiction of the good and bad within us all. 
The Irish Film Festival comes highly recommended!