Brain on Fire

#IrishFilm: Watch the first trailer for Gerard Barrett’s Brain on Fire

The first trailer has been released for Gerard Barrett’s Irish/Canadian co-production Brain on Fire, which premiered at last year’s Toronto International Film Festival.

Barrett (Glassland, Pilgrim Hill) adapted the screenplay for the film, which is based on a memoir by Susannah Cahalan and follows a rising journalist who mysteriously starts having seizures and hearing voices. As weeks go by, she moves inexplicably from violence to catatonia — but a last-minute intervention by one doctor finally gives her a diagnosis and hope to rebuild her life.

Brain on Fire
Chloë Grace Moretz and Richard Armitage in Brain on Fire

Chloë Grace Moretz plays the lead, with The Hobbit‘s Richard Armitage and The Matrix‘s Carrie-Anne Moss as her parents, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl‘s Thomas Mann as her boyfriend, and Gone Girl‘s Tyler Perry as her boss.

Filming took place in Vancouver with Sing Street cinematographer Yaron Orbach as DoP. Big Eyes editor JC Bond and Barrett oversaw the post-production process, and The Maze Runner‘s John Paesano is providing the score. Brain On Fire is produced by Charlize Theron, Beth Kono, and A.J. Dix for Denver & Delilah Films, Rob Merilees and Lindsay Macadam for Foundation Features, and Gabriel and Daniel Hammond for Broad Green Pictures. Barrett is a co-producer through Blank Page Production. Funding comes from the Irish Film Board/Bord Scannán na hÉireann, Mister Smith, Broad Green Pictures, and Screen Scene.

Brain on Fire will be released by Netflix this year. The streaming service purchased the worldwide rights to the film after TIFF.


brain-on-fire-stylisedBrain on Fire

Director: Gerard Barrett
Writer: Gerard Barrett (Based on memoir by Susannah Cahalan)
Producers: A.J. Dix, Beth Kono, Rob Merilees, Lindsay Macadam, Charlize Theron
Cinematographer: Yaron Orbach

Actors: Chloë Grace Moretz, Jenny Slate, Thomas Mann, Tyler Perry, Carrie-Anne Moss, Richard Armitage

Susannah Cahalan, a journalist at the New York Post, has serious health issues, including seizures and hearing voices. Over the following weeks her condition worsens and she quickly goes from violence to catatonia. After numerous misdiagnoses and a hospitalization, a doctor gives her a diagnosis with the hope she can rebuild her life. One day Cahalan wakes up in the hospital with no memory at all of her previous month.