The Irish Film Institute has announced the launch of its new video-on-demand platform, IFI@Home. The platform, now live at www.ifihome.ie, will make a selection of the IFI’s unique brand of Irish and international programming available to audiences across Ireland for the first time.
The platform launches with the Reel Art Collection, a selection of 20 Irish-made documentaries, funded by the Arts Council, that showcase the immense talent of Irish non-fiction filmmaking. The films, which have premiered at the Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival since 2010, include Tadhg O’Sullivan’s The Great Wall, Claire Dix’s We Are Moving: Memories of Miss Moriarty,David Cairns and Paul Duane’s Natan, and Oonagh Kearney’s Teach Ionadh/Wonder House. Each of the films is available to rent for €3.99 from www.ifihome.ie.
The launch of IFI@Home delivers on a key aspect of our current five-year strategy, to extend the reach of the IFI’s programming beyond our landmark Temple Bar venue to homes across Ireland. This is particularly relevant in these strange times when everyone is engaging with the arts online in far larger numbers than they ever did before COVID-19, and the IFI is delighted to respond to this change. We are particularly proud to launch IFI@Home with the Reel Art Collection, an inspiring, thought-provoking and diverse miscellany of Arts Council-funded documentaries, produced by some of Ireland’s finest filmmaking talent. During this difficult time, the IFI remains committed to supporting filmmakers both at home and abroad, and we look forward to making their work available to as wide an audience as possible through this new platform.’
Ross Keane, Director – IFI
At a time when the role of the artist has never been more vital, the Reel Art Collection examines the critical importance Irish creatives have played in the development of our national identity. Writers are central to a number of the films including Alan Gilsenan’s A Vision: The Life and Death of W.B. Yeats, Dónal Ó Céilleachair and Julius Ziz’s Dreamtime Revisited, and Patrick Jolley’s The Door Ajar, which examines the visit of French poet and theatre director Antonin Artaud to Cork in the 1930s.
Architecture provides the focus for Paul Rowley and Nicky Gogan’s Build Something Modern, Sé Merry Doyle’s Talking to My Father, and Adrian Duncan and Feargal Ward’s Floating Structures; socio-political and historical themes dominate Mark McLoughlin’s Blood Rising, Margo Harkin’s The Far Side of Revenge, and Joe Lawlor and Christine Molloy’s Further Beyond; while music takes centre stage for Claire Dix’s Broken Song and Niall McCann’s The Science of Ghosts, which features singer-songwriter Adrian Crowley.
Not surprisingly, the visual arts provide a focus for many of the films including Conor Horgan’s The Beholder, Sé Merry Doyle’s Jimmy Murakami: Non-Alien, and John Murphy and Traolach Ó Murchú’s Photo City, an exploration of the key role the city of Rochester in upstate New York has played in the development of the art of photography.
The Arts Council is delighted that IFI@Home is launching with the Reel Art Collection. Over the past ten years many of Ireland’s finest film artists have made a Reel Art film, and together their work forms a collection that is unique in its subject range and realisation. Until now it has not been possible to see most of these films following their cinema and festival screenings so it is wonderful that they will have a new life on IFI@Home and that audiences all over Ireland will have access to them.’
Fionnuala Sweeney, Head of Film and Architecture – The Arts Council
Also included in the collection are Rouzbeh Rashidi’s experimental love story Phantom Islands, and Cecily Brennan’s exploration of the ties between creativity and madness, The Devil’s Pool.
The Reel Art Collection is now available from IFI@HOME at www.ifihome.ie.
THE REEL ART COLLECTION – FULL LIST
The Beholder (2010), dir. Conor Horgan
Blood Rising (2013), dir. Mark McLoughlin
Broken Song (2013), dir. Claire Dix
Build Something Modern (2010), dirs. Paul Rowley and Nicky Gogan
The Devil’s Pool (2014), dir. Cecily Brennan
The Door Ajar (2011), dir. Patrick Jolley
Dreamtime Revisited (2012), dirs. Dónal Ó Céilleachair and Julius Ziz
The Far Side of Revenge (2012), dir. Margo Harkin
Floating Structures (2018), dirs. Adrian Duncan and Feargal Ward
Further Beyond (2015), dirs. Joe Lawlor and Christine Molloy
The Great Wall (2014), dir. Tadhg O’Sullivan
Jimmy Murakami: Non Alien (2010), dir. Sé Merry Doyle
Natan (2013), dirs. Paul Duane and David Cairns
Phantom Islands (2018), dir. Rouzbeh Rashidi
Photo City (2017), dirs. John Murphy and Traolach Ó Murchú
The Science of Ghosts (2018), dir. Niall McCann
Talking To My Father (2014), dir. Sé Merry Doyle
Teach Ionadh/Wonder House (2011), dir. Oonagh Kearney
A Vision: The Life and Death of WB Yeats (2013), dir. Alan Gilsenan
We Are Moving – Memories of Miss Moriarty (2016), dir. Claire Dix