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'Bigger and better': Here's an early look at the 20th Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival

The festival has released its programme of shorts, and some highlights in the lead up to next year.

NEXT YEAR, THE Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival celebrates 20 years – and we have the lowdown on what you can expect from the event.

The festival has just released its programme of shorts, where you can get a look at some of Ireland’s filmmakers of the future.

And it’s also released the highlights for the 2022 festival, which will run from 23 Feb – 6 March next year. Once again, Journal Media is delighted to be a media partner for the festival, which has weathered the storm of Covid-19 and brought brilliant films to audiences over the past two years. 

“We not only survived, but after a challenging and successful 2021, we are back, bigger and better and more determined than ever to deliver a memorable 20th anniversary event,” said Gráinne Humphreys, Festival Director. “Alongside a rich and diverse programme of new Irish and international films we will host a photographic exhibition of previous festival guests, screen previous Audience Award winners and create an interactive map of unique Dublin film locations to visit and explore.”

This year, there’s going to be a combined programme of in-person events and screenings alongside with a selection of films to watch at home – so if you’re not based in Dublin you’ll still get to take part. 

For the festival, actor Ruth Wilson will return to Dublin for the Irish premiere of the psychological thriller True Things, adapted from Deborah Kay Davies’s acclaimed novel. It’s about a bored office worker (played by Wilson) who is sleepwalking through life until a chance encounter with a charismatic stranger (Tom Burke) awakens her. Soon she embarks on an emotionally dangerous journey that begins to consume her.

Also at the festival, acclaimed composer Neil Brand will present an evening of music by legendary comedy duo Laurel and Hardy. It will feature music from their early days through to their silent masterpieces before the arrival of sound. It will also be fully illustrated with stills and clips, and should be a right tonic. 

You Are Not My Mother You Are Not My Mother

There’s been a lot of buzz about Irish director Kate Dolan’s psychological thriller You Are Not My Mother, after its successful debut at the Toronto International Film Festival. It features a host of great actors, including Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival (Virgin Media DIFF) Aer Lingus Discovery Award winner Hazel Doupe (Float Like a Butterfly), and will get its Irish debut at the festival.

Sundance triple award winner HIVE is Virgin Media DIFF’s 2022 Festival Access Tour film. HIVE is a drama based on the true story of Fahrije (Yllka Gashi), who lives in a patriarchal village,  and whose husband went missing during the war in Kosovo. The story follows as she pulls the other widows in her community together to launch a business selling a local food product. HIVE will tour to venues outside Dublin during the Festival, in association with access>Cinema, and with the support of the Arts Council.

Short films

This year, Virgin Media DIFF will have its largest programme to date of short films – 48 shorts across six different screening presentations. It will include highlights from Screen Ireland’s funding schemes, as well as a new selection of some of the best shorts from Glasgow Film Festival.

Among the shorts will be work from Irish directors including Dave Tynan’s (Dublin Oldschool) examination of race in Ireland, The Colour Between; Kelly Campbell’s Dublin story An Encounter, written by Mark O’Halloran (Rialto, Viva) and Rioghnach Ní Ghrioghair’s sonic horror, Don’t Go Where I Can’t Find You.

The programme will also show international shorts from countries as far afield as Qatar, Russia, Brazil, USA, Canada, Turkey, The Netherlands and more. Highlights include Greek American Filmmaker Laki Karavias’ look at race and immigration in Texas, The Night I left America; Hannah Currie’s BAFTA winning That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore, Leonardo Martinelli’s Brazilian musical comedy Neon Phantom, and Eliane Esther Bots award-winning experimental documentary about three interpreters of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, Flow of Words.

Screen Ireland/Fís Éireann once again supports Irish shorts with a curated programme from Screen Ireland’s Focus, Framework and Short Stories funding schemes. And the festival has announced a new partnership with Glasgow Film Festival, Scottish Shorts: Out of the Margins. This will be a mix of fiction and documentary, with a programme combining wider socio-political issues with deeply personal narratives.

“The short film format has always been a vital part of the festival, acting as both a showcase for future talent and as an art form in its own right and we have expanded our line-up to include the wealth of incredible films made under the most difficult of circumstances,” said Gráinne Humphreys.

Ruthless 3 Ruthless still

Here’s the 2022 Virgin Media DIFF shorts programme:

Virgin Media DIFF Shorts #1

  • Harvest – Tristan Heanue, Ireland
  • Libre – Arthur Lopes, Ireland
  • Hairy Monster – Oh Jisook Kim, Korea
  • Mora Mora – Jurga Šeduikytė, Lithuania
  • Store Policy – Sarah Arnold, France
  • Film Found – Claudia Munksgaard-Palmqvist, Denmark
  • Spirit Level – Eoin Heaney, Ireland
  • Motorcyclist’s Happiness Won’t Fit Into His Suit – Gabriel Herrera, Mexico

Virgin Media DIFF Shorts #2

  • Don’t go Where I can’t find you – Rioghnach Ní Ghrioghair, Ireland
  • Broken: A Lockdown Story – TJ O’Grady Peyton, Ireland
  • Birdwatching – Samantha Soule, USA
  • The Night I left America – Laki Karavias, USA
  • Conversations with my Dead Father – Maurice O’Carroll, Ireland
  • Liminal – Dan Ambromovici, Canada
  • Ruthless – Matthew McGuigan, Ireland
  • In Flow of Words – Eliane Esther Bots, Netherlands

Virgin Media DIFF Shorts #3

  • Nothing to Declare – Garret Daly, Ireland
  • Cleaner – Edwin Mullane, Ireland
  • Sucking Diesel – Sam McGrath, Ireland
  • And They Burn in the Sea – Majid Al-Remaihi, Qatar
  • Cuties – Theo W Scott, UK
  • The Passion – Mia Mullarky, Ireland
  • Lessness – Mahdi Safavi, Russia
  • The Colour Between – Dave Tynan, Ireland
  • Hello – Claire Byrne, Ireland

Virgin Media DIFF Shorts #4

  • Neon Phantom- Leonardo Martinelli, Brazil
  • This is Why – Sean Roberts, Ireland
  • Bounce – Alexander Dinelaris & Lloyd Owen, UK
  • Miss Fortunate – Ella Jones, UK
  • Miss D – Paddy Hayes, Ireland
  • Stiletto – Can Merdan Dogan, Turkey
  • Nettle Bush – Francis O’Mahony, Ireland
  • Squish – Xavier Seron, Belgium
  • Sparkle – Ger Walsh, Ireland

Screen Ireland Shorts

  • Bardo – Aisling Conroy, Ireland
  • Signal – Diarmuid Donohoe, Ireland
  • Lady Betty – Paul McGrath, Ireland
  • Momento Mori – Paul O’Flanagan, Ireland
  • Pork – Gareth Lyons, Ireland
  • An Encounter – Kelly Campbell, Ireland
  • If Neon Meets Argon – James Doherty, Ireland
  • Hedy – Andy Clarke, Ireland

Scottish Shorts: Out Of The Margins

  • The Shift – Laura Carreira, Scotland
  • My Name is Anik – Bircan Birol, Scotland
  • That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore – Hannah Currie, Scotland
  • Once Upon A Time in Easterhouse – Paul Cochrane, Scotland
  • Everyman – Jack Goessens, Scotland
  • Expensive Shit – Adura Onashile, Scotland

Over the past 19 years, the Dublin International Film Festival has screened more than 1,600 international films from over 52 countries. It has also hosted over 600 high profile guests, including Al Pacino, Angela Lansbury, Brendan Gleeson, Daniel Day-Lewis, Danny DeVito, and Julie Andrews.

The full festival programme will be revealed on 26 January, and tickets will go on sale from 12 noon that day. All festival screenings and events will adhere to government guidelines and Covid safety regulations.

You can currently buy a Festival Pass for €250, which will give you access to the festival’s regular cinema tickets as well as 20% discount on special presentations. Online 5 x film pass vouchers and 10 x film pass vouchers are also available to purchase at diff.ie

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    Mute Mike Kelly
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:29 PM

    Surly now we need to follow the example of Canada and Germany etc and offer all people under 60 the option of receiving either Pfizer, moderna or j and j instead of AZ . Hopefully this poor woman will pull through

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    Mute Paul Mahony
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    Apr 8th 2021, 10:22 PM

    @Mike Kelly: ( Pfizer & Moderna ) vs ( AstraZeneca)
    Pfizer & Moderna have 95% efficacy + 2nd dose in 4 weeks + more effective on various strains + safer. Whereas AstraZeneca has only 62% efficacy + 2nd dose in 12 weeks + does not cover SA and Brazil strains + less safe.

    When there is an obvious big difference in these 2 vaccines – It seems Pfizer costs more but is also the far better vaccine as per reports. Although some other countries have banned AstraZeneca including UK with restrictions, why is Ireland still sticking with this AstraZeneca vaccine? Why is there such inequality in vaccination rollout and why is Ireland treating some citizens differently? Why are the already vulnerable, high risk & immune suppressed people being given this risky & less effective AstraZeneca vaccine? Can’t understand the logic… As we have waited over 1 year by now, then I would rather wait another few more days and get the safer & more effective Pfizer/Moderna/J&J vaccine.

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    Mute Paul Mahony
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    Apr 8th 2021, 10:32 PM

    @Mike Kelly: Pfizer & Moderna Vs AstraZeneca
    Pfizer & Moderna have 95% efficacy + 2nd dose in 4 weeks + more effective on various strains + safer. Whereas AstraZeneca has only 62% efficacy + 2nd dose in 12 weeks + does not cover SA and Brazil strains + less safe.

    When there is an obvious big difference in these 2 vaccines – It seems Pfizer costs more but is also the far better vaccine as per reports. Although some other countries have banned AstraZeneca including UK with restrictions, why is Ireland still sticking with this AstraZeneca vaccine? Why is there such inequality in vaccination rollout and why is Ireland treating some citizens differently? Why are the already vulnerable, high risk & immune suppressed people being given this risky & less effective AstraZeneca vaccine? Can’t understand the logic… As we have waited over 1 year by now, then I would rather wait another few more days and get the safer & more effective Pfizer/Moderna/J&J vaccine.

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    Mute Niamh Brady
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    Apr 9th 2021, 7:10 AM

    @Paul Mahony: exactly what I’ve been wondering, it’s been about protecting the most vulnerable but not with the most efficient vaccine apparently, hopefully the strains it doesn’t offer protection don’t keep increasing. Basically government willing to risk a few dangerous clots than have Covid figures increase and because of the constant giving out about slow rollout they seem obsessed about the the numbers lately and if that means AZ so be it!

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    Mute Niamh Brady
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:55 PM

    Was reading about it there on a different site and it says she has been in the stroke ward for a week, it was her sister who contacted the paper so otherwise when would the public have been told as they said up to today there was none here.

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    Mute nelliekel
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    Apr 8th 2021, 7:03 PM

    @Niamh Brady: if someone had a reaction to flu jab which also happens would you expect to read it in paper or on news, her sister jumped on the bandwagon and there is not 100% prove she got clot because of vaccine yet

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    Mute Niamh Brady
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    Apr 8th 2021, 7:06 PM

    @nelliekel: She is a healthcare worker, perfectly healthy and was sick since day after getting the jab, I think it’s pretty obvious. Now she can’t return to work for 3 months at least and not be left alone for six weeks as needs observation. 1 case is 1 to many as far as I am concerned. Also don’t presume sister jumping on bandwagon, she just wanted to let people know anonymously as government said no cases reported yet.

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    Mute SquintEastwood
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    Apr 8th 2021, 7:16 PM

    @nelliekel: they could have said she had a blood clot WITH the vaccine or confirmed to have been vaccinated. not FROM the vaccine..that the safe way out

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    Mute John Black
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    Apr 8th 2021, 11:01 PM

    @Niamh Brady: a lot of healthy people get slight flu symptoms from each of the vaccines, it’s quite a leap to go from there to a serious rare blood clot, so no, it’s not really pretty obvious

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    Mute Barry Buckley
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:37 PM

    Hope she makes a full recovery. I am 61 and recovering from cancer and due to get that vaccine on Tuesday so I will follow my doctors advice and the science and go forward with the vaccine.

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    Mute Ci
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    Apr 8th 2021, 7:00 PM

    @Barry Buckley: AZ still recommended for your age group across the world, even where they have restrictions on it.

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    Mute Niamh Brady
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:21 PM

    Hope she is ok, poor woman.

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    Mute Hugo Bugo
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:12 PM

    Blood clots % risk vs 1 to 2% chance of being affected by a flu like virus, everything in life is gambling

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    Mute Ci
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:58 PM

    @Hugo Bugo: It’s not like there’s no other alternatives available. It doesn’t have to be a gamble for those at risk of clots from AZ. Like Germany, Nerherlands, Canada, a decision could be made to give people under 55/60 one of the other vaccines

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    Mute Hans Vos
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:40 PM

    A few countries don’t vaccinate with AZ under 60 anymore. The UK don’t vaccinate under 30 with AZ for the moment.

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    Mute Niamh Brady
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:22 PM

    Hope she is ok, nightmare for the poor woman.

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    Mute karenmaryobrien
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:38 PM

    @Niamh Brady: article says she has been successfully treated and will be discharged in the coming days. Still must have been a nightmare all the same.

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    Mute Suzanne Dorgan
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    Apr 8th 2021, 6:52 PM

    I hope that woman in the Mater recovers well.

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