Docs Ireland 2024 Programme Unveiled

Fri 17th May 2024



Docs Ireland 2024 has unveiled a feast of non-fiction film screenings and events in its festival programme. 

A wide range of topics including feminism, colonialism, music and health will be explored in documentaries showing as part of the festival from 18th to 23rd June.

Docs Ireland 2024 opens on 18th June with the award-winning documentary The Flats directed by Alessandra Celesia. Closing this year’s festival is the extraordinary documentary No Other Land made by a collective of activists as a form of resistance to the ongoing injustices in their region. It follows Palestinian activist Basel Adra resisting the forced displacement of his people in Masafer Yatta in the West Bank.

Alongside the In Conversation with this year’s special guest Asif Kapadia, Docs Ireland boasts a stellar programme of Special Events. On the night of the solstice (21st June), Women Folk will be a beguiling and magical evening, celebrating the often overlooked contribution of women in traditional Irish music. With live singing from Róis, Catriona Gribben and Stephanie Makem, great-granddaughter of Sarah Makem renowned traditional source singer and subject of David Hammond’s film, which will feature at the event in Rosemary St Church.

Docs Ireland will honour the work and life of pioneering broadcaster, documentary filmmaker and musician, David Hammond with an award for Outstanding Contribution to Irish Documentary and showcase some of his most iconic documentary shorts including Dusty Bluebells and The Magic Fiddle.

Throughout the festival, audiences will have an opportunity to hear directly from filmmakers and participants. Roisin Agnew’s The Ban explores the practice of dubbing the voices of IRA leaders on news broadcasts during the Troubles followed by a panel discussion with key participants in the film. A discussion will follow The Black and The Green from prolific documentarian St. Clair Bourne who followed five black civil rights activists on a fact-finding trip to Belfast in the 1980s.

Docs Ireland brings you to the Third Dimension with two screenings of classic documentaries for the first time in 3D in Ireland. Experience unexplored caves in Werner Herzog’s The Cave of Forgotten Dreams and become part of an unforgettable performance with Wim Wenders’ Pina.

Shellshock Music documentaries return this year with the Irish premiere of Toby L’s brand new documentary Blur: To The End, the Irish premiere of Mogwai: If the Stars Had Sound and Gama Bomb: Survival of The Fastest about Northern Irish thrash metal band Gama Bomb.

Docs Ireland’s strongest gaze falls on Irish film and this is exemplified in the annual Pull Focus competition which celebrates excellence in Irish documentary. This year’s stellar lineup includes Alan Gilsenan’s IFTA winning The Days of Trees, One Night on Millstreet (dir Andrew Gallimore) which captures the Celtic Tiger through a historic boxing match, an artist explores his feelings of grief about his mother’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis in Don’t Forget to Remember directed by Ross Killeen, and Burkitt by filmmaker Éanna Mac Cana explores his personal experience of Burkitt’s Lymphoma and the life and work of Irish surgeon Dr Denis Burkitt. Filmmaker Leo Regan draws on years of footage and material to convey the complex life of his good friend Lanre Fehintola in My Friend Lanre, an essay film by Katherine Waugh and Fergus Daly. I See a Darkness explores the historical relationship between photography, cinema and science, in Neasa Ni Chianáin’s The Alexander Complex the bizarre tale of a group of ‘gentlemanly explorers” is unravelled and a historic fraud case collides with immediate mortality in Colm Quinn’s Ransom 79.

Docs Ireland is at the forefront of International documentary presenting some of the best from across the globe. This year’s diverse line-up has everything from a direct challenge to India’s Caste system in The World is Family, to uncovering family secrets in The Taste of Mango, to an exploration of one of the great character actors in Remembering Gene Wilder.

The Maysles Brothers Competition for Observational Documentary rewards the best in observational non-fiction filmmaking from all over the world. Union follows the Amazon Labour Union as they take on one of the biggest corporations in the world, the day-to-day life of a floating asylum is explored in On The Adamant, Bhutanese documentary Agents of Happiness gives an intimate insight into the daily lives of communities in the Himalayas through the eyes of two ‘happiness agents’. With unprecedented access Hollywoodgate follows the Taliban in the immediate aftermath of the US’ pullout from Afghanistan and Flying Hands examines the stigma of disability in a mountain region of Pakistan.

This year’s festival has thrown a spotlight on two countries where documentary excellence is often overlooked on the international stage and is truly at its most urgent. As previously announced, the Focus on Palestine features films, seminars and discussions which are all fundraisers for Medical Aid Palestine. The Focus on Finland brings three world class documentaries directed by women to the forefront; a modern fairytale Once Upon a Time in a Forest directed by Virpi Suutari, Mácchan/Homecoming follows Sámi director Suvi West as she reflects on the collective pain of the Sámi people’s stolen heritage and Finnish Focus wouldn’t be complete without master documentarian Pirjo Honkasalo’s Melancholian 3 Huonetta/3 Rooms of Melancholia, a searing examination of the unrelenting Chechen conflict.

Continually pushing the boundaries of the genre The Zone takes documentary to its limits with a lecture from filmmaker Simon Aeppli, Operation Bogeyman: The Folk Horror Landscape of  1970s Ireland, Home Invasion is an existential musing on the history of the doorbell, Man Ray: Return to Reason the early films of Man Ray with a new soundtrack from Jim Jarmusch and a showcase of moving image art selected by Irish artists collective aemi Back Translation.

Docs Ireland’s commitment to community work and development of the future of documentary in Ireland is exemplified in its Fieldwork strand. With showcases from both Queen’s University Belfast and Ulster University, an exploration of Super 8 film with Brian Henry Martin, a project on Contemporary collecting in Northern Ireland and two brand new Irish language documentaries from TG4.

The festival prides itself in showcasing some of the best new short films in Ireland. This year is no different with four Irish short programmes with films that range from real time observation of the burning of a refugee camp in Ireland to an intimate portrait of man’s tender care of his pigeons to a midwife’s journey into the Peruvian jungle and much more.

Docs Ireland’s world class Industry programme returns with its fifth Marketplace.Taking place over two days, it provides an opportunity for filmmakers to meet one-to-one with leading international documentary industry players, including international funders, broadcasters, distributors and exhibitors. The programme is packed with opportunities for those working or aspiring to work in the documentary film industry to attend a wide range of panels, workshops, talks and networking opportunities.
Docs Ireland is supported by Northern Ireland Screen through the Department for Communities, Belfast City Council, Screen Ireland and BFI/Film Hub NI, and is proudly sponsored by TG4, BBCNI and Yellowmoon.

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