Hey, "Elementary" fans. We hope you guys enjoyed tonight's episode 12. Now that i's officially in the history books, it's time to see what Elementary will serve up to end the series in next week's series finale episode 13. That's right, guys. The series will sadly come to an end next week. So, episode 13 will be the last episode forever! We've got a few teaser descriptions from the lovely CBS folks. We will certainly be using those for this spoiler session. To get things started, this finale episode 13 does have a title. It has been revealed that the producers are calling it, "Their Last Bow." That sounds like a very fitting title since this is the last episode for all time. It sounds like episode 13 will feature some pretty interesting and intense scenes as Holmes and Watson continue to battle Odin. Holmes and Watson hear of Holmes' former love and enemy and more!
- 8/8/2019
- by Chris
- OnTheFlix
Rob Legato, visual effects supervisor of “The Lion King,” “The Addams Family” co-director Conrad Vernon and Baobab Studios’ co-founder and chief creative officer Eric Darnell, director of the Vr studio’s Emmy- and Annie-winning Vr short “Crow: The Legend,” are rounding out the keynote speakers at this fall’s 20th edition of the View Conference in Turin, Italy.
They join previously announced keynote speakers Brad Bird, director of last year’s “Incredibles 2”; Peter Ramsey, co-director of “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse”; “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World” director Dean DeBlois; composer Michael Giacchino; Pixar filmmaker Ralph Eggleston; Industrial Light & Magic’s Rob Bredow; Pubg CEO Ch Kim; Baobab Studios CEO Maureen Fan; tech pioneer and consultant Tom Wujec; and renowned scientist Daniel Zajfman.
In addition to their keynote addresses, Bird and Ramsey will offer master classes and Giacchino will perform a concert of his work during the weeklong event.
They join previously announced keynote speakers Brad Bird, director of last year’s “Incredibles 2”; Peter Ramsey, co-director of “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse”; “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World” director Dean DeBlois; composer Michael Giacchino; Pixar filmmaker Ralph Eggleston; Industrial Light & Magic’s Rob Bredow; Pubg CEO Ch Kim; Baobab Studios CEO Maureen Fan; tech pioneer and consultant Tom Wujec; and renowned scientist Daniel Zajfman.
In addition to their keynote addresses, Bird and Ramsey will offer master classes and Giacchino will perform a concert of his work during the weeklong event.
- 7/19/2019
- by Terry Flores
- Variety Film + TV
Writer-director-animator and voice actor Brad Bird, composer Michael Giacchino and Pixar filmmaker Ralph Eggleston have been added to the list of top showbiz industry pros giving keynote addresses at the 2019 View Conference in Turin, Italy in October.
It’s a reunion for the trio, who collaborated on Bird’s 2018 blockbuster “Incredibles 2,” with Giacchino writing the music and Eggleston handling production design.
They join the already announced writer, director and executive producer of “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World,” Dean DeBlois, and Changhan (Ch) Kim, CEO of Pubg Corporation, known for its online multiplayer game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, at the event.
“Year after year, View Conference has established its reputation as the event where the best and the brightest from the world’s digital industries convene to exchange experiences, discuss their work, and to enrich, teach and inspire us,” says conference director Dr. Maria Elena Gutierrez. “Increasingly, View...
It’s a reunion for the trio, who collaborated on Bird’s 2018 blockbuster “Incredibles 2,” with Giacchino writing the music and Eggleston handling production design.
They join the already announced writer, director and executive producer of “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World,” Dean DeBlois, and Changhan (Ch) Kim, CEO of Pubg Corporation, known for its online multiplayer game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, at the event.
“Year after year, View Conference has established its reputation as the event where the best and the brightest from the world’s digital industries convene to exchange experiences, discuss their work, and to enrich, teach and inspire us,” says conference director Dr. Maria Elena Gutierrez. “Increasingly, View...
- 6/12/2019
- by Terry Flores
- Variety Film + TV
“Silence” star Andrew Garfield had plenty to say to a fan after his mother interrupted the star’s lunch on Monday hours after he won a Tony Award — but in the most polite, British way possible.
“Hi Ian, you have a very sweet mother who doesn’t mind crossing boundaries over lunch tables,” Garfield said in an adorable video message shot on a smartphone. “I hear you’re sick and you didn’t get to go out last night. Get better, sending love.”
And just in case there was any confusion over who’s mug was in the camera, the proper English gentleman politely added: “This is Andrew Garfield, by the way.”
My mom had lunch in the same restaurant as Andrew Garfield today and this is what followed pic.twitter.com/C55MB7fDg8
– Ian Palmer (@itsianpalmer) June 11, 2018
Also Read: Andrew Garfield Slams Supreme Court in Tonys Speech: 'Let's...
“Hi Ian, you have a very sweet mother who doesn’t mind crossing boundaries over lunch tables,” Garfield said in an adorable video message shot on a smartphone. “I hear you’re sick and you didn’t get to go out last night. Get better, sending love.”
And just in case there was any confusion over who’s mug was in the camera, the proper English gentleman politely added: “This is Andrew Garfield, by the way.”
My mom had lunch in the same restaurant as Andrew Garfield today and this is what followed pic.twitter.com/C55MB7fDg8
– Ian Palmer (@itsianpalmer) June 11, 2018
Also Read: Andrew Garfield Slams Supreme Court in Tonys Speech: 'Let's...
- 6/13/2018
- by Debbie Emery
- The Wrap
A drama about bareknuckle fighting in the Traveller community has some crowd-pleasing moments, but there's not a lot to it
This feels like a fictionalisation of Ian Palmer's 2011 doc, Knuckle, about rival clans of itinerants holding bare-fisted donnybrooks in Irish laybys, but the tone is erratic. Writer-director Mark O'Connor aims for authenticity, tying the Travellers to those other migrant labourers persecuted by locals. Yet he stumbles over a vein of notionally crowd-pleasing comedy that recalls Guy Ritchie's Snatch, with its gold-chained chancers doing mushrooms in the woods. A flibbertigibbet: it arrives with a twinkle in its eye, but little else between its cauliflower ears.
Rating: 2/5
DramaComedyMike McCahill
guardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds...
This feels like a fictionalisation of Ian Palmer's 2011 doc, Knuckle, about rival clans of itinerants holding bare-fisted donnybrooks in Irish laybys, but the tone is erratic. Writer-director Mark O'Connor aims for authenticity, tying the Travellers to those other migrant labourers persecuted by locals. Yet he stumbles over a vein of notionally crowd-pleasing comedy that recalls Guy Ritchie's Snatch, with its gold-chained chancers doing mushrooms in the woods. A flibbertigibbet: it arrives with a twinkle in its eye, but little else between its cauliflower ears.
Rating: 2/5
DramaComedyMike McCahill
guardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds...
- 3/29/2013
- by Mike McCahill
- The Guardian - Film News
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Facebook: www.facebook.com/wearetheghosts
Release date: 15th April, 2012
The Ghosts are a product of love. Not the one-night-stand sort, that’s more like desperation, but more like a long-lasting, serious love where it takes over everything and everyone. The Ghosts is the baby of a lifelong relationship, cared for and nurtured until the creation finally came to fruition. This love and relationship is, as you may have guessed, the conjoined adoration and devotion to music.
After the dissolving of previous musical projects and the urge to come up with something new, something infinitely enduring and something more personal, Ian Palmer (drums) and Alex Starling (vocals) were introduced by a mutual friend – none other than The Charlatans’ Jon Brookes – in December 2010. Soon after, they met up and discussed what they liked and didn’t like about music and what each others’ influences were. They both found...
Facebook: www.facebook.com/wearetheghosts
Release date: 15th April, 2012
The Ghosts are a product of love. Not the one-night-stand sort, that’s more like desperation, but more like a long-lasting, serious love where it takes over everything and everyone. The Ghosts is the baby of a lifelong relationship, cared for and nurtured until the creation finally came to fruition. This love and relationship is, as you may have guessed, the conjoined adoration and devotion to music.
After the dissolving of previous musical projects and the urge to come up with something new, something infinitely enduring and something more personal, Ian Palmer (drums) and Alex Starling (vocals) were introduced by a mutual friend – none other than The Charlatans’ Jon Brookes – in December 2010. Soon after, they met up and discussed what they liked and didn’t like about music and what each others’ influences were. They both found...
- 4/4/2012
- by Rhys Milsom
- Obsessed with Film
The ninth annual Irish Film & Television Awards took place tonight at a Gala Awards Ceremony held at the Convention Centre Dublin.
In the field of film 'The Guard' was the big winner of the night receiving the Ifta for Best Film, with writer/director John Michael McDonagh named Best Director, Best Screenwriter and the Irish Film Board Rising Star for his feature directorial debut. Fionnula Flannagan who was honoured with a lifetime achievement award also won best supporting actress for her part in 'The Guard'.
Michael Fassbender picked up best actor for 'Shame' while Saoirse Ronan picked up best actress for her role in 'Hanna.' Ryan Gosling picked up the best international actor for 'Drive,' Chris O'Dowd picked up best supporting actor for 'Bridesmaids', and Glenn Close picked up best international actress for 'Albert Nobbs.'
'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy...
In the field of film 'The Guard' was the big winner of the night receiving the Ifta for Best Film, with writer/director John Michael McDonagh named Best Director, Best Screenwriter and the Irish Film Board Rising Star for his feature directorial debut. Fionnula Flannagan who was honoured with a lifetime achievement award also won best supporting actress for her part in 'The Guard'.
Michael Fassbender picked up best actor for 'Shame' while Saoirse Ronan picked up best actress for her role in 'Hanna.' Ryan Gosling picked up the best international actor for 'Drive,' Chris O'Dowd picked up best supporting actor for 'Bridesmaids', and Glenn Close picked up best international actress for 'Albert Nobbs.'
'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy...
- 2/11/2012
- by noreply@blogger.com (Flicks News)
- FlicksNews.net
Brendan Gleeson, The Guard The Guard, Glenn Close, Ryan Gosling Win: Irish Film Awards 2012 Film Categories Best Film Albert Nobbs, Alan Moloney, Bonnie Curtis, Julie Lynn, Glenn Close Charlie Casanova, Terry McMahon Stella Days, Jackie Larkin, Leslie McKimm * The Guard, Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Chris Cark, Flora Fernandez Marengo Best Director Rebecca Daly, The Other Side of Sleep * John Michael McDonagh, The Guard Terry McMahon, Charlie Casanova Thaddeus O'Sullivan, Stella Days Best Screenplay John Banville, Glenn Close, Albert Nobbs * John Michael McDonagh, The Guard Terry McMahon, Charlie Casanova Antoine O'Flaherta, Stella Days Best Actor * Michael Fassbender, Shame Brendan Gleeson, The Guard Ciarán Hinds, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy Martin Sheen, Stella Days Best Actress Aoife Duffin, Behold the Lamb Antonia Campbell Hughes, The Other Side of Sleep Marcella Plunkett, Stella Days * Saoirse Ronan, Hanna Best Supporting Actor Liam Cunningham, The Guard Brendan Gleeson, Albert Nobbs Ciarán Hinds, The Debt * Chris O'Dowd,...
- 2/11/2012
- by Steve Montgomery
- Alt Film Guide
Albert Nobbs and the other nominations for the 2012 Irish Film and Television Academy Awards have been announced. The 9th Annual Irish Film and Television Awards (IFTAs) “sole aim is to celebrate Ireland’s notably talented film and television community. The ceremony is considered to be one of Ireland’s most prestigious awards event, and can be viewed as the Irish equivalent to the American Oscars.” The awards ceremony will be held on February 11, 2012 at the Convention Centre Dublin (Ccd).
The full listing of the 2012 Irish Film and Television Awards is below.
Film Categories
Best Film
Albert Nobbs – Alan Moloney, Bonnie Curtis, Julie Lynn and Glenn Close (Parallel Film & TV Productions)
Charlie Casanova – Terry McMahon (Source Productions)
Stella Days – Jackie Larkin & Leslie McKimm (Newgrange Pictures)
The Guard – Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Chris Larke, Flore Fernandez Marengo(Element Pictures)
Director Film
Rebecca Daly – The Other Side of Sleep (Fastnet Films)
John Michael McDonagh...
The full listing of the 2012 Irish Film and Television Awards is below.
Film Categories
Best Film
Albert Nobbs – Alan Moloney, Bonnie Curtis, Julie Lynn and Glenn Close (Parallel Film & TV Productions)
Charlie Casanova – Terry McMahon (Source Productions)
Stella Days – Jackie Larkin & Leslie McKimm (Newgrange Pictures)
The Guard – Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Chris Larke, Flore Fernandez Marengo(Element Pictures)
Director Film
Rebecca Daly – The Other Side of Sleep (Fastnet Films)
John Michael McDonagh...
- 1/11/2012
- by filmbook
- Film-Book
A time machine of ancient tradition spotlighting bloody and violent bare-knuckle fighting that is as much legend as reality. Fascinating from start to finish. Ian Palmer.s .Knuckle. is one of the most unique documentaries to come out this year. He spent some 15 years following the secretive and brutal bare-knuckle fights of the Irish .Travelers.. These fights are against the law, against common sense, decency, sportsmanship and everything else society stands for. Yet, they have been a steadfast tradition with the Travelers since time immemorial. They are a way of defining a clan.s status as well as its identity. The most important piece of background to have going into this remarkable, and shocking, film, is the makeup of the...
- 12/16/2011
- by Ron Wilkinson
- Monsters and Critics
Michael Chabon's "The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay" could be coming to a screen near you.
According to Collider, director Stephen Daldry wants to turn the novel into a miniseries for HBO.
"I would love to do something for TV," he said. "I wanna do Kavalier & Clay on HBO as an eight-parter. It'll be so much better as a series, honestly."
There's just one catch -- Daldry doesn't have the rights to the book. Paramount does -- though Daldry himself was signed on at one point to direct a film version, the project has continued to languish.
"I spent a year working on it with Michael Chabon, so we're pretty close," Daldry told Collider. "And the rights, good question. Will Paramount give them to me? I don't know. It'll be a really good one. It'd go great with 'Boardwalk Empire.'"
HBO is already working with Chabon and...
According to Collider, director Stephen Daldry wants to turn the novel into a miniseries for HBO.
"I would love to do something for TV," he said. "I wanna do Kavalier & Clay on HBO as an eight-parter. It'll be so much better as a series, honestly."
There's just one catch -- Daldry doesn't have the rights to the book. Paramount does -- though Daldry himself was signed on at one point to direct a film version, the project has continued to languish.
"I spent a year working on it with Michael Chabon, so we're pretty close," Daldry told Collider. "And the rights, good question. Will Paramount give them to me? I don't know. It'll be a really good one. It'd go great with 'Boardwalk Empire.'"
HBO is already working with Chabon and...
- 12/13/2011
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
“Brothers and cousins fighting brothers and cousins”—this simple statement summarizes generations of hatred and a spellbinding feature documentary that is Knuckle. Filmmaker Ian Palmer was working as a wedding videographer when he was thrown right in the middle of Irish Traveller culture and, within it, the perpetuation of clannish hate expressed most often through violent bare-knuckled fighting among the men. Asked if he would film a fight between rival families, Palmer was sucked still further into the mysterious lives of these Travellers who believe so dearly in the honor of solving problems with their fists....
- 12/9/2011
- Pastemagazine.com
"Knuckle," documentarian Ian Palmer's portrait of Irish families constantly engaging in bare-knuckle fights, generated immediate industry buzz when it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January. HBO wanted to adapt its fierce, absurdly proud subjects for a series and Hollywood stars asked about playing them. However, none of this attention necessarily validated "Knuckle" as a movie; it demonstrated that Palmer had chosen ideal characters for pop-culture appropriation. Watching "Knuckle," it's impossible not to realize how their brutality could go mainstream. Palmer spent 10 years following a pair of warring Irish traveler families, the Quinn-McDonaughs and their distant cousins, the Joyces. Both sides are locked into a feud dating back to 1992, when a drunken brawl in London resulted in the death of a Joyce and the incarceration of a Quinn. However, that incidentonly served to resurrect lingering animosities from half a century...
- 12/9/2011
- Indiewire
Given the recent explosion of mixed martial arts in the last several years, it seems like a no-brainer that someone would make a documentary about real-life pugilists who don’t just fight but have a real, deep-rooted beef with one another. But Ian Palmer’s documentary “Knuckle” isn’t a celebration of competition, or even the chronicle of a journey some ambitious hopeful makes en route to victory, or even defeat; rather, it takes a long and in many ways tragic look at two warring Irish clans who have engaged in a rivalry for so long that they keep it going without ever knowing why, and certainly without considering stopping it. A chronicle of two intertwined family histories whose ongoing conflict is as raw and unrefined as the fists of the men who fight, “Knuckle” is an understated but powerful look at a world people know little about, in a...
- 12/9/2011
- The Playlist
Below filmmaker Ian Palmer shares a scene from his documentary "Knuckle." The film spans 12 years during which Palmer followed members of a nomadic ethnic group who when conflicts arise, settle their arguments through ritualized, bare-knuckle fighting. It opens at the Cinema Village in NYC today and is currently available on VOD. This scene is from the start of my documentary "Knuckle." In it two men are sparring on a beach in Dublin watched by a number of others. The two men are brothers although you don’t learn this until a little later in the film and the watching men are their father, older brother and cousins. After a few clashes the older of the men breaks off from the sparring saying, "Caught me lovely." His younger brother has just clipped him with a clean shot to the head. We see the younger boxer silhouetted against the sea and sky...
- 12/9/2011
- Indiewire
Aside from maybe Errol Morris' "Tabloid," there is no story you'll see in a docmentary this year as astonishingly odd and visceral as that in Ian Palmer's "Knuckle." But unlike Morris' film, which centers on a single incident in the already quirky life of one woman, Palmer's film tracks the simmering real life feuds between multiple families that has deloved in an endless series of bare knuckle fights between warring members. In "Knuckle," Palmer weaves an incredible tale, captured from more than a decade's worth of footage he shot as an invited witness to the matches, centered around the Quinn-McDonaugh family of Irish travellers and their battles with the Joyce and Nevins clans. The film is raw, brutal stuff with men of all ages -- from lads barely out of their teenage years to grandfathers -- meeting every few months to settle a variety of scores in bloody...
- 12/8/2011
- The Playlist
Forget all those criminal Cockney cliches populating Guy Ritchie movies. If you want to see what a real life tough as nails subculture looks like take yourself along to the movies and see Knuckle, which opens in New York, Los Angeles and Austin, Texas on Friday. A you-are-there portrait of a hardy Irish traveling community in Britain and Ireland, it’s a true to life picture of feuding Irish traveling clans and their long-standing history of violent bare-knuckle boxing. First we meet James Quinn McDonagh and Paddy “The Lurcher” Joyce, two men who are related by blood but separated by a family feud that dates back generations and whose origins are mostly long forgotten. As the heads of rival families, they represent what they call their “breeds” through the brutal -- and illegal -- street fights they spend most of their adult lives training for. ------------------------ Read More: Ireland may...
- 12/8/2011
- IrishCentral
Knuckle is a documentary about feuding families of Irish Travelers who settle their grudges with bare-knuckle boxing matches, so it’s bound to be inherently fascinating, regardless of how well it’s assembled. First-time filmmaker Ian Palmer has been following his subjects, the Quinn McDonagh clan, for more than a decade, and the film exhibits both the benefit of that long investment, and the problem that likely kept Palmer at it for so long—there’s no escalation, no conclusion, just a series of brutal bouts in the name of grudges that will never be settled. It’s an involving ...
- 12/8/2011
- avclub.com
In a landscape of movies where actors pretend to beat one another to a bloody pulp, it’s rare – whether or not you see it as a privilege – to watch people on screen actually trade blows. But in Ian Palmer’s Knuckle, audiences watch unflinching depictions of bare-knuckle fights, held in unglamorous locations and shot with unglossy brutality. At the same time, Palmer didn’t merely infiltrate a world of Irish bare-knuckle boxing and milk it of its visceral intensity, but chronicled its emotional underpinnings, as he follows the historic rivalry between two warring clans who can’t seem to resolve differences that began so long ago that the people almost literally have to invent new reasons to keep it going. Movies sat down with director Ian Palmer...
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- 12/8/2011
- by Todd Gilchrist
- Movies.com
In a landscape of movies where actors pretend to beat one another to a bloody pulp, it’s rare – whether or not you see it as a privilege – to watch people on screen actually trade blows. But in Ian Palmer’s Knuckle, audiences watch unflinching depictions of bare-knuckle fights, held in unglamorous locations and shot with unglossy brutality. At the same time, Palmer didn’t merely infiltrate a world of Irish bare-knuckle boxing and milk it of its visceral intensity, but chronicled its emotional underpinnings, as he follows the historic rivalry between two warring clans who can’t seem to resolve differences that began so long ago that the people almost literally have to invent new reasons to keep it going. Movies.com sat down with director Ian Palmer and...
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- 12/7/2011
- by affiliates@fandango.com
- Fandango
I've heard of fights at weddings, but this is ridiculous.
Filmmaker Ian Palmer was hired to shoot a wedding between members of what are called Irish Traveller clans, nomadic families notorious for their longstanding feuds with other Traveller clans. Palmer shot the wedding and was quickly invited to film a bare knuckle boxing match between two Travellers. Instantly, he was hooked on the endless drama and the explosive fights, and he spent the next decade recording the ups and downs of the Quinn McDonaghs, particularly their biggest and best fighter, James.
At Fantastic Fest 2011, I got the chance to talk with Palmer and Quinn McDonagh about their film and the fascinating world it explores. We touched on the logistics of spending more than ten years shooting a movie, and how the finished doc has affected the easily disturbed relationships between the clans. And thankfully, no one punched me in the face.
Filmmaker Ian Palmer was hired to shoot a wedding between members of what are called Irish Traveller clans, nomadic families notorious for their longstanding feuds with other Traveller clans. Palmer shot the wedding and was quickly invited to film a bare knuckle boxing match between two Travellers. Instantly, he was hooked on the endless drama and the explosive fights, and he spent the next decade recording the ups and downs of the Quinn McDonaghs, particularly their biggest and best fighter, James.
At Fantastic Fest 2011, I got the chance to talk with Palmer and Quinn McDonagh about their film and the fascinating world it explores. We touched on the logistics of spending more than ten years shooting a movie, and how the finished doc has affected the easily disturbed relationships between the clans. And thankfully, no one punched me in the face.
- 12/6/2011
- by Matt Singer
- ifc.com
Really like The Fighter? How about Warrior? Well, maybe you should get a taste of the real deal, some of the most brutal battles the sport of boxing has to offer – bare-knuckle fighting. A while back, Ian Palmer was asked to film Michael Quinn McDonagh’s wedding. While there, he ran into Michael’s brother, James, and was asked to film another family function – one of James’ fights. Little did Palmer know, this wasn’t just any fight, it was a bare-knuckle fight that wasn’t just rooted in athleticism; these were battles for family pride. Before long, Palmer was just as hooked as the Quinn McDonaghs and practically became part of...
- 12/5/2011
- by Perri Nemiroff
- ShockYa
Title: Knuckle Director: Ian Palmer Starring: James Quinn-McDonagh, Michael Quinn-McDonagh and Ian Palmer The violent world of bare-knuckle boxing has long been a secret one, as the community who largely embarks in the sport, the nomadic Travellers, remain silent about certain aspects of their lifestyle. But two rival Irish Traveller families, the Quinn-McDonaghs and the Joyces, allow filmmaker Ian Palmer into their elusive world, to show their long-standing hatred of each other. The first-time director surprisingly shows the families’ pressure to fight for the honor of their name and the need for revenge. ‘Knuckle’ chronicles the fight between the Quinn-McDonagh and Joyce families, who are distant relatives but are separated...
- 12/3/2011
- by karen
- ShockYa
Every single year come awards season, it's always upsetting to see the blatant misfires on the Academy's short list of films eligible for the Best Documentary Oscar. Just last year [1], the big story wasn't so much that Exit Through the Gift Shop or Restrepo were up for the award, it was that films like Catfish, Best Worst Movie and Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work were snubbed. This year it's more of the same. Much more. Fifteen films have been chosen that will be narrowed down to five to tangle for the Oscar itself and on that list are several exceptional documentaries: Bill Cunningham New York, Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory and Project Nim (above) just to name a few. Not on the list, however are Constance Mark's Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey, Steve James’s The Interrupters, Werner Herzog‘s Into the Abyss, Errol Morris' Tabloid, Ian Palmer's Knuckle,...
- 11/19/2011
- by Germain Lussier
- Slash Film
Boxing gloves are for wimps.
The upcoming documentary "Knuckle" chronicles a decade in the neverending feud between Irish Traveller clans. For reasons neither can quite remember, the Quinn McDonaghs and the Joyces have been at each other's throats for generations. Their arguments simmer through elaborate taunting videos they record and send to one another (and, nowadays, post on YouTube) and then explode at frequent underground bare knuckle boxing matches.
It was a fluke that director Ian Palmer discovered this world, and it was even more unlikely that he, an outsider among the Travellers, would be invited to document year after year in the war between the Quinn McDonaghs and Joyces. But that's exactly what happened, and the gripping "Knuckle" is the result.
In this exclusive clip from the film, which opens on December 9, you get a taste of what an underground bare knuckle boxing match looks like: it's a bloody,...
The upcoming documentary "Knuckle" chronicles a decade in the neverending feud between Irish Traveller clans. For reasons neither can quite remember, the Quinn McDonaghs and the Joyces have been at each other's throats for generations. Their arguments simmer through elaborate taunting videos they record and send to one another (and, nowadays, post on YouTube) and then explode at frequent underground bare knuckle boxing matches.
It was a fluke that director Ian Palmer discovered this world, and it was even more unlikely that he, an outsider among the Travellers, would be invited to document year after year in the war between the Quinn McDonaghs and Joyces. But that's exactly what happened, and the gripping "Knuckle" is the result.
In this exclusive clip from the film, which opens on December 9, you get a taste of what an underground bare knuckle boxing match looks like: it's a bloody,...
- 11/9/2011
- by Matt Singer
- ifc.com
The 2011 Sitges Film Festival has concluded its competition portion and announced awards in more categories than we've seen at any other fest. The biggest winners are Kevin Smith's Red State and Joe Cornish's Attack the Block, but several other films we've been closely watching here on Dread scored victories as well, including Kill List, Livid, The Divide, The Woman, Bellflower, Hell, and Detention.
Here's the full breakdown from the fest, held 6-16 October on the Catalan coast of Spain. Congratulations to all the winners!
Oficial FANTÀSTIC In-competition – Sitges 44
J. A. Bayona, Quim Casas, Lisa Marie, Ryoo Seung-Wan, Richard Stanley (judges)
Best Short Film (tie)
Dirty Silverwear by Steve Daniels
The Unliving by Hugo Lilja
Best Production Design
Marc Thiébault for Livide (Alexandre Bustillo & Julian Maury)
Best Makeup FX
Steven Kostanski for The Divide (Xavier Gens)
Best Special Effects
Lluís Castells and Javier García for Eva (Kike Maíllo)
Best...
Here's the full breakdown from the fest, held 6-16 October on the Catalan coast of Spain. Congratulations to all the winners!
Oficial FANTÀSTIC In-competition – Sitges 44
J. A. Bayona, Quim Casas, Lisa Marie, Ryoo Seung-Wan, Richard Stanley (judges)
Best Short Film (tie)
Dirty Silverwear by Steve Daniels
The Unliving by Hugo Lilja
Best Production Design
Marc Thiébault for Livide (Alexandre Bustillo & Julian Maury)
Best Makeup FX
Steven Kostanski for The Divide (Xavier Gens)
Best Special Effects
Lluís Castells and Javier García for Eva (Kike Maíllo)
Best...
- 10/15/2011
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
Another good day (night even) for Irish film. This time round, it was at Irish Film New York, where Knuckle (about bare knuckle boxing amongst the traveller community and is well worth a watch) by Ian Palmer picked up the Moet Best Film. The Moet Most Promising Film Maker went to Ian Power who is behind one of the feel good movies of the year, The Runway. And last, but not least, Paul Rowley picked up the Moet Rising Star award for Pyjama Girls. Congrats to all!
- 10/4/2011
- by vicbarry@gmail.com (Vic Barry)
- www.themoviebit.com
by Nick Schager
The docs have it at Irish Film New York, a new screening series founded and directed by Niall McKay, former steward of the San Francisco Irish Film Festival and co-founder of the L.A. Irish Film Festival. Taking place this weekend (September 30th though October 2nd) at Nyu's Cantor Film Center, Ifny aims to be a premiere showcase for movies and moviemakers hailing from the Emerald Isle, offering a selection of six varied features that speak, directly and indirectly, to the past and modern Irish condition. And for its inaugural outing, Ifny stands tall courtesy of its non-fiction works, which unlike its somewhat more clichéd and formulaic fictional submissions, capture a stinging sense of Irish history, character and culture with an effortlessness that’s matched by an insightfulness into its all-too-human subjects.
Ifny commences with a bang, as its opening night film Knuckle is its indisputable standout.
The docs have it at Irish Film New York, a new screening series founded and directed by Niall McKay, former steward of the San Francisco Irish Film Festival and co-founder of the L.A. Irish Film Festival. Taking place this weekend (September 30th though October 2nd) at Nyu's Cantor Film Center, Ifny aims to be a premiere showcase for movies and moviemakers hailing from the Emerald Isle, offering a selection of six varied features that speak, directly and indirectly, to the past and modern Irish condition. And for its inaugural outing, Ifny stands tall courtesy of its non-fiction works, which unlike its somewhat more clichéd and formulaic fictional submissions, capture a stinging sense of Irish history, character and culture with an effortlessness that’s matched by an insightfulness into its all-too-human subjects.
Ifny commences with a bang, as its opening night film Knuckle is its indisputable standout.
- 10/1/2011
- GreenCine Daily
by Nick Schager
The docs have it at Irish Film New York, a new screening series founded and directed by Niall McKay, former steward of the San Francisco Irish Film Festival and co-founder of the L.A. Irish Film Festival. Taking place this weekend (September 30th though October 2nd) at Nyu's Cantor Film Center, Ifny aims to be a premiere showcase for movies and moviemakers hailing from the Emerald Isle, offering a selection of six varied features that speak, directly and indirectly, to the past and modern Irish condition. And for its inaugural outing, Ifny stands tall courtesy of its non-fiction works, which unlike its somewhat more clichéd and formulaic fictional submissions, capture a stinging sense of Irish history, character and culture with an effortlessness that’s matched by an insightfulness into its all-too-human subjects.
Ifny commences with a bang, as its opening night film Knuckle is its indisputable standout.
The docs have it at Irish Film New York, a new screening series founded and directed by Niall McKay, former steward of the San Francisco Irish Film Festival and co-founder of the L.A. Irish Film Festival. Taking place this weekend (September 30th though October 2nd) at Nyu's Cantor Film Center, Ifny aims to be a premiere showcase for movies and moviemakers hailing from the Emerald Isle, offering a selection of six varied features that speak, directly and indirectly, to the past and modern Irish condition. And for its inaugural outing, Ifny stands tall courtesy of its non-fiction works, which unlike its somewhat more clichéd and formulaic fictional submissions, capture a stinging sense of Irish history, character and culture with an effortlessness that’s matched by an insightfulness into its all-too-human subjects.
Ifny commences with a bang, as its opening night film Knuckle is its indisputable standout.
- 9/30/2011
- GreenCine Daily
Fantastic Fest is not a big festival for documentaries. This year, there's just two in the lineup: Morgan Spurlock's "Comic-Con: Episode IV - A Fan's Hope" and "Knuckle," the true story of a family of Irish bare knuckle boxers, the so-called Traveller clan known as the Quinn McDonaghs. You may think of documentaries as stately, educational things with somber voiceovers and slow-motion zooms of photographs of men with handlebar mustaches who died in the Civil War. "Knuckle," with its perpetually smoldering blood feuds and brutal bare knuckle combat, is another breed of doc entirely, one that feels right at home amidst the rest of the funky, frenzied films at Fantastic Fest.
Its director is Ian Palmer, who stumbled into this world by accident, when he was hired to film a Traveller family wedding. There he met James Quinn McDonagh, his clan's biggest and best bare knuckle fighter. For reasons largely lost to history,...
Its director is Ian Palmer, who stumbled into this world by accident, when he was hired to film a Traveller family wedding. There he met James Quinn McDonagh, his clan's biggest and best bare knuckle fighter. For reasons largely lost to history,...
- 9/28/2011
- by Matt Singer
- ifc.com
I may no longer be in Austin enjoying Fantastic Fest, but it doesn’t mean my movie watching stops. On Monday I did some catching up thanks to screeners and finally got to one of the more buzzed films at the festival: Clown (or Klovn: The Movie). Now, the film has absolutely nothing to do with face paint and big shoes, but it does feature a buffoon. This Danish road trip comedy stands out at Fantastic Fest because it is a straight comedy without any genre elements, but that’s the beauty of this festival. Not everything is necessarily genre, and the programmers pick whatever they feel strongly about. Anyways, let’s get back to the film.
Clown follows Frank and Casper, two long-time friends that are preparing for a wild canoe getaway from their female companions to go on a “Tour de Pussy.” However, when Frank is stuck with...
Clown follows Frank and Casper, two long-time friends that are preparing for a wild canoe getaway from their female companions to go on a “Tour de Pussy.” However, when Frank is stuck with...
- 9/27/2011
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
As a westerner I always wondered whether the depiction of "pikeys" in Guy Ritchie's film Snatch had any semblance of truth in them, or were they exaggerated caricatures. Thanks to Ian Palmer's documentary Knuckle I got my answer to elements I didn't even think to question. Oh, and by the way the answer is no - Brad Pitt and his fellow fast-talk-mumbling-slang spitters in love with caravans and bare-knuckle fighting are not caricatures. Not completely, anyway.
- 9/27/2011
- by Adam Charles
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Within the insular Traveller community in Ireland and parts of the United Kingdom, among clans that are closely related by marriage and birth, conflicts are solved through ritualized bare-knuckle fights buoyed by blood pride and machismo. Think Brad Pitt in Snatch and you get the lighter side of the boxing tradition, but in real life, as documentarian Ian Palmer discovered as he filmed one clan's champions over the course of 12 years, there's a dark and tragic nature to the custom that drives the culture.
- 9/27/2011
- Movieline
Acquired by Lionsgate and pulled from all but one of its screenings at the festival, the crowd-pleasing horror-comedy "You're Next" still killed at the Fantastic Fest 2011 Awards. The story of a couple trapped in a remote house by crazed animal-mask-wearing killers won four awards: Best Horror Feature, Best Director (Adam Wingard), Best Screenplay (Simon Barrett), and Best Actress (Sharni Vinson). Unofficially, it also won my award for Best Defacement of the Alamo Drafthouse. Look for this one from Lionsgate, probably sometime late in 2012.
The other big winner of the night was "Bullhead," which made a huge splash in the Amd & Dell Next Wave Spotlight Competition devoted to emerging filmmakers. The dark character study of a steroid-taking Mafia enforcer won Best Picture, Best Director (Michael R. Roskam), and Best Actor (Matthias Schoenaerts). According to IMDb, the film does not yet have a Us distributor.
Choosing the winners in any of the categories couldn't be easy.
The other big winner of the night was "Bullhead," which made a huge splash in the Amd & Dell Next Wave Spotlight Competition devoted to emerging filmmakers. The dark character study of a steroid-taking Mafia enforcer won Best Picture, Best Director (Michael R. Roskam), and Best Actor (Matthias Schoenaerts). According to IMDb, the film does not yet have a Us distributor.
Choosing the winners in any of the categories couldn't be easy.
- 9/27/2011
- by Matt Singer
- ifc.com
Being the only documentary playing this year at Fantastic Fest it was sure to be about something outside the mainstream. And it is. Knuckle is a fly on the wall story about feuding clans of traveler families in rural Ireland. Traveler families are basically the western european version of gypsies, with their own set of rules and laws, never staying at the same place for very long and staying on the fringe of "normal" society. Director Ian Palmer started making the film by accident really when asked to film a Quinn family wedding he found out about James Quinn McDonagh, the undefeated champion of bare knuckle fighting within the Traveler community. Intrigued by this tradition he asked to film some of these fights and...
- 9/26/2011
- Screen Anarchy
See clips from the Knuckle documentary. Journey into the world of an Irish Traveller community's bare-knuckle fighting lives We have 5 clips from Arc Entertainment's documentary helmed by Ian Palmer. After watching all of the clips (also available in HD) showing different on-camera challenges, as well as several fights, I was left quite intrigued by this film, which is naturally rated R. Knuckle is a long twelve-year journey into in the world of an Irish Traveller community, taking viewwers inside their brutal, secretive and exhilarating bare-knuckle fighting lives. Chronicling a history of violent feuding between rival families, the story focuses on two brothers as they fight for their reputations and the honour of their family name.
- 9/25/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
See clips from the Knuckle documentary. Journey into the world of an Irish Traveller community's bare-knuckle fighting lives We have 5 clips from Arc Entertainment's documentary helmed by Ian Palmer. After watching all of the clips (also available in HD) showing different on-camera challenges, as well as several fights, I was left quite intrigued by this film, which is naturally rated R. Knuckle is a long twelve-year journey into in the world of an Irish Traveller community, taking viewwers inside their brutal, secretive and exhilarating bare-knuckle fighting lives. Chronicling a history of violent feuding between rival families, the story focuses on two brothers as they fight for their reputations and the honour of their family name.
- 9/25/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
We're in Austin, Texas for the shank of this year's Fantastic Fest. If our preview chat with Tim League had you interested, be sure to hit refresh on this page over and over and over like a moon-eyed crazy person all day Sat, Sun and Monday for updates.
Friday 9/23/11
Fantastic Fest is already in full swing. I'm not there yet, but I'm flying in tonight. Last night I was all over Twitter to hear descriptions of The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence)'s pre-screening antics. An hour and a half later, I read virtually every critic say it was awful. (Though one or two defended it as "having something to say about obsessed fandom.")
As a jury member for this year's "features" division - which means full length movies that aren't straight-up horror movies - I've actually been able to get a sneak peek at some of the eight movies in competition.
Friday 9/23/11
Fantastic Fest is already in full swing. I'm not there yet, but I'm flying in tonight. Last night I was all over Twitter to hear descriptions of The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence)'s pre-screening antics. An hour and a half later, I read virtually every critic say it was awful. (Though one or two defended it as "having something to say about obsessed fandom.")
As a jury member for this year's "features" division - which means full length movies that aren't straight-up horror movies - I've actually been able to get a sneak peek at some of the eight movies in competition.
- 9/23/2011
- UGO Movies
Poster created by Mike Saputo
The time is nearly upon us, the annual gathering of genre hounds, eager to experience the greatest, the most shocking and exhilarating collection of fascinating feature (and short) films of 2011 — Fantastic Fest, presented by Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Austin, Texas.
Look, the truth is, this is my first time. Yes, I am a Fantastic Fest virgin, but I am overwhelmingly excited to finally be experiencing this tradition that promises to be more than just a film festival. Having recently announced in three waves its lineup of feature films, as well as its short film lineup and even its special events, Fantastic Fest is now speeding towards us at full throttle, barreling into Austin with the force of a Texas-sized stampede of longhorn steers jacked full of Red Bull and Viagra.
With such a diverse and eclectic mix of films, and so many to choose from,...
The time is nearly upon us, the annual gathering of genre hounds, eager to experience the greatest, the most shocking and exhilarating collection of fascinating feature (and short) films of 2011 — Fantastic Fest, presented by Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Austin, Texas.
Look, the truth is, this is my first time. Yes, I am a Fantastic Fest virgin, but I am overwhelmingly excited to finally be experiencing this tradition that promises to be more than just a film festival. Having recently announced in three waves its lineup of feature films, as well as its short film lineup and even its special events, Fantastic Fest is now speeding towards us at full throttle, barreling into Austin with the force of a Texas-sized stampede of longhorn steers jacked full of Red Bull and Viagra.
With such a diverse and eclectic mix of films, and so many to choose from,...
- 9/20/2011
- by Travis Keune
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
The main thing that people have been comparing the documentary Knuckle to is Guy Ritchie‘s Snatch, in particular the Brad Pitt character of Pikey. If you’ve seen it, you probably remember the muscled fighter with a lovable spirit and an indecipherable brogue. Knuckle is in that same vein, since it follows Irish bare-knuckle boxers who go against each other, with pride and money on the line.
Playing at Sundance (to positive reviews) and showing up at Fantastic Fest this month, a trailer has appeared from Yahoo! (via FirstShowing), giving us a look at the men beating each other with their fists. Director Ian Palmer followed his subjects over the course of twelve years, chronicling how fighting changes both themselves and their families; that should allow for the audience to get a full picture of these people. The trailer gives you a brief glimpse of that, although some of...
Playing at Sundance (to positive reviews) and showing up at Fantastic Fest this month, a trailer has appeared from Yahoo! (via FirstShowing), giving us a look at the men beating each other with their fists. Director Ian Palmer followed his subjects over the course of twelve years, chronicling how fighting changes both themselves and their families; that should allow for the audience to get a full picture of these people. The trailer gives you a brief glimpse of that, although some of...
- 9/19/2011
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
"We will fight because we are men!" Are you ready for this?! Yahoo (via SlashFilm) recently debuted the official trailer for a documentary called Knuckle, directed by Ian Palmer, about an epic 12-year journey into the brutal and secretive world of Irish Traveler bare-knuckle fighting. This could honestly be described as the real-life, brutal, bloody version of Snatch, which they even play up somewhat in this trailer. Its been receiving some solid praise already, so give it a shot, as long as you can handle violence. This is also the film, and the guy, that Tim League is fighting at Fantastic Fest later this week in a live boxing match - he's crazy! Watch the official trailer for Ian Palmer's documentary Knuckle, debuted on Yahoo: Knuckle is an epic 12-year journey into the brutal and secretive world of Irish Traveler bare-knuckle fighting. The film gives a rare inside look...
- 9/19/2011
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
When Benji Carver hit Sundance for us earlier this year, he fell in love with Knuckle, saying it’s “a film that shares bloody punches and sardonic wit as we see various brothers and cousins fight each other the back-roads of Ireland. It plays out like a true rough and tumble version of Michael Apted’s Up series.” If I weren’t already sold on it, this trailer would do the trick. Of course, it has more up its sleeveless shirt than just violence. Director Ian Palmer promises that there will be blood, but there will also be a socially fascinating look at family, status, and honor. Check out the trailer for yourself: Freeze-framing on that kid’s joyous face is both disturbing and poetic. Genius. Knuckle is playing Fantastic Fest, and with any luck, make its way into a theater near you with the quickness. Would you go see it?...
- 9/19/2011
- by Cole Abaius
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
The Sundance selection Knuckle, Ian Palmer's documentary about feuding Irish families who engage in illegal bare-knuckle fights to bring honor to their clans, is more than scary: It's angry. The new trailer shows all the hateful grit, bloodied torsos, and familial sanctity you can imagine, and it even throws in a few shots of the children fighting too. The gloves are off, and the intimidation is on. (Who am I, Gene Shalit?) Lock up your sons, and watch the trailer after the jump.
- 9/17/2011
- Movieline
Here's the first full theatrical trailer for the documentary Knuckle. The film follows long standing family fueds over the course of 12 years who settle their disputes in the streets and with their fists, to uphold their honor, get their revenge, and fight for their family. I saw this movie at the Sundance Film Festival, and regardless of how unsettling it was to watch I thought it was an incredible riveting film! This movie is the real thing, and it's hard-freakin-core. It was amazing to see how deep the hatred goes between these families and how they feel that bare-knuckle boxing is the best, safest, and only way to settle things, of course there's a huge amount of money involved as well.
Did you see the Guy Ritchie film Snatch? You know the Irish Boxing character that Brad Pitt played in that movie? This is that world... only this is the real thing.
Did you see the Guy Ritchie film Snatch? You know the Irish Boxing character that Brad Pitt played in that movie? This is that world... only this is the real thing.
- 9/17/2011
- by Venkman
- GeekTyrant
We've all been so mad at someone we wanted to punch them in the face. Some of us might have even gone through with it. But with Knuckle, Ian Palmer's documentary about a long lasting family feud between Irish clans, we see where real anger leads. Palmer shot the film over a decade as two families with a deep seeded hatred of each other continually settle the score in illegal bare knuckle boxing matches for huge sums of money. The winners are loved and respected by their family. The losers, shamed for not defending the family name. The film, which had its world premiere at Sundance in January [1] and was optioned by HBO to be turned into a TV series [2], will be playing at Fantastic Fest next week [3] before its release date of December 2. Check out the brand new trailer after the jump. Here's the trailer for Knuckle thanks...
- 9/17/2011
- by Germain Lussier
- Slash Film
Each year the Sitges Film Festival commercial spot is almost as eagerly awaited by the general public as its lineup, and Rafa Antón, creative director of the China agency and the man responsible for its campaigns over the last ten years, has presented this year’s commercial, entitled "Alter Ego". In addition, the preliminary lineup for the Festival has been revealed, but it's not complete by any means. More will be announced throughout the month.
Antón presented the commercial at the Velodrome, property of the brand, along with Festival director Angel Sala and one of Sitges 2011’s partners Moritz Beer.
As explained at the presentation of the Sitges 2011 posters, artificial intelligence is this year’s central theme, represented through the geminoids created by professor Ishiguro in Japan. For the commercials, Rafa Antón stated that he’d “continued with the same commemorative leitmotif of the tenth anniversary of Artificial Intelligence (Steven Spielberg...
Antón presented the commercial at the Velodrome, property of the brand, along with Festival director Angel Sala and one of Sitges 2011’s partners Moritz Beer.
As explained at the presentation of the Sitges 2011 posters, artificial intelligence is this year’s central theme, represented through the geminoids created by professor Ishiguro in Japan. For the commercials, Rafa Antón stated that he’d “continued with the same commemorative leitmotif of the tenth anniversary of Artificial Intelligence (Steven Spielberg...
- 9/16/2011
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
Helsinki International Film Festival, which kicked off yesterday, will screen a programme of Irish features and shorts including box-office record breaker 'The Guard', Ian Palmer's bare-knuckle boxing documentary 'Knuckle' and Ripple World Pictures' Irish-Finnish co-production 'Parked'. Irish stars to attending the festival include Colm Meaney, who will be present for the screening of 'Parked' with fellow 'Parked' co-star and Finnish actress Milka Ahlroth, and director Risteard O'Domhnaill, whose feature length documentary on the Corrib Gas Pipeline 'The Pipe' will be screened at the festival. 'Knuckle' helmer Ian Palmer will also attend the Finnish Festival.
- 9/16/2011
- IFTN
MovieWeb has the first U.S. poster for Knuckle, a stirring controversial documentary on the underground fighting scene.
Meet James Quinn McDonagh and Paddy “The Lurcher” Joyce. Related by blood and separated by a feud that dates back generations. As the heads of rival families, they train to represent their feuding traveling clans, in their long-standing history of violent bare-knuckle boxing.
Ian Palmer directs. Should be out soon stateside.
Meet James Quinn McDonagh and Paddy “The Lurcher” Joyce. Related by blood and separated by a feud that dates back generations. As the heads of rival families, they train to represent their feuding traveling clans, in their long-standing history of violent bare-knuckle boxing.
Ian Palmer directs. Should be out soon stateside.
- 9/7/2011
- by Jon Peters
- Killer Films
An 12-year journey into the brutal and secretive world of Irish Traveler bare-knuckle fighting.
Ian Palmer’s documentary of bare-knuckle fighting in the Irish Traveller community is a gritty and at times fascinating watch but it still left me feeling wholly dispirited.
The refereed fights are a tradition by which feuding traveller families settle their quarrels and Palmer spent more than 12 years recording the bouts. The film’s core is the ages-old warring between the Joyces and the Quinn McDonaghs. There has evidently been bad blood simmering between them for generations...
Ian Palmer’s documentary of bare-knuckle fighting in the Irish Traveller community is a gritty and at times fascinating watch but it still left me feeling wholly dispirited.
The refereed fights are a tradition by which feuding traveller families settle their quarrels and Palmer spent more than 12 years recording the bouts. The film’s core is the ages-old warring between the Joyces and the Quinn McDonaghs. There has evidently been bad blood simmering between them for generations...
- 9/6/2011
- by Paul Griffiths
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
The Antenna International Documentary Film Festival has announced their inaugural line-up for the event which runs 5-9 October.
Boasting 15 Australian premieres and 25 Sydney premieres with films from 18 different countries, there is $10,000 in prizes.
Opening night at the Dendy Opera Quays will screen Robert Nugent’s Memoirs of a Plague that looks at the relationship between humans and the locust.
Closing night will be Philip Cox’s The Bengali Detective followed by an awards presentation to announce the winner of the Sbs Award for International Documentary (worth $5000) and the Best Australian Documentary ($2500). Both films are in competition.
Other films in International Competition: Michael Madsen’s Into Eternity, Robin Hessman’s My Perestroika, Danfun Dennis’ Hell and Back Again and Marcus Linden’s Regretters – winner of the Prix Europa Best Documentary at Berlin 2010 about two transgender people regretting their decisions to undergo surgery.
In the international special screenings, see Alex Gibney’s...
Boasting 15 Australian premieres and 25 Sydney premieres with films from 18 different countries, there is $10,000 in prizes.
Opening night at the Dendy Opera Quays will screen Robert Nugent’s Memoirs of a Plague that looks at the relationship between humans and the locust.
Closing night will be Philip Cox’s The Bengali Detective followed by an awards presentation to announce the winner of the Sbs Award for International Documentary (worth $5000) and the Best Australian Documentary ($2500). Both films are in competition.
Other films in International Competition: Michael Madsen’s Into Eternity, Robin Hessman’s My Perestroika, Danfun Dennis’ Hell and Back Again and Marcus Linden’s Regretters – winner of the Prix Europa Best Documentary at Berlin 2010 about two transgender people regretting their decisions to undergo surgery.
In the international special screenings, see Alex Gibney’s...
- 9/6/2011
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
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