Monday, July 19, 2010

100 Mornings - COMING SOON!


Conor Horgan is a man in a hurry. He squeezes me in for a chat in a Dublin café the day before he is due to fly to the Slamdance festival in Park City, Utah where his debut feature - One Hundred Mornings - will have its World Premiere.

For his first film to be chosen for Slamdance is a creditable achievement in itself but over the coming days the film makes a substantial impression at the festival, where it receives a Special Jury Mention and is described by Filmmaker Magazine as, "Achingly humane and stringently observed".

One Hundred Mornings was one of three films green-lit by the Catalyst Project to go into production with a €250k budget. The other films were the festival favourite Eamon and the as-yet unreleased Redux but the scheme was also responsible for incubating other fine films like His & Hers and Savage, that weren’t funded by the project itself but were developed to the point that production was almost inevitable, and was ultimately successful.

What comes across so strongly in conversation with Horgan is just how much he enjoyed making this intense, moving film. His eyes light up when he thinks back to the process, holed up in a Wicklow location for four weeks.

“The film is quite bleak, you could say, but the set was the happiest set I’ve ever been on. Perhaps that was a reaction to the material. We were a group of people doing something that we believed in and believing it was something we could do well. There was a strong feeling amongst the cast and crew that we had the potential to make a good film.”

The film imagines a world where society has broken down and the population is struggling to survive with no energy and limited resources. At the centre of the film, two couples form an uneasy alliance, hiding out in a remote lakeside cabin and hoping things will somehow improve.

Time passes. With precious little information from the outside world and an increasing amount of external threats to their survival, tensions rise between the characters, leaving the audience gripped by the action.

To make the film, it was vital that Horgan find a location cut off from the external world, both from the point of view of isolating his characters and also creating a quiet world away from the sounds of daily life.

“Writing the film, I thought I was being very clever because we only needed one location but when I actually broke it down I realised that the location had to provide a very long and specific list of requirements. It took us an awful long time to find it. We were at the top of a hill looking down at Lough Dan and we saw this place. I remember walking down the hill and looking in the windows and thinking, ‘this is it!’”

“It was just in the middle of nowhere but because of the film it needed to be in the middle of nowhere. It needed to have no lights, no noise, not even a road nearby or even livestock. And it had to big enough so that we could shoot four people in it and make it visually interesting.”

The film is definitely that. At times watching it, I was reminded that Horgan has a background in photography; so many of the frames could have been stunning photographs in themselves.

This visual strength allied to the bleak but beautiful location makes this film the best looking of the recent lower budget Irish films, in my opinion at least, and Horgan explains that he had a strong collaborative bond with cinematographer, Suzie Lavelle.

“Suzie was just a really great ally to make the film with. We spent two weeks on the set before filming, looking at everything and storyboarding. She has a document somewhere with photographs for every scene from the film but when it came to filming we just put that in the back pocket and were open to what would happen in front of us. There was a spontaneity and an energy about how things happened on set that gave the film life.”

Horgan has achieved a taut, compelling drama that sucks you in and won’t let go. Central to achieving this outcome is his choice of bravely long takes held in wider shots that drag the viewer into the centre of the unfolding human drama.

“I didn’t want to make a cutty film,” he says. “I started off in commercials where you cut so often. Where possible, I wanted to make the scene work in one take. I wanted to block the scenes and set the frame and create something that held the attention and held the drama without needing to cut to another angle. It just makes the film feel more real.”

Test screenings confirmed that the intensity of film could emotionally engage viewers. Horgan sat delighted amongst the punters while post-screening debates about the film unfolded. People were engaged and passionate about it. The film’s domestic premiere at Galway continued the trend and success at Slamdance suggests it has a bright future.

“It isn’t a film that’s everyone’s cup of tea but then it wasn’t intended to be. I think the people that get it, really get it. I certainly hope that it’s thought-provoking and, so far, it seems to be.”

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