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Access the entire 89 minute episode (and additional bonus episodes) by becoming a patron of Junk Filter: https://www.patreon.com/posts/62244513
Ben Nash, a PhD student at Kings College London and a writer whose work has appeared at Mubi and Splice Today, joins the show from Colchester, England to discuss two recent films about “The Troubles” in Northern Ireland, each grappling in their own way with issues of history, family, memory and cinema.
Belfast (2021) has been called director Kenneth Branagh’s “most personal film”, a depiction of his childhood as sectarian violence gripped his neighbourhood. It’s a film that views the turbulent era from a Protestant child’s perspective, but it’s notably a story that for the most part omits the city’s Catholic population from the narrative.
In the excellent 2018 documentary essay-film The Image You Missed, filmmaker Donal Foreman grapples with the legacy of his estranged father, the late American guerrilla filmmaker Arthur MacCaig, who shot documentaries about the conflict in Northern Ireland from the on-the-ground perspective of the Irish Republican socialist left.
Along the way we summarize the conflict in Northern Ireland, Branagh’s peripatetic directing career, the idea of “personal films” and the challenges of mixing monochrome and multicolour in cinema.
The Image You Missed is available for rent at Vimeo On Demand
Follow Ben Nash on Twitter.
Patrons of the Junk Filter podcast receive at least two additional exclusive episodes a month: some of our notable previous guests include Jared Yates Sexton, David Roth, Bryan Quinby, Sooz Kempner, and Jacob Bacharach. More to come! Sign up at https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter
By Jesse Hawken4.6
4949 ratings
Access the entire 89 minute episode (and additional bonus episodes) by becoming a patron of Junk Filter: https://www.patreon.com/posts/62244513
Ben Nash, a PhD student at Kings College London and a writer whose work has appeared at Mubi and Splice Today, joins the show from Colchester, England to discuss two recent films about “The Troubles” in Northern Ireland, each grappling in their own way with issues of history, family, memory and cinema.
Belfast (2021) has been called director Kenneth Branagh’s “most personal film”, a depiction of his childhood as sectarian violence gripped his neighbourhood. It’s a film that views the turbulent era from a Protestant child’s perspective, but it’s notably a story that for the most part omits the city’s Catholic population from the narrative.
In the excellent 2018 documentary essay-film The Image You Missed, filmmaker Donal Foreman grapples with the legacy of his estranged father, the late American guerrilla filmmaker Arthur MacCaig, who shot documentaries about the conflict in Northern Ireland from the on-the-ground perspective of the Irish Republican socialist left.
Along the way we summarize the conflict in Northern Ireland, Branagh’s peripatetic directing career, the idea of “personal films” and the challenges of mixing monochrome and multicolour in cinema.
The Image You Missed is available for rent at Vimeo On Demand
Follow Ben Nash on Twitter.
Patrons of the Junk Filter podcast receive at least two additional exclusive episodes a month: some of our notable previous guests include Jared Yates Sexton, David Roth, Bryan Quinby, Sooz Kempner, and Jacob Bacharach. More to come! Sign up at https://www.patreon.com/junkfilter

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