Film Reviews
Eamon
- Rating:

- Director: Margaret Corkery.
- Starring: Amy Kirwan, Robert Donnelly, Darren Healy.
- Details: Ireland / 86mins (15A).
The first of three Irish films borne of the ambitious Catalyst Project - first time filmmakers making a movie under €250,000 - Eamon, a subtle, unhurried drama that explores Irish motherhood and the slow death of the family unit, is the first to hit the screens.
Grace (Kirwan) is a young mother struggling with a hyperactive 6-year-old boy in Eamon (Donnelly) and maintaining a relationship with his father, Daniel (Healy). In an attempt to bond as a family, the three take off for the coast on a budget holiday but inherent problems doom the break before it begins. Eamon insists on sleeping in the same bed as his mother, maddening the increasingly horny Daniel further, while Grace cuts a frustrated figure - a pretty woman tied down in a loveless relationship, she seeks the attention of the hunk on the beach. As Eamon becomes ever more emotionally sidelined by his selfish parents, he looks to secure attention by other means...
Written and directed by Margaret Corkery, Eamon can be accused of being lifeless, that not much happens in its short running time, but the flipside to that argument is that it's a patient slow-burner; throughout, first-timer Corkery remains confident that its unexpected climax will be worth sticking around for. However, that slow pace becomes monotonous after a time, deadening the impact of the finale. The characters have little to say to each other and what they do say is of little interest. Not that a movie has to be awash with clever dialogue but there has to be something to patch over the quieter moments.
Unlikeable characters they may be, but Corkery makes them believable and the director drags strong turns from all involved. Young Robert Donnelly is strong as the titular character while Kirwan, despite the movie being called Eamon, is really the central character and she holds the story together. It's Healy, however, that is the standout. Hampered by the least-fleshed out role of the three, he plays Daniel like an almost-mute child and is determined to have fun with him.
The Catalyst Project's aims were to help a first time filmmaker make a film with a tight budget and they have succeeded. But will it encourage movie lovers to fork over a tenner for it is another matter.
Review by Gavin Burke
DVD Reviews
Footloose (2011)

Differentiating itself from the recent slew of dance flicks by having an actual plot - all be it a regurgitated one - this remake of the 1984 Kevin Bacon starrer manages to (mostly) compliment the... [more]
One Day

Based on the much loved novel by David Nicholls (who adapts his own book), An Education director Lone Scherfig is in charge of this innately complex tale of the development of a relationship over the... [more]
Midnight in Paris

Woody Allen goes whimsical, while Owen Wilson gives his best performance in years (granted, that's a low bar) in this slight but amusing romantic comedy which features a barrage of classic cultural... [more]
Crazy Stupid Love

You wait all year for a Ryan Gosling film to come out then two come along in the same day. In this hugely enjoyable, if somewhat disjointed, romantic comedy/drama, the talented leading man gets to... [more]
Your Comments
robert - caoilfhionn
Published 25 July 2010
hey robert its caoilfhionn here well done
Robert - Robyn
Published 17 February 2010
he"s an amazing lil kid, pleasure to be around, he"s in my dancing & he will make himself very big in years to come! He"s our broadway baby :) so proud of ya Rob x