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Published 17:24 8 Dec 2021 GMT
Updated 17:27 8 Dec 2021 GMT
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"It’s a GAA story about a young guy who, after he gets into a row on a night out, he gets an injury and he struggles to be able to return playing. It just follows his journey through small-town Ireland, and how that goes. "We went back to our home-town and we had huge row-in and support. Called in all the favours we had and got the local football team out, and all the regulars. Shot that across three weeks and just finished up Saturday, a week ago."Higgins and McGivney, who shared writing and directing duties on the film, both met at Under-8s training in Granard and have known each other ever since. "We would have played Gaelic football together, the whole way up," says McGivney. "Robert saw sense at about 18 and decided to go live his life. I’m still there! I never left, apart from a couple of years away down at college.
"We’ve been very much a part of that world and I guess that is one of the reasons why we thought there was a lot of potential there and a lot of material to explore. It’s just something that is so ingrained in rural Ireland, and is something so ingrained in our rural culture, that we felt it was worthy of our exploration, and depiction, in feature format."
"We were fortunate enough to get Paul Mescal in it, just after he had finished Normal People. So that got a little extra eyes on the stories that we were trying to tell. And, from there, we were looking at expanding that. It’s when we started writing this feature script, this longer version, and really looking to explore our home-town a bit more."Links with Normal People will come naturally, given the Hardwicke, Mescal and GAA connections. It is something the lads are happy to steer into. "Football was a small part of that show and it resonated so much," says Higgins. "It showed there was an appetite for that. The first couple of episodes caused a phenomenon and we really thought there was scope there to explore, deeper into the real minutiae of this world. The deeper side of it." Building on that idea, McGivney believes there is definitely space to see and hear more of these tales of local football, and what it means to communities across the country.
"I guess the version of Gaelic football that is depicted a lot of the time isn’t the version or the world that a lot of people know. It’s club football, it’s meeting up with your mates on a cold winter’s evening, a lot of the time. And it’s something that we felt was interesting there to explore, outside the bright lights of Croke Park and down in that grassroots version of GAA."
"Éanna Hardwicke was someone we’ve been really impressed with for a while. He was in Normal People as well, and Vivarium [which starred Jesse Eisenberg]. He’s got a really varied, for a young actor, he’s done a huge amount of different things. "The role he has, as that central role, his character goes through about every emotion there is. We thought he was the perfect man for it. And then Danielle Galligan has really took off with the Netflix show Shadow and Bone. I’d been watching her in short films in Ireland for years, and I thought she’d be a great fit for this world, from her previous work."The lads also speak highly of Gary Lydon's depiction of the hard-nosed GAA coach while the cast also features Lorcan Cranitch (Bloodlands, The Dig), Dafhyd Flynn (Michael Inside), and Dara Devaney (Arracht). As for the all important GAA scenes, the local team all volunteered their services and all knew how pivotal getting genuine and realistic training and match footage was. As for what comes next, Higgins says the goal will be for 'Lakelands' to head out on the festival circuit once post-production is wrapped. "Hopefully getting around to a few festivals next summer and into the winter, and potentially a cinema release," he says. "It’s exciting and we’ll see where it might go."
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