Christy: Behind a cinematic love-letter to the Northside of Cork City
A still from 'Christy', the film by Irish film-maker Brendan Canty starring Daniel Power.
Director Brendan Canty and screenwriter Alan OâGorman have seen their debut feature Christy on the big screen in Berlin and Galway, but nothing beat the Corkoniansâ hometown nerves when it premiered recently at the Omniplex in Mahon Point.
They neednât have worried: A huge crowd attended the film, which is about a 17-year-old called Christy (Danny Power of The Young Offenders) who moves in with his estranged brother Shane (Diarmuid Noyes of Blood) in Knocknaheeny after a fractious exit from his foster family.
âItâs such a Cork film â it was like bringing it home,â says Canty. âIt makes sense why we were a bit more nervy.â
Christy is a film with heart and hope in it. It has its dark sides, but bright splashes of humour too. Set over a short period of time, it follows Christy and Shane as they struggle to connect following Christyâs move into Shaneâs house, which is also occupied by Shaneâs partner Stacey (Emma Willis of The Young Offenders) and their infant daughter.

The day after the Cork premiere, the main cast â Power, Noyes, Willis, and newcomer Cara Cullen â join Canty and OâGorman in the Cork Opera House to chat to the Irish Examiner.Â
Theyâre surprisingly fresh-faced despite the nightâs celebrations, with light teasing and camaraderie testament to the bonds made while on set.
In fact, deep friendships are at the root of Christy: OâGorman and Canty were childhood best friends in Ballincollig who reconnected in young adulthood, while Power (a former rapper) and Cullen (a singer) are connected to Knocknaheenyâs music and creative hub the Kabin Studio, run by producer Garry McCarthy.Â
Other âKabin Crewâ in Christy include Darren Stewart as Ferret, Sophie McNamara as Joey, and Ian Tabone who plays the menacing Jammy.Â
Canty began taking photos and making music videos as a teenager, while OâGorman went into teaching.
âI was writing privately a lot,â says OâGorman, who later did a masters in creative writing.
âYou were writing all these mad short stories,â Canty teases as the pair detail discovering they were on the same creative buzz.Â
They worked on a few projects together, but were waiting for the âbig oneâ.
âWhen we tried to write a Cork story, thatâs when it started to click,â says Canty. That Cork story became a 2019 short film, also called Christy, which this feature film expands on.
KIDS IN CARE
Christyâs roots lie in 2012, when Canty photographed bonfire night in Knocknaheeny and got chatting to some local teens.
âThey were kind of the kids you might steer away from⊠but they were really sweet when I got talking to them, and they were really interested in what I was doing,â says Canty.Â
âI was like, âwell, you could get into filmmaking too. Youâve just got to go to collegeâ. And I was just being really naive.â
He was struck both by the options afforded to him by his middle-class upbringing, and the lack of confidence among the teens. He wondered: At what stage does their confidence disappear?
This âreally resonatedâ with OâGormanâs experience as a teaching assistant in Wythenshawe in Manchester, which has a similar socioeconomic profile to Corkâs northside. Many of the children he was working with were in foster care.
âWe didnât intentionally set out to make something about kids in care,â he says, but he did write a character living with his estranged brother for the short film Christy. Turning this into a feature necessitated digging deeper into Christyâs background, and it became clear the character had been in care too.
âIt was really important for us to get that right, and we luckily were surrounded by enough people to really show us what that was authentically like,â says Canty.
Their mentor, Yann Demange â a producer and director known for â71 and Top Boy â had been in foster care as a child himself. The team wanted to make sure that they didnât parachute an imagined story into the lives of real people.
âWe never would have done that,â says Canty.

One of the crucial parts of getting Christy made was time spent developing and workshopping the film with the cast. The film was financed by BBC Film and Screen Ireland, who encouraged them to lean into its Cork-ness. During workshops with acting coach Toby Clarke, the actors dug deep, improvising key moments from their charactersâ lives.
âThere was a real freedom to create the character,â says Emma Willis. She and Noyes came up with one of OâGormanâs favourite scenes during this period, where their characters Shane and Stacey
talk about how they met in Cubinâs nightclub.
âThat was gold for us,â says Canty, while OâGorman says it helped them âfind out why the characters are acting the way they areâ.
When these exercises didnât go well, they still helped the film take shape. Noyes and Power were tasked with improvising a scene to uncover the humour between the brothers, but it just wouldnât land.
âDiarmuid was getting super frustrated, as if he was failing this exercise,â recalls Canty. âBut I was like, no, has taught me that there is no humour, and it makes so much sense, because thereâs such friction between them.â
When the brothers do eventually laugh together on screen, things feel all the sweeter.

PURE DIVA
First-time actor Cara Cullen plays Leona, a sparky new friend Christy makes in Knocknaheeny.
âI donât do improv,â she told Canty before filming, joking now that she was a âpure divaâ. Yet she was asked to improvise one of her first scenes.
âI was like, how am I supposed to do that? How am I supposed to keep talking without having a conversation?â says Cullen, animatedly recalling her frustration. Now she says proudly that the scene is the one people always ask her about, even though itâs just her ârambling onâ.
Cullen and Jamie Forde, who plays the character Robot, bicker like brother and sister on screen.
âWe speak to each other like that in real life,â chuckles Cullen. âIt was pure natural in that way, because itâs the way I talk to my own brothers.â
When she walked on set, she felt like she was playing a version of herself: âShe was a 17-year-old girl living in Knocknaheeny, and I was the exact same. And having a single mam and having to take care of her brothers and all of this stuff. I almost felt like Leona was like a different version of me.â

In the RTĂ/BBC series The Young Offenders, Danny Power plays a loudmouthed antagonist. His lead role of Christy couldnât be more different.
âFor Christy thereâs not a lot of talking, but he also has to tell a story without speaking,â says the softly-spoken actor.Â
âSome of this stuff that he went through, the emotions that he felt⊠I had a child at a very young age, so some of them emotions just connected with me.â
His son, who was born when he was 18, plays the young Christy.
âObviously, we have different pasts and weâve been through different things, but itâs the emotional side of it, I feel like Christy is just me,â says Power.
Both Christy and his brother Shane have a maelstrom of emotions trapped inside them: Shane loves his brother but doesnât know if he can deal with him; Christy wants love and freedom.
âI felt empathy for him. I understood him,â says Noyes of Shane.Â
âItâs a lot of Irish males, just not saying what they mean and bottling up everything and afraid to be vulnerable.â
The silence between the men was drawn out even further in the edit.
âIt makes the end way more powerful,â says OâGorman.
âI got into a habit of, when weâre doing angry scenes, Iâd always punch a wall,â Noyes adds.
âBrendan texted me in the edit and he was like âall these takes â I can see you looking for something to punchâ.â
TALKED DOWN
That Christy is set in Knocknaheeny still feels remarkable for an Irish film.
âThe northside is talked down by so many people, especially Knocknaheeny,â says Power. âTo show people that there is beautiful stuff that goes on in the northside and in the city is a real big thing.â
âItâs a community,â adds Cullen, which âhas the best peopleâ.
As a Dubliner, Diarmuid Noyes discovered the âlove for life around Knocknaheenyâ.
âPeople just want connection, and thatâs very much what this film is about â connection,â he says.
There were âkids everywhereâ while they filmed, though onlookers often thought it was The Young Offenders set. One scene in Christy features a young boy in tiger face paint.
âHe just kept coming up, and Brendan was like âput him in the filmâ,â says Willis.
Ten of Christyâs cast members came from the Kabin Studio, as did some team members behind the camera. Power says if he didnât start rapping and join the Kabin: âI would have never, ever been here today.
âMy plan was to go to the army when I was 18â.
OâGorman interjects, smiling as he tells him: âI just caught you before that.â
He and Canty cast the short film by visiting the Kabin Studio, and the project re-routed Power during a âhecticâ point in his life. The whole gang is full of praise for Garry McCarthy of the Kabin.
âIf we had Garrys in every part of the city all over Ireland, it would be a better world,â says OâGorman.
They filmed amid real bonfires in Knocknaheeny, inside real houses, and did their costumes, hair, and makeup in Terence McSwiney Community College in Hollyhill.
âThereâs nothing worse than going into an area that youâre filming about and they make it look artificial,â says Willis.
Cork film stars Alison Oliver and Chris Walley are also among the cast â playing a homeless woman and Shaneâs co-worker, respectively â adding their imprimatur to Christy.
âThe two of them were just so into the whole ethos of the film,â says Canty.
OâGorman is a huge fan of Helen Behan, who plays local hairdresser Pauline, because of her work in the Shane Meadows series The Virtues, and was astounded she signed on.
Christy doesnât shy away from the issues faced by some residents of Knocknaheeny, but offers lightness too. During filming, someone told Canty they assumed Christy would be âa dark, depressing film set up in Knocknaheenyâ.
âThat was just an expectation, and Iâm happy that itâs not at all, without shying away from the dark side of things. That would not be authentic,â says Canty.
He sees the northside as cinematic: âItâs on a hill. Thereâs so much space. The houses have all these pastel colours. Youâve got the water tower, which is just this incredible structure.â
To him, Christy is âa love letter to the cityâ.

LA-based OâGorman and Cork-based Canty are currently in the early stages of planning a TV series set in the world of Christy, while Noyesâ upcoming projects include the Marian Keyes series The Walsh Sisters, and Power is working on various unnamed projects.Â
Willis is auditioning, while Cullen is âjust living lifeâ.
Both OâGorman and Canty indicate Christy taught them about paying attention and being willing to change their approach.
âI learned whenever youâre not sure about anything, just listen. And talk to people, ask questions. Itâs as simple as that really,â says Canty, as OâGorman nods in agreement.
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- Christy is in cinemas from August 29.

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