Dublin international Film Festival announced its full lineup today with the Sally Hawkins and Ethan Hawke starring folk artist biopic Maudie set to open proceedings on February 16.
Along with a sizable selection of International films and guests, there'll be plenty of Irish talent on show. Cillian Murthy and Jack Reynor will be present, along with director Ben Wheatley, for a screening of Free Fire, while Aiden Gillen will arrive with the World Premiere of Jamie Thraves' Pickups.
With the Irish film industry in fine health at the moment, there's plenty of locally produced films for Dubliners to discover.
See below for the full announcement on the festival's many films, events, and guest appearances. All verbiage courtesy of the festival.
Galas and World Premieres
The Gala Opening Night of ADIFF 2017 will be the Irish Premiere of Maudie, the internationally acclaimed biopic of folk artist Maud Lewis by award-winning Irish director Aisling Walsh (Song for a Raggy Boy) and starring Sally Hawkins and Ethan Hawke.
Jim Sheridan’s The Secret Scripture, adapted from the award-winning novel by Sebastian Barry, will receive a Gala Irish Premiere and see ADIFF present a Volta Award to Vanessa Redgrave. The Volta Award is the Festival’s most prestigious honour, reserved for those who have made an outstanding contribution to the world of film.
Top Irish talent Jack Reynor, Cillian Murphy and Ben Wheatley will attend the Audi Gala screening of Wheatley’s new film Free Fire. ADIFF’s new Centrepiece Gala will be Neasa Ní Chianán and David Rane’s In Loco Parentis documentary study of the Headfort School. Juanita Wilson’s Tomato Red will receive its Irish premiere at the festival with cast member Anna Friel in attendance. Director Alan Gilsenan’s Unless, another Irish premiere, features Catherine Keener as a mother attempting to reconnect with her homeless daughter who seems all but lost to her.
Witness film history in the making at one of the many World Premieres at ADIFF17 Dennis Bartok’s terrifying hospital horror Nails; and Aiden Gillen and Jamie Thraves’ Pickups that features Gillen playing a semi-fictionalised version of himself, a troubled actor weighing the price of success.
The Arts Council and ADIFF’s Reel Art documentary commissions receive their World Premieres at the Irish Film Institute. Ken Wardrop (His & Hers) brings his characteristic warmth and humanity to piano grade exams in The Piano Lesson while John Murray and Traolach Ó Murchú’s Photo City delves into the celluloid history of Rochester, NY.
Rounding up a stellar festival at ADIFF’s prestigious Closing Night Gala is the Irish premiere of Handsome Devil, John Butler’s (The Stag) new comedy-drama set in an Irish boarding school.
International Programme
Three international screen actors, Nathalie Baye, Kerry Fox and François Cluzet, will attend the festival, each giving tour-de-force performances that build on already remarkable careers. French screen icon Baye becomes the target of a dangerous obsession in Moka; New Zealander Fox features as the uncompromising acting teacher in The Rehearsal and gives us a welcome look back at her stunning performance in Jane Campion’s An Angel at My Table; and known internationally for his performance in international hit The Intouchables, this year Cluzet stars in stylish paranoia thriller Scribe.
From Bhutan to New Zealand, Seoul to Senegal, Nova Scotia to Manila – ADIFF’s world cinema programme feature films from over 35 countries including vital new films from established auteurs to the Festival including Olivier Assayas, Pablo Larraín, Michael Winterbottom, Aki Kaurismäki, Ben Wheatley, Asghar Farhadi, Cristian Mungiu, Lone Scherfig and Terence Davies.
In 2011, Iko Uwais’ flying fists and lightning-fast feet in The Raid hailed a new hero of action cinema. Now Uwais returns as the hero of Headshot (an ADIFF Special Presentation) bringing his astounding fighting skills to this tale of amnesia and revenge.
First time Directors
This year’s programme is remarkable for its extraordinary new international voices making their feature debuts. Juho Kuosmanen uplifting Oscar-tipped boxing biopic The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki, Ben Young’s Australian kidnap nightmare Hounds of Love, noted British director William Oldroyd’s Lady Macbeth, Daouda Coulibaly’s thrilling West African crime thriller Wùlu are all highlights of the festival made from international first-time directors while Irish director Lorcan Finnegan’s deeply creepy walk in the woods, eco-horror Without Name, equally marks him out as a talent to watch closely in years to come.
The world has tilted on its axis in the past year and there’s a thread of black comedy running through many of 2017’s offerings, with the frustration and unease relieved through acerbic and bitter humour – not least in the title of Dash Shaw’s My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea! but also in Sean Foley’s Mindhorn with Ross Noble in attendance, Anna Biller’s future cult favourite Love Witch, and Kris Avedisian’s fine comedy of discomfort Donald Cried.
Special Events and the Surprise Film
The meeting point between audiences, critics, talent and industry that the Festival provides extends far beyond the cinema screen in the ADIFF Special Events. A singular master of film adaptations, Terence Davies will take part in a public interview with Roddy Doyle. Masterclasses include Oscar-winning costume designer Alexandra Byrne, in association with Warner Bros. Creative Talent, whose credits range from the upcoming Jungle Book to Hamlet to Doctor Strange; and leading British director Ben Wheatley (High Rise, Free Fire). Celebrating and documenting the current high point in Irish film, ADIFF will present an exhibition by Hugh O’Conor featuring intimate portraits of his colleagues in the Irish film industry.
An annual treat for the brave and the bold, the Surprise Film is a tightly guarded secret known only to the Festival Director, but one thing that can be guaranteed is that no one need go hungry, as this year the screening is supported by Just Eat, the official food ordering app, who will be offering special discounts and vouchers to the audience.
Fantastic Flix
The Festival’s expanding Fantastic Flix programme brings the world of cinema to the next generation in its packed festival of children’s films from around the globe, workshops, short film selections, the Fantastic Flix Children’s Jury and special events. Highlights include a special selection of films from visiting children’s author Dame Jacqueline Wilson, along with the Golden Globe-nominated animated film My Life as a Courgette, and Michaël Dudok de Wit’s The Red Turtle.
Awards
Alongside the Volta Awards that recognise outstanding achievement, the ADIFF Discovery Award sees the festival reward emerging Irish talent; the Dublin Film Critics Circle Jury selects the best of the festival for their awards ceremony; and filmgoers themselves select their favourite with the AUDI-ence award. The AUDI-ence award-winning filmmakers
 will be flown to the Berlin International Film Festival in 2018, where they will enjoy a true VIP Audi experience.
Tickets go on sale online and the digital programme will be available to browse and download from 18.30 on 18th January at www.diff.ie. Tickets available by phone on +353 1 687 7974 or in person at DIFF, 13 Ormond Quay from 10am Thurs 19th Jan.