My buddy Brian Rossney is making a film and looking for funding from crowd sourcing website fundit. Brian and I worked together in the Galway Film Centre many moons ago and he’s a very talented guy. I’ve read the script for this and I think it’s going to be great.
‘Trench’ is a 15 minute short film from the perspective on an Irish soldier. Brady, played by award winning Mark O’ Halloran (Adam & Paul) is a brilliant marksman who finds himself alienated amongst a predominantly British battalion. As the sun begins to rise, he pins down a young and disturbed German soldier with rifle fire and forces him out into ‘No Mans Land’. In an ironic twist of fate, he finds himself in the same place as the German he was trying to kill earlier.
‘Trench’ tells the story of a friendship between two soldiers who don’t speak the same language but share the lack of will to fight each other.
Due to be completed in time for the festivals in 2014 (WW1 Centenary), ‘Trench’ will be beautifully shot on a Red Epic and enhanced with stunning visual effects from a production crew with decades of commercial and film experience.
Written and directed by Brian Rossney who has worked as a visual effects artist, editor and commercials director, ‘Trench’ has caught the attention of a great film crew and cast who are committed to making this film. Cathal Watters, who recently shot a feature ‘Wild’ for Robert Walpole (I went down, Shrooms) will be filming ‘Trench’ on a Red Epic (as used on ‘The Hobbit’.)
Much of the budget required will be for costumes, set construction, additional camera equipment, special effects, and marketing the film to ensure it gets picked up by festivals and broadcasters around the globe.
There’s only so much we can do with our crew, equipment and talent to give this short film the quality that one would expect from a high class feature film. We need you to help with some of the costs to ensure that this film gets made in time and to a standard that the screenplay deserves.
With the Irish theme and a release date due for the 100th anniversary of the bloodiest, hellish warfare in history, ‘Trench’ is destined to achieve international attention.
Roisin gives the thumbs up to Theatre
Roisin Stack has done a huge amount of work in Galway for the last number of years to promote theatre in the Galway area. As director of the Galway Theatre Festival, held each year in November, she has overseen the provision of a great platform that local theatre companies can use to promote and showcase their productions. The festival has been a huge success and has without a doubt increased the number and quality of productions being made in Galway and provided a great launching pad for west of Ireland talent. One of the most successful of these companies is Mephisto and they have provided the lovely Miss Stack with an oppurtunity to direct an exciting project this summer. They are currently seeking finance to help fund the production through fundit and I think they are a very worthy cause and that this is an oppurtity to thank Roisin for her hard work with some hard cold cash. You can apply to help them here
The play they are going to produce is “The Mai” by Martina Carr, this is what the lads in Mephisto have to say about it.
‘The Mai’ is our 20th production and builds on our successful run at the Town Hall Theatre in 2011 with ‘The Honey Spike’ by Bryan MacMahon. For that production the Town Hall Theatre invested financially in us, as they are doing with ‘The Mai’. With a cast of thirteen and demanding production requirements, ‘The Honey Spike’ was “an epic step in the company’s 5-year theatrical voyage”, (Irish Theatre Magazine). In August 2012, we’re taking an even bigger leap.
The Project:
‘The Mai’ by Marina Carr is a play about love, the kind that chews you up and spits you out. It’s a play that centres on four generations of women from the same family who struggle to come to terms with effects of their love and how it can be damaged but remain true; a play that our female actors will relish. With all the plays in the world to choose from, we chose this one, chiefly because Marina Carr is one of Ireland’s most popular and gifted modern Irish playwrights.
From opium-smoking, oar-wielding matriarch Grandma Fraochlán, who forever laments the death of her beloved Nine-Fingered Fisherman, to The Mai herself who tears her world apart and re-builds it again and again for her passionate but absent husband Robert, to their 16-year-old daughter, Millie, who is just beginning to learn about the punch that crazy love can pack, ‘The Mai’ re-imagines the timeless Celtic myth of Coillte and Bláth, and gives the audience a story that will lodge deep down in their bones.
Why do we need your help?
‘The Mai’ is our most ambitious play yet – a challenging and moving play, a large cast, performing on the main stage of the Town Hall Theatre, Galway – and we have engaged a professional team of theatre practitioners to stage this ambitious production. We are fortunate to have some financial support from the Town Hall Theatre and we are looking to raise just over 10% of our budget here on Fund it for design costs needed to compliment the dream-like, elegiac quality of the script, and to get us over the line and give the production the staging it deserves.
In other funding news, some more of my buddies are also looking for cash.
Aoife Scott is doing a parachute jump in aid of the RISE foundation, you can support it here
The RISE Foundation is a registered charity founded by the singer Frances Black in 2008, focussed on the family of those in addiction (alcohol, drugs, gambling, food addiction etc.).
Our Mission “To support families who have loved ones in addiction, to reduce addiction related harm and to combat the shame and stigma associated with addiction”.
At RISE (Recovery In a Safe Environment), we are dedicated to working towards helping families to free themselves from the heartache of a loved one in addiction, and to rediscover relationships in families lost to addiction.
We help families understand the nature of addiction, and teach self-help mechanisms to those suffering the devastation and heartache of having a loved one in addiction.
Maire De Barra is running a marathon to help raise funds for the Cork Life Centre, you can support it here
The Sunday’s Well Life centre is one of 4 Life Centres in Ireland.
Established in Cork in 2000, the Centre offers one-to-one education, counselling and support to early school leavers aged 12-16.
Laura Rigney and her consorts are raising a lot of money for concern by climbing up a big hill you can support her here
In 2011, we, that is, Laura Rigney, Sarah O’Toole and Sinead Coughlan, decided to climb Africa’s highest peak, Mt. Kilimanjaro, in aid of Concern. There are many personal reasons behind why we have decided to do this however it is primarily to try to make a difference. We believe we can achieve that difference through fundraising for Concern, a respected Irish, non Governmental Organisation with a long track record of making successful interventions in areas of the developing world where help is most needed.
Please help us to help others by lending us your financial support. Our target is to raise €17,000 in sponsorship all of which will go directly to improving lives through agricultural and environmental health development and practice in Tanzania, where Mt. Kilimanjaro is situated. The challenge is now set for 11th October 2012.
Donating through this site is simple and totally secure. Concern will receive your money directly so they can put it to work in some of the poorest communities in Africa.
Thanks so much for your support and for helping to make a difference.
Much love and gratitude