Screened as part of NZIFF 2023

Pray for Our Sinners 2022

Directed by Sinéad O'Shea Framing Reality

Journalist Sinéad O’Shea delivers a powerful portrait of those who resisted the Catholic Church’s historic abuse of women and children in small-town Ireland ranging from corporal punishment and oppressive mother-and-baby homes.

Jul 22

ASB Waterfront Theatre

Jul 25

Rialto Cinemas Newmarket

Jul 26

Rialto Cinemas Newmarket

Aug 04

ASB Waterfront Theatre

Ireland In English
82 minutes Colour / DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Maya Derrington
,
Sinéad O’Shea

Cinematography

Andrew Cummins
,
Brian Moore
,
Michael Lavelle
,
Enda O’Dowd

Editor

Edna O’Dowd

Music

George Brennan

Festivals

Toronto 2022; Sydney 2023

Elsewhere

Irish filmmaker and journalist Sinéad O’Shea returns to her hometown of Navan in Co Meath to speak to those who stood up to the Catholic Church’s maltreatment of women and children through the 60s and 70s. We meet women who fell pregnant and were forced through shame into brutal mother-and-baby houses and Magdalene Laundries as portrayed in films such as Stephen Frear’s Philomena and Peter Mullan’s The Magdalene Sisters; a doctor couple who established Ireland’s first family planning clinic outside Dublin; a man who, as a child, was viciously beaten by his teacher for writing with his left hand, “the devil’s hand”; and the town’s complicated priest, a charismatic Kennedy type with a conservative streak. A revelatory look at the dignity of resistance and the impact individuals can have on an abusive system. — Amanda Jane Robinson

“Pulls no punches… A backward glance from a more enlightened, progressive time… powerfully documents what happened within living memory, the trauma still experienced by those who survived it and the inspiration from an often invisible resistance who helped to bring about change.” — Allan Hunter, Screendaily

“A heart-wrenching and important documentary about the abusive Catholic rule in Ireland. A crucial history lesson…a study in trauma and resistance.” — Alex Heeney, Seventh Row