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Learning to Breath Under Water’ wraps production

LTBUW Cast

Learning To Breathe Under Water, directed by Rebekah Fortune, has completed production in Galway, Ireland, with the support of WRAP.

Featuring an impressive cast led by Rory Kinnear (The Imitation Game) and Maria Bakalova (The Apprentice), the film has already garnered significant international interest, with pre-sales to territories including Benelux (September Film), Bulgaria (Beta), Eastern Europe excluding Poland (HBO), Former Yugoslavia (Karantanija Cinemas), the Middle East (Front Row), Poland (Best Film), and airline distribution (Aardwolf). The project is co-produced by Ireland’s Wildcard (Patrick O’Neill) and the UK’s Shudder Films (Jack Tarling), whose previous collaboration on Kneecap was both a box office success and Ireland’s submission for the Oscars.

Learning to Breathe Under Water follows an eight-year-old boy (newcomer Ezra Carlisle) as he navigates life after the death of his mother while his father swings between manic creativity and debilitating anxiety. The arrival of a Bulgarian au pair, played by Bakalova, brings unexpected changes to the household.

The film represents a global collaboration, with co-production partners including KeyFilm in the Netherlands, One Wave Films in Wales, and Eiru Films in the west of Ireland. Funding came from several prestigious bodies, including Screen Ireland, the BFI Global Screen Fund, Ffilm Cymru, the Netherlands Film Fund, Bankside Films, and Three Point Capital. WRAP investment played a vital role in facilitating production in Galway city, allowing the project to showcase the region’s talent, locations, and industry infrastructure. The feature was film in and around Galway City utilising Galway Airport as a studio space where several sets were built.

This is Fortune’s second feature film, following her acclaimed 2017 debut Just Charlie, which won the Ecrans Junior Award at Cannes, the Audience Award at Edinburgh, and was nominated for two BIFAs.

Original article by Mona Tabbara and published on Screen Daily. Read it here.

See also ‘Learning to Breath Under Water’ wraps production at Eirufilms.com

WRAP continues to grow and sustain Film and AV industry in the West of Ireland 

Siobhán Cullen as Elvira Clanc in Obituary 2 (1)

Regional investment fund from Ardán and the Western Development Commission creating ‘a sustainable industry and ecosystem for the West’ 

The West of Ireland’s rugged and atmospheric beauty has made it an ideal location for film and TV production over the decades, and one of WRAP regional investment fund and commission’s goals is to show the region has more than just location to offer.  

This evolution of WRAP’s strategy is a significant step towards scaling the region’s film and AV landscape. Alongside Budget 2024’s Section 481 tax credit cap increase, Screen Ireland’s Creative Clusters Programme, and sectoral regional development strategies led by the Western AV Forum (WAVF), this initiative aims to grow the Western Region’s competitiveness and appeal. 

WRAP is expanding from a position of investing in individual productions to direct investment in film, TV, games, and animation production companies and growing them over a longer term, empowering producers and companies in the Western Region via more direct support through the newly established WRAP Screen Commission. With these strategic supports, the WRAP Region can compete with the east coast in terms of the kind of production which can be attracted here. 

WRAP is a joint initiative of the Western Development Commission and Ardán, with support from local authorities from the Western Region, namely Clare, Donegal, Galway City and County, Leitrim, Mayo, Roscommon and Sligo and Údarás na Gaeltachta. Through WRAP, we are furthering a sustainable ecosystem for people who work in the AV industry in the West of Ireland. 

An expanding industry 

Since WRAP’s inception in 2018, it has supported 32 projects, including TV series Obituary (shot in Donegal), Smother and Blackshore (Clare) and North Sea Connection (Connemara), with 98 award nominations and 13 wins. The fund has seen upwards of €33 million (€40.2 million including non-regional cast) spend in the region, from €2.69 million invested, a €12: €1 impact in the region. 

WRAP has also supported the award-winning creative and collaborative animation studio, Studio Meala, in Boyle, and films such as Wild Mountain Thyme, with Emily Blunt and Jamie Dornan (Mayo); The Cellar, starring Elisha Cuthbert (Roscommon); The Winter Lake, with Charlie Murphy and Emma Mackey (Sligo/Leitrim); and Death of a Ladies’ Man, starring Gabriel Byrne (Connemara). 

Importantly for the West, this has created approximately 500+ regional crew positions and the employment of 150+ regional trainees, 75+ regional cast, and 1500+ regional extras. 

Allan Mulrooney, CEO, Western Development Commission welcomes the creation of the WRAP Screen Commission saying “this scaling of funding to support the whole AV ecosystem in the Western Region is very much complementary to WDC’s ongoing strategy of fostering the emerging CreaTech sector in the region. Through this clustering of investment, the Western Region is strengthening its competitive advantage of offering stunning and unique film locations complete with the necessary infrastructure that enables us to attract international interest.” 

The screen industry in the West of Ireland is also undergoing a period of expansion in the number of production studios and facilities who are based in and building their businesses here. WRAP’s focus on longer-term support and development of the film, TV, games and animation industries in the WRAP Region will help create a sustainable, self-propagating AV sector in the West. 

“Supporting the regionalisation of the film and TV industry is a very clear Government policy,” says Ardán CEO Alan Duggan. “WRAP investing in local producers and local productions directly addresses that policy. We at Ardán are determined to support production happening in the region and to develop regional talent and capacity through our local producers.” 

Creating a sustainable industry in the West 

WRAP can invest up to €200,000 in film, TV, games, and animation companies in the WRAP Region, with the intention to scale and grow production companies, studios, post-production facilities, and game developers, among others, through the development of their own IP, service/work-for-hire offerings, or both. 

“Investing in those companies and growing them over a longer term means we can play a bigger part in nurturing producers and the overall sector here,” says Gar O’Brien-Collins, WRAP Executive. “We are also identifying producers of scale in the WRAP Region, and investing in producers and production companies to a point where they can internationalise, and work and pitch in the co-production market, allowing them to sustain more consistent work here.” 

The WRAP Screen Commission is an important new strand to ensure more opportunities for companies and individuals committed to developing the screen industry in the West. This includes networking and mentoring opportunities in partnership with national organisations and initiatives, including the National Talent Academies and IMIRT.  

The WRAP Screen Commission will also work directly with producers and production companies to provide funding opportunities for talent and location scouting, and key connections to local fixers. 

Increasing the impact 

WRAP has already had a significant impact on the AV industry in the West, supporting award-winning TV series Smother, Obituary, and Ireland’s Wild Islands, as well as the films Calm with Horses, Wild Mountain Thyme, and Death of a Ladies Man

“Investment from WRAP has been invaluable to us,” says Paddy Hayes, producer with Galway based Magamedia. “As a regional producer with a large-scale, international co-production in Obituary, having the support to shoot in the regions and showcase the wealth of crew, talent, locations, and scenery here is very important to me.” 

The importance of WRAP to the West of Ireland is further underlined by producer, Martina Niland, of Port Pictures. “Bringing top quality work to regions around the country can often be challenging,” she says, “so WRAP has been vital in providing investment that has allowed us to bring international projects such as Death of a Ladies’ Man, starring Gabriel Byrne, to Connemara.” 

Supported by WRAP, as well as initiatives like the Creative Clusters Programme, the West of Ireland’s screen industry is poised to make significant progress in the coming years on a local, national and international scale. Building on a strong production legacy, these WRAP initiatives will reinforce the Western Region as a key hub for the creation of film, TV, games, and animation, delivering a significant and lasting impact both culturally and economically into the future.  

For more information on the WRAP investment fund and commission email wrap@ardan.ie.