Delighted to see John Butler's Handsome Devil listed in the Huffington Post's Top Ten Films from 2017. What a way to start the new year!
Picture Lock on Metal Heart!
Excitement is building in the Treasure offices as we have just picture locked on Hugh O'Conor's debut feature film Metal Heart. We are so looking forward to presenting it to audiences in 2018!
Jordanne Jones in Hugh O'Conor's Metal Heart
Handsome Devil opens in Irish cinemas nationwide on 21 April 2017!!
Handsome Devil Wins Image + Nation Montreal Audience Award!
We are thrilled to announce that Handsome Devil has won the Audience Award at the 2016 Image + Nation Montreal LGBT Film Festival!! The film opened the festival on November 24th, its second Canadian screening after premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.
The Flag - Out Now on DVD!!
We are delighted to announce that our comedy heist feature film The Flag featuring Pat Shortt is out now on DVD.
Handsome Devil selected for TIFF!
We are thrilled to confirm that Handsome Devil has been selected for the Toronto International Film Festival next month. Handsome Devil is John Butler's second feature film and second TIFF premiere. The film stars Andrew Scott, Michael Mc Elhatton, Moe Dunford as well as the suberb upcoming leads Fionn O'Shea and Nicholas Galitzine. More information on the screenings can be found here.
Viva is out now in cinemas!
Handsome Devil
Ned and Conor are forced to share a bedroom at their boarding school. The loner and the star athlete at this rugby-mad school form an unlikely friendship until it's tested by the authorities...
Review: In ‘Viva,’ a Star Is Waiting to Be Born
An exhilarating hybrid of Social Realism and feel-good aspirational entertainment, Paddy Breathnach’s “Viva” is an oddity by its very pedigree: an Irish movie set in Havana, where it was filmed with a keen eye to that city’s dinginess in tropical light. It infuses a too-familiar story with so much heart that you surrender to its charm and forgive it for being unabashedly formulaic. Even its one big plot twist is hardly a surprise. At the same time, its portrait of Havana, an impoverished city of crumbling architecture, has a gritty neorealist pungency.