The Dawn (film) explained

The Dawn
Director:Tom Cooper
Producer:Tom Cooper
Starring:Tom Cooper
Donal O'Cahill
Eileen Davis
Brian O'Sullivan
James Gleeson
Gerry O'Mahony
Bill Murphy
Marion O'Connell
Music:Pat Crowley's Dance Band
Studio:Hibernia Pictures
Runtime:89 minutes
Country:Irish Free State
Language:English

The Dawn is a 1936 film made in the Irish Free State, directed and produced by Tom Cooper, who also co-wrote and acted in the film. Set during the Irish War of Independence, it was the first indigenous sound production made in Ireland. It was released in the United States under the title Dawn Over Ireland.[1] [2]

Production

The Dawn was filmed by Killarney garage owner Tom Cooper in 1934 and 1935. The cast comprised 250 amateur actors from the local area, many of them Irish Republican Army veterans.[3]

Plot

In 1866, in the runup to the Fenian Rising, Brian Malone was falsely denounced as an informer. In 1919, his grandson of the same name aims to clear the family name by serving in the IRA.

Reception

The Irish Times correspondent wrote, "The Dawn, in spite of various crudities, is as thrilling a show as ever I want to witness, and its amateur cast gives it a freshness which is all too rare." It was contrasted with Ourselves Alone, which had portrayed "clean-limbed police" with the IRA men shown as "tough hombres"; The Dawn, on the other hand, depicted the Black and Tans as "too scoundrelly for words" and was liable to make Unionist viewers squirm.[4]

Cooper received an award from Cork Film Festival in the late 1970s.

An original 35 mm print is stored in the British Film Institute; it was digitised and restored in 2016.[5] Prints are also held by RTÉ and the Irish Film Institute.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Irish Film & TV Research Online – Trinity College Dublin. www.tcd.ie.
  2. Web site: The Dawn (1936). BFI.
  3. Web site: The Making of 'The Dawn'. RTÉ Archives.
  4. The Irish Times (Tuesday, August 25, 1936), page 4.
  5. News: Restored version of first Irish sound film 'The Dawn' to be screened. Hugh. Linehan. The Irish Times.