'The Guard' gets nine IFTA nominations

The Guard, John Michael McDonagh’s hit comedy, came out on top when nominations for the Irish Film and Television Awards (Ifta…

The Guard, John Michael McDonagh's hit comedy, came out on top when nominations for the Irish Film and Television Awards (Ifta) were announced earlier today.

The film received nine nominations including nods for Brendan Gleeson as best actor and McDonagh for both director and screenwriter.

However, two other films also received nine mentions. Stella Days, Thaddeus O'Sullivan's story of a priest's efforts to maintain a cinema in rural Ireland, and Alfred Nobbs, featuring Glenn Close as a woman forced to cross-dress in 19th century Ireland, jostle with The Guard at the top of the nomination hit parade.

Now the most successful ever independently released Irish picture at the domestic box-office, The Guard must, nonetheless, be regarded as a strong favourite for the big prize. Gleeson has already received a Golden Globe nomination for his amusingly profane performance and the picture was very well reviewed on its US release.

Joining those three films on the shortlist for best film is Terry McMahon's controversial Charlie Casanova. The story of a violent misanthrope adrift in contemporary Ireland, the picture shared the prize for best first feature at last year's Galway Film Fleadh.

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As is often the case with the Iftas, most of the nominees for best film still have a relatively low profile with general viewers. The Guard is the only one of the four to have received a commercial release in Ireland at this point.

The most puzzling of the nominations must, however, be the one granted to Ciarán Hinds as actor in a "lead role" for his performance in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. Though reliably impressive, Hinds has only a handful of lines in the John le Carré adaptation. His role in The Debt – for which he received a best supporting nod – is, if anything, slightly larger. Michael Fassbender, hugely acclaimed as a sex addict in Steve McQueen's Shame, and Martin Sheen, star of Stella Days, compete with Hinds and Gleeson in the race for best actor.

Saoirse Ronan, nominated for the thriller Hanna, is up against Antonia Campbell Hughes, Marcella Plunkett and Aoife Duffin in the best lead actress competition.

The Iftas also acknowledge achievement in television. Love/Hate, RTÉ's gangland drama, was way ahead of the pack with an impressive 10 nominations. Game of Thrones, the fantasy epic filmed in Northern Ireland, wheezes into a distant second place with five mentions. Created by distinguished playwright Stuart Carolan, Love/Hate has been picking up good reviews and strong viewing figures since its debut in 2010. Aidan Gillen, the show's star, received a nomination in the best actor category.

Other shows receiving multiple nominations included Corp & Anam, the Irish language crime series, and the flouncy Arthurian epic Camelot.

Ifta chief executive Aine Moriarty said:  "Ireland's economic struggles have been well documented, but against this pressure it's heartening to see how Ireland's hard-working creative community continues to punch above its weight and really deliver."

The awards will be handed out on February 11th in the Convention Centre Dublin at a ceremony hosted by actor Simon Delaney.

List of Nominations

BEST FILM

Albert Nobbs- Alan Moloney, Bonnie Curtis, Julie Lynn and Glen Close

Charlie Casanova- Terry McMahon

Stella Days- Jackie Larkin& Leslie McKimm

The Guard- Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Chris Larke, Flore Fernandez Marengo

DIRECTOR FILM

Rebecca Daly - The Other Side of Sleep

John Michael McDonagh - The Guard

Terry McMahon - Charlie Casanova

Thaddeus O'Sullivan - Stella Days

SCRIPT FILM

John Banville & Glenn Close - Albert Nobbs

John Michael McDonagh - The Guard

Terry McMahon - Charlie Casanova

Antoine O'Flaherta - Stella Days

ACTOR IN A LEAD ROLE IN A FEATURE FILM

Michael Fassbender – Shame

Brendan Gleeson - The Guard

Ciarán Hinds – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

Martin Sheen – Stella Days

ACTRESS IN A LEAD ROLE IN A FEATURE FILM

Aoife Duffin - Behold The Lamb

Antonia Campbell Hughes - The Other Side of Sleep

Marcella Plunkett - Stella Days

Saoirse Ronan – Hanna

ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A FEATURE FILM

Liam Cunningham - The Guard

Brendan Gleeson - Albert Nobbs

Ciarán Hinds - The Debt

Chris O'Dowd - Bridesmaids

ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A FEATURE FILM

Maria Doyle Kennedy
- Albert Nobbs

Fionnula Flanagan - The Guard

Brenda Fricker - Albert Nobbs

Amy Huberman - Stella Days

INTERNATIONAL FILM

Bridesmaids

Drive

Senna


Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

BEST TV DRAMA

Corp + Anam - Paddy Hayes

Game of Thrones - Mark Huffam

Love/Hate
- Suzanne McAuley/Steve Mattews

The Borgias - James Flynn

ACTOR IN A LEAD ROLE TELEVISION

Diarmuid de Faoite - Corp + Anam

Aidan Gillen - Love/Hate

Chris O'Dowd - The Crimson and the White Petal

David Pearse – Trivia

ACTRESS IN A LEAD ROLE TELEVISION

Maria Doyle Kennedy - Corp + Anam

Michele Fairley - Game of Thrones

Ruth Negga - Shirley

Aisling O'Sullivan - Raw

ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAMME

Hardy Bucks

MasterChef Ireland

Mrs Brown's Boys

The Savage Eye

Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke

Donald Clarke, a contributor to The Irish Times, is Chief Film Correspondent and a regular columnist