Friday, 24 September 2010

Irish indie film Once proves that it doesn't take a monster budget to make a marvel

Once was shot in only seventeen days back in 2006 and, in my humble opinion, the film world is a great deal better off for it. This Irish gem, written and directed independently with a tiny budget, was highly revered amongst critics upon its release, with the hauntingly emotive ‘Falling Slowly’ winning an Academy Award for Best Original Song.

The storyline may sound cheesy and clichéd but the reality could not be more delighfully different. An unnamed busker nervous about performing his own songs meets a Czech immigrant girl who is selling roses on the same Dublin street. They form an unlikely bond through their passion for music, as both attempt to express their feelings and experiences of loss and love to one another through their songwriting. Musicians primarily, lead actors second, Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová composed and performed the soundtrack together. A little bit of research tells me that folk royalty Bob Dylan was such an avid fan that he invited the pair to support him during some of his world tour shows. The duo also covered ‘You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere’ for the 2007 film about his life, I'm Not There.

Once is charmingly unpretentious and believable, with an intimate integrity far deeper than so many overstated romantic blockbusters. The honest portrayal of two strangers struggling with inherently human turmoils restores faith in the importance of music and friendship. A rough diamond of a film, its unpolished nature is what ultimately, and somewhat ironically, allows it to sparkle.


Trailer for Once, released in 2006.