GFF24 · Interviews

Tummy Monster Interview: Ciaran Lyons & Lorn Macdonald – ‘There was a real energy to the shoot – you could feel it’.

Have you ever had a bad experience when asking a celebrity for a selfie? Glasgow-based filmmaker Ciaran Lyons explores the dark side of this idea in his debut feature Tummy Monster, a psychological black comedy set entirely in a tattoo studio. Rising star Lorn Macdonald plays Tales who gets embroiled in a twisted game when a musician turns up at his parlour to get inked in the middle of the night.

Ahead of its World Premiere at Glasgow Film Festival 2024, I jumped at the opportunity to sit down with director Ciaran Lyons and actor Lorn Macdonald to discuss their inventive new film…

I note that you’re both credited with writing the screenplay along with Orlando Norman. What was your process around collaborating? I guess that there was some improv involved…?

CL – Yeah, it’s partly the improv element. I wrote the first draft and it was always my intention that it would be a very actor led piece. I really wanted to give both Lorn and Orlando scope to flesh out their characters and contribute to the script and they did. They both brought an awful lot to it and they crafted their roles into the characters you see on screen.

Continue reading “Tummy Monster Interview: Ciaran Lyons & Lorn Macdonald – ‘There was a real energy to the shoot – you could feel it’.”
DVD & Digital · GFF24

Film review: Tummy Monster

 Just how far would a desperate person go to get a selfie with someone famous? Scottish filmmaker Ciaran Lyons explores this in his impressive feature debut Tummy Monster. Fusing psychological thriller elements with jet black comedy, the plot centres around tattoo artist Tales (Lorn Macdonald) who is living out of his studio following a run of misfortunes. When an American pop star (Orlando Norman) and his security guard (Michael Akinsilure) turn up at his shop in the dead of night, he thinks his luck might have changed. After giving him the ink that he desires, Tales asks for a quick snap as a memento because his ‘niece is a big fan’ but when the musician surprisingly declines, their spat starts to spiral out of control.

Continue reading “Film review: Tummy Monster”
DVD & Digital

Film review: Defoe

After making a couple of award-winning short films, US-based writer and director James Ross has come across the pond for his debut feature, shifting genre from horror to sports documentary. A lifelong Spurs fan, this biographical film charts the illustrious career of one of their most prolific strikers. Defoe came up playing on the streets of East London before competing at the highest level for West Ham United, Tottenham Hotspur, Sunderland, and more, and represented England on the world’s stage.

Continue reading “Film review: Defoe”
DVD & Digital

Film review: The Sweet East

Best known for his work as a cinematographer, Sean Price Williams has brought his rough and ready aesthetic to independent hits such as Good Time, Funny Pages, and Her Smell. Fantasy drama The Sweet East marks his directorial debut and sees him doubling down on his experimental approach and follows high schooler Lillian (Talia Ryder) on a field trip to Washington, D.C. 

Continue reading “Film review: The Sweet East”
DVD & Digital

DVD review: The Taste of Things

Twenty years on from the end of their marriage, Juliette Binoche and Benoît Magimel reunite on screen in French romance drama The Taste of Things. Written and directed by Trần Anh Hùng, it is set in 1885 and centres on the relationship between cook Eugénie (Binoche) and Dodin (Magimel), her acclaimed gourmet. Bonded over a shared passion for exquisite cuisine, they are joined in their idyllic chateau by assistant Violette (Galatea Bellugi) and her young niece Pauline (Bonnie Chagneau-Ravoire) who is primed to be their latest apprentice.

Continue reading “DVD review: The Taste of Things”
DVD & Digital

DVD review: All of Us Strangers

 Throughout his career, writer and director Andrew Haigh has excelled in demonstrating the richness of relationships on screen, from fleeting passion in Weekend to an enduring companionship in 45 Years. His latest effort is romance drama All of Us Strangers, based on the 1987 novel by Taichi Yamada. The plot follows screenwriter Adam (Andrew Scott) who lives a lonely existence in a desolate London tower block. After a fire drill in his building, he has a brief encounter with neighbour Harry (Paul Mescal) who makes a drunken pass at him. Nights later, whilst looking for inspiration for his next script, he visits his suburban childhood home only to find that his mother (Claire Foy) and father (Jamie Bell) are still there, just as he remembers them, despite having been killed in a car accident around thirty years earlier.

Continue reading “DVD review: All of Us Strangers”