Beyond the Fire

2009 film by Maeve Murphy


title: "Beyond the Fire" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["2009-films", "2009-romantic-drama-films", "british-romantic-drama-films", "films-set-in-london", "2000s-english-language-films", "2009-british-films", "english-language-romantic-drama-films"] description: "2009 film by Maeve Murphy" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beyond_the_Fire" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary 2009 film by Maeve Murphy ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox film"]

FieldValue
nameBeyond the Fire
imageBeyondTheFireMoviePoster.jpg
captionTheatrical poster
directorMaeve Murphy
producerDean Silvers
Helen Alexander
Maeve Murphy
Frank Mannion
Marlen Hect
writerMaeve Murphy
starringScot Williams
Cara Seymour
musicNeel Dhorajiwala
Colm Ó'Snodaigh
cinematographyMattias Nyberg
editingAgnieszka Liggett
released
runtime77 minutes
countryUnited Kingdom
languageEnglish
::

| name = Beyond the Fire | image = BeyondTheFireMoviePoster.jpg | alt = | caption = Theatrical poster | director = Maeve Murphy | producer = Dean Silvers Helen Alexander Maeve Murphy Frank Mannion Marlen Hect | writer = Maeve Murphy | starring = Scot Williams Cara Seymour | music = Neel Dhorajiwala Colm Ó'Snodaigh | cinematography = Mattias Nyberg | editing = Agnieszka Liggett | studio = | distributor = | released = | runtime = 77 minutes | country = United Kingdom | language = English | budget = | gross = Beyond the Fire, Northern Irish screenwriter and film director Maeve Murphy's second feature, was an award winning film about love in the wake of sexual assault starring Cara Seymour and Scot Williams. The film was first selected and screened at New British Cinema season at the ICA. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian wrote "its unironic belief in the power of love is attractive". It was directed and written by Maeve Murphy. David Parkinson in Empire On Line Festivals and Seasons wrote, "Murphy confirms the good impression she made with Silent Grace... the performances of Williams and Seymour seep raw emotion."

Plot

Beyond the Fire tells the story of Sheamy and Katie. Sheamy is a gentle but troubled Irish ex-priest who arrives in London to find his old family friend and mentor Father Brendan. Katie is a warm hearted woman with her own emotional scars. After arriving in London, Sheamy tries to make contact with Father Brendan. As he is not at home when he calls, he contacts the only other person he knows in London, Rory, a distant relative by marriage. Rory is a musician and band member and, after meeting Sheamy at a gig (where Sheamy makes a good first impression on Katie, who manages the band), offers him a bed and introduces him more fully to Katie, his flatmate. There is an immediate and obvious attraction between Sheamy and Katie. The film follows their attempts to form a lasting relationship despite both their pasts continuing to haunt them.

Cast

  • Scot Williams as Sheamy O'Brien
  • Cara Seymour as Katie
  • Victoria Aitken as Amy
  • Alison Cain as Lisa
  • Brett Findlay as Paul
  • Hugh Sachs as Father Brendan

Awards

TV broadcasts

Beyond The Fire had its UK TV premier on BBC 2 on 22 March 2013 as well as being made available on BBC iPlayer where it was in the 'most popular' section for two weeks and was critically acclaimed by TV critics. It was Top film Tips "8 Best TV Movies of the Week" on the Sabotage Times. It also received a 5 star listing from My TV Guide Listing UK. Beyond The Fire was also broadcast in the Republic of Ireland on 7 April 2010 on TV3. There was press controversy about the film in The Irish Independent regarding RTE's decision not to acquire it due to feeling there was "no appetite for the subject matter". Victims of religious sexual abuse expressed their concern in The Irish Independent. TV3 stepped in and it was instantly broadcast across Ireland. The organisation One in Four supported the film with press relations. The film continues to be written about and reviewed positively.

References

References

  1. "Beyond the Fire".
  2. (18 June 2009). "Film review: Beyond the Fire".
  3. "Murphy's 'Beyond the Fire' Named Best UK Feature | the Irish Film & Television Network".
  4. "BBC Two - Beyond the Fire".
  5. "Top Film Tip's 8 Best TV Movies of the Week - Sabotage Times".
  6. "Tv Guide UK BBC 2 Sunday 17 March".
  7. "Victims' fury as RTE claims 'no appetite' for movie".
  8. "Beyond the Fire + Q&A with Director Maeve Murphy | Kiln Theatre".
  9. "A ★★★★★ review of Beyond the Fire (2009)".

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2009-films2009-romantic-drama-filmsbritish-romantic-drama-filmsfilms-set-in-london2000s-english-language-films2009-british-filmsenglish-language-romantic-drama-films