So This Is Christmas review – most wonderful time of the year in a small Irish town | Film

A modest film with modest ambitions, this is a documentary that paints a portrait of a small Irish town at Christmas, through interviews with various inhabitants about their lives, touching on what the festive season means to them. There’s a single mum of three, now sober, who used to have a drinking problem. There’s a young widower contemplating his first Christmas with his two sons and without his beloved late wife. There’s a cheery older gentleman working on his reading skills, and an older lady who remembers the time when their small community was ruled by a handful of male authority figures in positions of power.

These people’s stories are all gently compelling, in much the same way as they would be if you got into a conversation with any of them on the bus or in a bar. The uniting principle of the documentary is that they’re all part of the same town at Christmas, which is a fairly light-touch framework; this isn’t a portrait with a complicated thesis about its subject, the vibe is strictly observational. And yet beneath that impression of fly-on-the-wall nonchalance there is a sense of a hidden guiding hand, sketching out a particular image of Ireland’s rural inhabitants: wryly stoical, encountering terrible life events and general hardships with good humour and admirable pluck. This is, then, a selective portrayal, focusing on a particular character type, and juxtaposing that set of people with the so-called most wonderful time of the year.

This is a non-fiction film, but one drawing on a tradition of informing fiction such as A Christmas Carol and It’s a Wonderful Life, in which the viewer’s empathy for the poor and/or deserving and their struggles is given an additional prod by the festive backdrop. In the case of the personable people interviewed here, that festive twist is hardly needed.

So This Is Christmas is at Bertha DocHouse, London, from 13 December.

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