Several scenes from this Irish-language film take place in Tigh Bhric, local pub and home to Beoir Chorca Dhuibhne/West Kerry Brewery. This establishment is renowned for its beers, which are all named after local places, like the beaches at Béal Bán and Cúl Dorcha. They offer tours of the brewery, and also provide accommodation on site. Local people are both extras and actors in this scene, most notably journalist and radio presenter Sláine Ní Chathalláin, who has a speaking role as one of the rowers on a rival team.
Tarrac re-centers women’s bodies in the context of a sport and cultural tradition previously largely imaged – and thus only ever really imagined – as populated by male bodies: the western Irish tradition of naomhóg-racing. Tarrac seeks not just to amplify women’s voices (importantly: as Gaeilge, or speaking through Irish) within the same arena in which Irish society and Irish Cinema (including Irish Language Cinema, vis-a-vis An Cailín Ciúin) has historically positioned them – the domestic – but to broadcast them across social, public, and sporting spaces as well.
Tarrac tells the story of Aoife (Kelly Gough) returning to her West Kerry home to take care of her widowed father, nicknamed Bear (Lorcan Cranitch), who has recently suffered a heart attack. While both of them are forced to confront the emotional fall-out of Aoife’s mother’s passing years ago, as well as Bear’s consequent / stereotypical inability as an Irish man to supplement the emotional labour traditionally ascribed to mothers, Aoife falls in with a local women’s rowing crew. Physical exertion obfuscates emotional turmoil and emptiness…to a point. Aoife ultimately commands her team to improbable success in the all-Ireland final, and in so doing, resurrects the spirit of her dead mother (famed for her own skill in rowing) and forces Bear to acknowledge his parental shortcomings.
The bones of the story may be bare, but the landscape and the milieu – the inner and social lives of women in 21st century rural Ireland – flesh Tarrac out into something vital and new.
The interview below is with local artist Áine Ní Chíobháin, who worked as location manager for the production.