Joe Lawlor
Total Credits at Criticker: 1 (Actor), 8 (Director), 8 (Writer)
Find more information about Joe Lawlor at The Internet Movie Database
Titles you haven't rated - Actor (1) | Director (8) | Writer (8)
An 18 year old girl called Joy has gone missing. Another girl called Helen is a few weeks away from leaving her care home. Helen is asked to 'play' Joy in a police reconstruction that will retrace Joy's last known movements. Joy had everything. A loving family, a boyfriend, a bright future. Helen, parent-less, has lived in institutions all her life and has never been close to anyone... (imdb)
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After discovering his wife's infidelities, Gerry leaves London to look after his deceased brother's business and family in Singapore. (imdb)
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Who Killed Brown Owl? (2004) - Short Film
In a 10-minutes long-take camera moves on and over a park in London showing the regular fellows doing regular stuff in a holiday but - there is something more to it.
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Joy (2008) - Short Film
A police officer, coordinating the reconstruction of the last known movements of a young girl who has gone missing, speculates on what might have happened to her. (imdb)
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Christine Molloy and Joe Lawlor take as their point of departure the compelling 18th Century figure, Ambrose O'Higgins, and attempt to retrace his remarkable journey from Ireland to Chile. (imdb)
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An adopted girl seeks out her birth mother only to be told her mother has no desire to meet her. (imdb)
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Baltimore is based on actual events that took place on the 26 April 1974 when Rose Dugdale and three comrades carried out an armed raid on Russborough House, Wicklow, in which 19 masterpieces were stolen in an effort to support the IRA’s armed struggle. The film plays out over the course of the days following the raid, when Rose is in hiding in a remote cottage.
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When two Irish filmmakers travel home from London with their daughter, they reflect on their relationship to Ireland, and their adopted home, England. They explore their own experiences in ageing, parenting, and mental illness, along with the brutal history that lies beneath Ireland’s heavy earth.
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