A Boatload of Wild Irishmen (2010)

Irish-American filmmaker Robert J. Flaherty is credited with being the father of the modern documentary after making "Nanook of the North" and classics such as "Man of Aran" and "Louisiana Story", but he was also criticized for engaging in distortion and stereotyping of his subjects for dramatic effect.

A Doctor’s Sword (2015)

An Irish doctor survived the atomic bomb attack on Nagasaki and was given a Samurai sword for the lives he saved. Seventy years later, his family searches for the origin of their father's sword.

After Braveheart (2015)

Historical docudrama that traces the events of 1315-1318 when Robert Bruce invaded Ireland along with his brother Edward in order to unite the Celtic nations against English oppression.

An Irish Story: This is My Home (2020)

Two Irish immigrant musicians, The Black Donnelly's, embark on a quest to set a Guinness World Record playing sixty shows in all fifty states in just 35 days. Racing against the clock, they examine the pursuit of the American dream from an immigrant's perspective; and how music connects us all.

Atlantean Quartet (1984)

Documentary about the history of the Irish people, dispersing the myth that they are all of pure "Celtic" heritage, but showing them as they really are- a mix of races from the Baltic, Mediterranean and North Africa. It portrays the island not as the remote outpost of Europe most people think it is, but as a busy meeting place and crossroads for seafaring traders of the Atlantic throughout history.

Atlantic (2016)

Documentary about the two big resources in the North Atlantic, fish and oil, and the impact of their exploitation on the environment in various countries on both sides of the Atlantic.

Burren Girl (2020)

A Minnesota woman searches for the place and people her immigrant grandmother left behind. The quest takes her to the Burren: a beautiful, windswept region of County Clare, Ireland. There she finds a clan - and its medieval legacy - that were scattered and lost during some of the most difficult centuries in Irish history.

Charlotte Who? A Gaelic Football Story in America (2020)

In 2000, Kevin Devin and Ronan Cleary founded the James Connolly GAA Club in Charlotte, North Carolina because they missed that part of Irish culture. Seventeen years later, the American women of Charlotte GAA compete at the highest level of the sport in North America against teams stacked with imported Irish players.

Crash and Burn (2016)

For a hot moment in the early 1980s, Irishman Tommy Byrne was the world’s greatest Formula 1 driver, the motor racing equivalent of George Best and Muhammad Ali all rolled into one. His rise was meteoric and his fall spectacular.