Maze (2017)

Drama inspired by the true events of the infamous 1983 prison breakout of 38 IRA prisoners from HMP Maze; which became the biggest prison escape in Europe since World War II.

With or Without You (1999)

Rosie and Vincent are a married couple in Northern Ireland; unhappy with their jobs and trying to have a baby. One morning Benoit, a Frenchman and former pen pal of Rosie, whom she never met, comes to visit. Did Rosie love him in the past; and does she love him now?

Shadow Dancer (2012)

In 1990s Belfast, an active member of the IRA becomes an informant for MI5 in order to protect her son's welfare.

Some Mother’s Son (1996)

The 1981 hunger strike in an Irish prison, in which I.R.A. prisoner Bobby Sands led a protest against their treatment as criminals rather than as prisoners of war. It focuses on the mothers of two of the strikers, and their struggle.

I, Dolours (2018)

Documentary drama about Dolours Price, one of very few women who rose to the top of the provisional IRA in Northern Ireland and who was involved in bombings during the Troubles in the 1970s.

Keep It a Secret (2021)

The inspiring true story of the dawn of Irish surfing and how the sport’s brave pioneers found peace and escape in the water during the most violent years of The Troubles in Northern Ireland.

Mandrake (2022)

Probation officer Cathy Madden is tasked with rehabilitating a notorious killer named 'Bloody' Mary Laidlaw back into society following a two-decade sentence.

My Mother and Other Strangers (2017)

In 1943 Northern Ireland, the Coyne family and their neighbors struggle to maintain a normal life after a US Army Air Force base is set up in the middle of their rural farming community; bringing hundreds of gum-chewing, swing-band-listening American airmen into contact with its winsome women and stolid workingmen.

The Secret (2016)

The true-crime story of a respectable dentist and pillar of the community who became a killer in partnership with a Sunday school teacher.

In the Name of Gerry Conlon (2022)

In 1974, Gerry Conlon was a victim of one of the worst judicial crimes in UK history. Aged 20, he and three others were sentenced to life in prison for an IRA bombing. The "Guildford Four" had to wait until 1989 to be exonerated.