TheFighting Irish

The hardest fights are the ones closest to home.

A Feature Screenplay · Written by David West

Winner
New York Screenwriting Awards
2024
Best Feature
Red Brick Road Film Festival
2024
Best Screenplay
Screaming Ostrich Int'l Film Festival
2024
Official Selection
LA Int'l Screenplay Awards
2024
Official Selection
Oregon Independent Film Festival
2024
Official Selection
Mindfield Film Festival Albuquerque
2024

Logline

A young Irish-American film student stumbles upon an obscure tradition where sons fight their fathers as a rite of passage — leading him on an unexpected journey to confront his own estranged father, and to uncover the true meaning of identity, legacy, and family.

Format
Feature
Pages
112
Genre
Meta-Comedy
Drama
Setting
Ireland
Status
Seeking
Production

A tradition that never
actually existed.

Sean O'Malley is twenty, Irish-American, and stuck. A film student in Ireland with a thesis to shoot and nothing to shoot it about — until he hears about Troid Athar: the rite of passage where a son must fight his father on his twenty-first birthday.

He assembles a crew — Lukas, a dry Lithuanian sound op; Leaf, a relentless Taiwanese producer; and Siobhan, a brilliant Irish cinematographer who is very difficult to work with — and sets out across the island to document it.

From the industrial grit of Wexford to the cliffs of Moher, they film fathers and sons squaring up in fields and car parks. Every duel says something different about family, legacy, and what men do instead of talking. And underneath the whole project runs Sean's real reason for making it: somewhere in this country is Donal O'Malley, the father who left.

When Sean finally finds him — in a Galway pub, not on a clifftop — it is not the reunion he wrote in his head. It's worse, and truer. The documentary gets finished. It premieres. It goes well. And then Donal turns up drunk, and Sean's mother ends the evening with a right hook that lands both literally and metaphorically.

The film is a love letter to Ireland and a satire of how desperately we invent traditions to explain ourselves. Because here's the thing about Troid Athar: it isn't real. It never was. Sean's entire journey is built on a myth somebody made up — and it changes his life anyway.

The People

Characters

Sean O'Malley

20s · Protagonist

Irish-American film student. Determined, curious, quietly desperate to understand where he comes from. Making a film about other people's fathers to avoid making one about his own.

Siobhan O'Reilly

20s · Cinematographer

Brilliant, blunt, deeply Irish, no-nonsense to a fault. Sees straight through Sean's thesis to the thing underneath it. The romantic tension is mutual and inconvenient.

Donal O'Malley

50s · The Father

Sean's estranged father. Bitter, broken, haunted by his own failures — and nothing like the man Sean spent a lifetime imagining.

Bridget Peterson

50s · The Mother

Raised Sean alone after Donal left. Strong-willed, protective, funnier than everyone in the room. Delivers the film's final blow.

Lukas Baltrunas

20s · Sound

Tall, gangly, Lithuanian, permanently unimpressed. The dry counterweight to Sean's idealism.

Leaf

20s · Producer

Taiwanese, relentlessly energetic, and the only reason the production doesn't collapse. Holds the crew together by sheer will.

Dara Brennan

20s · Cork

Fights his father in a Troid Athar duel to force him to accept his sexuality. The film's most quietly devastating sequence.

Tone & Vision

Handheld truth,
cinematic myth.

Documentary handheld for the duels — raw, immediate, unflattering — cut against composed cinematic frames of the Irish landscape. A muted palette that breaks into colour only when something real finally happens.

The tone moves fluidly between dark comedy and genuine grief, often inside the same scene. It is a film-within-a-film about how the stories we're handed shape us, whether or not they are true.

Borat What We Do in the Shadows This Is Spinal Tap Sing Street The Guard Lady Bird Living in Oblivion Little Miss Sunshine

Writer's Statement

A myth I believed.

I first heard about Troid Athar as a film student in Prague. I believed it completely. I was broke, foreign, and struggling to make anything meaningful without the money or the connections that seemed to come so easily to everyone else — and the idea of a son having to physically fight his father in order to become himself felt like the truest thing I had ever heard.

It isn't real. Somebody made it up. I have never entirely forgiven them, and I have never stopped being grateful.

Every location in this film is somewhere I have actually been. I hitchhiked across Ireland, absorbing the landscape and its stories, real and invented. This began as a 48-hour film project in 2013, born out of a playful lie, and grew into a reflection on fatherhood, identity, and the funny, painful business of coming of age.

The Fighting Irish is about the stories we inherit, the ones we invent, and the ones that shape us anyway — even when they were never true.

— David West

Recognition

Awards & Selections

The screenplay has been recognised across the 2024 festival and screenwriting-award circuit.

Winner
New York Screenwriting Awards
Best Feature Script
Red Brick Road Film Festival
Best Screenplay
Screaming Ostrich IFF
Official Selection
LA Int'l Screenplay Awards · Oregon Independent · Mindfield Albuquerque

Full project listing on FilmFreeway →

Financing

An international
co-production.

The Fighting Irish is an Irish story, written by an American who studied filmmaking in Prague. The financing is being structured the same way: as a genuine co-production across the territories the film actually belongs to.

United StatesEquity
IrelandCo-production · locations
Czech RepublicCo-production · crew
United KingdomCo-production

The production is structured to pursue the national film incentive programmes available in each participating territory, and to shoot on the locations the script was written around — every one of which the writer has walked.

Track record. The writer's previous feature, Into The Fog, was financed through a dedicated production LLP with investor funds held in escrow and released against production milestones. That structure — and the people who backed it — is the template here.

Full financing materials — budget, structure, recoupment, territory strategy and comparables — are provided privately on request to qualified parties. Nothing on this page is an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security.

Investor Enquiry →

Enquiries

Get in Touch

The Fighting Irish is a completed 112-page feature screenplay seeking production partners, co-production finance, and representation. Tell me who you are and what you'd like to see.

Goes straight to the writer. Script and financing materials are sent privately, on request.

This website is for information only. It is not an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security or interest in any production entity. Any such offer would be made only to qualified parties, by private materials, and subject to the applicable law of the relevant jurisdiction.