Dream Kitchen

Dream Kitchen
Directed by Barry Dignam
Produced by Conor McKiernan
Katherina Fay
Barry Dignam
Written by Barry Dignam
(adapted from an original stage scene by Kevin McCarthy)
Starring
  • Andrew Lovern
  • Frank Coughlan
  • Caroline Rothwell
  • Sarah Pilkington
  • Loclann Aiken
Music by "Dream Kitchen" by Frazier Chorus
"Un bel di vedremo" performed by the Orchestra of the Opera House, Rome
Cinematography David O'Sullivan
Edited by Michelle Spilanne
Production
company
Hit and Run Productions
DLIADT
Release dates
  • 1999 (1999)
Running time
8 minutes
Country Ireland
Language English

Dream Kitchen is a 1999 Irish short film directed by Barry Dignam in which a young man fantasises about coming out to his parents.[1]

Plot

A young man arrives home from school and meets his father fixing the car. The two barely exchange words except for the boy's father asking him to hand him a pair of Vise-Grips. When he goes inside he sees his pregnant sister smoking and his mother in the dark and untidy kitchen drinking vodka and coke.

As he sits at the table he begins to daydream of being in a clean stylish kitchen with his well dressed mother. Speaking in faux-Elizabethan English to one another he tells his mother that he is gay and she is delighted with the news. She calls in his father who is wearing clean white overalls and when he is told of his son's secret he too is overjoyed. Just then the young man's sister enters and again reacts happily to the news of her brother's homosexuality and hugs him.

The doorbell then rings and the son reveals to his family a glowingly handsome young man, Andrew; his boyfriend. The family welcome him and invites him to a celebratory feast.

The young man awakes from his daydream and is back in the grey kitchen. He tries to initiate a conversation with his mother about a television programme they watched the night before. His father enters and sits at the table still grubby from fixing the car. He asks what they are talking about, to which the mother says "...the programme about those fairies", to which he replies "Bloody perverts!" and rants that the programme is "rubbish" and "dangerous". The parents then ask why the son brought up the programme; just then the doorbell rings and he rushes out.

When he answers the door it is revealed that the handsome boyfriend from the fantasy was real, and the young man grabs his coat and smiles to the camera before they drive off together.

Cast

Awards and accolades

Film Festival Category Year Outcome
Galway Film Fleadh[2]Best Irish Short Film 1999 Won
Berlin International Film Festival[3]Golden Berlin Bear 2000 Nominated
Rose Film FestivalBest Short Film 2000 Won
New York Independent Film Festival[3]Audience Award for Best Short Film 2001 Won

References

External links


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