Gabriel (Dermot Murphy) is a talented drummer. But just before the breakthrough, the band threatens with his ejection – the guys are fed up with his extreme mood swings, which he urgently needs to get a grip on. His doctor diagnoses a bipolar disorder and advises him to a therapeutic football training. On the field, Gabriel clashes with goalkeeper Christopher (Jacob McCarthy), who suffers from Asperger syndrome.
In order to stay in the team, the coach asks both to make friends. Christopher takes that literally – much to the annoyance of Gabriel, who will not let go of his obtrusive follower. But despite all the differences and initial difficulties, they actually develop an unusual friendship: both feel connected in their otherness – with unimaginable consequences…
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THE DRUMMER AND THE KEEPER tells the story of an unusual friendship and shows us with a big heart, that we need to stop reducing people with mental illness only to their illness…
From Ireland, this small, but extremely fine film, has found it’s way to the International Film Festival Emden-Norderney. Director Nick Kelly, who also wrote the screenplay, succeeds in creating an unconventional film that touches deeply, but at the same time shows us, what is going wrong in our society. Because often – if not even always – we reduce a person with Asperger’s or a bipolar disorder to their illness and forget, that there are way more other things, that shape their personality.
What makes the movie interesting, is the idea of combining the ups and downs of a bipolar human with the almost linear everyday life of a person suffering from Asperger’s. This provides some very interesting friction points throughout the story. It’s not by chance that the role of the bipolar is a rock musician, after all, director Nick Kelly is a rock musician himself and thus knows what he’s talking about. „Actually, the life of a rock musician is like that of a bipolar“, Kelly says in an interview with nochnfilm.de. „After all, you sit on the bus for 23 hours or wait for something to happen, and then you’re incredibly excited for one hour.“
Also, the aspect of Asperger’s syndrome is not completely foreign to Kelly, because his own son is autistic. No wonder the characters in THE DRUMMER AND THE KEEPER are so real and authentic.
The supporting actors in the scenes that take place in an institute are also members of an autistic drama group. Before the shooting began, his producer asked him, if that was not too difficult, but Kelly countered that finding ten actors and making them all play different aspects of autism would have been much more complicated.
THE DRUMMER AND THE KEEPER is a wonderful movie that will hopefully somehow find its way into our theaters or homes. There’s rarely been a film about the mentally ill, that’s been so authentic and affectionate.
At the International Film Festival Emden-Norderney I had the chance to talk to director and screenwriter Nick Kelly about his film THE DRUMMER AND THE KEEPER.
Nick Kelly began his career in the 1990s as a singer and songwriter for the Irish band „The Fat Lady Sings“, released four solo albums, partly under his stage name Alien Envoy, and is considered one of Ireland’s most innovative independent musicians. Since 2003 he has been working as a scriptwriter and director and has made several short films that have been screened and awarded at film festivals worldwide. The short film „Shoe“ received an Oscar nomination in 2011. With THE DRUMMER AND THE KEEPER he gives his feature film debut, which was awarded „Best First Irish Feature“ at the Galway Film Fleadh.
The Drummer and the Keeper (Ireland 2017)
94 minutes
Drama
Nick Kelly
Nick Kelly
Dermot Murphy, Jacob McCarthy, Adrian Hudson, Aoibhinn McGinnity, Charlie Kelly, Peter Coonan, Annie Ryan