Dark Gael Blowing
A HBO-style Irish language domestic drama? That’s what TG4 has set out to achieve with its gritty new series, Corp + Anam.
Anne Sexton, 21 Feb 2011

Starring Diarmuid de Faoite as television crime correspondent Cathal Mac Iarnáin and Maria Doyle Kennedy, seething with quiet fury as Cathal’s wife Mairéad, Corp + Anam casts a harsh eye over Ireland’s social, cultural and domestic problems. Comic relief is in short supply.
“Yes,” laughs De Faoite. “I’m not sure how many jokes there are in the four episodes. I’d say you could count them on one hand. That’s what makes it a really intense viewing experience. You get in there and it’s unrelenting and gripping and ugly.”
Mac Iarnáin chases stories whose themes will be familiar to Irish viewers – boy-racer teens, corrupt Gardaí, health service incompetence and internet paedophilia. Writer and director Darach Mac Con Iomaire’s aim was to make an ‘HBO-style’ Irish-language drama. This can’t have been easy without an HBO-style budget.
“You just have to work harder!” De Faoite proffers. “With a role like Cathal where you’re in every second scene, the shoot was work, work, work, go home and shovel a few lines into your head for the following day. There was certainly no glamour, I’ll tell you that.”
Cathal is single-minded, selfish, underhand, an absent father and husband, a chauvinist and even his boss describes him as a “bollocks”.
“I remember speaking to Darach, and comparing Cathal to a Jack Russell. Jack Russells are fierce and fiercely loyal, but they often suffer from poor eyesight as well so they may bite the hand that feeds them. Cathal has those qualities. He’ll sink his teeth into a story and he will not let go, no matter what, but at huge expense to the people he is investigating, or to himself and particularly to his personal life.
“It’s too easy sometimes when you have a lead character who is likeable and does everything you’d want Prince Charming to do. People aren’t like that. When he shows a heroic side, which isn’t all that often, that’s exceptional for him.”
Despite his success as a journalist, Cathal’s position is threatened by office politics, partly because of his aggressive relationship with his female news editor Deirdre. Younger and perhaps better educated than her star correspondent, she lacks field experience and has none of Cathal’s journalistic chops.