Blue Road: The Edna O’Brien Story
18 – 24 April, 2025
In 1960, a young Irish woman named Edna O’Brien wrote a sexually frank debut novel, The Country Girls. She became a literary sensation, writing for The New Yorker, delivering provocative interviews, and authoring screenplays.
Her success enraged her writer husband and made her a pariah in her native Ireland, where her books were banned and burned. She would make her home in London, where she conducted numerous love affairs, hosted star-studded parties, and made and lost a fortune.
In July 2024, Edna passed away and this film provides a final testimony from her, aged 93, as she reflects upon her extraordinary life for filmmaker Sinéad O’Shea’s camera.
Granting the director access to her personal journals — read aloud in the film by the Oscar nominated Irish actress Jessie Buckley — and with additional perspectives offered from Gabriel Byrne, Walter Mosley and an array of renowned writers, Edna does not shy from any subject.
Blue Road is as candid, dark, and enchanting as O’Brien’s wonderful novels.
GFT, 12 Rose Street, G3 6RB
This section: Cinema
Filed under: Cinema
Related Pages
- Take 2: The Day The Earth Blew Up – Looney Tunes
- Glasgow Film Theatre Programme for April 2026
- Showcase Screening, GMAC Partnership, University of Glasgow
- Anti-Empire Film Club: Palestine 36
- Arco at GFT
- The Love That Remains
- Dead Man’s Wire
- Earth’s Greatest Enemy film review Pat Byrne
- Everbody to Kenmure Street at GFT
- Glasgow Film Festival Takeover Day 2026 review Pat Byrne
- Mermaids at GFT – Mother’s Day
- Couture Glasgow Film Festival 2026 review by Pat Byrne
- Effi O Blaenau review Pat Byrne – Glasgow Film Festival 2026
- Super Nature Glasgow Film Festival 2026
- Glasgow Film Theatre Announces Programme for March 2026
- Earth’s Greatest Enemy at GFT
- Jaripeo at Glasgow Film Festival 2026
- Sailm nan Daoine (Psalms of the People)- Glasgow Film Festival 2026
- It’s A Fine Thing To Sing – Songs and Singers of Inishowen Peninsula Documentary
- Midwinter Break – Glasgow Film Festival 2026 Review