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SHOOTING THE DARKNESS

Shooting the Darkness - Photographer Stanley Matchett with his camera in Derry in Shooting the Darkness Image Name: Shooting the Darkness - Photographer Stanley Matchett with his camera in Derry in Shooting the Darkness Description: Shooting the Darkness RTÉ One Wednesday January 30th Photographer Stanley Matchett with his camera in Derry in Shooting the Darkness
Shooting the Darkness - Stanley Matchett Bloody Sunday Image Name: Shooting the Darkness - Stanley Matchett Bloody Sunday Description: Shooting the Darkness RTÉ One Wednesday January 30th Bishop Edward Daly carries a blood stained handkerchief ahead of the body of Jack Duddy, who was shot dead in Derry on Bloody Sunday (January 30th 1972) Photograph by Stanley Matchett. ***PLEASE NOTE*** This photograph can only be used in the promotion of Shooting the Darkness. Copyright: Photograph by Stanley Matchett. ***PLEASE NOTE*** This photograph can only be used in the promotion of Shooting the Darkness.
Shooting the Darkness - Paul Faith Pacemaker Image Name: Shooting the Darkness - Paul Faith Pacemaker Description: Shooting the Darkness RTÉ One Wednesday January 30th PACEMAKER BELFAST ARCHIVE 92 284/92 26 FEBRUARY 1992 PAUL FAITH OUTSIDE PACEMAKR OFFICE WITH CAMERA
Shooting the Darkness - Pacemaker Belfast-archivePhotographer Martin Nangle.12-9-891087/89/BW Image Name: Shooting the Darkness - Pacemaker Belfast-archivePhotographer Martin Nangle.12-9-891087/89/BW Description: Shooting the Darkness RTÉ One Wednesday January 30th Pacemaker Belfast-archive Photographer Martin Nangle. 12-9-89 1087/89/BW
Shooting the Darkness - Alan Lewis Paul Faith Hugh Russell Image Name: Shooting the Darkness - Alan Lewis Paul Faith Hugh Russell Description: Shooting the Darkness RTÉ One Wednesday January 30th (L-R) Photographers Alan Lewis, Hugh Russell and Paul Faith in Shooting the Darkness

Shooting the Darkness is a documentary about the men who unwittingly became war photographers on the streets of their own towns. They didn’t go in search of war and adventure: the violence erupted around them. They expected a career of wedding photography and celebrity photocalls and instead the images they produced during the worst years of the Troubles would come to define that conflict.

The film focuses on a number of Northern Irish photographers who witnessed the Troubles from their inception in 1968 until the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998. Among them are: Alan Lewis, Paul Faith, Hugh Russell, Martin Nangle, Crispin Rodwell, Trevor Dickson and Stanley Matchett.

In depth original interviews with these men speaking about specific images they shot form the backbone of the film. Contemporary archive footage evokes the chaotic and fractured atmosphere of the times. Extensive use of photo archive takes us back behind the lens of the photographer – back to the negatives and the contact sheets and the pictures that nearly made the cut.

Photographs discussed in-depth include: Stanley Matchett’s photograph of Bishop Edward Daly waving the blood stained handkerchief as the body of Jack Duddy is carried through the streets of Derry on Bloody Sunday.

Alan Lewis’ photograph of Sean Downes, shot and killed by an RUC plastic bullet in Andersonstown in 1984.

Martin Nangle’s visceral photographs of the attack (and subsequent murder) of corporals Derek Wood and David Howes after they mistakenly drove into the funeral of IRA man Kevin Brady in March 1988.

Twenty years on from the end of the conflict in Northern Ireland, Shooting the Darkness is interested in answering two key questions: What did it cost you to take that image? And what was its value?

It examines what it meant to be a press photographer in this cauldron of violence and how witnessing horror an a daily basis affected them. It also deals with the wider context; what did these images mean, both at the time and now at a distance from the original event. Did they make a difference, ultimately contributing to the peace process or did they just sell papers?

Shooting the Darkness is a documentary by Broadstone Film. The film was directed by Tom Burke and produced by Thomas Kelly. It was funded by RTÉ, ARTE and the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland.

Shooting the Darkness airs on Wednesday, 30th January on RTÉ One at 22:35.