One Hundred Mornings

[1] Filmed over twenty days in County Wicklow,[2] Ireland, for a total budget of €275,000, it was writer/director Conor Horgan's first feature.

Set in a world upended by a complete breakdown of society, two couples hide out in a lakeside cabin hoping to survive the crisis.

As resources run low and external threats increase, they forge an uneasy alliance with their self-sufficient hippie neighbour.

The New York Times commented: "Positioned on the cusp of a dying civilization, "One Hundred Mornings" shows people still bound by rules — like deference to a couple of essentially useless local cops — while coming to terms with an unspeakable future.

Packing reams of information into a minimalist screenplay (as an added novelty, the female characters are, if anything, more complex than their male counterparts), the film slowly subordinates sex, death and basic decency to the terrors of a dwindling food supply.