Abode | Film Threat
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Abode

By Benjamin Franz | March 11, 2026

Vignette films are wonderful things. Ever since I saw my first one, Todd Haynes’ Poison, I have enjoyed the infinite possibilities involved in cinematic short fiction. Abode features five vignettes, each built around strong central characters. The latest film from Liam Ó Móchain, Abode, considers five different expressions of home and what it means to people.

These five vignettes explore the ways people live these days. You have Carol (Marion O’Dwyer) living rough outside Benedict’s (Liam Ó Móchain) restaurant. Carol’s story takes place over Christmas. It’s fascinating, gentle reader, to see how Christmas customs vary across the world. Whereas we in America range in holiday greetings from the banal ‘Happy Holidays’ to the direct ‘Merry Christmas’, the Irish seem to gravitate to simply ‘Happy Christmas’. Carol’s story is the sort of thing you’d expect from a body on Christmas, regardless of whether they’re homeless or not. Everyone across the world at the Winter holiday seeks a dinner, preferably with friends and family. Carol is no different. What changes is how she arranges her Christmas dinner, and who attends. This was an especially sweet short story, dealing with the theme of loss at the holidays.

Then you have Peggy (Mary McEvoy). Peggy and her son own a corner shop. Every so often, regardless of whether she likes it or not, Peggy plays host to Red (Brendan Conroy), an aging suitor of hers. These sporadic visitations vex her son. However, Peggy and Red seem to have great fun whenever he turns up.

“These five vignettes explore the ways people live these days.”

Molly (Rosemary Henderson) is driving her family insane. On the day of a church-arranged reunion, she’s trying to corral her husband Frank Sr. (Donncha Crowley) and her two kids, Frank Jr. (Karl Argue) and Patricia (Lynette Callaghan), to be there on time. It’s slightly more somber than the prior entrants, and beautifully led by Henderson as the Matriarch of the family.

Skyler (Gail Brady) and Sam (Matthew O’Brien)’s tale is the complications of acquiring home appliances that are smarter than you. This is a real problem that has developed in the past decade, gentle reader, wherein the stores provide ‘smart’ appliances with WIFI connections. Why an oven needs to be voice-activated, I’ve no clue. The gentle humor of the tale is most delightful. I especially enjoyed the debate on whether or not to name the ‘voice’ that interacts with them whilst governing the smart oven. Absolutely relevant material, watching Skyler and Sam’s lives become co-opted by this smart appliance they bring into their home.

In Abode’s last vignette, Conor (Stephen Jones) and Maria (Mary Murray) are intent on having a child-free weekend by the sea. The film gently and sweetly focuses on the neuroses that develop when you finally get free of your dependents and have to figure out what to do with your free time. As with all these vignettes, the story plays on in a sweet and unpredictable way. Such is the way people’s lives are.

Abode is a consummate slice of life film from Liam Ó Móchain. If you’re in the market for a sweet, gentle film with decidedly unexpected zigs and zags, this is for you. Ó Móchain has crafted five short films that relate to each other in subtle ways. And if one is looking for a film to offset the bombast of most other recent releases, Abode fits that bill nicely.

Abode (2025)

Directed and Written: Liam Ó Móchain

Starring: Liam Ó Móchain, Brendan Conroy, Mary McEvoy, Marion O'Dwyer, Rosemary Henderson, Donncha Crowley, Karl Argue, Lynette Callaghan,Gail Brady, Matthew O’Brien, Stephen Jones, Mary Murray, etc.

Movie score: 7/10

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"…a consummate slice of life "

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