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What you may need to know

1. We’re putting the band back together. Director Danny Boyle has reunited the original cast (Ewan McGregor, Robert Carlyle, Johnny Lee Miller, Ewan Bremner and Kelly McDonald), for a sequel to his era-defining 1996 comedy drama based on the novel by Irvine Welsh. Original screenwriter John Hodge is also back on board.

2. We can only hope Welsh will reprise his role as weaselly drug dealer Mikey Forrester; he has hinted as much on twitter. Russian sailors optional.

3. Set 20 years later and partially adapted from Welsh’s 2002 novel Porno, Mark Renton (McGregor) is back in Edinburgh to finally confront his friends after stealing £16,000 from them and fleeing to Amsterdam at the end of the first film. Sick Boy (Miller) and Spud (Bremner) are happy enough to see him, less so Begbie (Carlyle).

4. This feels like a good idea. Trainspotting launched the careers of its cast and director; reuniting exactly 20 years later feels distinctly uncynical. Less a cash-in than a genuine curiosity for them as much as the audience to learn what became of the characters.

5. Trainspotting 2 might have happened years ago, were it not for Boyle and McGregor falling out when the latter was passed over for the lead role in Boyle’s 2000 gap-year adventure The Beach. You dodged a bulled there Ewan, in fairness.

6. There are a quite a few visual references to the original in this trailer, and the remix of Renton’s iconic “Choose Life” monologue feels clunky. One would hope Boyle and co haven’t settled for a rehash. The only other sequel he has been involved in (as executive producer) was the excellent 28 Weeks Later (2007), and a rehash that most certainly was not.

7. On that note, Danny, how about you give us 28 Months Later next?

8. In a 2014 interview, Welsh called Boyle “a colossus”, saying “we’re all protective of the Trainspotting legacy and we want to make a film that adds to that legacy and doesn’t take away from it.”

9.Similarly Robert Carlyle told NME last year it’s one of the best scripts he’s ever read.

“This will be an emotional experience for people. [..] That’s really what the whole thing is about. Have these four characters changed? Have they remained the same? Have they f****d it up completely? Have they achieved anything? And of course the audience are going to be asking themselves exactly the same questions.”

Verdict: Let’s skip the garlic bread and proceed directly to January 27, 2017 (release date).

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ls3bqg1NQ_s

A deftly edited montage by Beyond The Frame celebrating the shared universe of Quentin Tarantino’s various films. To wit:

Everything’s connected. There are two universes shared by Tarantino’s characters. Everyone’s related, but unlike real families they talk to each other on the phone. They all eat Big Kahuna Burgers and smoke Red Apples, but somehow seem fit. K-Billy. Records scratching. Shots from trunks.

MORE: Tarantino’s Cinematic Universe (explained) (Patreon)

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Bruuuuuce on the Late Late!

Yay.

From London.

Oh.

Gareth Naughten writes:

For the first time in almost 30 years, The Late Late Show is leaving the country for an interview with ‘The Boss’, Bruce Springsteen. The Late Late Show very rarely leaves the RTÉ campus, let alone the country, and it has been many years since a guest was interviewed outside of Ireland. The last time is believed to have been when Gay Byrne travelled to London to interview Hollywood star Jane Fonda in 1989….

Host Ryan Tubridy said:

“For one night only, The Late Late Show is making a small detour to London for a very special guest. This is very unusual, and not something we do very often, but when The Boss comes calling, you just can’t say no. It is a first in my time as host of The Late Late Show and we hope that people will roll with it because we felt he was someone worth chasing. The Irish people have a particular love of Bruce Springsteen, and him for us, and people will see that in the interview”

*kicks telly*

The Late Late Show, RTÉ One, Friday at 9.35pm

Pic: CBS

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IMLÉAlbum launch and video for single Críochfort

What you may need to know…

01. Last time we checked in with Gaelgóir funk/hip-hop outfit IMLÉ, they’d been doing well with single Fún Orm and preparing for their debut full-length.

02. The aforementioned is now complete, and releasing via Gael Linn this month.

03. Streaming above is the video for new single Críochfort, featuring the Hot Zombie collective, and directed by the band’s Fergal Moloney. On the song’s subject matter, the band writes:

Tá neart faoin saol seo le bheith dóchasach faoi. Déanann Críochfort plé ar an gcaidreamh casta atá againn mar dhaoine leis an domhan. Tá rudaí diúltacha agus dearfacha ag baint leis, ach sin cuid den tsaoil ina maireann muid.

04. The band launches the record next Thursday at the Bello Bar in Dublin (formerly the Lower Deck), with more national dates to follow.

VERDICT: Subtly groovy stuff that doesn’t really fall neatly between any set of pews musically. Adoption of the mother tongue is but one aspect of IMLÉ’s sound.

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From top: Dublin Tenants’ Association campaign;  Dr. Michael Byrne

The Dublin Tenants’ Associatio this week starts a campaign for rent certainty,

Dr. Michael Byrne writes:

If ever there was a timely campaign, this is it.

As is well known, rents have increased nationally by 40% since 2011. In urban areas, especially Dublin, rent increases have been far in excess of this. The sector itself has expanded by 65% since just 2011 and up to 1/3rd of households will be life long renters.

This is nothing short of a radical transformation of our housing system. Renting, including long term renting, will now be the norm for a large and growing section of Irish households.

Following the crisis in 2008 mortgage lending in Ireland collapsed by around 90%. In subsequent austerity budgets, capital funding for social housing fell by 80%, as did output in the sector.

With both of the other housing tenures in free fall, it was perfectly clear that only one thing could happen: a massive increase in the rented sector and a consequent increase in rents.

After years of chaos and the emergence of a full blown homelessness crisis the government has decided it might be a good idea to do something about the rental sector; the National Strategy for the Rental Sector will be published this December.

The Secure Rents campaign is thus perfectly timed to pile on the pressure and force Minister Simon Coveney to take seriously the task of regulating rents, providing security of tenure for tenants and making the rental sector one fit for life-long living.

One of the biggest obstacles, however, is the chorus of actors arguing that since rent increases are driven by a supply shortage we should not be focusing on regulating rents but instead on increasing supply.

This argument has permeated public debate to the extent that at Coveney’s recent stakeholder consultation for the National Strategy, in which I participated, the two words heard most frequently were ‘landlord’ and ‘incentive’.

There is a real danger that the pseudo-economics of ‘supply’ will eclipse the pressing need to introduce root and branch reform and finally give tenants something approaching equality with home owners and social housing residents.

So let’s pick apart the argument here. There is not enough supply of housing, especially in urban areas. This is a fact. We therefore need to increase the supply of housing and we need to do it quick. This is also a fact.

But this where we need to watch out for a sleight of hand. It goes like this: if rent increases are driven by supply shortages then an increase in supply will drive rents down. This is where the pseudo-economic comes in.

What shapes the cost of rent is not supply in and of itself, but the relationship between supply and demand. For increased supply to bring down rent prices it would have to increase to such an extent that it would overtake the chasm which has opened up between supply and demand in recent years.

But more importantly, supply would also have to increase faster, significantly faster, than demand is increasing. This is where we have to look at the ‘demand side’ factors which are seldom discussed.

The concentration of economic activity in Dublin and other urban areas has intensified over recent years and will continue to intensify – this means more rural to urban migration and more demand for housing in our cities. People are living longer, piling further pressure on housing demand.

And finally, but importantly, household formation patterns are changing – people are living in smaller and smaller households. In short more people concentrated in cities, living longer and in smaller households.

We also have to take in the labour market aspects of all this. On the one hand wages and employment are likely to grow somewhat (as seen in the spate of recent strikes) adding to housing demand.

At the same time, however, secure employment contracts (and thus mortgages) are harder to come by in our ‘gig economy’ and the labour force is more mobile (moving from job to job and place to place much more frequently than in the past). This more mobile work force will become home owners much later, if they can afford to do so at all.

There is simply no way that enough private rented housing is going to come on stream in the next five to ten years to catch up with and overtake the demand side factors discussed above, and therefor rents will continue to increase.

This is why regulating rents is vital – it is the only way to halt the crisis of unaffordability in the rental sector and the tidal wave of homelessness it has unleashed.

To argue that regulating rents won’t sort out the supply problem is to miss the point entirely. It’s a bit like saying umbrellas are useless because they don’t stop it raining. While it’s true that they don’t, they do stop you getting soaked. Likewise, rent certainty won’t increase supply on its own, but it will protect tenants from the worst consequences of the supply problem.

There are many options to increase housing supply which don’t involve trampling all over tenants’ rights.Let’s hope the National Rental Strategy includes some.

But please don’t tell me these measures will mean I won’t have a rent increase of between 10% and 50% over the next few years. Because that is pseudo-economics – it’s an argument based on market ideology, not market logic.

The only way we can guarantee small and predictable rent increases is to regulate them.

Dr. Michael Byrne is a lecturer at the School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice in UCD and participates in the Dublin Tenants Association Follow Michael on Twitter: @mickbyrne101

Previously: Michael Byrne: You Might Want to Sit Down For This

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Abortion protests in Dublin in 1992 during the X Case

Paul Cullen writing (In the Irish Times) about the increasingly inevitable repeal of the Eighth Amendment, opines that:

“…discussion is being dominated by the strident voices on the two ends of the spectrum, each group deeply attached to absolutist views on the subject”.

This all-too-common refrain suggests a false equivalence: that those who actively oppose abortion and those who actively support its availability are direct polar opposites – “absolutist views” – on a finite spectrum.

The usual conclusion of this question-begging cliché is that the most desirable or moral position may, or even must be some nebulous midpoint on the scale – a supposed “moderate centre ground” or the like.

This is the kind of fallacy that might lead one to argue that since some people are for slavery and some against, a little slavery is surely best.

Further, the anti-abortion position can be defined with some considerable measure of confident objectivity as absolutist or extreme by reference to clinically verifiable best medical practice, international human rights’ norms and opinion polling. (Support for an all-out abortion ban has hovered around 10 per cent in recent Irish polls).

The same cannot be said of the pro-choice position. It is therefore not good enough to suggest, by implying a false dichotomy, that since the anti-abortion position is absolutist, so too, ipso facto, is the pro-choice position.

John Cale,
Cork Street,
Dublin 8

‘Strident Voices In Abortion Debate (Irish Times Letters)

Has the intolerance of the 1980s pro-life brigade been transplanted to the Repeal debate? (Paul Cullen, Irish Times, November 1, 2016)

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