Colin Farrell’s friend breakup in ‘The Banshees of Inisherin’ is eerily similar to my own. His is just more cinematic.
The Banshees of Inisherin
People
I asked many questions, but in the end we both dissolved into tears and bewilderment. She wasn’t sure if it was the right thing to do, but she needed a break. I said okay. We hugged, and she told me she loved me.
“This isn’t a friend fight,” she said, wiping tears from her cheeks and smiling pitifully. “This is a sister fight. We’ll be okay.”
I hate to spoil the end of a movie, but we were not going to be okay.
*
Anyone who publicly acknowledges that they write is subjected to the same haunting question. It is everywhere, in every conversation: What do you like to write about?
People love this question. I used to think it was the only thing nonwriters could come up with, but it turns out writers also love this question, as I answered it about two dozen times within the first few weeks of my MFA program.
It’s lightly infuriating, as far as questions go. What am I not writing about? What is not up for grabs here? Would you ask Colin Farrell what he acts about? Of course you wouldn’t. That makes no grammatical sense.
Last month, I wrote a flash fiction piece about a pigeon that is trained to steal by its owner, whose arch nemesis is a mournful-faced borzoi. If I wanted to be a smart-ass, I might point to this example—that is what I write about! Silly little fictional stories! I write about anything, but also nothing! I am the Colin Farrell of writing; watch me sway effortlessly from Miami Vice–style blockbusters to the whimsies of cult classic The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus.
When I am subjected to more professional contexts, I usually say that I am interested in the formation of human identity in the context of relationships, how humans help and harm one another. I use a lot of big words. I talk in grand, sweeping gestures with my hands, knowing in the back of my mind that the question was probably only asked out of politeness.
But the real answer, the hard answer is: this. This friendship, this heartbreak. In all these stories, in all these characters and plots and themes, I am trying to capture this moment. Those two hours when I sat on a ridiculous chair in front of a coffee shop, surrounded by people and their children, and my life crumbled helplessly in my hands. This interaction, when the person I loved and trusted most in the world told me very plainly that I was horrible and unlikable and causing her immense pain. This confusion, this string of insecurities confirmed and then weaponized, this silence, this mystery, this grief.
I am always writing about this.
*
In the film, Brendan Gleeson has similar complaints about Colin Farrell. He is troubled—fighting off an existential despair, we discover—and feels he must take extraordinary measures to prioritize composing music and playing the fiddle. This includes demolishing their friendship.
“I think I need to spend the time I have left . . . just trying not to listen to any more of the dull things you have to say for yourself. But I’m sorry about it. I am, like,” he says, pitched forward with the weight of his sincerity, pleading with Colin Farrell to understand.
Ironically, I find this plight sympathetic. Colin Farrell is just a man who wants his life to stay its course. But here is Brendan Gleeson, someone who creates, who thinks, who is reckoning with legacy and mortality and what it all means. Some of the characters in the film speculate that Brendan Gleeson is just depressed, which seems fair, though no one is clear if that renders his choices less credible.
“None of it helps me, you understand? None of it helps me,” Brendan Gleeson says. Colin Farrell stammers a reply, but it’s too late. His friend is already gone.
The similarities are uncanny. They still take the breath out of me. If they were women and I were a touch more delusional, I might sue for copyright.
Another parallel: In the background of the film, we see cannonfire from the ongoing Irish Civil War. Two weeks after Veronica and I spoke, mandatory lockdowns were instituted across the US in response to Covid-19, sequestering us to isolation. Unlike Colin Farrell, I could not traipse across our city searching for an excuse to cross paths with her. This was for the better: In the film, Brendan Gleeson is so desperate to get away from his newly ex–best friend, he threatens to cut off a finger from his playing hand every time Colin Farrell speaks to him.
If they were women and I were a touch more delusional, I might sue for copyright.
It would be narratively convenient to say I, like Colin Farrell, could not help myself, that I relentlessly pursued answers from Veronica until she took sheep shears to her dominant hand and threw five bloody stumps at my door. It would be cleaner, alternatively, to say we never saw each other again, but life is more complicated when it’s real and you share all of the same friends.
When it was safe enough to socialize, we crossed paths here and there: during get-togethers with friends and once when she made a surprise appearance at a soccer match with my quarantine bubble. I was chaste and polite if we were forced to acknowledge each other. I cried about it afterward, in private, like a normal person.
I tried not to drag our other friends into the mess. I was petrified I was a burden on them, too, that only Veronica had expressed what everyone was secretly thinking. (“And people don’t be laughing at me behind me back, do they? They don’t think I’m dim or anything?” Colin Farrell asks his sister over dinner one night.) It took a lot of courage for me to eventually confess to one of our friends that what Veronica said had destroyed me and I was struggling to make sense of things months later. If any word of what she said was true, I begged him to tell me. I would banish myself. I didn’t want to hurt anyone anymore.
He assured me that no one else felt that way. I was loved, dependable, congenial, and known for being a good listener. I was not a mean-spirited gossip. I was not a buzzkill, or a monster, or a burden. I was a friend. (“You’re more one of life’s good guys,” the town’s bartender reassures Colin Farrell.)
I found it difficult to believe. Worse, I disliked myself for not being a different type of person, for not being more like Veronica, who was self-aware and strong enough to eradicate arbitrary distractions from her life, even when those arbitrary distractions included me. (“I used to think that’d be a nice thing to be, one of life’s good guys. Now it sounds like the worst thing I ever heard.”)
Things got easier. I came around to the idea that I might not be the worst person in the world. Veronica quietly stopped showing up to group events. We haven’t spoken to or seen each other in two years.
In the end, the film accumulates much more impressive collateral: Jenny the pet donkey chokes and dies on one of the severed fingers. Colin Farrell burns Brendan Gleeson’s house down while he’s still inside, stopping only to spare his ex-friend’s dog. Brendan Gleeson survives and apologizes, staring out at the sea, trying to broker a frail peace. Colin Farrell refuses. Some things can’t be forgiven and forgotten, he muses, and, he believes now, life is better that way.
He’s trying to tell me something about myself, I know. I can see it in his layered stare. But it’s hard work, deciphering Colin Farrell’s expressions for answers, and every time I am on the verge of cracking the code, the credits start to roll.
*
I don’t know what to do now that I’ve written the thing I am always writing about. I have never singled out this pain from the litter of the rest, held it into the light, and declared the world of my body its kingdom. Now that I have, I’m tempted to kneel before it and plead. Not for forgiveness, but for an ending to the mystery. I want it to tell me who was right all along: Veronica or everyone else.
Because I know Veronica was not wrong about me, not entirely. I won’t simplify the intricacy of her truth. I can be negative. My road rage is incredible. I am outspoken but also sometimes oblivious—a deadly combination. I have oddly stringent standards for salads. I love and think about the people in my life with a frequency and intensity that can border on overbearing, especially if my little sister has anything to say about it.
If I am just a thing made of other smaller things—a person made of all the tiny, fractured parts of other people, of the words they use to define me—than the answer is not A or B, but all of the above. I am this person, whether I like it or not. These are all parts of me. They are parts that may be isolated and analyzed, but to derive conclusions without observing them as a whole would make someone a very bad scientist, or actor—or friend. Similarly, to try to outrun them, to leave any parts behind, would mean abandoning the people who forged those parts, and that I won’t do. Plus, I can’t really run that fast.
Only with time (and a few dozen therapy appointments) have I arrived at a truth that feels like mine. The truth is that I miss Veronica. I miss her all the time. I fear she might be right about me, but that fear recoils in the shadow of the many incredible, generous people who hold the little ball of me in their hands, tracing the distinct parts of my personality, the unsavory and the otherwise, and decide they want to be my friend anyway. And the truth is I think that’s pretty fucking wonderful.
I tell myself there will still be things to write after this. Even though I have named the thing, only time will tell if I’ve repossessed its power or if it will still linger, randomly twinging with pain, like a bone that has broken and healed. For now, I think it can be enough to just coexist.
Besides, there is more to look forward to. Colin Farrell was just nominated for an Oscar.
Jessika Bouvier is a queer writer from New Orleans and Atlanta. Her work has been published in Electric Literature, perhappened, Black Fox, and elsewhere. She is a current MFA candidate in fiction at George Mason University.