The Spin arrives as an independent, feel-good buddy comedy with a premise that favors clarity over complication. The film builds itself on a classic quest: two friends, both struggling, need a MacGuffin to keep their small business alive. Dermot (Brenock O’Connor) and Elvis (Owen Colgan) run Boneyard Records in Omagh, Northern Ireland.
Their landlord, Sadie (Tara Lynne O’Neill), issues an ultimatum. The answer they choose is a dash to Cork for what they believe to be a remarkably valuable set of Robert Johnson records. The plan is simple. Buy low, sell high, pay the rent, and steady the future. The tone signals warmth from the first scenes, the humor anchored in the recognizable scramble of two friends trying to outrun bad luck.
The Engine of Authenticity: Banter and Belief
The film organizes its storytelling around the chemistry between Brenock O’Connor and Owen Colgan. Their shared rhythm feels earned through time, which gives the scenes an easy credibility. Dermot, thoughtful and sharp in vintage clothes, works through the friction between a singer-songwriter’s ambitions and real life, including a strained relationship with his daughter, Rose.
Elvis, the more hapless partner, picks up the pieces after a messy divorce, spooked by his ex-wife’s successful new partner and making a rash promise to his daughter, Lily, about a horse his finances cannot support.
Dialogue drives character more than exposition. The running bits about a secondhand horse and the sight of pigeons scissoring sound like the strange, funny detours that pop up in actual conversations. These details shape a portrait of two men who cope with stress through riffs and observational humor.
Sadie, played by Tara Lynne O’Neill, steadies the structure with a local antagonist who threatens to convert their shop into a nail salon. The performances serve the writing. The pair at the center comes across as the kind of friends an audience will back, even when their plans wobble.
Meandering Structure and Thematic Depth
The road trip takes the form of a shaggy dog story, and the film treats that looseness as a design choice. Director Michael Head and writer Mark McCausland, drawing from McCausland’s original story, avoid big, brash road movie gestures. The plot favors a smaller frame. Two friends look for a reset while the Irish route from Omagh to Cork provides texture and scale.
The round trip clocks in at roughly 600 miles. Along the way the film stages an array of encounters that read as episodic checkpoints: a nun, a stripper played by Kimberly Wyatt, a man with a stuffed fox, and a farmer. These meetings function as narrative beats rather than side chatter. The film ties progress to moments of generosity and small choices, which gives the journey a series of modest turning points.
The script keeps friendship at the center. Music threads through as subject and signal, a reminder of how inspiration can push people forward and how a shared passion can organize a life. The tone stays accessible even when the characters brush against adult realities. The story’s core problem is direct. Dermot and Elvis have to decide if Boneyard Records still reflects a shared vision or if it has become a weight they can no longer carry. That question fuels the external hunt for the vinyl and gives the trip its stakes.
Aesthetic Simplicity and Musical Heart
The film favors sincerity over gloss. The direction keeps to a stripped-back style that fits the material. The budget shows at times, though the choice to keep things unvarnished works with the story’s scale and keeps the focus on character and rhythm. Music matters here in both setting and mood. Mark McCausland wrote the original story and composed the folksy soundtrack.
The film features appearances by Steve Wickham and Barry Devlin, which underlines the music-first identity. A standout original number, Laughs For The Lonely, performed by O’Connor’s Dermot, pins down the emotional line of the movie and gives the character a clean musical anchor.
The narrative taps into the familiar underdog energy of music-centered indie films. The leads care about records and songs with a depth that exceeds their business instincts, and the film uses that imbalance for humor and momentum. The trip moves with a relaxed pulse, the jokes land with a friendly cadence, and the scenes feel like time spent with people you might actually know. The story works because it sets a clear goal and tracks it with patience. The film is light on flourish and steady on feeling. It earns its laughs and its warmth, and it makes a case for a much bigger audience.
The Spin is a feel-good Irish comedy that had its world premiere at the Belfast Film Festival in 2024. The film follows two hapless friends who run a record shop in Omagh and embark on a desperate road trip to Cork to acquire a priceless vinyl record that could save their business from closure. It has a reported running time of 92 minutes. While it has made the rounds on the festival circuit and has been noted for theatrical releases in the UK and Ireland (with a projected cinema release date of October 2025, according to some reports), you should check local cinema listings or major streaming platforms for its current availability in your region.
Credits
Director: Michael Head
Writers: Colin Broderick, Mark McCausland (Original Story)
Producers and Executive Producers: Jake Jacovides, Ismail Ismail
Cast: Owen Colgan, Brenock O’Connor, Tara Lynne O’Neill, Kimberly Wyatt, Maura Higgins, Leah O’Rourke
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Sebastian Cort
Editors: Aideen Johnston
Composer: Mark McCausland
The Review
The Spin
The strength of this comedy rests entirely on the chemistry between its leads, Dermot and Elvis. Michael Head delivers a genuine, unassuming road film that successfully prioritizes character authenticity over grand narrative spectacle. The dialogue is sharp and observational, lifting a simple quest structure into something truly heartfelt. While the low-budget execution shows in small moments, the film remains a charming, easy-going success. It is a welcome addition to the buddy film canon, deserving of broad recognition.
PROS
- Marvelous, genuine connection between Brenock O’Connor and Owen Colgan.
- Observational and eccentric banter drives the comedy and flavor.
- Strong focus on the importance of long-term friendship and following personal dreams.
- A strong musical component that complements the Irish setting and the protagonists’ shared passion.
CONS
- The low-budget aesthetic surfaces in certain scenes.
- The quest structure and "shaggy dog" style offer few surprises.
- The landlord subplot, while effective, feels structurally conventional.






















































