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* ''Adam & Paul'' (2004)
* ''Garage'' (2007)

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* ''Adam & Paul'' ''Film/AdamAndPaul'' (2004)
* ''Garage'' ''Film/{{Garage}}'' (2007)



* '' Film/{{Frank}}'' (2014)

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* '' Film/{{Frank}}'' ''Film/{{Frank}}'' (2014)
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* ''Literature/TheLittleStranger'' (2018)
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Abrahamson is slightly unusual as an Irish director, in that his movies tend to put relatively little emphasis on dialogue (compared to, say, [[Creator/MartinMcDonagh the [=McDonagh=] brothers]]), the more common style being a holdover from the tradition of theatrical writers like [[Creator/OscarWilde Wilde]] and Synge. Instead he takes a more unobtrusive approach of letting characters come through in actions and quiet contemplative moments. He also shows much more of an influence from European rather than American directors, having named people like Aki Kaurismaki and Creator/WernerHerzog as influences – ''Garage'' has even been favourably likened to a Creator/RobertBresson film. His movies tend to focus on outsiders with an idiosyncratic perception of the world, and have a somewhat spiritual feel.

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Abrahamson is slightly unusual as an Irish director, in that his movies tend to put relatively little emphasis on dialogue (compared to, say, [[Creator/MartinMcDonagh the [=McDonagh=] brothers]]), the more common style being a holdover from the tradition of theatrical writers like [[Creator/OscarWilde Wilde]] and Synge. Instead he takes a more unobtrusive approach of letting characters come through in actions and quiet contemplative moments. He also shows much more of an influence from European rather than American directors, having named people like Aki Kaurismaki Creator/AkiKaurismaki and Creator/WernerHerzog as influences – ''Garage'' has even been favourably likened to a Creator/RobertBresson film. His movies tend to focus on outsiders with an idiosyncratic perception of the world, and have a somewhat spiritual feel.
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* ''What Richard Did'' (2012)

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* ''What Richard Did'' ''Film/WhatRichardDid'' (2012)

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* DownerEnding: Certainly in the first two films. ''Richard'' depends on whether the audience thinks he will be punished or not.

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* DownerEnding: Certainly CreatorThumbprint: [[OceanAwe Bodies of water]] feature in each of the first films, often involving the deaths or transformations of characters.
* DownerEnding:
** ''Adam & Paul'': [[spoiler: after the
two films. ''Richard'' depends on whether spend the audience thinks night getting high, Adam winds up dead on a beach the following morning. Paul, waking up next to him, wanders offscreen. A moment later he will comes back, takes the rest of the heroin from Adam's pockets, and leaves again.]]
** ''Garage'': [[spoiler: after tentatively forming a few relationships over the course of the summer, Josie is called in for questioning for sharing a pornographic tape and alcohol with David, is rejected by Carmel, and it's implied the garage where he lives is going to
be punished or not.sold to property developers. The film ends with him committing suicide in a river.]]
** ''What Richard Did'': More ambiguously than the other examples, but it's implied that [[spoiler: Richard never confesses to killing Connor and goes unpunished. His relationship with his father is also irreparably damaged, Lara and his friends have left him, and the final scene depicts him alone and detached at college.]]
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Educated in physics and philosophy at Trinity College Dublin, where he set up a filmmaking society with some of his friends, he was offered a scholarship to study for a PhD in philosophy at Stanford University. However, he returned to Ireland before completing the course to take up filmmaking professionally, directing commercials in the UK and Ireland. He made the transition to feature filmmaker in 2004 with the dark comedy ''Adam & Paul'', directing two more well-received films in Ireland and the four-part series ''Prosperity'', followed by the 2014 comedy-drama ''Film/{{Frank}}'', starring Creator/MichaelFassbender. His most prominent film so far was the 2015 adaptation of the Emma Donoghue novel ''Literature/{{Room}}'', which was nominated for four Academy Awards (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Creator/BrieLarson winning Best Actress).

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Educated in physics and philosophy at Trinity College Dublin, where he set up a filmmaking society with some of his friends, he was offered a scholarship to study for a PhD [=PhD=] in philosophy at Stanford University. However, he returned to Ireland before completing the course to take up filmmaking professionally, directing commercials in the UK and Ireland. He made the transition to feature filmmaker in 2004 with the dark comedy ''Adam & Paul'', directing two more well-received films in Ireland and the four-part series ''Prosperity'', followed by the 2014 comedy-drama ''Film/{{Frank}}'', starring Creator/MichaelFassbender. His most prominent film so far was the 2015 adaptation of the Emma Donoghue novel ''Literature/{{Room}}'', which was nominated for four Academy Awards (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Creator/BrieLarson winning Best Actress).
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[[quoteright:227:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ab.jpg]]

Lenny Abrahamson (born 1966) is an Irish film director and writer.

Educated in physics and philosophy at Trinity College Dublin, where he set up a filmmaking society with some of his friends, he was offered a scholarship to study for a PhD in philosophy at Stanford University. However, he returned to Ireland before completing the course to take up filmmaking professionally, directing commercials in the UK and Ireland. He made the transition to feature filmmaker in 2004 with the dark comedy ''Adam & Paul'', directing two more well-received films in Ireland and the four-part series ''Prosperity'', followed by the 2014 comedy-drama ''Film/{{Frank}}'', starring Creator/MichaelFassbender. His most prominent film so far was the 2015 adaptation of the Emma Donoghue novel ''Literature/{{Room}}'', which was nominated for four Academy Awards (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Creator/BrieLarson winning Best Actress).

Abrahamson is slightly unusual as an Irish director, in that his movies tend to put relatively little emphasis on dialogue (compared to, say, [[Creator/MartinMcDonagh the [=McDonagh=] brothers]]), the more common style being a holdover from the tradition of theatrical writers like [[Creator/OscarWilde Wilde]] and Synge. Instead he takes a more unobtrusive approach of letting characters come through in actions and quiet contemplative moments. He also shows much more of an influence from European rather than American directors, having named people like Aki Kaurismaki and Creator/WernerHerzog as influences – ''Garage'' has even been favourably likened to a Creator/RobertBresson film. His movies tend to focus on outsiders with an idiosyncratic perception of the world, and have a somewhat spiritual feel.

!Films:

* ''Adam & Paul'' (2004)
* ''Garage'' (2007)
* ''What Richard Did'' (2012)
*'' Film/{{Frank}}'' (2014)
* ''Film/{{Room}}'' (2015)

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!!Tropes common to Abrahamson and his works

* AntiHero: His protagonists tend to have moments of moral ambiguity to keep the audience from sentimentalising them.
* BittersweetEnding: Even ''Frank'', probably the most upbeat film, ends on a somewhat melancholy note as Jon gives up on his dreams of being a musician.
* BlackComedy: ''Adam & Paul'' centres on the antics of two homeless drug addicts, and plays like a series of Creator/LaurelAndHardy sketches.
* DownerEnding: Certainly in the first two films. ''Richard'' depends on whether the audience thinks he will be punished or not.
* HiddenDepths: Usually clownish or comical characters revealing deeper sensitivity. ''Richard'' inverts this by instead focusing on the weaknesses and failings of its [[TheAce alpha male]] protagonist.
* {{Oireland}}: Strongly [[AvertedTrope averted]]. His Irish films are very naturalistic, and the comedy of ''Adam & Paul'' is more in line with the gallows humour of Creator/SamuelBeckett than anything else.
* OneWordTitle
* ProductionPosse: Collaborated with writer Mark O'Halloran on his first two movies and ''Prosperity'', and with musician Stephen Rennicks since ''Richard''.
* RandomEventsPlot
* SceneryPorn: Shots of the sky in ''Garage'' and the desert and island footage in ''Frank''.
* SilenceIsGolden
* TimeCompressionMontage: Usually combined with voiceover from different scenes within the montage.
* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: ''What Richard Did'' is based on a much-publicised killing that occurred in Dublin in 2000. ''Frank'' is inspired by Machester musician [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Sievey#Frank_Sidebottom Frank Sidebottom]].

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