Intinn youth film & mental health programme
CIFF is proud to present Intinn, meaning ‘mind’ or ‘way of thinking’, our free film and mental health programme. It offers Transition Year students the opportunity to explore mental health, personal well-being and strategies of resilience through film, Q&As with filmmakers and well-being workshops led by youth mental health specialists.
Developed in collaboration with University College Cork School of Nursing and Midwifery, Intinn is supported by ESB Energy for Generations Fund, and has been shortlisted for multiple Business to Arts Awards in 2021, 2022 and 2023.
Supported by ESB Energy for Generations Fund, UCC, Cork County Council and Cork City Council.
About
Intinn is CIFF’s flagship Youth Film and Mental Health Programme. It offers Transition Year students an opportunity to explore mental health and wellbeing through the popular and accessible medium of film, stimulating meaningful conversations through film and providing strategies for resilience.
Intinn was devised in 2019 and developed to bring the creative, healthcare and education sectors together to provide a safe and accessible platform to explore mental health issues and bridge the education gap with mental health and wellbeing through film. The aim is to assist young people to build greater resilience and provide resources to teachers, particularly in response to the increased needs resulting from the pandemic, and to remove the stigma associated with mental health issues.
Intinn is unique in Ireland and delivers a programme of meaningful impact, in person and online, for free. Developed in collaboration with University College Cork, Intinn is supported by ESB Energy for Generations Fund, for which it has been nominated for multiple Business to Arts Awards in 2021 and 2022. The programme has been delivered to 7,000 young people since its pilot in 2019.
The current programme includes two short films, each with Q&As and workshops, available for free both in-person in Cork and online direct to TY classrooms in secondary schools nationwide. In 2024, CIFF is collaborating with First Cut! Youth Film Festival to present a new iteration to young people in Youghal as part of the First Cut! Youth Film Festival in March, supported by Community Foundation Ireland through the RTÉ Toy Show Appeal.
You may also like: Illuminate, CIFF’s unique and vital series of film and mental health discussion events for adults which take place during our annual Festival in November.
Intinn @ First Cut! Youth Film Festival 2024
Supported by the Community Foundation of Ireland through the RTÉ Toy Show Appeal, Cork International Film Festival was delighted to collaborate with First Cut! Youth Film Festival to present a new free Intinn programme for the first time, as part of the 2024 First Cut! Youth Film Festival (4th – 9th March).
Four in-person Intinn sessions were available in Youghal on Monday 4th and Tuesday 5th March, and Tuesday 9th and Wednesday 10th April, for schools to book directly by contacting intinn@firstcutfilmfestival.com. Each session consisted of a short-film screenings and related wellbeing workshop led by Dr. John Goodwin, Lecturer in Mental Health Nursing in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, UCC.
An online Intinn package was also available nationwide from Monday 11th March to Friday, 19th April.
Online programme – accompanying resource packs:
- Teachers Resource Pack (Sound & Colour)
- Student Resource Pack (Sound & Colour)
- Teacher Resource Pack (Subsurface)
- Student Resource Pack (Subsurface)
For Intinn @First Cut! 2024 booking/enquiries, please contact intinn@firstcutfilmfestival.com
Intinn @ First Cut! Programme 2024
Sound & Colour
After her attempted suicide, Hannah must face her emotionally repressed family. Believing that her relationship ending is the root cause of her recent struggles, they avoid talking about the “incident” at all costs. The following workshop will give an overview on the topic of suicide in young people, the risk factors, things to look out for.
Subsurface
Finding himself bound, alone, and desperate to escape the waking nightmare surrounding him, Jared is forced to confront himself on an otherwise perfectly normal day.
The workshop will give an overview of depression in young people, myths, the risk factors, signs and symptoms.
Intinn Workshop
Following the film screenings, a workshop was delivered by mental health professional Dr Johnny Goodwin, addressing the themes of the chosen film, including practical tips about how to build resilience and enhance wellbeing.
Topics covered also included the importance of authentic discussions about mental health, and appropriate supports. The workshops are devised to help students to explore different mental health experiences, to understand their own wellbeing and ways of developing personal coping and resilience skills.
Intinn @ First Cut! 2024 Facilitator
Dr Johnny Goodwin
CIFF and Dr Johnny Goodwin have been working together on the development of the Intinn programme since its inception in 2018. Dr. Goodwin is a lecturer in mental health nursing in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, UCC. He holds an M.A in Film Studies. His PhD research focused on young people’s perceptions of mental health services. Dr. Goodwin’s interests also include the use of the arts and creativity in mental health, young people & mental health, and mental health stigma.
Intinn Programme 2023
Hum
An intimate portrait of artist and musician Kevin Nolan, diagnosed at 19 with schizoaffective disorder.
An Open Door
A pioneering initiative within the Mental Health Service provides a space for hope and recovery for the local community.
Intinn Workshop
Following the film screenings, a workshop led by a mental health professional will address the themes of both films and includes practical tips about how to build resilience and enhance wellbeing.
Topics covered include sleep hygiene, the importance of authentic discussions about mental health, and appropriate supports. The workshops will help your students to explore different mental health experiences, to understand their own wellbeing and ways of developing personal coping and resilience skills.
Intinn 2023 Facilitators
Dr Johnny Goodwin
CIFF and Dr Johnny Goodwin have been working together on the development of the Intinn programme since its inception in 2018.
Dr. Johnny Goodwin is a lecturer in mental health nursing in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, UCC. He holds an M.A in Film Studies. His PhD research focused on young people’s perceptions of mental health services. Johnny’s interests also include the use of the arts and creativity in mental health, young people & mental health, and mental health stigma.
Dr Caroline Kilty
Caroline is a Lecturer in the area of Older Adult Mental Health in UCC. She trained as a mental health nurse in Edinburgh in 2000, and has since worked in such areas as acute psychiatry, eating disorders and addictions. Alongside teaching, her area of research includes topics relating t dementia, young onset dementia and rights-based models of care.
Dr Maria O’ Malley
Maria is a lecturer in mental health nursing in UCC. She lectures at both undergraduate and post graduate levels and coordinates the postgraduate course in specialist mental health nursing practice. She is a consultant with a not-for-profit self-harm and suicide prevention organisation across Ireland and the United Kingdom.
Dr John Cummins
John is a qualified Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapist (CBT) completing his education with Trinity College Dublin. After his studies he has progressed to becoming a trainer and supervisor in this area with University College Cork (UCC). He teaches in UCC on the Postgraduate Diploma in CBT and has been developing his teaching skills in the area since the course’s inception.
More about Intinn
Meaning ‘mind’ or ‘way of thinking’, the Intinn programme has grown from 300 students participating in person in Cork in its pilot in 2019 to over 5,700 students participating in over 50 schools throughout Ireland online. In spring 2021, the Intinn programme also provided a unique opportunity to gather essential research on the impacts of this flagship education programme on TY and Senior Cycle students and their teachers, the results of which have contributed to a Report by UCC School of Nursing and Midwifery.
The resulting research study, led by Dr. Johnny Goodwin, titled: Implementation of a Film-Based Mental Health and Wellbeing Workshop in Secondary Schools: INTINN will soon be published. Interim findings endorse the value and importance of this programme, indicating outcomes of a significant decrease in major depression post-intervention, and a significant positive increase in wellbeing, personal resilience, and attitudes towards help-seeking observed. The findings will lead it is hoped, to greater awareness of mental health and wellbeing issues and support for young people, as well as guiding the further development of the Intinn programme for and with young people.
AWARDS
Cork International Film Festival has been shortlisted in the Best Small Sponsorship category with ESB Energy for Generations Fund in the Business to Arts Awards 2022 as an outstanding example of arts organisations and businesses working together in areas such as community engagement, sponsorship, and CSR initiatives, for Intinn.
CIFF and ESB Energy for Generations Fund were also recognised by the 2021 Business to Arts in the Best Small Sponsorship and Best Use of Creativity in the Community categories along with programme partners Creative Ireland, Rethink Ireland and UCC School of Nursing and Midwifery.
Previous Programmes
CIFF delivered two iterations of Intinn in 2021. In April, the programme was delivered online nationwide and included a screening of Frank Berry’s feature, I Used to Live Here; a Q&A with Berry, actress Jordanne Jones and Clinical Psychologist Dr. Tony Bates; and a webinar workshop. The November iteration was delivered in person in Cork and online nationwide. It comprised two short film screenings of Hum and An Open Door with filmmaker Q&As with Nathan Fagan and Aoise Tutty Jackson and workshops.
Due to the Level 5 lockdown in November 2020, CIFF delivered Intinn online nationwide which included a screening of Frank Berry’s feature, I Used to Live Here; a Q&A with Berry, actress Jordanne Jones and Clinical Psychologist Dr. Tony Bates; and a webinar workshop.
The pilot programme of Intinn screened I Used to Live Here, a film which was researched with young people for young people and sensitively addresses mental health issues, in particular suicide clusters amongst young people. It was attended by award-winning Irish director and mental health advocate Frank Berry (Micheal Inside, Ballymun Lullaby) and followed by interactive wellbeing and resilience building workshops, delivered by the Mental Health Nursing Department in the School of Nursing, UCC, supported by Jigsaw, the National Centre for Youth Mental Health.