Kathleen Kilbane - In the Presence of a Holy Child. This is our most comprehensive telling of Kathleen’s story. It is a docudrama that uses Br Conway’s own words to tell her story. It was done on a very small budget, my daughter played Kathleen, my wife as a nurse and myself as Br. Conway. Friends and neighbours filled out the rest of the small cast and my father narrated the film. We filmed at the places where Kathleen roamed and played on Achill Island and we filmed at the Sanatorium where she spent the final 15 months of her life. We also created a little Sanatorium set in our cellar. This film is your first stop if you want to know Kathleen’s story.

How We Made The Kathleen Kilbane Films. Over the course of 8 years we have made 6 films about Kathleen, wrote and published a book about her and designed and printed many Prayer & novena cards, and booklets. This film tells of how this all came about and how we did it. The film includes behind-the-scenes footage and never seen before scenes and photos. It also tells of other people's efforts to make Kathleen’s story known throughout the world. If you like Kathleen you will like this film.

Kathleen Kilbane - A Pilgrimage to her Grave. We shot this film in the summer of 2019 in the Counties of Down, Donegal, Leitrim, Sligo and Mayo. In the film, the main character is an old man whose wife has recently passed away. One day while sorting through his wife's possessions he comes across the book, No More Tears in My Eyes: The Story of Kathleen Kilbane. He connects the picture of Kathleen on the cover of the book with the framed photograph which his wife kept on display. He remembers once asking her who it was and she had replied, “That’s my little friend. Perhaps some weekend you could take me to her grave.” He reads the book and is so moved by Kathleen’s story and so regretful for not having fulfilled his wife’s wish, that he decides then and there that he will walk from where he lives in County Donegal to Kathleen’s grave on Achill Island so he can leave on her grave his wife’s rosary beads and a photograph of her. The film is the story of that journey.

In this film, we follow the route Kathleen Kilbane would have taken from Achill Island to the Tuberculosis sanatorium just outside Ballinrobe, Co. Mayo. Interspersed with the footage of this journey are photographs from the 1890s to the 1960s that show how Ireland was back in those days. The film ends with Victor Kennedy at Kathleen's grave on Achill.

Reflections of Kathleen Kilbane opens with a fictionalized – hypothetical scene of Bro Conway visiting Kathleen after he has just returned from Cork. The rest of the film is made up of stories/testimonies of how Kathleen has affected the lives of various people from around the world.

'Kathleen Kilbane & Brother Conway' imagines Bro. Anselm Conway's last day on earth. A day where he visits Kathleen's grave at Kildownet Cemetery, on Achill Island. He sees the spirit of Kathleen all around him and he remembers and imagines key moments in her short life. We see Kathleen with her Granny when she spent the happiest days of her life on Achill. And some key moments from her story are re-enacted. A moving tribute to the victims of the Irish famine also features in the film. There is also a tribute to the Kirkintilloch Tragedy of 1937 when 10 young men from Achill perished in the flames of the bothy where they were sleeping. Their grave is at Kildownet cemetery. Also featured is the grave of the victims of the Clew Bay Drowning on 15 June 1894. By the film's end, we see Br. Conway at a beach on Achill Island, where Kathleen appears before him one last time and leads him to heaven.

Kathleen Kilbane: The "Little Saint" of Achill Island. Our first stab at having a go telling Kathleen’s story. I re-edited this film in 2018 - see below.

Kathleen Kilbane The 'Little Saint' of Achill Island New Version 2018. This is a re-edited version of the film Kathleen Kilbane: The 'Little Saint' of Achill Island. I've removed the boring bits! Updated the biographical details about Kathleen, and improved little bits and pieces that have bugged me over the last few years-it's a better film for it.

In Memory of Kathleen Kilbane. This is our very first film about Kathleen. We visited her grave on Achill Island, Co.Mayo, Ireland and my father reads out a special message to Kathleen, then recites 'The Chaplet of the Divine Mercy.' Also featured in the film are some of the stained glass windows by Harry Clarke from Ballinrobe and Newport, Co.Mayo. And we visit Creagh Sanatorium, Kathleen’s home for the last year of her life.