Lisa Barros D'Sa is a film director, writer and producer. Barros D'Sa studied English at University of Oxford and holds an MA in Screenwriting from London University of the Arts. Born in Belfast, she is best known for co-directing and producing the 2019 feature filmOrdinary Love, she has also co-directed the films Good Vibrations and Cherrybomb with husband Glenn Leyburn. Based on these three 'strikingly different' feature films, the Irish Times described Barros D'Sa and Leyburn as "the most important contemporary filmmakers working from Northern Ireland".
Career
In 2006, Barros D'Sa founded a film production company called Canderblinks Film with long-term collaborators Glenn Leyburn and David Holmes. Barros D’Sa's directorial debut in 2006 was The 18th Electricity Plan, a short film based on her own screen play and co-directed with husband and collaborator Glenn Leyburn. The film played at various international film festivals including LA Shorts, Clermont-Ferrand and Cork International Film Festival, where it won a Special Mention in the Best Short Film category.
''Cherrybomb''
Her feature film debut Cherrybomb followed in 2009. Co-directed with Leyburn and starring Rupert Grint, Robert Sheehan and Kimberley Nixon, Cherrybomb had its world premiere in competition at the 2009 Berlinale Generations and was subsequently bought by Indi Vision/Universal Pictures for distribution in the UK.
Working from Owen McCafferty's screenplay, Barros D'Sa and Leyburn directed their third feature film Ordinary Love. Starring Lesley Manville and Liam Neeson, the film observes the heartbreak, intimacy and resilience that follows when long married couple Joan and Tom are confronted with a sudden cancer diagnosis. The film received funding from the BFI film fund backed by National Lottery. Barros D’Sa described the film as "a story about a couple who have small but seismic moments in their lives, and go on a journey, separately and together, that moves their life forwards... It was about creating that considered stillness, and allowing the dynamic moments to really land". Interviewed for the Toronto International Film Festival, where Ordinary Love had its premiere in 2019, she described how the film "celebrates the ordinary miracle of a connection between two people that gives them both life". In an interview with the Irish Times, Barros D'Sa described the film as "a story that’s celebrating the poetry of ordinary life and ordinary moments and the texture and normality of a long-term love".