Glasgow Film Theatre - July/August 2016

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JULY/AUGUST 2016

WIENER-DOG ADAPTING MISS HIG HSMITH

POUTFEST GLASGOW FILM THEATRE BOX OFFICE 0141 332 6535 • WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG

THE COMMUNE

THE NEON DEMO N SUMMER BLOCKBUS TERS


CONTENTS

DIARY Adult Life Skills Access Film Club: Gregory’s Girl Access Film Club: Sing Street Alice Through the Looking Glass The Angry Birds Movie Author: The JT LeRoy Story Barry Lyndon Beatrice Gibson: Cadenza Born to Be Blue

13 29 29 32 32 17 21 27 14 15

The Carer Cemetery of Splendour

12 12

Chevalier The Childhood of a Leader Chitty Chitty Bang Bang The Commune The Confession The Daughter Elvis & Nixon The Hard Stop Hotel for Dogs Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words The Jungle Book

11

Sweet Bean

14

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

22

Top Cat Begins

32

Traders

14

Up For Love

15

Valley of Love

16

Visible Cinema: Elvis & Nixon

30

Visible Cinema: Where to Invade Next

30

The Wait

13

Weiner

17

Wiener-Dog

15

16

ADAPTING MISS HIGHSMITH

13

31

The American Friend

24

Deep Water

25

17

Enough Rope

23

The Glass Cell

25

Plein Soleil

24

Strangers on a Train

23

The Talented Mr Ripley

25

This Sweet Sickness

24

9

11

21

The Fly

Summertime

18 31 18 31

EVENT CINEMA Bolshoi Ballet: The Bright Stream

35

Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening

36

Bolshoi Ballet: The Golden Age

35

Bolshoi Ballet: A Hero of Our Time

36

10

Bolshoi Ballet: The Nutcracker

35

Men & Chicken

11

Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty

36

Mustang

18

Bolshoi Ballet: Swan Lake

36

The Neon Demon

10

Branagh Theatre Live: The Entertainer

34

No Home Movie

27

Branagh Theatre Live: Romeo and Juliet

34

RSC: Cymbeline

34

RSC: King Lear

34

Knight of Cups Long Way North Losing Ground The Mafia Kills Only in Summer Maggie’s Plan

Notes on Blindness

18 31 12 10

9 16

Poor Cow Queen of Earth

9

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR FORSYTH

The Sacrifice

21

Comfort and Joy

26

The Sky Trembles and the Earth Is Afraid and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers

27

Gregory’s Girl

26

Local Hero

26

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

21

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POUTFEST

19

28

Jaws

19

28

Rocky

19

28

Saturday Night Fever

19

Closet Monster The Girl King Holding the Man

SOUND & VISION

SUMMER BLOCKBUSTERS Grease

Boys on Film: Time & Tied

28

GFT REGULARS

Monterey Pop

20

Access Film Club

29

A Poem Is a Naked Person

20

Crossing the Line

27

Radiohead: Meeting People Is Easy

20

Sound & Vision

20

Sid & Nancy

20

Take 2 Access: Autism-friendly screenings

32

Take 2: Free Saturday Films for Families

31

STUDIO GHIBLI FOREVER Howl’s Moving Castle

22

Ponyo

22

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

22

The Wind Rises

22

Tuesday Treats

2

Visible Cinema

30

TUESDAY TREATS

We’d like to offer you £5 tickets for selected Tuesday screenings. No further discounts apply. 5 All tickets are £5

Knight of Cups p18

Traders p14

Maggie’s Plan p10

Author: The JT LeRoy Story p17

Tue 5 July (17.50)

Tue 12 July (20.40)

Tue 2 Aug (18.30)

Tue 9 Aug (20.25)

The Sky Trembles… p27

The Confession p17

Adult Life Skills p13

Tue 23 Aug (21.00)

Tue 19 July (20.40)

Tue 17 Aug (18.35)

The Hard Stop p18

Tue 26 July (18.30)

BUY TICKETS ONLINE WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG

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HOW TO BUY TICKETS Online: www.glasgowfilm.org (no booking fee) By phone: 0141 332 6535 (£1.50 booking fee per transaction) Please call within Box Office opening hours. At busy times you will be asked to leave a contact number. In person: Within Box Office opening hours.

BOX OFFICE & BAR OPENING HOURS

HOW TO FIND OUT ABOUT WHAT WE DO Enewsletter: Subscribe for weekly listings, news and opportunities at www.glasgowfilm.org/enewsletter Brochure mailing list: For £8.00 per year you can have this brochure delivered to your home. Sign up at the Box Office or by calling 0141 332 6535

ACCESSIBLE PROGRAMME

From May to October our box office opening hours will be different to normal to accommodate the foyer redevelopment work: Monday to Thursday: from 5pm Friday: from 3.00pm Saturday: from 11am Sunday: from 12noon GFT Bar will be closed May - October. Drinks and light snacks will be available to take into Cinemas 2 and 3.

GFT offers Audio Description, Captioning and Autism Friendly screenings on selected titles. See p38 for full details.

Glasgow Film Theatre 12 Rose Street, Glasgow G3 6RB @glasgowfilm

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TICKETS / LOYALTY CARDS Full price £8.50 Concession £7* Youth Card holders £4.50 (ages 15–21) Children £5 (ages 14 & under) CineCard holders £1 off every standard priced screening (Unless otherwise stated) CineCard subscription £40 per year Special features 5

£5 tickets Free but ticketed events Special ticket price Captioned films Audio described 3D films – £1.50 extra

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2 for 1 tickets

Buy the Sunday Herald for a voucher for one of our Monday night screenings. www.heraldscotland.com With MEERKAT MOVIES, you can get 2 for 1 cinema tickets every Tuesday or Wednesday. www.meerkatmovies.com

Fridays before 5pm

All tickets cost £5 before 5pm every Friday (unless otherwise stated).

Tuesday Treats

£5 tickets for selected Tuesday evening screenings (see p2 for details) *Concessions apply to full-time students, over-60s, Jobseekers Allowance or Income Support recipients, and registered disabled people. Please produce proof of eligibility when purchasing or collecting tickets. Tickets are non-refundable. Please note that late entry to the cinema for ticket holders is at the discretion of the manager. Cinema management reserve the right of admission and their decision is final. Please note programme may be subject to change.

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Notes on Blindness p9 15.30 5 / 18.40 / 20.50 Mustang p18 18.15 Queen of Earth p9 15.50 5 / 20.30

SAT 2 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 14.20 / 18.40 / 20.50 Mustang p18 13.50 / 16.00 / 20.30 Queen of Earth p9 16.30 / 18.15 Take 2: The Jungle Book p31 5 11.30 Take 2 Access: The Jungle Book p32 5 12.00

SUN 3 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 13.10 / 17.30 Mustang p18 16.20 Jaws p19 13.30 The Daughter p9 15.20 The Sacrifice p21 18.45 Crossing the Line: Beatrice Gibson: Cadenza p27 19.45

MON 4 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 20.50 Mustang p18 18.00 The Daughter p9 18.20 / 20.20

TUE 5 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 18.30 / 20.50 Knight of Cups p18 17.50 5 Howls’ Moving Castle p22 20.20

WED 6 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 18.05 Knight of Cups p18 20.30 Jaws p19 17.50 Holding the Man p28 20.10

THU 7 JULY

Notes on Blindness p9 18.30 / 20.40 Branagh Theatre Live: Romeo and Juliet p34 19.15

FRI 8 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 15.20 5 / 17.50 / 20.20 Maggie’s Plan p10 18.20 / 20.40 The Mafia Kills Only in Summer p10 15.40 5

SAT 9 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 14.45 / 17.50 / 20.20 Maggie’s Plan p10 14.00 /16.15 / 20.40 The Mafia Kills Only in Summer p10 18.30 Take 2: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang p31 5 11.30

SUN 10 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 17.00 / 19.35 Maggie’s Plan p10 13.20 / 17.45 Rocky p19 14.15 The Mafia Kills Only in Summer p10 15.40 / 20.00

MON 11 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 17.50 / 20.20 Maggie’s Plan p10 18.20 / 20.40

TUE 12 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 20.20 Maggie’s Plan p10 20.40 5 Ponyo p22 18.00 Access Film Club: Sing Street p29 18.10 5

WED 13 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 20.25 Maggie’s Plan p10 18.20 / 20.40

Rocky p19 17.50

DIARY

FRI 1 JULY

THU 14 JULY

The Neon Demon p10 17.50 / 20.20 Maggie’s Plan p10 18.20 / 20.40

FRI 15 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 15.45 5 / 18.10 / 20.30 Summertime p11 15.15 5 /20.15 Elvis & Nixon p11 17.50 Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan p21 23.00

SAT 16 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 13.30 / 15.50 / 18.10 / 20.30 Summertime p11 14.00 / 18.25 Elvis & Nixon p11 16.20 / 20.45 Take 2: Long Way North p31 5 11.30

SUN 17 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 17.10 / 19.30 Summertime p11 16.50 Elvis & Nixon p11 14.50 Saturday Night Fever p19 14.20 Losing Ground p12 19.10

MON 18 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 18.00 / 20.20 Summertime p11 20.35 Visible Cinema: Elvis & Nixon p30 5 18.10

TUE 19 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 17.50 Summertime p11 18.20 The Sky Trembles… p27 20.40 5 The Wind Rises p22 20.10

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DIARY

WED 20 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 20.35 Summertime p11 20.20 The Sky Trembles… p27 18.10 Saturday Night Fever p19 18.00

THU 21 JULY

Men & Chicken p11 18.10 / 20.30 Summertime p11 17.50 The Girl King p28 20.15

FRI 22 JULY

Chevalier p12 15.45 5 / 18.10 / 20.30 Cemetery of Splendour p12 15.15 5 / 20.15 The Wait p13 17.50

SAT 23 JULY

Chevalier p12 15.00 / 18.10 / 20.30 Cemetery of Splendour p12 12.45 / 17.50 The Wait p13 15.20 / 20.45 Take 2: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya p31 5 11.30

SUN 24 JULY

Chevalier p12 17.10 / 19.30 Cemetery of Splendour p12 14.10 / 19.00 The Wait p13 16.45 Grease p19 14.30

MON 25 JULY Chevalier p12 18.10 / 20.30 The Wait p13 20.45 Weiner p17 18.30

TUE 26 JULY Chevalier p12 17.40

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Weiner p17 20.40 Adult Life Skills p13 18.30 5 The Tale of the Princess Kaguya p22 20.00

WED 27 JULY

Chevalier p12 20.30 Weiner p17 18.30 Adult Life Skills p13 20.45 Grease p19 18.00

THU 28 JULY

Chevalier p12 18.10 / 20.30 Adult Life Skills p13 17.50 Boys on Film: Time & Tied p28 20.15

FRI 29 JULY

The Commune p13 15.15 5 / 18.00 / 20.25 Local Hero p26 15.35 5 Born to Be Blue p14 20.40 Traders p14 18.30

SAT 30 JULY

The Commune p13 15.00 / 18.00 / 20.25 Local Hero p26 15.30 Born to Be Blue p14 13.00 / 18.30 Traders p14 20.40 Take 2: Hotel For Dogs p31 5 11.30

SUN 31 JULY

The Commune p13 13.15 / 19.25 Born to Be Blue p14 15.40 / 19.50 Traders p14 17.50 Barry Lyndon p21 13.00 Comfort and Joy p26 17.00

MON 1 AUG

The Commune p13 18.00 / 20.25 Born to Be Blue p14 18.30 Traders p14 20.40

TUE 2 AUG

The Commune p13 18.00 / 20.25 Born to Be Blue p14 20.40 Traders p14 18.30 5

WED 3 AUG

The Commune p13 20.25 Born to Be Blue p14 18.10 Traders p14 17.15 Barry Lyndon p21 19.15

THU 4 AUG

The Commune p13 20.25 Born to Be Blue p14 18.10 Traders p14 18.30 Closet Monster p28 20.40

FRI 5 AUG

Up for Love p15 15.45 5 / 18.30 / 20.40 The Carer p15 15.15 5 / 18.10 Sweet Bean p14 20.20

SAT 6 AUG

Up for Love p15 13.45 / 18.10 / 20.30 The Carer p15 16.25 / 20.55 Sweet Bean p14 14.00 / 18.30 Gregory’s Girl p26 16.00 Take 2: The Angry Birds Movie p32 5 11.30 Take 2 Access: The Angry Birds Movie p32 5 12.00

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SUN 7 AUG

Up for Love p15 12.45 / 17.00 The Carer p15 12.20 / 15.00 Sweet Bean p14 14.30 Radiohead: Meeting People Is Easy p20 17.20 Strangers on a Train p23 19.50 Crossing the Line: No Home Movie p27 19.30

MON 8 AUG

Up for Love p15 18.00 The Carer p15 20.45 No Home Movie p27 18.15 The Confession p17 20.20

TUE 9 AUG

Up for Love p15 20.40 The Carer p15 18.20 Author: The JT LeRoy Story p17 20.25 5 Access Film Club: Gregory’s Girl p29 18.00 5

WED 10 AUG

Up for Love p15 20.40 The Carer p15 20.20 Author: The JT LeRoy Story p17 18.00 Enough Rope p23 18.20

THU 11 AUG

Up for Love p15 18.30 / 20.40 The Carer p15 18.10 Author: The JT LeRoy Story p17 20.25

FRI 12 AUG

Valley of Love p16 15.15 5 / 18.20 / 20.30 Wiener-Dog p15 15.45 5 / 18.40 / 20.50

SAT 13 AUG

Valley of Love p16 14.10 / 16.15 / 18.20 / 20.30 Wiener-Dog p15 14.30 / 16.35 / 18.40 / 20.50 Take 2: Alice Through the Looking Glass p32 5 11.30

SUN 14 AUG

Valley of Love p16 13.00 / 15.10 / 17.20 Wiener-Dog p15 13.20 / 15.30 / 19.50 Monterey Pop p20 17.45 Plein Soleil p24 19.30

MON 15 AUG

Valley of Love p16 18.20 / 20.30 Wiener-Dog p15 18.40 / 20.45

TUE 16 AUG

Valley of Love p16 18.20 / 20.30 Wiener-Dog p15 20.45 The Confession p17 18.35 5

WED 17 AUG

Valley of Love p16 20.45 Wiener-Dog p15 18.25 The Confession p17 20.30 This Sweet Sickness p24 18.10

THU 18 AUG

Valley of Love p16 18.20 / 20.30 Wiener-Dog p15 20.50 The Confession p17 18.40

FRI 19 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 15.20 5 / 17.50 / 20.20 Wiener-Dog p15 20.45 Ingrid Bergman: In her Own Words p18 15.45 5 / 18.15 The Fly p21 23.00

SAT 20 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 15.00 / 17.50 / 20.20 Wiener-Dog p15 16.10 / 20.45 Ingrid Bergman: In her Own Words p18 13.40 / 18.15 Take 2: Top Cat Begins p32 5 11.30

SUN 21 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 14.10 / 16.40 Wiener-Dog p15 12.30 / 19.40 Ingrid Bergman: In her Own Words p18 14.45 A Poem Is a Naked Person p20 17.20 The American Friend p24 19.15

MON 22 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 18.00 / 20.30 Ingrid Bergman: In her Own Words p18 17.45 / 20.15

TUE 23 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 18.00 / 20.30 The Hard Stop p18 21.00 5 Visible Cinema: Where to Invade Next p30 18.15 5

WED 24 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 20.30 The Glass Cell p25 18.15 The Hard Stop p18 18.30 Poor Cow p16 20.45

THU 25 AUG

The Childhood of a Leader p16 18.00 / 20.30 The Hard Stop p18 20.45 Poor Cow p16 18.30

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THIS SUMMER, GFT TRANSFORMS A BEAUTIFUL NEW FOYER NEW BARS A NEW LEARNING SUITE AN ACCESSIBLE LIFT TO ALL LEVELS AND MORE... But we still need your help to make it happen! All donations to the GFT Needs You Appeal will help us reach our final goal and secure the cinema for future generations.

Here’s how you can support us: Go to mydonate.bt.com/charities/glasgowfilmtheatre Text GFTD16 + £1, £2, £3, £4 or £10 to 70070 Download the appeal leaflet and form at glasgowfilm.org/theatre/support_gft Give your donation at the Box Office To discuss donating to the GFT Needs You Appeal, please contact Liana Marletta or Lorna Ferguson at development@glasgowfilm.org or by phoning 0141 352 8604. Registered charity number SC005932

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REDEVELOPMENT OPENING HOURS Box Office Opening Hours during the development:

Monday to Thursday: from 5pm Friday: from 3pm

Saturday: from 11am

Sunday: from 12noon To allow the redevelopment work to happen, Screen 1 is closed for the duration of the project. Screens 2 and 3 will be open as per the times stated above. GFT wishes to acknowledge the vital support the following have generously contributed to this project.

Robert Barr Charitable Trust Dunard Fund Margaret Murdoch Charitable Trust Martin Connell Charitable Trust Esterson Trust Seat Sponsors of GFT Cinema 3 Donors to GFT Needs You Appeal

Project managed by Tx and designed by Architects McGinlay Bell

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Notes on Blindness

Friday 1 - Thursday 7 July Notes on Blindness is a thought-provoking documentary exploring the loss of sight. Theologian and writer John Hull began to lose his sight, and over three years he made a series of audio recordings of his experience. Melding classic documentary elements with cinematic re-enactments, Notes on Blindness proves a poetic and intimate story of loss, rebirth and transformation. The Friday 1 July screenings will be accompanied by Notes on Blindness: Into Darkness, a Virtual Reality presentation based on John’s sensory and psychological experience, using binaural audio and real time 3D animations to create a fully immersive experience. Check glasgowfilm.org for details. Director Pete Middleton, James Spinney UK 2016, 1h26m, U

Queen of Earth

The Daughter

Friday 1 & Saturday 2 July A psychological horror movie with an emphasis on the (crumbling) psyche, the latest film from Alex Ross Perry focuses on the disintegrating relationship between two old friends. Elisabeth Moss delivers a searing central performance as Catherine, a recently single young professional who absconds to a lake cabin with her friend Virginia (Inherent Vice’s Katherine Waterston) after a particularly messy breakup. However, their friendship is not what it once was, and minor cracks soon give way to gaping chasms of introspection, self-doubt and a painful lack of belonging.

Sunday 3 & Monday 4 July A powerful reworking of Henrik Ibsen’s The Wild Duck with perfectly pitched performances from Geoffrey Rush, Miranda Otto, Sam Neill and Paul Schneider. In a small Australian logging town, the closure of the mill spells disaster for the local economy. However, it seems unlikely to cause sleepless nights for arrogant mill owner Henry (Rush). He is preparing for his wedding and the return of his estranged son Christian (Schneider) to serve as best man. But a dark secret from the past collides with the concerns of the present and they all head towards a day of reckoning.

Director Alex Ross Perry Cast Elisabeth Moss, Katherine Waterston, Patrick Fugit, USA 2015, 1h30m, 15

Director Simon Stone Cast Geoffrey Rush, Miranda Otto, Paul Schneider, Australia 2015, 1h35m, 15

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The Neon Demon

Friday 8 - Thursday 14 July Following on from Only God Forgives, Nicolas Winding Refn delivers another film that is sure to divide opinion. Elle Fanning plays Jesse, an innocent teen who moves to Los Angeles to crack the fashion world. Upon entering the modelling industry, she finds herself amongst a group of envious and beauty-obsessed women, desperate to devour her youth and vitality (literally, in some cases). This is fashion-world satire as horrific nightmare, and the sleek, highly-stylized imagery makes it as absorbing and gripping as it is outrageous. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available Director Nicolas Winding Refn Cast Elle Fanning, Christina Hendricks, Keanu Reeves France/USA/Denmark 2016, 1h57m, 18

Maggie’s Plan

The Mafia Kills Only in Summer

La mafia uccide solo d’estate Friday 8 - Sunday 10 July An inspired coming of age comedy that pays heartwarming tribute to all of those who have fallen in the long struggle against the Mafia. Arturo is born in 1970s Sicily where everyday life is dominated by crime, corruption and execution. His childhood is marked by his impossible love for classmate Flora and a devotion to Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti. Arturo’s story is interwoven with true tales of those who gave their lives in the fight against organised crime in a rollicking film that is funny and unexpectedly moving. Director Pierfrancesco Diliberto Cast Cristiana Capotondi, Alex Bisconti, Rosario Lisma, Italy 2013, 1h30m, subtitles, CTBC

Friday 8 - Thursday 14 July A young woman longing to start a family becomes involved in a complicated love triangle. Greta Gerwig is Maggie, an independent New Yorker whose plans to have a baby via artificial insemination are derailed when she meets and falls for John (Ethan Hawke), an unhappy academic married to Danish critical theorist Georgette (Julianne Moore). Three years on and experiencing a change of heart, Maggie devises some meddlesome schemes to put things right. Greta Gerwig delivers a typically absorbing performance in this delightfully witty and smart offbeat comedy. Director Rebecca Miller Cast Greta Gerwig, Ethan Hawke, Julianne Moore, USA 2015, 1h39m, 15

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Men & Chicken Mænd & høns

Friday 15 - Thursday 21 July If Franz Kafka had written a film for The Three Stooges, it might have turned out like Men & Chicken. Two misfit brothers set off to find their real father and discover much more than they had bargained for, in Anders Thomas Jensen’s first film as a director in 10 years. In this gleefully eccentric freewheeling delight, screwball farce and slapstick violence mix with philosophical musings on science and religion. Blazingly original and uproariously funny, Men & Chicken also features an uninhibited Mads Mikkelsen as you’ve never seen him before. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available Director Anders Thomas Jensen Cast Mads Mikkelsen, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, David Dencik Denmark/Germany 2015, 1h42m, subtitles, 15

Elvis & Nixon

Summertime La belle saison

Friday 15 - Thursday 21 July Sweeping social change is reflected in intense personal experiences in this exuberant autobiographical drama from writer/director Catherine Corsini. In 1971 Delphine (Izïa Higelin) leaves the family farm for the freedom of the big city. In Paris, she meets Spanish teacher Carole (Cécile De France) and a group of militant activists in the feminist movement. Delphine is inspired by their passion for change, and is drawn into a deeper relationship with Carole. But she also finds her roots are not so easy to escape in this poignant, bittersweet remembrance of love. Director Catherine Corsini Cast Cécile De France, Izïa Higelin, Noémie Lvovsky, France/Belgium 2015, 1h45m, subtitles, 15

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Friday 15 - Monday 18 July One December morning in 1970, the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll turns up on the doorstep of the White House to meet the most powerful man in the world requesting to be made a federal agent. A farcical scramble ensues as entourages on both sides coordinate a meet-and-greet. With the two icons played by Michael Shannon and Kevin Spacey respectively, director Liza Johnson weaves an imagined story from behind the Oval Office doors, capturing a preWatergate moment in a time when America had both a King and a President. Elvis & Nixon also screens as part of Visible Cinema on Monday 18 July. Check p30 for details. Director Liza Johnson Cast Michael Shannon, Kevin Spacey, Alex Pettyfer, USA 2016, 1h26m, 15

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Chevalier

Friday 22 - Thursday 28 July The third feature from Attenberg director Athina Rachel Tsangari is a richly comic reflection on the male ego. Six men are on an expensive yachting holiday in the Aegean. They range in age and social status from an elegant 60-something GP to a 30-year-old doormat who still lives with his mother. They all agree to a test of their masculinity that grows increasingly petty and rancorous as they go from assembling flatpack furniture to comparing the size of their erections. Finding the measure of a man is the basis of a funny, provocative and profound comedy. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available Director Athina Rachel Tsangari Cast Yiorgos Kendros, Panos Koronis, Sakis Rouvas Greece 2015, 1h45m, subtitles, 18

Losing Ground

Sunday 17 July (19.10) Three decades after its release and 25 years after director Kathleen Collins’ death, Losing Ground is in cinemas for the very first time, thanks to a new digital restoration. One of the very first fictional features by an African-American woman, the film takes a wryly humorous look at the relationship of a philosophy professor (Seret Scott) and her philandering painter husband (Bill Gunn). Its focus on a black female character who is both intellectually and sexually empowered was groundbreaking at the time, and the film is still considered to be a feminist masterwork. Director Kathleen Collins Cast Seret Scott, Bill Gunn, Maritza Rivera, USA 1982, 1h26m, N/C 15+

Cemetery of Splendour (Rak ti Khon Kaen)

Friday 22 - Sunday 24 July Soldiers afflicted by a mysterious sleeping sickness are stationed in a temporary clinic in a former school. A young medium named Keng helps visitors communicate with their comatose loved ones, while a volunteer, Jenjira, senses there may be a connection between the soldiers’ inexplicable syndrome and the ancient, mythic site on which the clinic is built. Visionary filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s new film is a hypnotic wonder that delves into the myths, traditions and political attitudes of his native Thailand. Director Apichatpong Weerasethakul Cast Jenjira Pongpas, Banlop Lomnoi, Jarinpattra Rueangram, Thailand 2015, 2h2m, subtitles, 12A: infrequent moderate sex references, moderate violence

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The Commune Kollektivet

Friday 29 July - Thursday 4 August Academic couple Erik and Anna decide to set up a Danish commune in bohemian 1970s Copenhagen. Erik embarks on a love affair with a young student and eventually asks her to join him in the commune. What follows is a compelling clash between personal desires and the dream of solidarity and tolerance, as Anna desperately tries to come to terms with this new situation. The Commune is a touching and at times funny look at the frailties of togetherness. Director Thomas Vinterberg Cast Ulrich Thomsen, Fares Fares, Trine Dyrholm Denmark/Sweden/Netherlands 2016, 1h52m, subtitles, 15

The Wait L’attesa

Adult Life Skills

Friday 22 - Monday 25 July Two women from different generations meet unexpectedly at a villa in Sicily, with profound consequences for them both. Jeanne (Lou de Laâge) arrives on the island before her fiancé, Giuseppe (Giovanni Anzaldo), whose absence casts a shadow over the household. As she waits, Jeanne begins to bond with Giuseppe’s mother, Anna (Juliette Binoche). They grow close and form a strange relationship despite the secrets they are keeping from one another. An atmospheric and elegant drama that examines a complex emotional landscape.

Tuesday 26 - Thursday 28 July Anna is stuck: she’s approaching 30 and lives in her mum’s garden shed. She hides in her own imagination and spends her days making videos using her thumbs as actors. However, Anna’s self-imposed isolation becomes impossible to maintain as she bonds with a troubled eight-yearold boy obsessed with Westerns. In this feature length version of her BAFTA nominated short, Emotional Fusebox, Rachel Tunnard explores the universal themes of being lost, finding yourself and regaining self-confidence in a charming and engaging new British film.

Director Piero Messina Cast Juliette Binoche, Giorgio Colangeli, Lou de Laâge, Italy/France 2015, 1h40m, subtitles, CTBC

Director Rachel Tunnard Cast Jodie Whittaker, Lorraine Ashbourne, Brett Goldstein, UK 2016, 1h32m, 15

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Born to Be Blue

Friday 29 July - Thursday 4 August Jazz legend Chet Baker’s tumultuous life is thrillingly reimagined in this anti-biopic. In the 1950s, Baker was a famous trumpeter renowned as a pioneer of the West Coast Jazz scene. However, by the 1960s his career and personal life were in ruins due to years of drug addiction. In Born to Be Blue, Baker (played by Ethan Hawke) battles against the odds to make a comeback, spurred on in part by a passionate romance with new flame Jane Azuka (Carmen Ejogo). Driven by Hawke’s dazzling performance, Born to Be Blue unfolds with the stylistic brio of great jazz. Director Robert Budreau Cast Ethan Hawke, Carmen Ejogo, Callum Keith Rennie, UK/Canada/USA 2015, 1h37m, CTBC

Traders

Sweet Bean An

Friday 29 July - Thursday 4 August This violent and blackly humorous film deals with ‘econocide’: the act of committing suicide as a result of bad economic conditions. When Vernon (Game of Thrones’ John Bradley) and Harry (Killian Scott) lose their jobs, Vernon comes up with the unique idea of ‘trading’ – meeting up with someone else in a financial bind, and fighting it out to the death. The winner takes the life savings of the other person. Set in recession-hit Ireland, this acerbic social satire keeps the audience guessing to the very end.

Friday 5 - Sunday 7 August Sentarô, a lonely Japanese baker, hires an eccentric 76-year-old woman to be his new assistant, and soon learns that she has a wonderful recipe for red bean paste. Sentarô’s business begins to thrive and the pair’s relationship develops beyond their mutual appreciation of Japanese confectionary. However, their partnership is threatened when it’s revealed the elderly woman is suffering from a severe illness. A beautiful and delicate fable that is both a feel-good food movie and moving drama.

Directors Rachael Moriarty, Peter Murphy Cast Killian Scott, John Bradley, Nika McGuigan, Ireland 2015, 1h30m, CTBC

Director Naomi Kawase Cast Kirin Kiki, Masatoshi Nagase, Kyara Uchida, Japan/France/Germany 2015, 1h53m, subtitles, PG

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Wiener-Dog

Friday 12 - Sunday 21 August Todd Solondz (Happiness, Welcome to the Dollhouse) returns with this poignant tale of how a pet dachshund inspires the lives of those around him. Consisting of a series of vignettes, and with an all-star cast including Greta Gerwig, Julie Delpy and Danny DeVito, Wiener-Dog follows the dachshund’s fate as it is shuttled from owner to owner. Solondz provides truthful observations about the human condition with this dark but humorous tale of a travelling dog. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available Director Todd Solondz Cast Charlie Tahan, Greta Gerwig, Zosia Mamet, USA 2016, 1h30m, CTBC

The Carer

Friday 5 - Thursday 11 August Brian Cox has a high old time as Sir Michael Gifford, a classically-trained lion of the British stage who has heard the chimes at midnight. An unforgettable Lear and now an impossible human being, Sir Michael is suffering from a rare form of Parkinson’s disease and living out of the public eye. Dorottya (Coco König), the latest poor soul hired as his carer, develops an improbable connection with this man whose blustering swagger conceals his vulnerability. The Carer is a funny, poignant tale with a barnstorming gem of a performance from Cox. Director János Edelényi Cast Brian Cox, Anna Chancellor, Emilia Fox, UK/Hungary 2016, 1h29m, CTBC

Up for Love

Un homme à la hauteur Friday 5 - Thursday 11 August Diane (Virginie Efira) is a newly single lawyer who receives a call from a stranger after losing her phone. The pair hit it off and arrange to meet up in order to return the lost item. Diane has great expectations of this first date, and is disappointed to discover that Alexandre (Jean Dujardin, in a visual effects-tweaked performance) is a man of diminutive stature. As Diane struggles to overcome her prejudices and the expectations of society, she realises that following her heart is much more important. A charming and sweet romance about a mismatched couple. . Director Laurent Tirard Cast Jean Dujardin, Virginie Efira, Cédric Kahn, France 2016, 1h38m, subtitles, CTBC

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Valley of Love

Friday 12 - Thursday 18 August Isabelle and Gérard have arrived in the suffocating heat of Death Valley to answer an invitation from their dead son Michael, shockingly received six months after his suicide. He has written to them with the promise that if they meet at this location on a particular date he will return and see them both. Despite the absurdity of the situation, they decide to go along with Michael’s plan. Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu are riveting as parents trying to come to terms with their guilt and grief. Director Guillaume Nicloux Cast Isabelle Huppert, Gérard Depardieu, Dan Warner France/Belgium 2015, 1h31m, subtitles, CTBC

Poor Cow

The Childhood of a Leader

Friday 19 - Thursday 25 August Brady Corbet’s debut feature is a chilling tale about the rise of fascism in the early 20th century. A young boy moves to the French countryside at the end of the First World War, where his father (Liam Cunningham) is working on the creation of the Treaty of Versailles. As the boy’s views and beliefs are shaped by what he witnesses, his behaviour becomes erratic and uncontrollable. With a full orchestral soundtrack by Scott Walker, this adaptation of the 1939 short story by Jean-Paul Sartre is an ambitious and compelling psychodrama. Director Brady Corbet Cast Robert Pattinson, Liam Cunningham, Stacy Martin, UK/Hungary/France 2015, 1h55m, some subtitles, CTBC

Wednesday 24 (20.45) & Thursday 25 August (18.30) Ken Loach’s first feature film was a landmark in British social realist filmmaking, and today offers a completely unique snapshot of 1960s London. The film tells the story of Joy (Carol White), a beautiful, resilient and free-spirited young mother who falls for her husband’s associate whilst her uncaring spouse is in prison. Full of 60s colour and music, Loach depicts Joy’s world with typical care, showing how her plight derives from a set of social circumstances largely outside her control. New Digital Restoration Director Ken Loach Cast Terence Stamp, Carol White, John Bindon, UK 1967, 1h41m, 15

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DOCUMENTARIES

Weiner

Monday 25 - Wednesday 27 July New York Congressman Anthony Weiner’s mayoral campaign is the subject of this incisive and painfully funny behind-the-scenes documentary. The disgraced ex-congressman is on the comeback trail, but soon encounters a political storm when he is forced to admit to new sexting allegations. With unrestricted access to Anthony Weiner, his family and his campaign team, Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg reveal the human story behind the high profile scandal, while examining how much of today’s politics are driven by an appetite for spectacle. Directors Josh Kriegman, Elyse Steinberg, USA 2016, 1h36m, 15

The Confession

Monday 8 August (20.20) Tuesday 16 - Thursday 18 August From the rise of the Bosnian Mujahideen to the torture cells of Guantanamo Bay, and from rebel training camps in Syria to the prison-bars of Belmarsh, Moazzam Begg has lived through a generation of conflict. The Confession captures the entirety of Begg’s story: from his forced confession and testimony as a free man, to his experience as a British Muslim and the impact of the War on Terror. Ashish Ghadiali’s gripping documentary charts the rise of modern jihad, its descent into terror, and the disastrous reaction of the West. The screening on Monday 8 Aug (20.20) will be followed by a Q&A with director Ashish Ghadiali and Moazzam Begg.

Author: The JT LeRoy Story

Tuesday 9 - Thursday 11 August In its October 2005 issue, New York magazine ran a piece detailing how celebrated literary figure JT LeRoy was actually a creation from the mind of 40-year-old San Francisco punk rocker and phone sex operator Laura Albert. In this new film from Jeff Feuerzeig (The Devil and Daniel Johnston), we are offered an insight into how Laura created the HIV-positive ex-prostitute transgender male author, a ruse that led her down a celebrity-lined rabbit hole of rock shows, fashion shows and the Cannes red carpet. Director Jeff Feuerzeig, USA 2016, 1h51m, 15

Director Ashish Ghadiali, UK 2016, 1h30m, CTBC

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Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words

Friday 19 - Monday 22 August Ingrid Bergman was a star of Hollywood’s Golden Era and a universally celebrated actor of American and World cinema. Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words is a captivating look behind the scenes of the remarkable life of the young Swedish girl, who was orphaned at the age of 12 but stayed true to her passion for acting. Celebratory and revelatory, the film makes extensive use of Bergman’s own diaries, personal pictures, home movies, and family members to produce an intimate portrait of one of the silver screen’s brightest stars. Director Stig Björkman, Sweden 2015, 1h54m, subtitles, CTBC

Friday 1 - Monday 4 July Winner of the Audience Award at Glasgow Film Festival 2016, Deniz Gamze Ergüven’s extraordinary debut depicts the way female sexuality becomes a challenge in a strict society. Five orphan sisters innocently head to the beach with male classmates. A disapproving neighbour reports them and their uncle responds by keeping them under lock and key. Playful teenage rebellion becomes a fight for survival as the girls face a family determined to mould them into compliant young women and potential wives. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available.

Tuesday 23 - Thursday 25 August In August 2011, the fatal shooting of Mark Duggan by the London Metropolitan Police was the spark that caused the nation’s capital to explode into intense riots. This timely documentary explores the life and death of Duggan, picking up the story where the media left off and bringing the focus back to Duggan’s home, where his close friends Marcus and Kurtis seek justice whilst struggling against discrimination in their daily lives. ‘Unflinching… A unique perspective on a notorious case’ **** Empire Director George Amponsah, UK 2015, 1h25m, 15

Knight of Cups

Tuesday 5 & Wednesday 6 July Terrence Malick’s seventh feature takes its title from the Tarot card depicting a romantic adventurer guided by his emotions. Rick (Christian Bale) is a writer indulging in all the desires that Las Vegas and Los Angeles have to offer. Feeling disenchanted with his relationships with his father and brother, he undertakes a search for love and self that leads him on a series of adventures with six different women. Knight of Cups offers both a vision of modern life and an intensely personal experience of memory, family and love. Director Terrence Malick Cast Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Natalie Portman, USA 2015, 1h58m, some subtitles, 15

Director Deniz Gamze Ergüven Cast Günes Nezihe Sensoy, Dogba Zeynep Doguslu, Elit Iscan, Turkey/France/Germany/Qatar 2015, 1h37m, subtitles, 15

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DID YOU MISS?

Mustang

The Hard Stop


SUMMER BLOCKBUSTERS

Forget 2016’s crop of CGI-packed comic book adaptations and remakes, and journey with GFT back to the 70s, the time of the original Summer Blockbusters. We present four of the best, boxoffice-busting classics for your popcorn-munching enjoyment. See you in the front row! Special Offer: buy a full season pass for £24, saving up to 30%

Jaws

Sunday 3 (13.30) & Wednesday 6 July (17.50) Spielberg’s big breakthrough is a suspenseful classic that has lost none of its power to frighten moviegoers out of the water. When pieces of human flesh wash up on the shore of a popular tourist resort, Police Chief Brody suspects the worst. Local officials, mindful of the lucrative tourist trade, refuse to put the island on a business-killing shark alert. After more deadly attacks, Brody recruits marine biologist Hooper and veteran fisherman Quint to hunt down the legendary beast, only to realise it is the shark that is hunting them. Director Steven Spielberg Cast Roy Scheider, Robert Shaw, Richard Dreyfuss, USA 1975, 2h4m, 12A: Contains moderate threat and occasional gory moments

Saturday Night Fever

Sunday 17 (14.20) & Wedesday 20 July (18.00) John Travolta graduated from minor celebrity to genuine superstar with Saturday Night Fever. Tony Manero is an uneducated and immature teenager from Brooklyn, working in a dead end job. The highlight of his week is going to the local disco, where he is king of the dancefloor. When a big dance competition is announced, Tony sees an opportunity to fulfil his potential and escape the drudgery of this life. Travolta’s towering performance coupled with the iconic disco soundtrack made Saturday Night Fever a seminal film of the 70s.

Rocky

Sunday 10 (14.15) & Wednesday 13 July (17.50) Winner of 3 Oscars and one of the biggest hits of 1976, Rocky is a charming crowdpleaser with a career-defining performance from Sylvester Stallone. Rocky Balboa is a down-on-his-luck boxer working as a debt collector in a tough neighbourhood in Philadelphia. When heavyweight champion Apollo Creed visits the city looking for an unknown opponent, Rocky is chosen for this once in a lifetime opportunity. With a shot at glory in his sights, Rocky trains harder than he thought possible to earn self-respect and go the distance with the champ. Digital Restoration Director John G Avildsen Cast Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burt Young, USA 1976, 1h57m, 12

Grease

Sunday 24 (14.30) & Wednesday 27 July (18.00) Released in the US on 17 June 1978, Grease became the biggest American box office hit of that year. Danny and Sandy’s classic tale of summer lovin’ at Rydell High School quickly became a worldwide favourite, with audiences slayed at the site of John Travolta’s pout and Olivia Newton-John’s leathers. Not to mention the music: You’re the One That I Want, Greased Lightnin’, Summer Nights, the list goes on. Grease is the word. Director Randal Kleiser Cast John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, Stockard Channing, USA 1978, 1h51m, PG

Director John Badham Cast John Travolta, Karen Lynn Gorney, Barry Miller, USA 1977, 1h58m, 18

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Radiohead: Meeting People Is Easy

Sunday 7 August (17.20) Following the release of Radiohead’s ninth studio album and subsequent world tour, GFT takes a look back at a turning point in their career. Capturing the band during the tour for their 1997 breakthrough OK Computer, Grant Gee’s unique film is both a rare insight into a jaded band, unprepared to take part in the media circus of popular music, and also a companion to their paranoid, world-weary and game-changing album. Preceded by a special 35mm screening of the band’s latest video ‘Daydreaming’, directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

Monterey Pop

Sunday 14 August (17.45) Before he created his timeless and lengthy chronicle of Woodstock, DA Pennebaker documented the titular 3-day music festival that took place in 1967 San Francisco and featured performances from Ravi Shankar, The Mamas & the Papas, Simon & Garfunkel, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and Jimi Hendrix (who performs a literally incendiary set). One of the most influential concert films ever made, Monterey Pop gives audiences the chance to view these legendary acts like they are discovering them for the very first time. Director DA Pennebaker, USA 1968, 1h19m, N/C 15+

Director Grant Gee, UK 1998, 1h35m, 15

A Poem Is a Naked Person

Sunday 21 August (17.20) An ineffable mix of unbridled joy and vérité realism, this film presents the beloved Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Leon Russell as filmed by documentarian Les Blank. Letting us into Russell’s intimate world, Blank’s camera captures off-the-cuff moments and combines them with mesmerizing scenes of Russell and his band performing live. A singular film about a singular artist that never got an official release and has since attained a legendary cult status. Now, after more than 40 years, it can finally be seen in all its rough beauty. Director Les Blank, USA 1974, 1h30m, N/C 18+

Sid & Nancy

Sunday 28 August (16.45) A fascinating portrait of love and addiction, Alex Cox’s Sid & Nancy tells the true story that led to the arrest of former Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious, while his paramour Nancy Spungen lay dead in their Chelsea Hotel room. Starring Gary Oldman and Chloe Webb as the doomed couple, this is a visceral, energetic and tragic look at ‘punk rock’s Romeo and Juliet’ that has become both a cautionary tale and a cinematic cult classic. New Digital Print Director Alex Cox Cast Gary Oldman, Chloe Webb, David Hayman, UK 1986, 1h52m, 18

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SOUND & VISION: SUMMER MUSIC SEASON

This summer, GFT is offering an alternative to the crowds, muddy fields and unreliable weather of music festivals with a series of films about music and musicians throughout the decades. Featuring a mixture of rare screenings and new re-issues, we invite audiences to relive and discover some of the greatest and most riveting moments from the torrid history of modern music.


LATE NIGHT CULT CLASSICS

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Friday 15 July (23.00) Often regarded as the best entry in the franchise, Wrath of Khan features Kirk’s greatest adversary in Ricardo Montalban’s iconic Khan. Having been marooned on a dead planet, Khan grasps an opportunity to exact revenge upon his old foe Kirk. Now an admiral and feeling his age, Kirk needs to use every trick in the book, as well as relying on his old crew, to try and best Khan and protect the Federation. Director Nicholas Meyer Cast William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Ricardo Montalban, USA 1982, 1h53m, 12A: Contains moderate horror and threat

RESTORED CLASSICS

The Sacrifice Offret

Sunday 3 July (18.45) Visionary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky’s final film unfolds at the dawn of World War III. Friends and family have gathered for retired actor Alexander’s birthday celebration, which is interrupted by a TV announcement warning of an imminent nuclear disaster. Each guest reacts differently and Alexander’s response is to make a promise to God to give up all he holds dear if the destruction of mankind can be averted. The next morning, miraculously, normality has been restored and Alexander sets about keeping his vow. New Digital Print

Introduced by Dr David Archibald, Senior Lecturer in Film & Television Studies

Director Andrei Tarkovsky Cast Erland Josephson, Susan Fleetwood, Allan Edwall, Sweden/UK/France 1986, 2h29m, subtitles, 12A: brief sexualised female nudity

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The Fly

Friday 19 August (23.00) Seth Brundle (Jeff Goldblum) is an eccentric scientist working on teleportation. He offers journalist Veronica Quaife (Geena Davis) a scoop on his research into Telepods, which can transfer matter through space. Believing all the issues have been ironed out, Brundle attempts to teleport himself, but the presence of a fly in the booth leads to horrific consequences as the fly’s cells begin to take over his body. David Cronenberg’s imaginative sci-fi classic combines strong characters with trademark moments of horror, making The Fly an affecting tragedy. Director David Cronenberg Cast Jeff Goldblum, Geena Davis, John Getz, USA/UK/Canada 1986, 1h36m, 18

Barry Lyndon

Sunday 31 July (13.00) & Wednesday 3 August (19.15) Legendary director Stanley Kubrick’s tenth feature film is one of his finest and most influential. Adapted from a William Makepeace Thackeray novel, the film follows the rise and fall of Redmond Barry (Ryan O’Neal), an ambitious and intelligent young Irishman who seeks to make a life for himself. He lies, duels and seduces his way up the social ladder, marrying a rich widow and assuming her dead husband’s aristocratic position in 18th-century England. With visuals inspired by the paintings of Thomas Gainsborough and William Hogarth, this is an astonishingly beautiful film. New Digital Print Director Stanley Kubrick Cast Ryan O’Neal, Marisa Berenson, Patrick Magee, UK/USA/Ireland 1975, 3h8m, PG

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Hauru no ugoku shiro

Ponyo Gake no ue no Ponyo

Tuesday 5 July (20.20) In Miyazaki’s thrilling adaptation of the Diana Wynne Jones novel, Sofî is unexpectedly befriended by Howl, a young and flamboyant wizard. Displeased by their blossoming friendship, the Witch of the Waste curses Sofî with an old body, transforming her into a 90-year old woman. Unable to tell anyone, Sofî takes shelter in Howl’s castle and together with his companions look for ways to reverse the spell. Visual spectacles, magic and humorous imagination abound in this bewitching tale.

Tuesday 12 July (18.00) Ponyo is a goldfish princess with the magic of the sea at her disposal. After five-year old Sosuke befriends the little fish, she yearns to become human. Transforming into a little girl, Ponyo shows up at Sosuke’s doorstep and makes herself at home. However, the use of such sorcery disturbs the balance of the mystical universe and greater powers in the ocean are needed to put things right. Hayao Miyazaki’s eighth animated feature with Studio Ghibli is a touching story of love and friendship that overflows with visual invention and wonder.

Director Hayao Miyazaki Cast Chieko Baishô, Takuya Kimura, Tatsuya Gashûin, Japan 2004, 1h59m, subtitles, U

Director Hayao Miyazaki Cast Yuria Nara, Hiroki Doi, Tomoko Yamaguchi, Japan 2008, 1h41m, subtitles, U

The Wind Rises Kaze tachinu

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

Kaguyahime no monogatari

Tuesday 19 July (20.10) Hayao Miyazaki’s unique and inspired final feature is a decades-spanning masterpiece. It is 1927, and Jiro dreams of designing and flying planes. Near-sighted and therefore unable to be a pilot, Jiro joins a Japanese engineering company and goes on to become one of their most inventive and remarkable aeroplane designers. Charting key historical events throughout Jiro’s life and his relationship with his muse Naoko, The Wind Rises is a breathtaking film about love and perseverance in a changing world.

Sat 23 (11.30, dubbed) & Tue 26 July (20.00) Japan’s most famous folktale is the centre of visionary filmmaker Isao Takahata’s hand-drawn masterwork. One day in the forest of Okina, a bamboo cutter finds a baby in the folds of a bamboo shoot. Believing her to be divine, he takes her home to his wife Ona and they raise the child, whom they name Kaguya, as their own. The couple soon begin to discover their daughter may not be fully satisfied in the idyllic surroundings, as she rapidly matures into a young woman and her true heritage is revealed.

Director Hayao Miyazaki Cast Hideaki Anno, Hidetoshi Nishijima, Miori Takimoto, Japan 2013, 2h6m, subtitles, PG

Director Isao Takahata Cast Aki Asakura, Yukiji Asaoka, Takeo Chii Japan 2013, 2h17m, subtitles/dubbed, U

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STUDIO GHIBLI FOREVER

Howl’s Moving Castle


ADAPTING MISS HIGHSMITH

Described by Graham Greene as the ‘poet of apprehension’, Patricia Highsmith specialised in tightly plotted thrillers exploring the fear, jealousy, guilt and violence bubbling under the surface of outwardly civilised characters. Neurotic men dominate her fiction, though she was equally capable of studies of great sensitivity and tenderness, as evidenced by one of her few forays outside the thriller genre, The Price of Salt (adapted in 2015 as Carol). The artistry and intelligence of her work is widely considered to have transcended the thriller genre and rival that of mainstream literature, and has made for much compelling cinema. This season showcases the very best of them. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available

Strangers on a Train

Sunday 7 August (19.50) Often referred to as Alfred Hitchcock’s return to form after a series of critical and commercial disappointments, and co-written by Raymond Chandler, Strangers on a Train was adapted from Highsmith’s debut novel, published just a couple of months after the author’s 29th birthday in 1950. Robert Walker and Farley Granger are perfectly cast as Bruno and Guy, two young men whose chance meeting on a train journey leads to a supposedly foolproof murder swap. Of course, things don’t go to plan, resulting in one of Hitchcock’s finest psychological thrillers. Showing on 35mm. Director Alfred Hitchcock Cast Farley Granger, Robert Walker, Ruth Roman, USA 1951, 1h39m, PG

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Enough Rope Le meurtrier

Wednesday 10 August (18.20) Shot in glorious monochrome ‘Scope, the big screen version of Highsmith’s The Blunderer from director Claude Autant-Lara and his regular screenwriters Jean Aurenche and Pierre Bost stars a pre-Goldfinger Gert Fröbe as boorish bookseller Melchior Kimmel. After seeming to escape justice for killing his wife, Kimmel comes to the attention of philandering husband Walter Saccard (Maurice Ronet). When Saccard’s own spouse Clara (Yvonne Furneaux) comes to a tragic end, the police are quick to link the two deaths. Director Claude Autant-Lara Cast Gert Fröbe, Marina Vlady, Robert Hossein, France/West Germany/Italy 1963, 1h44m, subtitles, N/C 15+

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Plein Soleil

Sunday 14 August (19.30) In the same year he starred in Luchino Visconti’s family drama Rocco and His Brothers, Alain Delon took on the role of Highsmith’s most famous character, the eponymous, ice-cold sociopath of The Talented Mr Ripley. Although she felt that certain compromises had been made to reach as wide an audience as possible, Highsmith deemed René Clément’s picture – co-written by regular Claude Chabrol collaborator Paul Gégauff – to be ‘very beautiful to the eye and interesting for the intellect’. Director René Clément Cast Alain Delon, Maurice Ronet, Marie Laforêt France/Italy 1960, 1h58m, subtitles, PG

This Sweet Sickness Dites-lui que je l’aime

The American Friend Der amerikanische Freund

Wednesday 17 August (18.10) Highsmith’s seventh novel This Sweet Sickness was first adapted for TV as part of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour in 1962. Fifteen years later came the first film version by director Claude Miller (Garde à vue, The Little Thief). It features a boyish Gérard Depardieu – still fresh from acting opposite Robert De Niro in Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1900 – as David, an accountant hopelessly obsessed with a woman he has carried a torch for since his youth, but who is now married to another man.

Sunday 21 August (19.15) New German Cinema auteur Wim Wenders followed up his acclaimed road movie trilogy (Alice in the Cities, The Wrong Move, Kings of the Road) with an adaptation of Ripley’s Game, the third of Highsmith’s five Ripley novels. Also including elements of Ripley Under Ground, The American Friend sees the protagonist (broodingly played by counter-culture icon Dennis Hopper) involve terminally ill picture-framer Jonathan Zimmerman (Bruno Ganz) in an underworld murder plot.

Director Claude Miller Cast Gérard Depardieu, Miou-Miou, Claude Piéplu, France 1977, 1h47m, subtitles, N/C 15+

Director Wim Wenders Cast Dennis Hopper, Bruno Ganz, Lisa Kreuzer, West Germany/France 1977, 2h5m, some subtitles, 15

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The Glass Cell Die gläserne Zelle

Wednesday 24 August (18.15) Director Hans W Geissendörfer is perhaps best known as the creator of Lindenstrasse, Germany’s longestrunning soap opera. In 1978, he adapted Highsmith’s The Glass Cell, shifting the action to Frankfurt. Phillip (Helmut Griem) is an architect released from prison after serving time for a crime he didn’t commit. Struggling to find work, and troubled by his wife’s relationship with his lawyer, he soon finds that – like many a Highsmithian protagonist – his life is tumbling dangerously out of control. Director Hans W Geissendörfer Cast Brigitte Fossey, Helmut Griem, Dieter Laser West Germany/Portugal 1978, 1h33m, subtitles, N/C 15+

The Talented Mr Ripley

Sunday 28 August (19.15) After the Oscar-laden success of his Michael Ondaatje adaptation The English Patient, Anglo-Italian filmmaker Anthony Minghella tackled a very different literary source – the book that first introduced the character of Tom Ripley (‘I loved the tone of the novel’, he said, ‘airless, alienated, uncomfortable, claustrophobic, lonely and also quite harsh’). Casting Matt Damon as the protagonist opposite Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow, Minghella sought to be more faithful to the original text than Clément’s Plein Soleil, a film he nonetheless keenly admired. Director Anthony Minghella Cast Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, USA 1999, 2h19m, 15

Deep Water

Eaux profondes Wednesday 31 August (18.10) Middle-aged perfumer Vic Allen (Jean-Louis Trintignant) lives on the island of Jersey with his young wife Mélanie (Isabelle Huppert) and their daughter Marion (Sandrine Kljajic). Mélanie embarks on a string of extra-marital flirtations, all with her husband’s apparent approval, but mild-mannered, chess-playing Vic soon has murder on his mind. Directed by Michel Deville (Death in a French Garden, La lectrice), this version of Highsmith’s 1957 novel has a dark humour poised mischievously between Luis Buñuel and Claude Chabrol. Preceded by short film A Mighty Nice Man directed by Jonathan Dee (12m) Director Michel Deville Cast Isabelle Huppert, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Sandrine Kljajic, France 1981, 1h34m, subtitles, N/C 15+

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Local Hero

Friday 29 (15.35) & Saturday 30 July (15.30) Writer/director Bill Forsyth’s third feature is one of the funniest culture-clash comedies in cinema history. Described by its maker as Apocalypse Now meets Brigadoon, Local Hero both celebrates and subverts a laundry list of Scottish stereotypes. When a materialistic American corporate executive arrives in Scotland with the aim of turning a huge stretch of unspoilt northern coastline into a gigantic petrochemical refinery, the economics of oil go head to head against the enchantment of Highland culture and mythology. A movie warm enough to melt the heart of Donald Trump.

Comfort and Joy

Sunday 31 July (17.00) Bill Forsyth followed up the classic Local Hero with this quirky story of disc jockeys and ice cream wars. A few days before Christmas, radio host Alan Bird (Bill Paterson) witnesses an ice cream van being attacked and destroyed. When he delves deeper into the incident, he discovers a longstanding clash between two Italian families over ice cream-selling territory in Glasgow. Packed with Forsyth’s typical charm and wit, Comfort and Joy offers a uniquely Glaswegian perspective on life. Director Bill Forsyth Cast Bill Paterson, CP Grogan, Eleanor David, UK 1984, 1h40m, PG

Director Bill Forsyth Cast Burt Lancaster, Peter Riegert, Fulton Mackay, UK 1983, 1h51m, PG

Gregory’s Girl

Saturday 6 August (16.00) BAFTA-winning Gregory’s Girl is probably the most beloved Scottish film ever made. Writer-director Bill Forsyth beautifully portrays the awkwardness and cock-eyed optimism of adolescence in a film that captures school life like no other. John Gordon Sinclair is the gangly teenager besotted with the new star player in the school football team but fate has other plans in store for his romantic longings. There will be an autism friendly screening of Gregory’s Girl on Tuesday 9 August. Check p29 for details. Director Bill Forsyth Cast John Gordon Sinclair, Dee Hepburn, Jake D’Arcy UK 1981, 1h29m, 12A: moderate nudity, moderate bad language, sex references

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR FORSYTH

Bill Forsyth turns 70 on 29 July, and that’s all the reason we need to bring three of his best-loved cinema classics back to the big screen. A master of character, comedy and filmic invention, Forsyth is one of Scotland’s greatest cinematic creators and these films remain truly unmissable.


CROSSING THE LINE

No Home Movie

Beatrice Gibson: Cadenza

Sunday 3 July (19.45) This programme explores abstraction as subject and form, looking at music, money, numbers and narrative through the frame of experimental cinema. Curated by internationally renowned and award winning artist Beatrice Gibson, the programme features Gibson’s latest films F For Fibonacci and Crippled Symmetries alongside work by Tony Conrad, Laida Lertxundi and Mary Helena Clark. With playful yet studied musings on the nature of (and interplay between) rhythm, maths and abstraction, Cadenza serves to investigate Gibson’s practice and place it in a wider context.

Sunday 7 (19.30) & Monday 8 August (18.15) Pioneering filmmaker Chantal Akerman’s final film is an intimate video essay that focuses on her relationship with her mother Natalia, a Holocaust survivor. Akerman returned to the subject of her mother throughout her filmography and No Home Movie can be understood both as a response to News From Home (1977), and as a continuation of its themes of personal and familial disconnection. A meditation on death and the fragility of memory, this is a moving exploration of how and what we remember. Director Chantal Akerman Belgium/France 2015, 1h55m, subtitles, CTBC

Director various, UK/USA 1976 – 2015, 1h11m, N/C 15+

The Sky Trembles and the Earth Is Afraid and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers

Tuesday 19 (20.40) & Wednesday 20 July (18.10) A labyrinthine misadventure that pushes the boundaries of genre to disorientating effect. Shot against the sublime beauty of the Moroccan landscape, and inspired by Paul Bowles’ short story ‘A Distant Episode’, The Sky Trembles… mixes documentary, fiction, and fable. It opens with Spanish filmmaker Oliver Laxe directing a complex and ambitious project on location in the Atlas Mountains. However, as Laxe abandons his set and ventures deeper into the realm of the unknown, it soon becomes clear that nothing is as it seems. Director Ben Rivers Cast Oliver Laxe UK 2015, 1h40m, subtitles, 12A: infrequent strong language, moderate threat, gory images

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Holding the Man

The Girl King

Wednesday 6 July (20.10) Timothy, an aspiring actor and John, the captain of the football team, fell in love as teenagers at an all-boys high school in Melbourne in the 1970s. Their 15-year romance endured throughout their lives despite many challenges and prejudices and the pair went on to become champions of gay rights. Adapted from Timothy Conigrave’s cult classic memoir of the same name, Holding the Man is a sensitive and poignant tale of love and loss.

Thursday 21 July (20.15) The Girl King is both historical drama about a kingdom on the brink of modernisation and a deeply personal love story. As a 6-year-old, tomboy Kristina is crowned Queen. She begins officially ruling Sweden at 18 and is quickly faced with choosing between her country, a new male suitor, her people and her religion. She further sets tongues wagging by embarking on a love affair with a young countess.

Director Neil Armfield Cast Ryan Corr, Craig Stott, Anthony LaPaglia, Australia 2015, 2h7m, 15

Director Mika Kaurismäki Cast Malin Buska, Sarah Gadon, Michael Nyqvist, Finland/Germany/Canada/Sweden/France 2015, 1h46m, some subtitles, 15

Closet Monster

Boys on Film 15: Time & Tied

Thursday 28 July (20.15) The Time & Tied shorts programme serves up a selection of British treats. Two men sit on a park bench and strike up a conversation in Polari; a tormented teen time travels into the future through his bedroom closet; a destructive relationship unravels on the streets of London; a night in a sauna turns into a fight for survival and London’s booming chemsex scene is explored through a chill-out party. Followed by filmmakers Q&A. Directors Various, UK 2015-16, 1h40m, N/C 18+

Thursday 4 August (20.40) A creative and driven young teen struggles to find his own way in life. Oscar is confused with his sexuality, fearful of his macho father and haunted by a gay-bashing he witnessed as a child. He dreams of escaping the town he feels is suffocating him and embarks on a journey of self-discovery with his talking pet hamster (voiced by Isabella Rossellini). Stephen Dunn’s first feature film puts an imaginative twist on the coming-of-age tale, mixing affecting drama with whimsical fantasy. Director Stephen Dunn Cast Connor Jessup, Aaron Abrams, Isabella Rossellini, Canada 2015, 1h30m, N/C 15+

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POUTFEST

POUTFest returns for another exciting year with the theme of ‘A Journey Through Time’, bringing a selection of international features exploring LGBTQI life from different eras, along with an accompanying mix of humorous, sexy, thought-provoking and current gay short films.


Access Film Club: Sing Street

ism Aut ly d n e fri

Tuesday 12 July (18.10) GFT, together with Scottish Autism, is delighted to provide Access Film Club: a screening and post-film discussion in a friendly and welcoming environment.

A resounding hit at Glasgow Film Festival, Sing Street is set in Dublin during the 1980s, where 14-year-old Cosmo (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) forms a band and aims to win the heart of the beautiful and mysterious Raphina (Lucy Boynton) by inviting her to star in his music videos. All tickets £5. A discussion after the film will be led by a representative from Scottish Autism. If you require a wheelchair space please request this on booking or call our box office on 0141 332 6535. Director John Carney Cast Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, Lucy Boynton, Jack Reynor Ireland 2016, 1h48m, 12A: infrequent strong language, drug use, moderate sex references, smoking

Access Film Club: Gregory’s Girl

ism Aut ly d n e i fr

Tuesday 9 August (18.00) BAFTA winning Gregory’s Girl, the first international hit for director Bill Forsyth, is a quirky, charming Scottish high-school comedy. The story of Gregory reminds us of growing pains, youthful desire and the never-simple teenage quest for affection. All tickets £5. A discussion after the film will include an invited guest speaker. If you require a wheelchair space please request this on booking or call our box office on 0141 332 6535 Director Bill Forsyth Cast John Gordon Sinclair, Dee Hepburn, Jake D’Arcy UK 1981, 1h29m, 12A: moderate nudity, moderate bad language, sex references

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Elvis & Nixon

Monday 18 July (18.10) Visible Cinema is for Deaf and Hard of Hearing audiences, featuring captioned, subtitled or BSL interpreted screenings, followed by a post-film discussion. Check the website for more details. This event combines a captioned film screening enhanced by BSL and Speech to Text post film discussion. One morning in 1970, the King of Rock n’ Roll hand-delivered a letter to the most powerful man in the world, President Nixon. Michael Shannon and Kevin Spacey bring the icons to life in an imagined story from behind Oval Office doors, inspired by the most requested photograph in the National Archives. All tickets £5. The cinema has a hearing loop system and infrared sound facility. Contact the Duty Manager to reserve a headset. Subject to availability. Director Liza Johnson Cast Michael Shannon, Kevin Spacey, Alex Pettyfer, USA 2016, 1h26m, 15

Where to Invade Next

Tuesday 23 August (18.15) Academy award-winning documentary filmmaker Michael Moore’s latest film is insightful and funny. Moore plays the role of the invader as he visits a host of nations to find answers to issues confronting America today. From France’s healthy school meals to Iceland’s strong female presence in business and government, Moore discovers that the solutions to many of America’s problems already exist in the world. Where to Invade Next is a hopeful film encouraging America to do better. This event combines a captioned film screening enhanced by BSL and Speech to Text post film discussion. All tickets £5. The cinema has a hearing loop system and infrared sound facility. Contact the Duty Manager to reserve a headset. Subject to availability. Director Michael Moore, USA 2015, 2h, subtitles, 15

BUY TICKETS ONLINE WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG

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TAKE 2: FAMILY-FRIENDLY FILMS

Glasgow Young Scot or Kidz Card holders and an accompanying adult get in FREE to these shows when tickets are purchased at the box office on the day. All other tickets are £5 (plus £1.50 for 3D screenings). Each £5 child’s ticket also admits one adult free of charge. Children under the age of eight must be accompanied. Free tickets are only issued on the day of the screening.

The Jungle Book

PG - mild threat Sat 2 July 11.30am (1h46m) When the fearsome tiger Shere Khan unleashes his mighty roar, Mowgli must leave the only home he’s ever known. Befriended by a no-nonsense panther and a free-spirited bear Mowgli’s epic journey of self-discovery leads him towards a world full of fun and adventure.

Long Way North

PG - Mild violence, threat Sat 16 July 11.30am (1h22m) In the late 1800s when Sasha’s parents make arrangements for her marriage, she rebels and embarks on an epic adventure to discover the fate of her grandfather Oloukina, a renowned scientist and Arctic explorer, who has failed to return from his latest expedition to the North Pole.

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

U - Contains very mild comic violence Sat 9 July 11.30am (2h24m) Full of mischief and dark humour, Ian Fleming’s legendary flying car carries Professor Potts, Truly Scrumptious, Jemima and Jeremy off to a faraway world where children are trapped by a vicious child catcher and locked away out of sight. One of the greatest family films of all time. Screening on 35mm.

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya U - Mild violence, natural nudity

Sat 23 July 11.30am (2h14m) A tiny nymph found inside a bamboo stalk by an old bamboo cutter and his wife grows into a beautiful and desirable young woman who enthrals everyone who encounters her. A fabulous film from Studio Ghibli, for all lovers of anime. Dubbed into English.

Hotel For Dogs

U - Contains mildly scary moments, mild language and slapstick violence Sat 30 July 11.30am (1h36m) When they move in with carers who forbid pets, Andi and Bruce quickly need to find a home for their dog, Friday. The resourceful kids stumble upon an abandoned hotel and, using Bruce’s talents as a mechanical genius, transform it into a paradise for Friday and his stray-dog friends.

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The Angry Birds Movie

U - Very mild bad language, comic slapstick, innuendo, toilet humour Sat 6 August 11.30am (1h37m) When a population of happy, flightless birds welcome green pigs to their island paradise, it’s up to misfits Red, Chuck and Bomb to find out just exactly what the pigs are planning and to fire up the other birds to fight back.

Alice Through the Looking Glass

PG - Mild threat, mild bad language Sat 13 August 11.30am (1h53m) After slipping through a magical looking glass, Alice finds herself back in Underland where her friends tell her that the Mad Hatter has lost his Muchness. Alice embarks on a perilous adventure into the past to save the Hatter before time runs out.

Top Cat Begins

U - Very mild bad language, mild slapstick violence Sat 20 August 11.30am (1h30m) Top Cat Begins reveals how Top Cat came to be the rogue that we all know and love. A chance meeting with the good-natured, if naive, Benny changes both their fortunes, and when they meet up with Choo Choo, Fancy-Fancy and Brain, the adventure really begins.

Take 2 Access screenings are for children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and their families, and are also suitable for any child with a disability who would enjoy seeing a film in a ‘low sensory environment’. The films have no subtitles, the volume is turned down, the house lights left on low, and children can make noise and move around. Glasgow Young Scot or Kidz Card holders and an accompanying adult get in FREE to these shows when tickets are purchased at the box office on the day. All other tickets are £5. Each £5 child’s ticket also admits one adult free of charge. Children under the age of eight must be accompanied by an adult or carer.

The Jungle Book PG - Mild threat

Sat 2 July 12 noon (1h46m) When the fearsome tiger Shere Khan unleashes his mighty roar, Mowgli must leave the only home he’s ever known. Befriended by a no-nonsense panther and a free-spirited bear, Mowgli’s epic journey of selfdiscovery leads him towards a world full of fun and adventure.

The Angry Birds Movie

U - Very mild bad language, comic slapstick, innuendo, toilet humour Sat 6 August 12 noon (1h37m) When a population of happy, flightless birds welcome green pigs to their island paradise, it’s up to misfits Red, Chuck and Bomb to find out just exactly what the pigs are planning, and to fire up the other birds to fight back. BUY TICKETS ONLINE WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG

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TAKE 2 ACCESS

Take 2 Access: Autism-friendly screenings


COMING SOON

Julieta

From Friday 26 August TBC The latest offering from cinematic giant and GFT favourite Pedro Almodóvar will be hitting our screens at the end of August. Adapted from three short stories by Canadian Nobel Prize winner Alice Munro, it’s a return to female-centric drama for Almodóvar, following the high camp of I’m So Excited! in 2013. We’re anticipating more of the lush style and bold characterisation that made Volver, All About My Mother and Talk to Her such enduring classics. Director Pedro Almodóvar Cast Adriana Ugarte, Michelle Jenner, Rossy de Palma Keep an eye on glasgowfilm.org for ticket release dates

CONTEMPORARY CINEMA COURSE Monday 15 August – Monday 3 October An ideal beginner’s course for those wishing to broaden their critical understanding of contemporary cinema. Current releases are complemented by engaging discussion around a range of topics.

CONTEMP CINEMA COURSE

The course takes place over eight consecutive Monday evenings, and is comprised of four film screenings and four seminars. Films will be in early evenings but exact times may vary and will include titles such as Wiener-Dog, Julieta and Captain Fantastic.* Seminars will take place at 18.30 in the clubroom at Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA). Led by Alistair Harkness, Film Critic and Feature Writer with The Scotsman, and regular contributor to BBC Radio Scotland’s The Janice Forsyth Show. Price: £65/55 - tickets to films included Sign up via glasgowfilm.org or at GFT Box Office.

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*Films subject to change due to scheduling and release dates

This is a level one course. facebook.com/glasgowfilm


Thursday 7 July (19.15) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard The Kenneth Branagh Theatre Company Live cinema season continues with a new vision of Shakespeare’s heartbreaking tale of forbidden love. Branagh and his creative team present a modern passionate version of the classic tragedy. A longstanding feud between Verona’s Montague and Capulet families brings about devastating consequences for two young lovers caught in the conflict. Reuniting the stars of his celebrated film of Cinderella, Kenneth Branagh directs Richard Madden and Lily James as Romeo and Juliet and Sir Derek Jacobi as Mercutio.

EVENT CINEMA

Branagh Theatre Live: Romeo and Juliet

Branagh Theatre Live: The Entertainer

Thursday 27 October (19.00) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Set against the backdrop of post-war Britain, John Osborne’s modern classic conjures the seedy glamour of the old music halls for an explosive examination of public masks and private torment. Rob Ashford directs Kenneth Branagh as Archie Rice, with John Hurt as Billy Rice in the final production for Plays at the Garrick season. 3h approx

3h approx

RSC: Cymbeline

RSC: King Lear

Wednesday 28 September (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Cymbeline is ruler of a divided Britain. When Innogen, the only heir, marries her sweetheart in secret, an enraged Cymbeline banishes him. Distracted by Innogen’s marriage, Cymbeline is blind to the actions of a powerful figure behind the throne who is plotting to seize power by murdering them both. Shakespeare’s rarely performed romance is directed by Melly Still (Coram Boy). Gillian Bevan is the first woman to play the role of Cymbeline for the RSC, while Bethan Cullinane makes her RSC debut as Innogen.

Wednesday 12 October (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard King Lear has ruled for many years. As age begins to overtake him, he decides to divide his kingdom amongst his children. A proud man, he allows vanity to cloud his judgment, believing that he can relinquish the crown, but enjoy the same authority and respect he has always known. Misjudging his children’s loyalty he finds himself stripped of his state, wealth and power. Following his performance in Arthur Miller’s great American tragedy Death of a Salesman, Antony Sher returns to play King Lear, one of the greatest Shakespearean parts.

4h approx

4h approx

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THE BOLSHOI BALLET 2016/17 SEASON

Buy a season pass for all 7 Bolshoi 2016/17 shows for £90, saving up to 40%! Full details at tickets.glasgowfilm.org/subscriptions

The Bolshoi Ballet: The Golden Age

Sunday 16 October (15.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard A satire on Europe during the Roaring ’20s, The Golden Age makes for an original, colourful and dazzling show with its jazzy score and music-hall atmosphere. This ballet – which can only be seen at the Bolshoi – has everything: mad rhythms, vigorous chase scenes and decadent cabaret numbers. With this passionate love story featuring beautiful duets between Boris and Rita, the Bolshoi dancers plunge magnificently into every stylised step and gesture. 2h 20m

The Bolshoi Ballet: The Bright Stream

Sunday 6 November (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Alexei Ratmansky invokes the genius of Shostakovich’s score, creating a laugh-out-loud masterpiece with slapstick comedy, hilarious deceptions, false identities (including Principal Dancer Ruslan Skvortsov dressed as a sylph) and many colourful characters. During harvest festival on a collective farm, a visiting dance troupe reunites a ballerina with her childhood friend, Zina. In order to teach her unfaithful husband a lesson, Zina, the ballerina and the ballerina’s husband decide to swap roles for the evening. The Bolshoi bursts with vivid life and bright spirits in Ratmansky’s brilliantly choreographed smash.

The Bolshoi Ballet: The Nutcracker

Sunday 18 December (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Christmas would not be complete without the enchanting tale of young Marie and her nutcracker prince. On Christmas Eve, Marie’s wooden nutcracker doll is transformed into a beautiful prince who takes her on a magical journey. Before they leave, they must confront the Mouse King, whose army is threatening Marie. Danced by the Bolshoi’s principals, Russian ballet master Yuri Grigorovich’s staging of ETA Hoffmann’s fairy tale will transport children and adults alike to a world of magic and wonder for the holiday season. 2h 15m

2h 30m

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The Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty

Sunday 22 January (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard On her 16th birthday, a curse by the evil Carabosse causes the beautiful Princess Aurora to fall into a deep slumber for 100 years. Only the kiss of a prince can awaken her. In this resplendent classic, the Bolshoi dancers take us on a dreamlike journey through the famous fairy tale, complete with jewel fairies, a magical kingdom, a youthful princess and a handsome prince. In the purest style of classical ballet, the Bolshoi’s peerlessly sumptuous staging with luxurious sets and costumes brings Perrault’s tale to life. A must-see!

The Bolshoi Ballet: Swan Lake

Sunday 5 February (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard A ballet of ultimate beauty, and a score of unparalleled perfection, born at the Bolshoi in 1877. In the dual role of the white swan Odette and her rival black swan Odile, prima ballerina Svetlana Zakharova exudes both vulnerability and cunning through superb technical mastery, alongside Denis Rodkin as a powerful and emotional Siegfried. Including breathtaking scenes with the Bolshoi’s corps de ballet, this is classical ballet at its finest. 3h

2h 50m

The Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening

Sunday 19 March (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard For one evening, the Bolshoi takes on a bold new challenge in Hans Van Manen’s ‘Frank Bridge’s Variations’, Sol León and Paul Lightfoot’s ‘Short Time Together’ and Alexei Ratmansky’s ‘Russian Seasons’. This encounter between some of the best dancers in the world and the masters of contemporary choreography results in an outstanding synthesis, raising Van Manen’s formal beauty, León and Lightfoot’s intensity, and Ratmansky’s witty brilliance to a new level.

The Bolshoi Ballet: A Hero of Our Time

Sunday 9 April (15.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard ‘Give me everything, it is still not enough.’ This story, based on the larger-than-life hero Pechorin, is adapted from Mikhail Lermontov’s literary masterpiece, three separate tales recounting Pechorin’s heartbreaking betrayals. Is he a real hero? Or is he just a man like any other? This brand new production by choreographer Yuri Possokhov is a tragic poetic journey that can only be seen at the Bolshoi. 2h 45m

2h 40m

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It’s easy to find us. We’re right in the city centre just off Sauchiehall Street.

By Subway

Please Note: Subway service will be suspended from 2 July - 1 August due to modernisation work. A full replacement bus service will be in operation, details at www.spt.co.uk/suspension. Nearest subway is Cowcaddens. Leave the station and turn right, then right again turning left onto Rose Street. The GFT is a short walk from here. www.spt.co.uk/subway

By Bus

Local bus services stop close to the cinema. www.spt.co.uk

By Train

Glasgow city centre is served by both Central and Queen Street Stations. www.nationalrail.co.uk

Car Parking

Closest public parking is the supervised 24 hour multi-storey car park in Cambridge Street. Parking after 6pm costs £1.50. Glasgow Film Theatre 12 Rose Street, Glasgow G3 6RB

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During the redevelopment work between May and October, our hire options may be limited. If you are looking to hire please contact: dutymanager@glasgowfilm.org Find out more at www.glasgowfilm.org/hire

Refreshments at GFT

Our screens are fully licensed so drinks purchased from our mobile bars can be enjoyed while you watch your film. As well as alcoholic drinks, we also offer a selection of soft drinks and hot drinks. Snacks include luxury ice cream, chocolate, biscuits and cakes.

Gift Vouchers Certification

Films awaiting BBFC (British Board of Film Classification) certification are marked ‘CTBC’ (check the website or call the box office for upto-date information). Films not being certified by the BBFC are marked N/C and accompanied by an age recommendation i.e. N/C 15 + (suitable for ages 15 and older, no-one under 15 will be admitted).

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Events, Conferences & Private Hires

Available from Box Office and valid for one year. The perfect gift for film lovers.

Glasgow Film Theatre (known as GFT) is a charity registered in Scotland, No. SC005932

DALHOU

USEFUL INFORMATION

How to Get Here

Rstn QUEEN ST STATION

Bstn Bus Station Rstn Railway Station

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GFT Accessible Programme

Accessible Screenings

Notes on Blindness (U) Friday 1-Thu 7 July – All Shows Tue 5 July (20.50) Thu 7 July (18.30) Take 2: The Jungle Book (PG) Saturday 2 July (11.30) Take 2 Access: The Jungle Book (PG) Saturday 2 July (12 noon) The Neon Demon (18) Fri 8 July-Thu 14 July – All Shows Mon 11 July (17.50) Maggie’s Plan (15) Fri 8 July-Thu 14 July - All ShowsSat 9 July (14.00) Wed 13 July (18.20) Access Film Club: Sing Street (12A) Tue 12 July (18.10) Elvis & Nixon (15) Sat 16 July (16.20) Visible Cinema: Elvis & Nixon (15) Mon 18 July (18.10) Take 2: The Angry Birds movie (U) Sat 6 Aug (11.30) Take 2 Access: The Angry Birds Movie (U) Sat 6 Aug (12 noon) Access Film Club: Gregory’s Girl (12A) Tue 9 Aug (18.00) Visible Cinema: Where to Invade Next (15) Tue 23 Aug (18.15)

GFT offers both Audio Description and captioning on selected titles and selected screenings. Audio Description is a service for partially sighted or blind people (AD headphones are available to collect fromBox Office when you pick up your tickets prior to the film screening). Captioning is a service for deaf and hard of hearing audience members who rely on subtitling to enable them to follow the film’s dialogue.

Access Information GFT accepts the CEA Card. (www.ceacard.co.uk)

We can offer an infrared sound facility for the hearing-impaired (please ask at Box Office for a head set). There is disabled badge holders’ parking to the rear of the building in Cambridge Street. If you are a wheelchair user, please inform Box Office when booking. Guide dogs are welcome at GFT. Please contact our Manager (0141) 352 8603 or email dutymanager@glasgowfilm.org with your specific access enquiries.

Due to circumstances beyond our control, occasionally we are unable to provide these accessible screenings. You are advised to check with Box Office.

A large print version of this brochure is available at Box Office. GFT is part of the Green Arts Initiative and is committed to carrying out sustainable practices. Please use our recycling facilities when visiting and recycle this brochure when you’re finished with it. Thank You!

MLG McAllister Litho Glasgow Ltd.

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