6 December 2013 - 30 January 2014
/PicturehouseatFACT
www.picturehouses.co.uk
0871 902 5737
@FACT_Cinema
From 6 December
We hope you have a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
5
Director: Alexander Payne. Starring: Bruce Dern, Will Forte, Stacy Keach. USA 2013. 115 mins. Cantankerous old Woody (Dern, giving a masterful performance) is convinced he’s won a million dollars in a postal sweepstake and is determined to claim his prize, even if it means walking 850 miles to collect it. His son (Forte) decides to indulge his father and drive him. Shot in monochrome, director Payne’s (SIDEWAYS, THE DESCENDANTS) road movie is a poignant elegy for a disappearing America.
From 13 December
The Hobbit:
the desolation of Smaug 3D/2d
(Cert TBC)
Director: Peter Jackson. Starring: Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen, Cate Blanchett. USA/New Zealand 2013. TBC mins. The second part in Jackson’s THE HOBBIT trilogy is probably the most eagerly awaited film of the holiday season, and it doesn’t disappoint. Martin Freeman is back as the nervy adventurer Bilbo Baggins, who must now honour his contract with the Dwarves and find the secret door in Lonely Mountain that will reveal the lair of Smaug the dragon, played by Freeman’s Sherlock co-star Benedict Cumberbatch.
Anchorman 2:
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(Cert TBC)
Director: Adam McKay. Starring: Will Ferrell, Paul Rudd, Christina Applegate, Meagan Good. USA 2013. TBC mins.
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Nebraska
From 20 December
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Pleasenote: The management reserves the right to cancel or alter the programme in exceptional circumstances. Please check your tickets carefully as mistakes cannot be rectified later. Film start times may vary, particularly with special screenings, which may not be preceded by adverts or trailers. Please arrive on time. Latecomers can spoil the enjoyment of others and are admitted at the manager’s discretion. Admission is subject to our Terms of Admission, available on request.
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When you see this symbol the film is featured in the Picturehouse Recommends magazine. Pick up a copy in the cinema. –
Will Ferrell returns as the blundering Ron Burgundy in Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues. Directed by and starring Ben Stiller, James Thurber’s short story about a meek fantasist, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is transposed to the Internet age in spectacular style. With an all-star cast, David O. Russell brings comedy thriller American Hustle and the poignant The Railway Man stars Colin Firth as British World War II veteran Eric Lomax.
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FilmInformation andBooking For more information about the Picturehouse film programme, or to book call 08719025737 (lines open 9.30am – 8.30pm) or visit picturehouses.co.uk
On our cinema screens, new road movie Nebraska is a poignant elegy for a disappearing America. The second part of The Hobbit trilogy is probably the most eagerly awaited film of the holiday season, and The Desolation of Smaug doesn’t disappoint.
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Programmecorrectattimeof goingtopress;pleasecheck listingsbeforeyourvisit.
FILM
If you’re looking for festive family activities, pop in to our free workshops to design and print your own 3D Christmas decorations!
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FindFACT Bybus The nearest bus stops are Berry St, Paradise St and Hardman St Bybike On-street bike parking is available five metres from the FACT entrance Bytrain A 12 minute walk from Lime St Station Bycar There are car parks on Seel St, Paradise St and Hanover St
FACTInformation For information about the FACT building, exhibitions, booking a group tour, accessibility or hiring a space call 01517074464visit fact.co.uk or email info@fact.co.uk
We’re rounding up a year celebrating a decade of the FACT building with new exhibition Time & Motion: Redefining Working Life which explores the effect technology has had on the world of work. Vote for the films you think best depict working life and join us in the free co-working space to meet new people and share ideas.
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OpeningTimes Centre Seven days a week BoxOffice 30mins before the first film of the day Bar 15mins before the first film of the day Cafe Mon – Fri: 9am – 9pm Sat: 10.30am – 9pm Sun: 11am – 9pm
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FACT 88WoodSt Liverpool L1 4DQ fact.co.uk
With Will Ferrell again starring as the blundering anchorman Ron Burgundy, his TV newsroom remains as hilariously taste-free as it was when it was first revealed to an unsuspecting audience in 2004. Having lost the affections of his terminally indiscreet colleague, Veronica (Applegate), Big Ron is inexplicably hired by New York’s 24-hour Global News Network. Along for the ride, quite literally aboard his accident-prone motorhome, are Ron’s crass, sexist and not entirely brainy crew played by Paul Rudd, Steve Carell and Dave Koechner.
From 26 December
From 3 January
THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY
The Railway Man
P
(Cert TBC)
Director: Ben Stiller. Starring: Ben Stiller, Kristen Wiig, Sean Penn. USA 2013. 114 mins.
Director: Jonathan Teplitzky. Starring: Colin Firth, Nicole Kidman, Jeremy Irvine, Stellan Skarsgård. Australia/UK 2013. TBC mins.
James Thurber’s short story about a meek fantasist, which became a vehicle for Danny Kaye in 1947, is here transposed to the Internet age. When Life magazine is forced out of print, office worker Mitty (Stiller) somehow overcomes his natural timidity to seek a cover image for the final edition from a globetrotting photographer (Penn) – a quest which entails derring-do, a crush on a co-worker (Wiig, BRIDESMAIDS), and a winning degree of self-parody.
Based on the autobiography of the same name, THE RAILWAY MAN stars Colin Firth as British World War II veteran Eric Lomax. When his harrowing past in a Japanese POW camp comes back to haunt him, his new wife Patti (Kidman) suggests a surprising pathway to redemption in this poignant, humane and ultimately positive film. Contains sustained moderate threat, disturbing images and strong language.
From 10 January
From 26 December
all is lost
12 Years a Slave
2A
5
Director: J. C. Chandor. Starring: Robert Redford. USA 2013. 106 mins.
Director: Steve McQueen. Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Giamatti. USA/UK 2013. 134 mins.
Alone in the Indian Ocean in a crippled yacht, Robert Redford’s anonymous character in ALL IS LOST must take increasingly desperate measures in order to survive. With virtually no dialogue and his presence in almost every frame, this is a hugely challenging role for Redford that represents a bold step in his remarkable renaissance; few actors of any generation could pull off such a riveting performance. Contains one use of strong language.
Based on Solomon Northup’s 1853 memoir of the same name, 12 YEARS A SLAVE stars Ejiofor as a well-to-do musician who is kidnapped and forced into slavery in the cotton fields of Louisiana, ending up on the plantation of the vicious Edwin Epps (Fassbender). The result is the first must-see movie of the Oscar season, an intimate epic about freedom and resilience.
From 3 January
From 10 January
american hustle
mandella: long
(Cert TBC)
Director: David O. Russell. Starring: Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Amy Adams, Jennifer Lawrence. USA 2013. TBC mins. An FBI agent (Bradley Cooper) blackmails a pair of con artists (Christian Bale, Amy Adams) into swindling corrupt politicians. Shifting allegiances, scams within scams and outrageous 1970s coiffure all aid this highly entertaining comedy thriller.
walk to freedom
2A
Director: Justin Chadwick. Starring: Idris Elba, Naomie Harris, Tony Kgoroge, Riaad Moosa. UK/South Africa 2013. 146 mins. Idris Elba stars as Nelson Mandela in this biopic with magnificent authority. Mandela’s 27-year imprisonment for his anti-apartheid activism is known to all, but director Chadwick also spotlights his relationship with his wife Winnie (Harris), who was instrumental in his politicisation. Contains moderate violence, language, sex references and distressing scenes.
From 17 January
the wolf of wall street
Sun 8 Dec, 12.00
Director: Martin Scorsese. Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, Matthew McConaughey, Rob Reiner. USA 2013. TBC mins.
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
Martin Scorsese adapts the bestselling story of real-life rogue trader Jordan Belfort, played by his long-time collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio. Like so many of his films, this paints a picture of an outlaw life that’s appealing at first, but quickly becomes a nightmare – albeit one that features Lamborghinis, a chimpanzee on roller skates and the destruction of a 167ft yacht.
To celebrate the release of The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug join us to see the epic trilogy the way it was meant to be seen, up on the big screen.
(Cert TBC)
Director: Peter Jackson. Starring: Elijah Wood, Ian Mckellen, Cate Blanchett, Viggo Mortessen. New Zealand/USA 2001–2003.
From 17 January
august: osage county (Cert TBC)
Director: John Wells. Starring: Meryl Streep, Ewan McGregor, Julia Roberts. USA 2013. TBC mins. Presided over by venomous matriarch Violet (Meryl Streep), the Weston family reunion is a highly dysfunctional but acerbically entertaining event. Julia Roberts and Juliette Lewis lead the fray, supported by an impressive ensemble cast.
The Fellowship of the Ring P 182 mins The Two Towers 2A 179 mins Contains intense combat and fantasy horror scenes.
The Return of the King 2A 201 mins Contains intense battle violence and horror scenes.
Full price £20, Members £15
From 24 January
inside llewyn davis 5
Directors: Joel Coen, Ethan Coen. Starring: Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake. USA 2013. 105 mins. Rags to riches, riches to rags - these are the familiar trajectories for films about professional musicians. But in their brilliant 16th feature, the Coen brothers offer their own unique take on the genre. Greenwich Village, 1961. The emerging folk scene has yet to produce a star, although it does not want for talent, notably singer-songwriter Llewyn Davis.
Family Ticket
Great-value cinema experience for families: our Family Ticket will get you four tickets (must include one adult and one child) and a Kids’ Combo drink and popcorn for each child.
£26 - Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 5.00; all day Saturday, Sunday and Bank Holidays. £21 - Monday - Friday before 5.00; all day Wednesday. Children must be under 15. Excludes premium-price screenings and regular clubs. £2 supplement per person for 3D films (or £1.30 if you are reusing 3D glasses).
Tuesday 14 January
Short Term 12 5
Discover stunning cinema. Whether it’s a cult classic, an art-house gem or a riveting documentary, there will always be a chance to see something different and brilliant in our weekly slot.
Tuesday 10 December
Muscle Shoals
P
Director: Greg Camalier. Featuring: Rick Hall, Keith Richards, Aretha Franklin. USA 2013. 111 mins. Since the 1950s Alabama’s Fame Studios has been legendary for its unique ‘Muscle Shoals sound’. This documentary charts its story primarily through interviews with its founder, Rick Hall, and many of the musicians who’ve used it, including Gregg Allman, Etta James, the Rolling Stones, Wilson Pickett, Jimmy Cliff and Aretha Franklin. Hall talks candidly about his life, and rousing archive performances add to the film’s immense likeability.
Tuesday 17 December
Computer Chess 5 Director: Andrew Bujalski. Starring: Patrick Riester, Gerald Peary, Wiley Wiggins. USA 2013. 91 mins. Maverick mumblecore writer-director Bujalski (FUNNY HA HA, MUTUAL APPRECIATION) turns his wicked eye back to the early ’80s, when desktop computers the size of fridges were pitted against human chess players who could often outwit them. During a weekend tournament, various geeks use home-written software to try to beat a human grandmaster. Authentic fashions and nerdy dialogue compound this knowing comedy’s considerable appeal. takes a break on 24 and 31 December
Tuesday 7 January Gloria 5 Director: Sebastián Lelio. Starring: Paulina García, Sergio Herndández. Chile/Spain 2013. 109 mins. Spanish with English subtitles. Gloria (García) is a 58-year-old divorcee, trying to make the most of her freedom but inwardly still craving romance. One night she meets Rodolfo (Herndández), who seems to share the same ideals, but he isn’t quite what he seems. This Berlin Festival multi-award-winner is full of sly observations on Chile’s middle classes, and García’s performance – one moment achingly vulnerable, the next confidently resilient – is mesmerising.
Director: Destin Cretton. Starring: Brie Larson, John Gallagher Jnr, Kaitlyn Dever. USA 2013. 97 mins. Drawing on his experiences working in a rehab facility for troubled teenagers – and on his multi-award-winning 2008 short of the same name – writer-director Cretton’s drama centres on social workers Grace (Larson, GREENBERG, 21 JUMP STREET) and Mason (Gallagher, WHATEVER WORKS) who, although barely older than their wards, strive to provide the tough love that will help them mend their lives. This quietly persuasive film is admirably un-mawkish.
Tuesday 21 January
Leviathan 2A Directors: Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Verena Paravel. France/UK/USA 2012. 87 mins. The rough Atlantic waters that inspired Melville’s Moby-Dick give rise to a rather different beast in this bracing cinematic voyage into uncharted documentary territory. Already showered with accolades from festivals around the world, this is, loosely, a study of life aboard a New England fishing boat. But with a host of radically innovative formal devices and a complete lack of narration or meaningful dialogue, it utterly defies the simple label of documentary, instead delivering an incredibly visceral, primal and sensuous representation of seafaring life. Contains one use of strong language.
Tuesday 28 January
child’s pose 5 Director: Calin Peter Netzer. Starring: Luminita Gheorghiu, Bogdan Dumitrache. Romania 2013. 112 mins. Romanian with English subtitles. Cornelia (Gheorghiu) is used to manipulating everyone to her own ends. But when her grown-up son (Dumitrache) kills a 14-year-old boy in his car, she is obliged to marshal all her skills to prevent his imprisonment. Garlanded director Netzer caustically reveals the implications of wealth and entitlement in Romanian society, and Gheorghiu’s performance is wincingly captivating; the film richly deserved its Golden Bear at the 2013 Berlin Film Festival.
vintage sundays Sunday 8 December
Mary Poppins U
Director: Robert Stevenson. USA 1964. 139 mins. Julie Andrews stars as the magical nanny with remarkable powers who changes the lives of an entire family.
Sunday 15 December
the EPIC OF EVEREST U
Director: J.B.L. Noel. UK 1924. 87 mins. In 1924 British mountaineers Andrew Irvine and George Mallory attempted to scale Everest. Using primitive equipment, cameraman John Noel went with them. Sunday 27 October The result is this breathtaking film, now newly restored.
NOSFERATU: A SYMPHONY Sunday 22 December A Wonderful OF It’s HORROR P Director: F. W. Murnau. Starring: Max Schreck. Life U Germany 1922. 63 mins. Silent.
Director: Frank Capra. USA 1946. 130 mins. Don’t let One that ofPGthe certificate fool you: most popular andcinema’s enduringfirst-ever films ever made, vampire is still Capra’s by far the terrifying. Murnau’s Frank IT’Smost A WONDERFUL LIFE is a gloriously Expressionism collidestestament with Max to Schreck’s sentimental homely horrifying small-town moral performance to produce a film of strange, unearthly beauty. values.
Sunday 29 December Sunday 3 November
THEThe Wizard Of Oz U ELEPHANT MAN Pmins. Director: Victor Fleming. USA 1939. 102
Director:MGM’s David evergreen Lynch. Starring: Johnmusical Hurt, fantasy based technicolor Anthony on Hopkins. USA mins.about Kansas farm the story by1980. Frank123 L. Baum In nightmarishly monochrome London, the to seriously girl Dorothy, who goes1880s over the rainbow a land of deformedcolourful John Merrick (Hurt) is rescued from fairground characters and spirited adventure. exploitation, cruelty and abuse by an eminent surgeon (Hopkins), the first person to treat him like a man rather than a monster.
Sunday 5 January
The 5000 Fingers Of DR. T. U
Director: Roy Rowland. USA 1953. 89 mins. Celebrated, extravagant musical fantasy in which a young boy imagines his hated piano teacher as an evil genius who keeps 500 boys imprisoned in a castle of musical instruments
Sunday 12 January
The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad U
Director: Nathan Juran. USA 1958. 84 mins. The first of three highly successful films based on the myth of the voyages of Sinbad, best remembered now for Ray Harryhausen’s groundbreaking special effects.
Sunday 19 January
Sunday 17 November
Sunday 24 November
bride of frankenstein P
night of the demoN P
Whale followed up 1931’s tragic FRANKENSTEIN with this hilariously camp comedy horror, in which a rival mad scientist persuades Henry Frankenstein to create a mate – in the iconic form of Elsa Lanchester – for the long-suffering Monster.
When an academic attempts to debunk a cult leader’s claims to paranormal powers, he finds himself the object of a satanic curse. Based on an M. R. James story, Tourneur’s brilliantly paced film builds up the atmosphere to unbearably creepy heights.
Director: James Whale. Starring: Boris Karloff, Elsa Lanchester, Colin Clive, Ernest Thesiger. USA 1935. 75 mins.
Director: Jacques Tourneur. Starring: Dana Andrews. UK 1957. 91 mins.
Sunday 1 December
the exorcist 8
Director: William Friedkin. Starring: Ellen Burstyn, Max von Sydow, Jason Miller, Linda Blair. USA 1973. 132 mins. This is still one of the scariest films ever made, with Blair as the apparently normal 12-year-old girl whose body is possessed by the Devil, and Miller as the troubled priest who must confront the demon within and without.
Bicycle Thieves U
Director: Vittorio De Sica. Italy 1948. 85 mins. Italian with English subtitles. A cornerstone of Italian neo-realism, De Sica’s drama of survival in Italy’s post-war depression earned a special Oscar for its affecting power.
Sunday 26 January
Sunday 10 November Brief Encounter P Director: David Lean. UK 1945. 86 mins. Frankenstein P Capturing the imagination of an entire generation,
Director: James Whale. Starring: Boris Karloff, Colin Clive. Trevor Howard and Celia Johnson give two touchingly USA 1931. 70 mins. underplayed performances as the ill-fated, would-be In Whale’s stylish masterpiece, sympathy with lovers in one stark, of David Lean’s finest everour films. the Monster – a childlike, unwittingly murderous victim – is crucial to the story’s emotional power. Karloff’s famous screen debut is one of the greatest performances in film history.
The Exorcist
i c o n i c mgm movies at picturehouse cinemas
Thu 26 Dec, 9.00
Silver Screen members’ tickets are just £3 for MGM HD Matinées!
92 mins
Mon 6 Jan, 12.00
Spaceballs (12A)
Friday 6 December, 9.00
the room
(Cert TBC) Director: Tommy Wiseau. Starring: Tommy Wiseau, Juliette Danielle, Greg Sestero, Philip Haldiman. USA 2003. 99 mins. The best worst movie ever made! A successful banker, Johnny, is madly in love with his fiancée, Lisa, and intends to get married next month. His plans take a horrid turn when he finds out the truth about Lisa and the people surrounding him.
The Apartment (PG)
Monday 9 December, 6.30
gone with the wind U
125 mins
Director: Victor Fleming. Starring: Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland, Hattie McDaniel, Butterfly McQueen. USA 1939. 233 mins. Against the epic backdrop of the American Civil War, passionate southern belle Scarlett O’Hara (Leigh) finds her resolve tested by a fight for survival and a heady romance with Rhett Butler (Gable). Presented in a sumptuous new digital restoration.
Wed 22 Jan, 9.00
Masters of the Universe (PG) 106 mins
Thursday 26 December, 3.00
Cinema ParAdiso P
digital restoration
www.picturehouses.co.uk/mgmhdnights
www.picturehouses.co.uk/mgmhdmatinees
For more great movies, tune in to mgm hd, Sky 313
Director: Giuseppe Tornatore. Starring: Philippe Noiret, Jacques Perrin, Salvatore Cascio, Marco Leonardi. Italy/France 1988. 122 mins. Italian with English subtitles. Told in flashback as successful film director Salvatore returns to his native Sicilian village, CINEMA PARADISO centres on the friendship between the young Salvatore and irascible projectionist Alfredo (Philippe Noiret). Romantic, nostalgic, funny and exuberant, CINEMA PARADISO is all the more memorable for the winning performances by the great Philippe Noiret and ten-year-old Salvatore Cascio. Revolutions and
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The Nightmare Before Christmas 9.00
BLACK CHRISTMAS 6.45
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a m t is
Chr
DEC DEC
Batman Returns 9.00
DEC
70mm Die hard on 70mm 5.30
Dec
the bishop’s wife 6.30
DEC The Muppet Christmas Carol 6.30
Dec
DEC
The Nightmare Before Christmas 6.45
Gremlins 8.45
Dec
Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale 6.45
Bad Santa 8.45
Dec
It’s A Wonderful Life 1.30
elf 9.00
Dec
DEC
It’s A Wonderful Life 6.00
Scrooged 8.45
Lethal Weapon 6.00
Home Alone 1 and 2 Double Bill 4.30
DEC
elf 8.30
The Muppet Christmas Carol 3.45
Trading Places 8.45
The Muppet Christmas Carol 1.00
White Christmas 3.15
Dec It’s A Wonderful Life 3.15 & 6.10
merry christmas
RSC Live
from Stratford-upon-Avon
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Encore: tuesday 10 December, 7.30 sold ou Encore: thursday 12 December, 12.00
Richard II Met Opera Live: Saturday 14 December, 5.55 Encore: tuesday 17 December, 12.00
Falstaff Royal Opera House Live: wednesday 18 december, 4.45
Picturehouse at FACT brings you a hand-picked selection of Screen Arts productions from the Royal Opera House, Bolshoi Ballet and Berlin Philharmonic for the festive season. Keep up to date about new seasons and special events by signing up to our Screen Arts mailing list. Email customerservice@picturehouses. co.uk with 'Screen Arts Mailing List' in the subject. Please include the name of your local Picturehouse Cinema when you email us. picturehouses.co.uk/screenarts
parsifal Live: monday 27 january, 7.15
Giselle Bolshoi Ballet Live: sunday 19 January, 3.00
jewels NT LIVE LIVE: thursday 30 january, 7.00 ENCORE: tuesday 4 february, 12.00
Royal Opera House Live: thursday 12 december, 7.15
the nutcracker Bolshoi Ballet sunday 22 december, 12.00
THE sleeping beauty
coriolanus
berlin philharmonic
Booking and information:
new yearâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s eve gala concert
0871 902 5737 www.picturehouses.co.uk/screenarts
live: tuesday 31 december, 4.30
www.picturehouses.co.uk/big_scream
Membership The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
By joining Big Scream parents can visit our cinema without having to find a babysitter or worry about their baby disturbing others. The screenings are on Fridays and Thursdays at 11.00am. Doors open at 10.30am. Membership is £1, for two people per baby, valid until the baby’s first birthday. To join please ask for a form at Tickets & Information.
6 & 12 December
20 December
3 & 9 January
17 & 23 January
jeune & Jolie (18)
anchorman 2: the legend continues
american hustle (Cert TBC)
august: osAGe county (Cert TBC)
10 & 16 January
24 & 30 January
the railway man
inside llewyn Davis (15)
13 & 19 December
the hobbit: the desolation of smaug (Cert TBC)
(Cert TBC)
27 December & 2 January
the secret life of walter mitty (Cert TBC)
(Cert TBC)
Please note that Big Scream films may contain material intended for adults - please check with the cinema for more information..
Please note: We are not providing any official childcare. If you leave your child at the cinema, please be there on time to collect them at the end of the film.
Showing every Tuesday at 11.00am.
7/8 December
4/5 January
when santa fell to earth (U) 105 mins
the smurfs 2 (U)
14/15 December
11/12 January
103 mins
LIAF: Animated Shorts (Cert TBC)
21/22 December
TBC mins
arThur christmas (U)
18 /19 January turbo (U) 96 mins
28/29 December moon man (U) 92 mins
25 /26 January
95 mins
film TBC
www.picturehouses.co.uk/kids_club www.picturehouses.co.uk/autism_friendly_screenings
Every Sunday at 11.30am. These screenings are for people on the autism spectrum and their families, friends and carers. Tickets are £3 (no concessions or free tickets for support workers).
Admission is just £3 per child, accompanying adults free, when they become members of Toddler Time. All shows are approximately 30 minutes long. www.picturehouses.co.uk/toddlertime
Our public building, inspiring community and education projects and our free programme of extraordinary art exhibitions couldn't exist without your generosity. So far this year, we've raised more than £6000 in donations, large and small. Can you help us reach our £10000 target by Christmas? Doubleyourmoney For a very limited time only, every donation you make to FACT is being doubled £1 for £1 through Arts Council England Catalyst match funding scheme. TextFACT03+theamountto70070 orvisit fact.co.uk
Join and enjoy £5 of your FACT Membership helps support our charity, and you get a fantastic set of benefits: ThreeFREEcinematickets+ £2offwhenyoubuyfull pricedcinematickets+ DiscountsatTheGardenbyLeafatFACT, theFACTBarandotherlocal Fullprice Single £33 Joint £60
Turbo
the muppet christmas carol (U) 86 mins
Masha and the Bear
The Kids' Club film starts at 11.00am every Saturday, with games and activities beforehand from 10.30am. Annual membership is just £4. Tickets are only £1 for members and accompanying adults, £3 for non-members.
Toddler Time is especially designed to introduce preschool children to the big screen.
Make a difference this Christmas
ConcessionPrice Single £27 Joint £50
To become a FACT Member, and find out more information about discounts available with your Membership card, visit us at Box Office, go to fact.co.uk or call 08717042063
FamilyActivities
DigitalDecorations
7 & 14 December
ExhibitionRelatedFilms 12pm-4pm/Atrium/ FREEjustdropin!
Join 3D printing network #3DPM to design a printable decoration for your Christmas Tree! Try your hand at using 3D design software and see 3D printers in action.
WorkonFilm: AudienceSelection
Dates TBC
To vote, visit fact.co.uk/timeandmotion
Throughout its history, cinema has represented the world of work, from life at the top to living on the breadline, and we’d like you to tell us which films you think have done it best. The top three will be screened during the Time & Motion exhibition.
Schools&Learning
Explore Time&Motion Ex-ForcesChristmas FamilyDay Are you Ex-Forces with kids? Join us for some festive fun and meet other Ex-Forces and their families. Design your own 3D printed Christmas decorations and watch a classic Christmas film. Perfect for the first day of the Christmas holidays!
20 December
11.30am/TheBox/FREE For more information or to book, contact emily.gee@fact.co.uk 01517074421
Explore the themes of our current exhibition with this special screening of Terry Gilliam's Brazil and guided tour. Introduction by Keith Marley, Lecturer at Liverpool Screen school.
10 February
10am/ TheBox/£4per student,TeachersFREE (Booking essential) For more information or to book contact anna.kronenburg@fact. co.uk 01517074417
ExhibitionRelatedEvents
ExhibitionRelatedFilms
TaxiDriver
24 February TaxiDriver18
The taxi cab is the classic mobile workplace, a place to observe and be observed. For mentally unstable war veteran Travis Bickle (Robert DeNiro) this constant exposure to all the darkest elements of his city fuels his psychosis and desire to weed out corruption and perversion.
Martin Scorsese / 1976 / 113 mins
9pm/Screen3/PriceTBC Image Still from Taxi Driver
RoyStringerMemorialLecture Writer and broadcaster Sir Christopher Frayling will discuss images and stereotypes of the workplace in the movies, how they influence our perceptions and how they predict the future.
DreamFactory Brazil This Orwellian masterpiece focuses on Sam Lowry, a man trapped in a mind numbing job and living in a futuristic world driven by consumerism.
3 March Brazil18 Terry Gilliam / 1985 / 132 mins
9pm/Screen3/ PriceTBC Image Still from Brazil
12 December
A collection of shorts exploring labour, advertising and consumption, by artists including Michael Bell-Smith, Harun Farocki, Mark Leckey, The Otolith Group, and Ryan Trecartin. Followed by a Q&A with the curators.
3pm/Screen2/FREE (Booking essential) Image Sir Christopher Frayling
13 December
3pm/TheBox/FREE Image Enterprise by Gavin Brown
Exhibition
Exhibition
HybridLives:CoworkingSpace
Time&Motion:RedefiningWorkingLife
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12December–9March
12December–9March
As part of the Time & Motion exhibition, we are opening up a space in our foyer as a free facility for groups and individuals to work and share ideas.
Atrium
Take a seat anytime during FACT's opening hours and log on to a high speed wifi network in order to work, study, think, dream, make and collaborate.
Imagebelow Co-working space
There will be weekly events, happenings and experiments, from social networking events to pop-up conferences, presentations and research into the productivity of working groups. By choosing to work here you are participating in a dynamic research project that is building new knowledge about how our working lives are changing with digital technology.
FREE Daily For more information see fact.co.uk/timeandmotion
A collaborative design and research project with Creative Exchange Project (CX).
How and where do you work? How long is your working day and when does it end? When does leisure time become labour, and vice versa?
Galleries 1 / 2 FREEEntry Sun – Fri: 12pm – 6pm Sat: 11am – 6pm
The exhibition Time & Motion, developed in collaboration with The Royal College of Art, looks to contemporary artists to ask urgent questions about the undermining of some of our most basic rights, and the ability of design to reveal our hidden working systems of power, exchange and value. At a time when new technology has never been so disruptive to our working lives, Time & Motion provides a platform for thinkers, academics, artists and designers to re-envisage our working environment and consider the future of work. #timeandmotion Play the game at tm-888.co.uk
Imagesabove 75Watt, Revital Cohen & Tuur van Balen. 2013 – iPaw, Alexei Shulgin, 2011 – Imageleft Minimum Wage Machine, Blake Fall-Conroy, 2013 Artistsinclude Revital Cohen & Tuur Van Balen, Harun Farocki, Oliver Walker, Blake FallConroy, Sam Meech, Molleindustria, Jeff Crouse & Stephanie Rothernberg, Andrew Norman Wilson and The Creative Exchange.
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LeifJohnson IT Technician What'sthebestthingaboutFACT? How enthusiastic people are about their jobs, FACT's work culture was a complete shock to me at first but it's such a welcomed change
|TIME |& & |MOT TION ... |REDEFINING |REDEF | FINING |WORK KING |LIFE
What'smakingyouexcitedatthe moment? (atFACT) At the moment I would have to say the new website that we are working on for ex-forces men and women. The possibilities of creating content for the purpose of supporting vulnerable people and improving people's standards of life are endless and very unexplored at present. One of the hurdles is that the audience that it is for, are often not aware of the services nor in a position to be using them. With this project though, the audience is being physically engaged with at every step of the way. Whowouldbeyourcollaborationdreamteam? I would like to see either Seiji Muzishima or Yoshiyuki Tomin collaborate with James Cameron. They have both created fantastic sci-fi throughout their careers and have contributed to the Gundam series. With such a wealth of content relatively unknown James Cameron would be a safe pair of hands to bring it to the western audience. Tellus....(afact,asecretorajoke) If you weighed all the electrons used to store the information on the internet, it would weigh less than a chicken's egg.
For more information email leif.johnson@fact.co.uk
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Funding The Foundation for Art and Creative Technology is a registered charity and relies on the support of a range of funding bodies, trusts and foundations, corporate members and individuals to continue its work.
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Exhibitions&Events 6December–16January FREE entry to galleries fact.co.uk / 0151 707 4464 Twitter: @FACT_liverpool / Facebook: FACTliverpool
Image:75Watt,RevitalCohen&TuurvanBalen,2013