JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2017
LA LA LAND | SILENCE | JACKIE | MANCHESTER BY THE SEA MOONLIGHT | TONI ERDMANN | LOVING
CONTENTS
5–7
DIARY
76 Minutes and 15 Seconds With Abbas Kiarostami + Take Me Home
14 10
2001: A Space Odyssey Access Film Club: Hunt for the Wilderpeople Asterix and Obelix: Mansions of the Gods The Ardennes Cameraperson
Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock & Roll
Uncle Howard
17
Visible Cinema: RSC Curates Strangers & The End
28 14
The Dreamed Ones
12
Endless Poetry
28
Evil Dead II
10
Francofonia
15
Further Beyond
28
Gimme Danger
15
The Goonies
9
Hell or High Water
9
I, Daniel Blake
20
In Pursuit of Silence
15
Jackie
31
Jumanji
29
Kate Davis Film
13
Krisha La La Land Loving Lux Scotland Presents: Steve Reinke Manchester by the Sea Moonlight Panic + Q&A Phantom Boy Prevenge
The Wailing
ANDREI TARKOVSKY: SCULPTING TIME
18
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13 10 30 11
16
19
Solaris
19
Ivan’s Childhood Stalker
EVENT CINEMA
19 19
Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening
36
Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty
36
Bolshoi Ballet: A Hero of Our Time
36
Bolshoi Ballet: Swan Lake
36
NT Live: Amadeus
NT Live: Hedda Gabler NT Live: Saint Joan
NT Live: Twelfth Night RSC: Julius Caesar
RSC: Titus Andronicus
35 35 35 35 34 34 34 34
From Caligari to Hitler
22
The People vs Fritz Bauer
21
Hedi Schneider Is Stuck WILD
16
Reset
27
Andrei Rublev
FOKUS: FILMS FROM GERMANY
31
32
28
14
22
18
Your Name
The Young Offenders
17
18
9
16
Whale Rider
RSC: The Tempest
29
11
31
32
RSC: Antony & Cleopatra
20
Napoleon
The Unknown Girl
13
9
The Light Between Oceans
Trolls 3D
12
29
Donna Rutherford: Lullaby
1
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
12
The Dance of Reality
T2 Trainspotting
31
17
Christine
Sully Toni Erdmann
11
Chocolat
Storks 3D
30
27
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
Silence
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21 22
28
Sound & Vision
NORDIC - BALTIC FILM FESTIVAL BUGS
23
Mellow Mud
23
23
The Homecoming
23
Mother
GFT REGULARS Access Film Club
30
Film Discussion Group
33
29
Crossing the Line
Glasgore! Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group
33
Take 2 Access: Autism-friendly screenings
Take 2: Free Saturday Films for Families
32 31/32
Tuesday Treats Visible Cinema
33 30
A large print version of this brochure is available at Box Office.
Help us shape the next four years of Glasgow Film Sunday 22 January (15.00-17.00) & Tuesday 24 January (17.30-19.30) Glasgow Film (GFT and Glasgow Film Festivals) is launching a public consultation to help shape its next strategy for promoting film, TV and the moving image. The new plan will build on our work to date and we are keen to hear views from as many people as possible. Glasgow Film is hosting a series of audience discussions that are open to all, taking place at GFT. At these events, we will outline the achievements and progress made in recent years. The discussions will also look to the future, inviting the audience to share their ideas and views on the challenges facing Glasgow Film, particularly in a rapidly evolving media landscape in which technological innovation is creating new opportunities for audiences. Staff from Glasgow Film’s activities in film curation, film education, audience development and operations will be present at these events. To book a place visit bit.ly/GFT-future BUY TICKETS ONLINE WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG
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HOW TO FIND OUT ABOUT WHAT WE DO
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.
ACCESSIBLE PROGRAMME GFT offers Audio Description, Captioning and Autism Friendly screenings on selected titles. See p38 for full details.
Enewsletter: Subscribe for weekly listings, news and opportunities at www.glasgowfilm.org 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
Glasgow Film Theatre 12 Rose Street, Glasgow G3 6RB @glasgowfilm
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BOX OFFICE AND BAR OPENING HOURS Sunday to Friday: from 12noon Saturday: from 11am Box office closes 15 minutes after the start of the final film. The building will open half an hour before the start of the first film.
TICKETS / LOYALTY CARDS Full price £9.50 Concession £7.50* 15-25 Card holders £5.50 (ages 15–25) Children £5.50 (ages 14 & under) CineCard holders £1 off every standard priced screening (Unless otherwise stated) CineCard subscription £40 per year Special features £5.50
£5.50 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 £5.50 before 5pm every Friday (unless otherwise stated).
Tuesday Treats
£5.50 tickets for selected Tuesday evening screenings (see p33 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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REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT As Phase two of our development project draws to a close we would like to warmly thank all of our supporters. This would not have been possible without your generous contributions.
GFT Cinema 3 Seat Sponsors
Dunard Fund
Cosmo Ceramics
Donors of GFT Needs You Appeal
Margaret Murdoch Charitable Trust
tX-2 Project Management
Garfield Weston Foundation
Martin Connell Charitable Trust
McGinlay Bell architects
LandTrust
Esterson Trust
Robert Barr Charitable Trust
Alliance Till Systems Ltd
CONTEMPORARY CINEMA COURSE Monday 6 March – Monday 24 April 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. 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, seminars will take place at 18.30 in GFT Project Room. This course is led by Alistair Harkness, Chief Film Critic and Feature Writer with The Scotsman, and regular contributor to BBC Radio Scotland’s The Culture Studio with Janice Forsyth. Films likely to be studied include Certain Women, Neruda, Free Fire, It’s Only the End of the World.* *all titles subject to release changes.
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DIARY
TUE 27 DEC
2001: A Space Odyssey p10 17.30 Sully p9 20.30 Hell or High Water p9 14.15 / 20.15 The Wailing p11 17.00 £5.50 The Light Between Oceans p9 14.30 The Unknown Girl p10 15.40 / 20.00 Francofonia p10 13.40 / 18.00
WED 28 DEC
2001: A Space Odyssey p10 19.50 Sully p9 14.45 Hell or High Water p9 17.15 The Wailing p11 14.00 / 19.30 The Light Between Oceans p9 17.00 The Unknown Girl p10 13.45 / 18.20 Francofonia p10 16.15 / 20.45
THU 29 DEC
Sully p9 18.25 / 20.35 Hell or High Water p9 15.10 / 20.15 Chocolat p11 17.30 The Unknown Girl p10 15.40 / 20.00 Francofonia p10 13.40 / 18.00 Calamity Jane Sing-a-long 13.00 / 15.50 - SOLD OUT
FRI 30 DEC
2001: A Space Odyssey p10 12.15 £5.50 / 17.35 Sully p9 15.15 £5.50 / 20.30 Hell or High Water p9 12.45 £5.50 / 18.00 Chocolat p11 15.00 £5.50 / 20.15 The Unknown Girl p10 13.45 £5.50 / 18.20 Francofonia p10 16.15 £5.50 / 20.45
SAT 31 DEC - CLOSED SUN 1 JAN - CLOSED HAPPY NEW YEAR!
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MON 2 JAN
Silence p11 12.40 / 16.00 / 19.30 The Ardennes p12 16.20 / 20.45 Your Name p28 18.10 Gimme Danger p28 15.30 / 20.30 Uncle Howard p13 14.10 / 18.30 I, Daniel Blake p9 13.00
TUE 3 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 The Ardennes p12 14.00 Your Name p28 15.50 / 20.30 Gimme Danger p28 13.20 Uncle Howard p13 16.05 / 20.45 £5.50 Hedi Schneider Is Stuck p21 18.30 I, Daniel Blake p9 18.15 Glasgore! Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group p33 18.30
WED 4 JAN
Silence p11 12.50 / 16.15 / 19.30 The Ardennes p12 20.40 Uncle Howard p13 13.05 Mother p23 18.30 I, Daniel Blake p9 15.15
THU 5 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 The Ardennes p12 13.45 / 18.30 Your Name p28 18.00 Gimme Danger p28 15.40 / 20.20 Uncle Howard p13 16.00 / 20.40
FRI 6 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 £5.50 / 16.15 £5.50 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 15.30 £5.50 / 20.05 Krisha p13 13.35 £5.50 / 18.10
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76 Minutes and 15 Seconds with Abbas Kiarostami p14 14.15 £5.50 / 18.35 The Dreamed Ones p14 16.30 £5.50 / 20.45
SAT 7 JAN
Silence p11 14.30 / 16.15 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 13.00 / 17.45 Krisha p13 15.45 / 20.30 The Goonies p15 13.45 76 Minutes and 15 Seconds with Abbas Kiarostami p14 20.45 The Dreamed Ones p14 18.35 Take 2: Storks 3D p31 £5.50 11.30 Take 2 Access: Storks p32 £5.50 12.00
SUN 8 JAN
Silence p11 15.15 / 18.30 Endless Poetry p12 15.00 Krisha p13 12.45 / 17.50 Napoleon p20 13.00 In Pursuit of Silence p20 20.10 CTL: Kate Davis Film p29 19.45
MON 9 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 13.15 / 18.10 Krisha p13 16.00 / 20.50 The Dance of Reality p12 14.40 / 20.15 Further Beyond p15 12.45 / 17.50
TUE 10 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 12.30 / 15.15 / 20.05 The Dance of Reality p12 12.45 Further Beyond p15 15.45 / 20.45 The People vs Fritz Bauer p21 18.15 £5.50 Access Film Club: Hunt for the Wilderpeople p30 18.00 £5.50
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WED 11 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 12.30 / 15.15 / 20.05 Reset p16 13.45 BUGS p23 18.10 RSC Live: The Tempest p34 18.45 Film Discussion Group p33 18.30
THU 12 JAN
Silence p11 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Endless Poetry p12 12.30 / 17.45 Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock & Roll p28 15.20 / 20.25 Reset p16 12.45 / 15.05 / 20.05
FRI 13 JAN
La La Land p13 12.15 £5.50 / 14.55 £5.50 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 £5.50 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 13.20 £5.50 / 15.20 / 20.45 Silence p11 17.20
SAT 14 JAN
La La Land p13 14.40 / 17.30 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 17.00 Silence p11 13.45 / 19.30 Take 2: Jumanji p31 £5.50 11.30
SUN 15 JAN
La La Land p13 13.40 / 16.30 / 19.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 13.15 / 16.10 / 19.00 The Young Offenders p16 13.55 / 19.45 Silence p11 15.55
MON 16 JAN
La La Land p13 12.15 / 14.55 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 14.00 / 16.00
Silence p11 19.30 Lullaby p29 £5.50 18.00
TUE 17 JAN
La La Land p13 12.15 / 14.55 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 16.10 / 20.45 Silence p11 12.50 From Caligari to Hitler p22 18.10 £5.50
WED 18 JAN
La La Land p13 14.40 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 20.45 Silence p11 14.00 Mellow Mud p23 18.20
THU 19 JAN
La La Land p13 14.40 / 17.30 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 The Young Offenders p16 12.50 / 18.30 Silence p11 14.50 Panic + Q&A p22 20.30
FRI 20 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 £5.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.40 £5.50 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 £5.50 / 17.10 / 20.00 Evil Dead II p28 23.00
SAT 21 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.00 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00 Take 2: Phantom Boy p31 £5.50 11.30
SUN 22 JAN
Jackie p15 12.30 / 16.45 / 19.35
La La Land p13 16.30 / 19.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 13.50 / 19.00 Ivan’s Childhood p19 14.15 Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty p36 14.45
MON 23 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.30 / 16.30 / 19.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 20.00 Visible Cinema: RSC Curates Strangers & The End p30 18.00 £5.50
TUE 24 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.30 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.20 WILD p22 20.45 £5.50
WED 25 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.30 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 20.00 The Homecoming p23 17.50
THU 26 JAN
Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.35 La La Land p13 14.30 / 17.35 / 20.15 Manchester by the Sea p14 14.15 / 17.10 / 20.00
FRI 27 JAN
T2 Trainspotting p16 12.50 £5.50 / 15.20 £5.50 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 13.50 £5.50 / 16.05 £5.50 / 18.20 / 20.40 Christine p17 12.20 £5.50 / 14.55 £5.50 / 17.30 / 20.05
SAT 28 JAN
T2 Trainspotting p16 13.30 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 12.20 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.40 Christine p17 14.55 / 17.30 / 20.05
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Take 2: Asterix and Obelix: Mansion of the Gods p31 £5.50 11.30
SUN 29 JAN
T2 Trainspotting p16 14.45 / 16.50 / 19.25 Jackie p15 12.30 / 17.20 / 19.40 Christine p17 13.55 / 16.30 / 19.05 Andrei Rublev p19 13.15
MON 30 JAN
T2 Trainspotting p16 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 20.40 Christine p17 12.25 / 17.30 Cameraperson p17 15.00 / 20.05 Prevenge + Q&A p18 18.20
TUE 31 JAN
T2 Trainspotting p16 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.40 Christine p17 15.00 / 20.05 Cameraperson p17 12.30 / 17.35 £5.50
WED 1 FEB
T2 Trainspotting p16 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.20 / 20.40 Christine p17 12.25 / 17.30 Cameraperson p17 15.00 / 20.05
THU 2 FEB
T2 Trainspotting p16 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Jackie p15 13.50 / 16.05 / 18.10 Christine p17 15.00 / 20.35 Cameraperson p17 12.30 NT Live: Amadeus p35 18.45
FRI 3 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 £5.50 / 16.15 £5.50 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 £5.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 15.20 £5.50 / 17.50 / 20.25
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SAT 4 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 14.30 / 17.50 / 20.25 Take 2: Trolls 3D p32 £5.50 11.30 Take 2 Access: Trolls p32 £5.50 12.00
SUN 5 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 18.45 Loving p17 14.00 / 17.00 T2 Trainspotting p16 16.50 / 19.25 Solaris p19 13.15 CTL: Steve Reinke p29 19.40 Bolshoi: Swan Lake p36 14.45
SAT 11 FEB
Moonlight p18 14.30 / 17.50 / 20.25 Prevenge p18 13.30 / 18.10 Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 15.30 / 20.10 Take 2: Whale Rider p32 £5.50 11.30
MON 13 FEB
TUE 7 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 £5.50 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25 Glasgore! Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group p33 18.30
WED 8 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25
THU 9 FEB
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25
Moonlight p18 13.00 / 15.25 / 17.50 / 20.25 Prevenge p18 13.30 / 18.10 Toni Erdmann p18 12.45 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 15.30 / 20.10
TUE 14 FEB
Moonlight p18 13.00 / 15.25 / 20.30 Prevenge p18 15.55 Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 13.20 / 18.10 Breakfast at Tiffany’s p27 18.00 The Umbrellas of Cherbourg p27 20.45 £5.50
WED 15 FEB
Moonlight p18 15.05 Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 Loving p17 12.30
FRI 10 FEB
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/ 19.30
Moonlight p18 12.30 / 16.50 / 19.20 Prevenge p18 14.55 / 19.45 Toni Erdmann p18 15.15 / 18.30 Loving p17 12.20 / 17.10 Stalker p19 13.15
Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 / 16.15 / 19.30 Loving p17 14.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 T2 Trainspotting p16 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.25
£5.50
£5.50
SUN 12 FEB
MON 6 FEB
Moonlight p18 13.05 £5.50 / 15.30 17.55 / 20.20
Prevenge p18 15.55 £5.50 / 20.45 Toni Erdmann p18 13.00 £5.50 / 16.15 Loving p17 13.20 £5.50 / 18.10
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WED 15 - SUN 26 FEB GLASGOW FILM FESTIVAL
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Deadline 31 May 2017 www.asff.co.uk
DID YOU MISS?
Sully
Hell or High Water
Tuesday 27 – Friday 30 December On Thursday 15 January 2009, the world witnessed the Miracle on the Hudson when Captain Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger glided his plane onto the frigid waters of the Hudson River, saving the lives of all 155 aboard. However, even as Sully was being heralded by the public and the media for his unprecedented feat of aviation skill, an investigation was unfolding that threatened to destroy his reputation and his career. Featuring an awards-tipped Tom Hanks in the title role, Sully is the untold story.
Tuesday 27 – Friday 30 December Hell or High Water merges a gripping family drama with an action packed Neo-Western. Two brothers, Toby (Chris Pine) and Tanner (Ben Foster) face the foreclosure of their family’s farm and decide to team up for a string of adrenaline filled heists. They soon find themselves on the radar of seasoned Texas Ranger, Marcus (Jeff Bridges). As the brothers prepare for a final heist and with the Rangers hot on their tails, a final showdown looms where the values of the Old and New West thrillingly collide.
Director Clint Eastwood Cast Tom Hanks, Aaron Eckhart, Valerie Mahaffey, USA 2016, 1h36m, 12A: moderate threat, infrequent strong language
Director David Mackenzie Cast Chris Pine, Ben Foster, Jeff Bridges, USA 2016, 1h40m, 15
I, Daniel Blake
The Light Between Oceans
Tuesday 27 & Wednesday 28 December This heartrending love story, adapted from the bestselling novel by M.L. Stedman, is the ultimate winter holiday weepie. The story begins as a slow-burn romance between WWI-veteran lighthouse keeper Tom (Fassbender) and local landowner’s daughter Isabel (Vikander). The one thing missing from their idyllic life is a baby, but this is the one thing that proves impossible. When a rowboat containing a newborn baby and a dead man washes up on their shore, they choose to raise the child as their own. That choice sets the stage for a heartbreaking story of love and sacrifice. Director Derek Cianfrance Cast Alicia Vikander, Michael Fassbender, Rachel Weisz, 2016 UK/New Zealand/USA, 2h10m, 12A: infrequent moderate sex
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Monday 2 – Wednesday 4 January British master Ken Loach won his second Palme d’Or at Cannes Film Festival for this timely and emphatic drama. Daniel Blake is a middle-aged carpenter from Newcastle, who after suffering a heart attack and deemed unfit to work, must rely on the state for help for the first time. As he comes up against the absurdities of the British welfare system, he befriends a single mother who is facing her own struggles on the breadline. A stark reminder of the profound injustices of life in contemporary Britain. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available at glasgowfilm.org. Director Ken Loach Cast Dave Johns, Hayley Squires, Sharon Percy, UK/France/Belgium 2016, 1h40m, 15
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2001: A Space Odyssey
Tuesday 27 – Friday 30 December Stanley Kubrick’s sublime science fiction masterpiece, scripted by both Kubrick and famed writer Arthur C Clarke, is regularly cited not only as one of the greatest pieces of science fiction, but also as one of the finest works of cinema ever made. Charting the birth and evolution of mankind, as well as our interactions with technology and extra-terrestrial life, this is a unique, beguiling and cerebral film that truly deserves to be seen on the big screen. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available at glasgowfilm.org. Director Stanley Kubrick Cast Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester, USA/UK 1968, 2h15m, some subtitles, U
The Unknown Girl La fille inconnue
Tuesday 27 – Friday 30 December Doctor Jenny Davin refuses to open the door of her practice to a mysterious late-night caller. The next morning she learns that the caller was a girl who has now been found dead, and that the police have no way to identify her. Guilt-stricken, Jenny resolves to discover the name of the young girl so she will not be buried anonymously. A morally astute and compelling investigation of personal responsibility, justice and guilt from two-time Palme d’Or winners Luc and JeanPierre Dardenne (Two Days One Night, The Child). Director Luc Dardenne, Jean-Pierre Dardenne Cast Adèle Haenel, Olivier Bonnaud, Jérémie Renier, Belgium/France 2016, 1h47m, subtitles, 15
Francofonia
Tuesday 27 – Friday 30 December Francofonia combines newsreel footage, floating images from the skyline of Paris and dramatised fantasy sequences to create a portrait of the Louvre Museum that grows into a meditation on France’s devotion to the arts, and how the museum contains the heart and soul of the nation. There are encounters with Napoleon, Marianne and a focus on the Nazi invasion of Paris and the relationship between museum curator Jacques Jaujard and German officer Count Franz Wolff-Metternich. Director Aleksandr Sokurov Cast Louis-Do de Lencquesaing, Benjamin Utzerath, Johanna Korthals Altes, France/Germany/ Netherlands 2015, 1h28m, subtitles, 12A: images of real dead bodies
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Silence
Monday 2 – Thursday 19 January The latest film from Martin Scorsese is an adaptation of the acclaimed 1966 novel by Japanese author Shusaku Endo, which the director has been working on for over 20 years. It tells the story of two 17th century Jesuits who travel to Japan in search of their issing mentor at a time when Christianity was outlawed and their presence forbidden. Silence is a return to big-scale historical epics from the legendary director, featuring breath-taking cinematography and stirring performances from lead actors Adam Driver and Andrew Garfield. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Martin Scorsese Cast Andrew Garfield, Adam Driver, Liam Neeson, USA/Taiwan/Mexico 2016, 2h39m, some subtitles, CTBC
The Wailing Goksung
Tuesday 27 & Wednesday 28 December South Korean horror-mystery The Wailing sees bumbling policeman Jong-gu (Kwak Do Won) drawn into solving the case of a mysterious spreading sickness. After he discovers the perpetrator of a multiple homicide incident standing with clouded eyes and boils all over his skin, several incidents begin to occur as this bizarre sickness ravages the once-sleepy village. When Jong-gu’s daughter develops a rash, the race is on to solve the mystery in order to save her before it is too late. Director Na Hong-jin Cast Kwak Do Won, Chun Woo-hee, Hwang Jung-min, South Korea 2016, 2h36m, subtitles, 15
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Chocolat
Thursday 29 & Friday 30 December From the circus to the music hall, from anonymity to glory, this is the incredible true story of ‘Monsieur Chocolat’, the first black artist of the French stage (Omar Sy, The Intouchables). The duo he formed with Footit (played by Charlie Chaplin’s grandson James Thierrée) met with huge success in Belle Epoque Paris, before fame, easy money, gambling and discrimination wore out their friendship and Monsieur Chocolat’s career. More than a biopic, this heartfelt and often hilarious film retraces the true story of a remarkable artistic friendship. Director Roschdy Zem Cast Omar Sy, James Thierrée, Clotilde Hesme, France 2016, 1h59m, subtitles, 12A: discriminatory terms & behaviour, violence, sex, infrequent strong language
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Endless Poetry Poesía sin fin
Friday 6 – Thursday 12 January The second autobiographical film in legendary director Alejandro Jodorowsky’s proposed cycle of cinematic memoirs (part one, The Dance of Reality, also screens this month), Endless Poetry recounts the artist’s young manhood in 1940s Chile. A young Jodoworosky finds himself drawn into the foremost bohemian artistic circles in Chile as a group of young creatives explore the beauty of the world in an entirely new way. In this poignant film about creativity and how it links to the world at large, Jodorowsky’s trademark phantasmagorical magical realism finds astonishing new heights of meaning. Director Alejandro Jodorowsky Cast Adan Jodorowsky, Brontis Jodorowsky, Leandro Taub, Chile/France/UK 2016, 2h8m, subtitles, CTBC
The Dance of Reality
The Ardennes D’Ardennen
Monday 9 & Tuesday 10 January Alejandro Jodorowsky, the legendary director of El Topo and Santa Sangre, returned in 2013 with this, his first feature in almost a quarter of a century. With typical joyous idiosyncrasy, The Dance of Reality is an exercise in imagined autobiography (the first in a series which this month’s Endless Poetry continues), revisiting defining moments from the auteur’s childhood in 1930s Chile. A witty and accessible magical mystery tour through the past finds the personal roots of Jodorowsky’s life-long fascination with religion, mysticism, poetry and philosophy.
Monday 2 – Thursday 5 January Robin Pront’s eye-catching debut set in an atmospheric Antwerp follows the consequences of troublemaker Kenny’s release from prison. In Kenny’s absence, his brother Dave has remained on the straight and narrow. He has also begun a relationship with Kenny’s girlfriend Sylvie, who is now pregnant. Any family reunion is going to be fraught, but the film’s deceptively mute, simmering first half eventually boils over as Kenny’s growing paranoia and appetite for violence tilt events in a much more gruesome direction.
Director Alejandro Jodorowsky Cast Brontis Jodorowsky, Pamela Flores, Jeremias Herskovits, France/Chile 2013, 2h13m, subtitles, 18
Director Robin Pront Cast Kevin Jassens, Jeroen Perceval, Veerle Baetens, Belgium 2015, 1h33m, subtitles, 15
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La La Land
Friday 13 – Thursday 26 January Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone star in an exuberant, modern day revamp of the Golden Age musical. Mia (Stone) is an aspiring actress, stuck serving lattes to the stars when she meets and falls in love with jazz pianist Sebastian (Gosling). As success calls, the couple are forced to re-evaluate their dreams and relationship under the twinkling neon lights of Los Angeles. Writer/director Damien Chazelle follows up his Oscar-winning Whiplash with a dazzling film that has received rave reviews from critics and audiences alike. Director Damien Chazelle Cast Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, J K Simmons, USA 2016, 2h6m, 12A: infrequent strong language
Uncle Howard
Monday 2 – Thursday 5 January Howard Brookner was buried on his thirty-fifth birthday in 1989. Brookner died of AIDS right when he was on the brink of a promising filmmaking career. His nephew Aaron embarks on an intensely personal journey to discover his uncle’s film legacy, which captured the late ‘70s and early ‘80s Downtown NYC Cultural Revolution. Through conversations with family and close friends including Jim Jarmusch, Tom DiCillo and Sara Driver comes an exploration into the artistic determination of a filmmaker whose life was cut short. Director Aaron Brookner, USA 2016, 1h37m, 15
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Krisha
Friday 6 – Monday 9 January Winner of both the Grand Jury and Audience Awards at the 2015 South-by-Southwest Film Festival, Trey Edward Shults’ directorial debut Krisha is the story of a woman’s return to the family she abandoned years before, set over the course of one turbulent Thanksgiving dinner. A palpable unease permeates the air, and it only grows in force as Krisha gets to work cooking the turkey and trying to make up for lost time. Long-buried secrets and deep-seated resentments soon come to the fore as everyone becomes immersed in an emotionally charged familial reckoning. Director Trey Edward Shults Cast Krisha Fairchild, Bill Wise, Alex Dobrenko, USA 2016, 1h20m, 15
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Manchester by the Sea
Friday 13 - Thursday 26 January When we first meet Casey Affleck’s Lee Chandler, he is a bitter and angry loner working as a janitor in Boston. However, when he receives tragic news he must return to his hometown and face up to the darkness in his past. An astonishingly-realised character study, Manchester by the Sea finds celebrated director Kenneth Lonergan (Margaret) deftly balancing utter tragedy with surprising moments of humour, and features a career-defining performance from Affleck. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Kenneth Lonergan Cast Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler, USA 2016, 2h17m, 15
76 Minutes and 15 seconds with Abbas Kiarostami + Take Me Home
Friday 6 & Saturday 7 January The great Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami lived for 76 years and 15 days, passing away on 4 July 2016. Seifollah Samadian commemorates him with 76 minutes and 15 seconds of undiscovered moments of his life and work. Formed from hundreds of hours of footage and filmed over 25 years of friendship, this documentary paints a fascinating portrait of a master. These are unique moments of Kiarostami’s daily life; a life lived in service of creativity. This new documentary will be preceded by a screening of Kiarostami’s final short film Take Me Home (Iran/Italy 2016, 16m), in which the director travels to Italy to uncover the beauty there.
The Dreamed Ones Die Geträumten
Friday 6 & Saturday 7 January Concentration camp survivor and poet Paul Celan met fellow writer Ingeborg Bachmann in 1948, and the two began a long-distance correspondence that would last for 20 years despite the erstwhile couple meeting only once more throughout that time. Documentarian Ruth Beckermann investigates this relationship in an innovatively simple way, simply filming two actors reading the correspondence in a recording studio. By keeping her camera rolling between readings and during cigarette breaks, Beckermann manages to capture a palpable on-screen chemistry that emerges from the historical letters. Director Ruth Beckermann, Austria 2016, 1h29m, subtitles, PG
Director Seifollah Samadian, Iran 2016, 1h16m, CTBC
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Jackie
Friday 20 January – Thursday 2 February The Club director Pablo Larrain’s English-language debut is an intimate portrait of one of the most important and tragic moments in American history. Eschewing the standard tropes of the Hollywood biopic, Larrain presents a never-before-seen portrayal of First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy (Natalie Portman), as she struggles with her faith, grief and trauma following the assassination of her husband John F Kennedy. Jackie’s fragmented, mosaic-like structure is accompanied by an eerie score from composer Mica Levi (Under the Skin). Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Pablo Larrain Cast Natalie Portman, Peter Sarsgaard, John Hurt, USA 2016, 1h40m, 15
The Goonies
Saturday 7 January (13.45) Mikey Walsh stumbles across a map to One Eyed Willie’s buried treasure. In hopes of saving their homes from demolition, Mikey and friends, ‘The Goonies’, head out in search of the treasure. As they embark upon an action-packed adventure through underground caves packed with booby-traps, fugitive family the Fratellis also in search of the valuable loot - are hot on their heels… Truffle Shuffle at the ready, this iconic fantasy film is a hearty dose of ‘80s nostalgia. Remember, Goonies never say die! Director Richard Donner Cast Sean Astin, Josh Brolin, Corey Feldman USA 1985, 1h54m, PG: contains hanging scene
Further Beyond
Monday 9 & Tuesday 10 January By way of two intertwining stories of Irish immigration and displacement, a poetic journey is made into the idea of the cinematic location and the transformative power of travel. Directors Joe Lawlor and Christine Molloy explore the extraordinary story of misfit and adventurer Ambrosio O’Higgins, expanding upon traditional biopic storytelling to speculate on ideas of place and embodiment. Using re-enactment and dual voiceovers to question their story, the filmmakers investigate within a specifically Irish context how travel and migration can transform identity. Director Christine Molloy will attend a Q&A following the screening on Mon 9 Jan (17.50). Directors Christine Molloy, Joe Lawlor Cast Denise Gough, Alan Howley, Aiden Gillen, Ireland 2016, 1h29m, N/C 15+
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T2 Trainspotting
Friday 27 January – Thursday 9 February Renton, Begbie, Spud and Sick Boy are back in Danny Boyle’s long awaited follow-up to his generation-defining 1996 film Trainspotting. Twenty years have gone by since Mark Renton left, but now he returns to the only place he can ever call home. Familiar memories, friends and feelings of sorrow, loss, joy, longing, fear, regret and self-destruction await in this explosive sequel. Reuniting many of the original cast and creative team, including award-winning screenwriter John Hodge, T2 is loosely based on Irvine Welsh’s follow-up novel Porno. Director Danny Boyle Cast Ewan McGregor, Jonny Lee Miller, Robert Carlyle, UK 2017, running time TBC, CTBC
Reset
The Young Offenders
Wednesday 11 & Thursday 12 January Benjamin Millepied is best known as the man behind Black Swan’s stunning ballet sequences, and in early 2013 he was appointed as director of the Paris Opera Ballet. This new documentary finds Millepied on the eve of his first gala with the Opera as he designs and fine-tunes his choreography for an esteemed audience. The film uses the likeable Millepied to explore the many facets of the institution, as he challenges many of the deeply conservative views that lie within the world of professional ballet.
Friday 13 – Thursday 19 January Inspired by the true story of Ireland’s biggest cocaine seizure in 2007, The Young Offenders follows Conor and Jock, two inner-city teenagers from Cork who dress the same, act the same, and even have the same bum-fluff moustaches. When a drug-trafficking boat capsizes off the coast of West Cork and 61 bales of cocaine, each worth 7 million euro, are seized, word gets out that there is a bale missing. The boys go on a road trip hoping to find a missing bale, but Sergeant Healy is in hot pursuit.
Directors Thierry Demaizière and Alban Teurlai, France 2016, 1h50m, some subtitles, PG
Director Peter Foott Cast Alex Murphy, Chris Walley, Hilary Rose, Ireland 2016, 1h23m, 15
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Loving
Friday 3 – Wednesday 15 February This understated drama, based on the true story of Richard and Mildred Loving (Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga), takes us to Virginia in the 1950s and ‘60s. The lives of the central characters, an interracial couple, get severely disrupted when local authorities discover they are married, violating state laws. Uprooted from their home, the Lovings engage in a history-making battle for justice that takes them all the way to the Supreme Court. Director Jeff Nichols (Midnight Special) delivers a sensitive and moving portrait of the Loving couple. An uplifting film, especially relevant for present-day America. Director Jeff Nichols Cast Ruth Negga, Joel Edgerton, Will Dalton, UK/USA 2016, 2h3m, 12A: infrequent racist language
Christine
Friday 27 January – Thursday 2 February In ‘70s Florida, ambitious 29-year-old Christine Chubbuck (Rebecca Hall) is relentlessly motivated to succeed in the male-dominated business of TV journalism. In a bid to boost ratings, the station manager issues a mandate to deliver juicier and more exploitative stories - a method firmly at odds with Chubbuck’s serious brand of issue-based journalism. Struggling to meet the demands, Chubbuck begins to crack. Based on real events, this is an incisive and empathetic study of a troubled mind, with an arresting performance from Hall. Director Antonio Campos Cast Rebecca Hall, Michael C. Hall, Tracy Letts, USA 2016, 1h59m, 15
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Cameraperson
Monday 30 January – Thursday 2 February A boxing match in Brooklyn; life in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina; the daily routine of a Nigerian midwife: these moments create a tapestry of footage collected over the 25 year career of documentary cinematographer Kirsten Johnson. Through a series of episodes that combine documentary, autobiography, and ethical inquiry, Johnson explores the relationships between filmmakers and their subjects. A thoughtful examination of the tension between the objectivity and intervention of the camera, and the complex interaction of unfiltered reality and crafted narrative. Director Kirsten Johnson, USA 2016, 1h42m, CTBC
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Moonlight
Friday 10 – Wednesday 15 February A truly lyrical and unique piece of filmmaking, Barry Jenkins’ second feature follows Chiron through three stages of his adolescence, as he discovers his identity and sexuality in 1980s Miami. Ostracised by his peers because of the way he walks and talks, a pre-teen Chiron grapples with queerness in an environment where it is simply not an option. As we see Chiron grow, we see his desires force his life in unexpected directions as Jenkins buckles traditional ‘coming-of-age’ techniques to instead slowly reveal an impressionistic tale of sensuality, pain and raw emotion. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Barry Jenkins Cast Mahershala Ali, Shariff Earp, Duan Sanderson, USA 2016, 1h51m, CTBC
Prevenge
Toni Erdmann
Preview: Mon 30 Jan (18.20) Friday 10 – Tuesday 14 February The directorial debut of Sightseers’ Alice Lowe follows in the darkly comic path of that film with the story of a pregnant woman driven to murderous extremes at the behest of her unborn child. The film was uniquely directed and performed by Lowe when she was herself seven months pregnant, and offers a grisly satire on society’s perception of pregnant women. Both tough and hilarious, Prevenge is one-of-a-kind filmmaking and announces Alice Lowe as a truly original filmmaker. Director Alice Lowe will attend a Q&A following the Mon 30 Jan (18.20) screening.
Friday 3 - Wednesday 15 February Recently voted the best film of the year by Sight & Sound’s critic’s poll, Toni Erdmann is a uniquely thought-provoking and absurdist comedy from Germany. Winfried Conradi is a divorced music teacher who fills his days with bizarre pranks and strange alternative personas. Following the death of his dog, Winfried decides to attempt to reconnect with his daughter – a high-power businesswoman living in Bucharest. Director Maren Ade uses often-hilarious comedy to interrogate the strained familial relationship against modern corporate society. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available.
Director Alice Lowe Cast Alice Lowe, Gemma Whelan, Kate Dickie, UK 2016, 1h28m, CTBC
Director Maren Ade Cast Peter Simonischek, Sandra Hüller, Michael Wittenborn, Germany/Austria 2016, 2h42m, 15
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TARKOVSKY: SCULPTING TIME
Following the huge success of our Tarkovsky season in summer 2016, we’re giving you another chance to see four of the Russian master’s best-known works, back on the big screen where they belong.
Andrei Rublev
Ivan’s Childhood Ivanovo detstvo
Andrey Rublyov
Sunday 22 January (14.15) Andrei Tarkovsky’s debut feature is a poignant and powerful story of war and revenge. In World War II, twelve-year-old Ivan loses his parents after Nazis attack his village. Seeking revenge the young boy joins the Soviet army as a scout and soon becomes indispensable due to his ability to go undetected through enemy lines. The missions get tougher and it is decided Ivan must take a step back, but after convincing the of cer in charge he is allowed to carry out one final expedition.
Sunday 29 January (13.15) Widely regarded as Tarkovsky’s finest film, this ambitious historical drama focuses on the life of the great icon painter Andrei Rublev. During a tumultuous period in 15th century Russia, Rublev drifts from place to place, gaining a reputation for his art. After unintentionally becoming involved in a battle he gives up his work. However, as he begins to overcome his troubles he returns to life as a painter. Working on an epic scale, Tarkovsky expertly portrays the brutality of the time from which Rublev’s serene art arose.
Director Andrei Tarkovsky Cast Nikolay Burlyaev, Valentin Zubkov, Evgeniy Zharikov, USSR 1962, 1h35m, subtitles, 12A: disturbing images of dead bodies
Director Andrei Tarkovsky Cast Anatoly Solonitsyn, Ivan Lapikov, Nikolai Grinko, USSR 1966, 3h3m, subtitles, 15
Solaris Solyaris
Sunday 5 February (13.15) Solaris transcends science fiction to portray an unsettling vision of humanity. Widowed psychologist Chris Kelvin is sent to a space station orbiting the ocean-covered planet of Solaris, to investigate a series of mysterious incidents among the crew. Finding the remaining cosmonauts behaving oddly, he discovers supernatural phenomena that cause repressed memories to take on a physical form, including that of his late wife. Kelvin begins to question his perception of reality as he attempts to communicate with the forces responsible. Director Andrei Tarkovsky Cast Donatas Banionis, Natalya Bondarchuk, Jüri Järvet, USSR 1972, 2h46m, subtitles, 12A: moderate injury detail, suicide references
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Stalker
Sunday 12 February (13.15) Deep within a desolate landscape known as the Zone there is a mystical room that grants wishes. Led by the Stalker, one of the few men able to navigate the complex pitfalls within the Zone, a scientist and a writer set out on a dangerous journey to reach the room. As the men progress deeper into the Zone, they become increasingly unsure of their ability to handle the consequences of realising their wishes. Tarkovsky’s second foray into science fiction is an intense and haunting exploration of man’s desires, and is regarded as one of the greatest Sci-Fi lms of all time. Director Andrei Tarkovsky Cast Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy, Anatoly Solonitsyn, Nikolai Grinko, USSR 1979, 2h42m, subtitles, PG
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Napoleon
Sunday 8 January (13.00) | Tickets £14/£12 After over 50 years, Abel Gance’s landmark masterpiece has finally been painstakingly restored for modern cinema screens, GFT is proud to show this epic cinematic triumph in its entirety for one day only. Gance’s depiction of the rise of Napoleon Boneparte demands substantial investment from the audience but rewards this with one of the most thrilling experiences in the history of cinema, with full scale historical events recreated with dizzying detail and a brilliant soundtrack courtesy of the Philharmonic Orchestra performance of Carl Davis’ majestic score. Please note this screening will include three 20-minute intervals. Director Abel Gance Cast Albert Dieudonné, Vladimir Roudenko, Edmond Van Daële, France 1927, 6h30m (incl. intervals), PG
In Pursuit of Silence
Sunday 8 January (20.10) In society’s race towards modernity, amidst technological innovation and the rapid growth of cities, silence is now quickly passing into legend. From the Desert Fathers of the third century AD who became the model for Christian monasticism to John Cage’s seminal work 4’33”, which would go on to inspire a generation of artists, humankind has had a long fascination with silence. In Pursuit of Silence is a meditative film about the power of silence and the impact of noise. Director Patrick Shen, USA/Japan/UK/Germany/Belgium/China/Taiwan/India 2015, 1h22m, PG
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FOKUS: FILMS FROM GERMANY
The Goethe-Institut and Filmhouse are working together for a second year to bring you a selection of recent German films, this year the topic of personal struggle takes centre stage - whether it is a political struggle, a struggle against mental illness or the struggle for acceptance by a mainstream society.
Hedi Schneider Is Stuck Hedi Schneider steckt fest
Tuesday 3 January (18.30) Uli, Hedi and Finn are a happy, loving family. They get by with various odd jobs and Hedi uses her unique sense of humour to deal with any unpleasant setback, but when she begins to suffer from panic attacks the everyday life of the family suddenly spirals out of control. Nothing will stay the same, and even when Hedi manages to overcome the crisis, both Hedi and Uli are aware that they have changed. Well-meant advice, hysterical parents, bored therapists and unfulfilled wishes come together to create a tragicomedy about fear and the influence of love. Director Sonja Heiss Cast Laura Tonke, Hans Löw, Leander Nitsche, Germany 2015, 1h32m, subtitles, N/C 12+
The People vs Fritz Bauer Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer
Tuesday 10 January (18.10) As the Cold War made new enemies of former allies, it was often considered expedient to let old crimes fade into the history books. In Germany, Attorney General Fritz Bauer was determined to ensure that the Nazi era was never forgotten, and that those responsible for its worst atrocities were hunted down. This exciting, award-winning political thriller follows Bauer, played by Burghart Klaußner, as he receives a letter from Argentina from a man convinced his daughter is dating the son of Adolf Eichmann. Bauer’s pursuit of justice requires him to challenge the apathy of a nation and risk treason. Director Lars Kraume Cast Burghart Klaußner, Michael Schenk, Ronald Zehrfeld, Germany, 2015, 1h45m, subtitles, N/C 15+
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From Caligari to Hitler Von Caligari zu Hitler
Tuesday 17 January (18.10) The Weimar Republic (1918 to 1933) was arguably the most important period of German cinema. Weimar’s directors: Murnau, Lang, Lubitsch, Pabst, Wilder, Sternberg and Ruttmann are still legendary today, their stars: Marlene Dietrich, Louise Brooks, Emil Jannings and Conrad Veidt are unforgotten, and films like Nosferatu; The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari; Metropolis; and The Blue Angel demonstrate their unique aura. This essential documentary gives a unique insight into these great films, and this turbulent time. Director Rüdiger Suchsland, Germany 2015, 1h58m, subtitles, N/C 5+
WILD
Tuesday 24 January (20.45) Ania has a strange encounter on the way to work: in the middle of a park she meets a wolf. She seeks to have a relationship with this presumed untameable animal, which develops far beyond that of master and pet. Director Nicolette Krebitz (Jeans, The Heart is a Dark Forest) tells a story of freedom and happiness that is powerful, sensual, and as fascinating as it is disturbing. WILD leads you into the world of a young woman who rejects the tacit contract we’ve made with civilisation. Director Nicolette Krebitz Cast Lillith Stangenberg, Georg Friedrich, Silke Bodenbender, Germany 2016, 1h37m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Panic + Q&A
Thursday 19 January (20.30) Music journalist Andrew Deeley (Interstellar’s David Gyasi) lives in a high-rise tower block, physically and mentally scarred from a vicious attack. Alone and cut off from the world, he obsesses over Kem, his beautiful Chinese neighbour. When Amy, a married woman he meets online, witnesses Kem’s kidnapping, Deeley is left with no choice but to find Kem himself. Armed with only an Oystercard and a hammer, Deeley spirals into the heart of the Triad underworld as he searches for a woman the world has forgotten. Director Sean Spencer will join us for a Q&A following the screening. Director Sean Spencer Cast David Gyasi, Pippa Nixon, Yennis Cheung, UK 2014, 1h25m, 15
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NORDIC-BALTIC FILM FESTIVAL
To celebrate their fifth annual celebration of films from the far north, Nordic Film Festival have decided to expand the remit of their programme to include Baltic as well as Nordic cinema. So, welcome to Nordic-Baltic Film Festival 2016! This year’s festival has a strong comedy flavour, alongside some of the best new dramas and documentaries from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. And there’ll be plenty of fantastic events running throughout the festival, so come and join us on a cinematic ride to the far north!
Mother Ema
BUGS
Wednesday 4 January (18.30) Piquant black humour and an inventive ‘whodunnit’ plot mark this tantalising Baltic noir. With her twenty-something son Lauri left languishing at home in a coma after a shooting, dutiful housewife and carer Elsa (Tiina Mälberg) finds herself eavesdropping on the friends and colleagues who drop by to see him. Her hope is to track down the perpetrator, though she also has a few secrets of her own in this wry, entertaining puzzler with a seasoning of sharp Fargo-style attitude.
Wednesday 11 January (18.10) With the UN estimating that food production will need to increase 70% to feed the planet by 2050, the daily reality of insects as a foodstuff may not be far away. Enter two indefatigable chef researchers, who travel the globe in search of great tastes and sustainable production models – even if it means crispy creepy-crawlies or succulent wriggling maggots. A timely, entertaining documentary to make you think twice about what you’re prepared to put on your plate.
Director Kadri Kõusaar Cast Tiina Mälberg, Siim Maaten, Andres Tabun ,Estonia 2016, 1h29m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Director Andreas Johnsen, Denmark 2016, 1h13m, subtitles, N/C 12+
Mellow Mud Es Esmu Šeit
Wednesday 18 January (14.00 & 18.20) Chaotic family circumstances lead to 17-year-old Raya and her unruly little brother being shipped off to their grandmother in the countryside. At school, an English-language competition presents the chance of broadening horizons, but life, love and mortality intervene to see Raya growing up even more quickly than she’d bargained for. This unsentimental coming-of-age tale showcases the compelling acting talent of newcomer Elina Vaska. Director Renars Vimba Cast Elina Vaska, Andzejs Lilientals, Edgars Samitis, Latvia 2016, 1h46m, subtitles N/C 15+
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The Homecoming Blóðberg
Wednesday 25 January (17.50) Self-help guru Gunnar and his wife Lisa are unhappily married with an adult son, Davio, who is their only sunshine. When Davio returns from a trip through Europe, he introduces his new girlfriend Sunna to his frayed parents. Unexpectedly, Gunnar begins acting strangely around the couple and tries everything to sabotage his son’s relationship. Gunnar comes to a startling realisation and is presented with an impossible dilemma: to keep his earth shattering secret or tell all. Director Björn Hlynur Haraldsson Cast Harpa Arnardóttir, Sveinn Ólafur Gunnarsson, Margrét Guðmundsdóttir, Iceland 2015, 1h40m, subtitles, N/C 8+
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TENTH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
Special events An Evening With Bukowski and Jazz Is Our Religion now on sale: GLASGOWFILM.ORG/GSFF Full programme announced 1 February 2017
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
In association with The Lost Boys at a Secret Location Friday 17 February, 18.10 (First bus departs GFT) “We’ve been aware there’s some very serious vampire activity in this town for some time.” For one night only, the undead come out of hiding for a special 30th anniversary screening of The Lost Boys at a top-secret location. Come and explore the thrilling world of shadows under the guidance of a real Transylvanian vampire and its gang of blood-sucking pals. Dress comfortable and don’t forget your garlic! Tickets inc. travel: £20/£18 conc. Director Joel Schumacher Cast Kiefer Sutherland, Jason Patric, Corey Haim, USA 1987, 1h37m, over 18s only
Secretary at SWG3 Friday 24 February, 19.30 (Doors open) “Who’s to say that love needs to be soft and gentle?” Join Glasgow Film Festival and Torture Garden to celebrate the 15th Anniversary of Secretary. Featuring a star-making turn from Maggie Gyllenhaal, perfectly-paired with a never-better James Spader, the film made waves in 2002 for its sweetly romantic portrayal of the relationship between a dominant lawyer and his submissive secretary. Take a step into a different reality during the post-screening after party featuring TG performers and dancers and a specially-curated playlist. Dress up not necessary, but highly encouraged. Tickets £14/£12 conc. Director Steven Shainberg Cast James Spader, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jeremy Davies, USA 2002, 1h44m. Strictly over 18s only: contains live acts and stage nudity.
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VALENTINE’S DAY
Breakfast at Tiffany’s
Tuesday 14 February (18.00) A lonely, struggling writer becomes enchanted with his beautiful and free-spirited neighbour Holly Golightly in this timeless romantic comedy. As the two learn more about one another, they begin to fall in love against a stunning Manhattan backdrop. Adapted from Truman Capote’s gritty novella into a sophisticated comedy, this timeless classic is remembered best for Audrey Hepburn’s luminous performance as Golightly, along with the Oscar-winning ballad ‘Moon River’. Director Blake Edwards Cast Audrey Hepburn, George Peppard, Patricia Neal, USA 1961, 1h55m, PG
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg Les parapluies de Cherbourg
Tuesday 14 February (20.45) Jacques Demy’s kaleidoscopic musical romance helped propel a young Catherine Deneuve to stardom along with helping define the image of French New Wave cinema. Umbrella-store worker Geneviève (Deneuve) has fallen for dashing mechanic Guy, however their romance is harshly interrupted when Guy is drafted to serve in the Algerian War, forcing the two lovers to grow up quickly. Cited by director Damien Chazelle as a defining influence on La La Land, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg is held as one of the greatest and most unorthodox musicals of all time. Director Jacques Demy Cast Catherine Deneuve, Nino Castelnuovo, Anne Vernon, France 1964, 1h31m, subtitles, U
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Mon 2 & Tue 3 & Thu 5 January Gimme Danger recounts the hard-rocking history of Iggy Pop and his legendary punk band, The Stooges. Emerging out of Michigan in the 1960s, The Stooges brought a powerful and aggressive style of rock-n-roll - blending rock, blues, R&B and jazz - that changed the musical landscape. Jim Jarmusch taps into a rich archive and presents candid interviews with Iggy. This poignant documentary reflects on the rise of the band, their inspirations and challenges, as well as Iggy’s reputation for passionate and wild performances. Director Jim Jarmusch, USA 2016, 1h48m, 15
SOUND & VISION
Gimme Danger
Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock & Roll
Thu 12 Jan (15.20 & 20.25) During the ‘60s and early ‘70s, as the war in Vietnam threatened Cambodia’s borders, a new music scene emerged that took Western rock and roll and stood it on its head – creating a sound like no other. This new documentary combines interviews of surviving Cambodian musicians with never-before-seen archival material to document the twists and turns of the country’s inexplicable music scene and how it relates to Cambodian society past and present. Director John Pirozzi, USA/Cambodia/France 2014, 1h45m, some subtitles, CTBC
CU
LT C
LAS
SIC
Evil Dead II
Friday 20 January (23.00) Stuck in a wooden cabin, Ash (Bruce Campbell) and some friends find themselves battling for their lives against demons summoned from the dead. Evil Dead 2 is a rare example of a sequel surpassing the original and demonstrates Sam Raimi’s distinctive style perfectly. Prepare yourself for a chain saw laiden, demon whacking, gore-fest. Groovy! Director Sam Raimi Cast Bruce Campbell, Sarah Berry, Dan Hicks, USA 1987, 1h24m, 18
Your Name Kimi no na wa
Mon 2 & Tue 3 & Thu 5 January Fresh from winning awards and shattering box office records in Japan, Makoto Shinkai’s enchanting tale of a young couple united only in their dreams is the latest emotionally charged anime to reach the UK. Considered by many to be the heir to Miyazaki, Shinkai’s film (based on his own novel) draws themes from sci-fi, high-school romance and Japanese magical realism. Thought provoking and enthralling, this mature work was the first animated film to be in competition at London Film Festival last year. Director Makoto Shinkai Cast Ryûnosuke Kamiki, Mone Kamishiraishi, Ryô Narita, Japan 2016, 1h46m, subtitles, 12A: contains moderate language and sex references
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CROSSING THE LINE
Crossing the Line:
Crossing the Line: Steve
Kate Davis Film
Sunday 8 January (19.45) The winner of the 2016 Margaret Tait Award, Kate Davis is a Glasgow-based artist whose work reconsiders what certain histories could look, sound and feel like. Informed by successive waves of feminist art and theory, Davis works across a range of media, including moving image, drawing, printmaking and bookworks. This programme is an opportunity to see her previous works on the cinema screen ahead of the premiere of her new film at Glasgow Film Festival 2017. Following the screening, Kate will take part in a Q&A with LUX Scotland. Director Kate Davis, UK 2009 – 2014, 49m, N/C 12+ Image: courtesy the artist and LUX
Reinke’s Anthology of American Folk Song plus Selected Shorts
Sunday 5 February (19.40) Steve Reinke’s Anthology of American Folk Song, (2004) and other works selected for this screening explore the relationships between desires, bodies and action. The subjects of Reinke’s work become party to the narrator’s humour and ironic musings on the nature of desire and its relationship with the outside forces of social narratives, media and historicity. With other selected shorts, this programme will seek to interrogate the utilisation of desire as material for artists’ film, examining the interactions between voice, performativity and subversion. Curated by Seán Elder, and presented by LUX Scotland. Directors Steve Reinke & Various, USA 2004, 1h30m approx, N/C 18+ Image: courtesy the artist and LUX
Donna Rutherford: Lullaby
Monday 16 January (18.30) Lullaby follows on from Rutherford’s recent projects KIN and Broth, and looks at family, ageing and the children she never had. Featuring interviews with other middle-aged women who never reproduced alongside Rutherford’s own narration, this event will combine film and live performance to explore the personal and public aspects of this emotionally loaded terrain. Fair Isle musician Inge Thomson has created an intricate soundscape of voices and music based on a series of lullabies (traditional and newly-penned). All tickets £5.50. Director Donna Rutherford, UK 2016, 1h, N/C 15+
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GFT, together with The National Autistic Society Scotland and Scottish Autism, is delighted to provide Access Film Club: screenings and post-film discussions in a friendly and welcoming environment. Please note there are no adverts or trailers, films will begin at 18.00. This event is two hours long. All tickets £5.50. A discussion will be held after the film. If you require a wheelchair space please request this on booking or call our box office on 0141 332 6535.
Access Film Club: Hunt for the Wilderpeople
Tuesday 10 January (18.00) Raised on hip-hop and in and out of foster homes, rebellious city kid Ricky (newcomer Julian Dennison) gets a fresh start in the New Zealand countryside. When a tragedy strikes that threatens to ship Ricky to another home he goes on the run with his gruff guardian, Hec (Sam Neill), as the clueless authorities lead a national manhunt. Taika Waititi’s follow up to What We Do In The Shadows, is a funny and rousing adventure movie, with brilliant comedic chemistry between Dennison and Neill. Director Taika Waititi Cast Sam Neill, Julian Dennison, Rima Te Wiata, New Zealand 2016, 1h41m, 12A: moderate bad language, innuendo, infrequent bloody moments
Visible Cinema: RCS Curates Strangers & The End
Monday 23 January (18.00) Join us for the second Visible Cinema Takeover by the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland’s BA Performance students. A cohort of Deaf artists have selected shorts focussing on Deaf culture and will host a discussion around them. Strangers and The End have subtitles for Deaf and hard of hearing viewers and have been made as part of the British Sign Language Broadcasting Trust’s ‘Zoom’ filmmaking and ‘Zoom Focus’ advanced filmmaking scheme respectively. With thanks to the BSL Zone for allowing us to show their films.
Strangers
A Deaf boy finds his voice when an interpreter visits his home. This film focuses on the importance of communication within Deaf and hearing families. Director Brian Duffy, UK 2012, 12m, N/C 8+
The End
Ted Evans’s award-winning documentary style film asks the viewer to imagine a world where a revolutionary but controversial ‘cure’ offers Deaf people the chance to become hearing. Director Ted Evans, UK 2011, 24m, N/C 8+
Visible Cinema is a monthly film programme open to everyone and enhanced for Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Please note there are no adverts or trailers, these events will begin at the advertised time. The cinema has a hearing loop system and infrared sound facility. Contact the Duty Manager to reserve a headset. Subject to availability. All tickets £5.50 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 £5.50 (plus £1.50 for 3D screenings). Each £5.50 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.
Storks 3D
U - mild slapstick, very mild bad language Sat 7 January 11.30am (1h29m) In this decidedly delightful romp Storks have moved on from delivering babies to delivering packages. But, when an order for a baby arrives, Junior, and his friend, Tulip, must race against time to fix the error and deliver the baby before the boss finds out. A clever, action-packed animation.
Phantom Boy
PG - mild violence, threat Sat 21 January 11.30am (1h25m) A courageous detective injured by a gangster ends up in hospital alongside a bedridden boy who has the incredible ability to leave his body and float around invisible to all. This Phantom Boy springs into action to help the detective to foil the gangster’s evil plans.
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Jumanji
U - very mild slapstick violence, threat Sat 14 January 11.30am (1h36m) When a magical board game unleashes a world of adventure on siblings Peter and Judy Shepherd a host of dangers can only be stopped by finishing the game - but that means braving giant bugs, ill-mannered monkeys and even stampeding rhinos!
Asterix and Obelix: Mansion of the Gods
PG - mild comic violence Sat 28 January 11.30am (1h26m) Just one small Gaulish Village stands between Caesar and world domination, so he plans to tear down their forest and build a Roman colony instead. Asterix and the villagers must stand against the might of Caesar and the whole Roman Empire. Gags aplenty for the whole family.
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Trolls 3D
U - mild comic threat Sat 4 February 11.30am (1h32m) In this cute adventure, Troll Princess Poppy – the happiest Troll ever born, teams up with grumpy, pessimist Branch in a quest to rescue her friends from the Troll-hungry Bergens. The mismatched pair must tolerate each other long enough to get the job done. A feel good family film, fun characters, great songs. .
Whale Rider
PG - mild language and emotional intensity Sat 11 February 11.30am (1h37m) Only males are allowed to ascend to chiefdom in a Maori tribe. When the boy selected to be the next chief dies at birth his twin sister, survives. In order to claim her birthright she must strive to learn all there is to know about being a leader and to work out a way to change this ancient tradition.
Take 2 Access: Autism-friendly screenings
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 £5.50. Each £5.50 child’s ticket also admits one adult free of charge. Children under the age of eight must be accompanied by an adult or carer.
Storks U - infrequent mild threat
Sat 7 January 12.00 noon (1h29m) In this decidedly delightful romp Storks have moved on from delivering babies to delivering packages. But, when an order for a baby arrives, Junior, and his friend, Tulip, must race against time to fix the error and deliver the baby before the boss finds out. A clever, action-packed animation.
Trolls U - mild threat
Sat 4 January 12.00 noon (1h32m) In this cute adventure, Troll Princess Poppy – the happiest Troll ever born, teams up with grumpy, pessimist Branch in a quest to rescue her friends from the Troll-hungry Bergens. The mismatched pair must tolerate each other long enough to get the job done. A feel good family film, fun characters, great songs. BUY TICKETS ONLINE WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG
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TUESDAY TREATS We’d like to offer you £5.50 tickets for selected Tuesday screenings. £5.50
All tickets are £5.50, CineCard discount applies.
The Wailing p11
WILD p22
Uncle Howard p13
Cameraperson p17
Tue 24 Jan (20.45)
Tue 27 Dec (17.00)
Tue 31 Jan (17.35)
Tue 3 Jan (20.45)
Erdmann p18 The People vs Fritz Bauer p21 Toni Tue 7 Feb (16.15) Tue 10 Jan (17.50)
From Caligari to Hitler p22 Tue 17 Jan (18.10)
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg p40 Tue 14 Feb (20.45)
Glasgore! Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group
Tuesday 3 January (18.30) | Tuesday 7 February (18.30) Free, GFT Project Room After a brief hiatus for the GFT renovation, Glasgore is back! This group meets on the first Tuesday of each month in the GFT Project Room, to discuss horror and cult cinema. Meet other genre fans in a friendly atmosphere to exchange thoughts and opinions about your favourite flicks.
Film Discussion Group
Wednesday 11 January (18.30) Free, GFT Project Room This group meets on the second Wednesday of each month in the GFT Project Room to discuss both blockbusters and arthouse movies. Led by film writer Eddie Harrison.
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RSC
RSC: The Tempest
Wednesday 11 January (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard On a distant island a man waits. Robbed of his position, power and wealth, his enemies have left him in isolation. But this is no ordinary man, and this no ordinary island. Prospero is a magician, able to control the very elements and bend nature to his will. When a sail appears on the horizon, he reaches out across the ocean to the ship that carries the men who wronged him. Creating a vast magical storm he wrecks the ship and washes his enemies up on the shore. When they wake they find themselves lost on a fantastical island where nothing is as it seems. Simon Russell Beale returns to the RSC after 20 years to play Prospero in a production directed by Artistic Director Gregory Doran.
RSC: Julius Caesar
Wednesday 26 April (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Angus Jackson directs Shakespeare’s epic political tragedy, as the race to claim the empire spirals out of control. Caesar returns from war, allconquering, but mutiny is rumbling through the corridors of power… The Rome season in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre opens with the politics of spin and betrayal turning to violence. Following his sell-out productions of Tom Morton-Smith’s Oppenheimer (2014) and James Fenton’s adaptation of Don Quixote (2016), Season Director Angus Jackson steers the thrilling action. Running time tbc
3h30m approx
RSC: Antony & Cleopatra
RSC: Titus Andronicus
Wednesday 24 May (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Iqbal Khan directs Shakespeare’s tragedy of love and duty, picking up the story where Julius Caesar ends. Following Caesar’s assassination, Mark Antony has reached the heights of power. Now he has neglected his empire for a life of decadent seduction with his mistress, Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt. Torn between love and duty, Antony’s military brilliance deserts him, and his passion leads the lovers to their tragic end. Iqbal Khan returns to the RSC to direct, following his critically acclaimed productions of Othello (2015) and Much Ado About Nothing (2012).
Wednesday 9 August (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard The decay of Rome reaches violent depths in Shakespeare’s most bloody play. Titus is a ruler exhausted by war and loss, who relinquishes power but leaves Rome in disorder. Rape, cannibalism and severed body parts fill the moral void at the heart of this corrupt society. Shakespeare’s gory revenge tragedy presents murder as entertainment, and, as the body count piles up, poses questions about the nature of sexuality, family, class and society. Blanche McIntyre returns to the RSC after her directorial debut The Two Noble Kinsmen (2016).
Running time tbc
Running time tbc
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NT LIVE
NT Live: Amadeus
Thursday 2 February (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Lucian Msamati (Game of Thrones) plays Salieri in Peter Shaffer’s iconic play, broadcast with live orchestral accompaniment by Southbank Sinfonia. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, a rowdy young prodigy, arrives in Vienna – and he’s determined to make a splash. Awestruck by his genius, court composer Salieri has the power to promote his talent or destroy his name. Seized by obsessive jealousy he begins a war with Mozart, with music, and ultimately, with God. After winning multiple Olivier and Tony Awards when it had its premiere at the National Theatre in 1979, Amadeus was adapted into an Oscar-winning film. Running time tbc.
NT Live: Hedda Gabler
Thursday 9 March (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Just married. Bored already. Hedda longs to be free... Hedda and Tesman have just returned from their honeymoon and the relationship is already in trouble. Trapped but determined, Hedda tries to control those around her, only to see her own world unravel. Tony Award-winning director Ivo van Hove (A View from the Bridge at the Young Vic Theatre) returns to National Theatre Live screens with a modern production of Ibsen’s masterpiece. Ruth Wilson (Luther, The Affair, Jane Eyre) plays the title role in a new version by Patrick Marber (Notes on a Scandal, Closer).
NT Live: Saint Joan
Tuesday 28 February (18.45) Encore Screening: £17.50 full price / £15 conc / £12.50 CineCard Gemma Arterton is Joan of Arc, in Bernard Shaw’s classic play, following the life and trial of a young country girl who declares a bloody mission to drive the English from France. As one of the first Protestants and nationalists, she threatens the very fabric of the feudal society and the Catholic Church across Europe. Josie Rourke (Coriolanus, Les Liaisons Dangereuses) directs Arterton (Gemma Bovery, Nell Gwynn, Made in Dagenham) as Joan of Arc in this electrifying production. 3h approx
NT Live: Twelfth Night
Thursday 6 April (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Tamsin Greig is Malvolia in a new twist on Shakespeare’s classic comedy of mistaken identity. Directed by Simon Godwin (NT Live: Man and Superman), a ship is wrecked on the rocks. Viola is washed ashore but her twin brother Sebastian is lost. Determined to survive on her own, she steps out to explore a new land. So begins a whirlwind of mistaken identity and unrequited love. Where music is the food of love, and nobody is quite what they seem, anything proves possible. Running time tbc.
Running time tbc.
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The Bolshoi Ballet: Swan Lake
Sunday 22 January (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard A curse by the evil Carabosse causes the beautiful Princess Aurora to fall into a deep slumber for 100 years. In this resplendent classic, the Bolshoi takes us on a dreamlike journey through the famous tale.
Sunday 5 February (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard A ballet of ultimate beauty, and a score of unparalleled perfection. Prima ballerina Svetlana Zakharova exudes both vulnerability and cunning through superb technical mastery in her dual roles.
2h 50m
3h
The Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening
Sunday 19 March (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard The Bolshoi takes on a new challenge in Van Manen’s ‘Frank Bridge’s Variations’, León and Lightfoot’s ‘Short Time Together’ and Ratmansky’s ‘Russian Seasons’. This encounter between some of the world’s best dancers and choreographers results in an outstanding experience.
The Bolshoi Ballet: A Hero of Our Time
Sunday 9 April (15.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard This story, based on the larger-than-life hero Pechorin, is adapted from Mikhail Lermontov’s literary masterpiece. This new production by Yuri Possokhov is a tragic poetic journey that can only be seen at the Bolshoi. 2h 45m
2h 40m
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BOLSHOI BALLET 2016/17
The Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty
Events, Conferences & Private Hires
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By Subway
www.spt.co.uk 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
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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 Glasgow Film Theatre (known as GFT) is a charity registered in Scotland, No. SC005932
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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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Our screens are fully licensed so drinks purchased from our 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.
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Refreshments at GFT
Available from Box Office and online and are valid for one year. The perfect gift for film lovers.
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GFT Accessible Programme
Accessible Screenings Take 2 Access: Storks p31 Sat 7 Jan (12.00)
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 Film Club: Hunt for the Wilderpeople p30 Tue 10 Jan (18.00) La La Land p13 Fri 13 – Thu 26 Jan - All Shows Sat 14 Jan (14.40) Tue 17 Jan (20.15) Thu 19 Jan (17.30) Tue 24 Jan (14.30) Jackie p15 Fri 20 – Thu 2 Feb - All Shows Sat 21 Jan (16.05) Mon 23 Jan (18.20) Thu 2 Feb (16.05)
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.
Visible Cinema: RSC Curates Strangers & The End p30 Mon 23 Jan (18.00) Loving p17 Fri 3 – Wed 15 Feb - All Shows Sat 4 Feb (14.50) Tue 7 Feb (20.05) Thu 9 Feb (17.25) Mon 13 Feb (20.10)
Please contact our Manager (0141) 352 8603 or email dutymanager@glasgowfilm.org with your specific access enquiries.
Take 2 Access: Trolls p32 Sat 4 Feb (12.00) Due to circumstances beyond our control, occasionally we are unable to provide these accessible screenings. You are advised to check with 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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FIRST TICKETS ON SALE NOW
15-26 FEBRUARY GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL #GFF17
Glasgow Film Festival is an operating name of Glasgow Film Theatre (GFT), a company limited by guarantee, registered in Scotland No. 97369, and registered as a charity (No SC005932).