NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2016
NOCTURNAL ANIMALS | ARRIVAL A UNITED KINGDOM | CHI-RAQ BLACK STAR | CHRISTMAS AT GFT FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL GLASGOW FILM THEATRE BOX OFFICE 0141 332 6535 • WWW.GLASGOWFILM.ORG
CONTENTS
5–8
DIARY
16 Years till Summer Access Film Club: Life, Animated Access Film Club: National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
Akira American Pastoral Arrival Bad Santa The Battle of the Somme
Blueprint: Scottish Independent Shorts
Paterson
13
21
Peter Pan
The Pass
30
Paths of the Soul
40 12
Cathy Come Home
16
Chi-Raq
13
Creepy
11
The Darkest Universe
30
Die Hard Donnie Darko Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words The Eagle Huntress Elf Elstree 1976 Ethel & Ernest Finding Dory 3D Gimme Danger Gremlins The Heroes of Telemark Hunt for the Wilderpeople The Innocents I, Olga Hepnarová It’s a Wonderful Life
1
11
@glasgowfilm
Nocturnal Animals
23
36
Calamity Jane Sing-a-long
22
29
24
Blue Velvet
15
41/44
22
16
The Black Hen
The Muppet Christmas Carol
17
One More Time With Feeling 3D
40
The Bishop’s Wife
Magnus
29
The Music of Strangers
42
The BFG
Life, Animated
23
42
9
After Love
43
Labyrinth
24
The Addams Family
Kubo and the Two Strings
38 38
Ace in the Hole
36
Julieta
14
The 39 Steps
Jarman Award 2016 Tour
15
18
Pete’s Dragon
Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny Road to Peace Scrooge
Snowden
Son of Joseph Sonita
9
17 16 43 43 10 15 44 17 18
9
Trading Places
30
United States of Love
14
A United Kingdom Vampire’s Kiss
Visible Cinema: It’s a Wonderful Life Visible Cinema: RCS Curates Deafness & Dawn of the Deaf
14 29 39 39
22
Woman Tiger, Woman Dove
36
18
Wunder der Schöpfung
22
You’ve Been Trumped Too
10
41 38 10 42 21
30/41
24 23 12 13 40
Writing Ensemble Your Name
BLACK STAR
11
29
Boyz n the Hood
31
In the Heat of the Night
32
Car Wash
Moolaadé
The Proud Valley Sembéne!
To Sleep with Anger Wild Style
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32 33 32 33 31 33
CHECK THE GATE Apocalypse Now
In a Lonely Place
The Last Picture Show The War of the Worlds
EVENT CINEMA
Bolshoi Ballet: The Bright Stream Bolshoi Ballet: A Contemporary Evening
Marseille
26
20
The Red Turtle
28
20
HAVANA GLASGOW FILM FESTIVAL
19
My Men
19
Thanks Boss!
48
Dancing with Margot
48
Bolshoi Ballet: A Hero of Our Time
48
Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty
48
Bolshoi Ballet: The Nutcracker Bolshoi Ballet: Swan Lake
47
NT Live: Hedda Gabler
47
NT Live: No Man’s Land
47
NT Live: Saint Joan
46
RSC: Antony & Cleopatra
46
RSC: Julius Caesar
46
RSC: The Tempest
46
RSC: Titus Andronicus
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL
25
Cézanne et moi
26
The Battle of the Rails
27
Dark Inclusion
28
The Death of Louis XIV
28
First Growth
The First, the Last
From the Land of the Moon La Grande Vandrouille
A Journey Through French Cinema Kill the Referee
48 47
NT Live: Amadeus
In Bed with Victoria
48
Viva
HOLLYWOOD DREAMS OF SCOTLAND
25 27
37 37
Annie Laurie
35
Highlander
35
Brave
LONDON KOREAN FILM FESTIVAL
35
Dong-Ju: The Portrait of a Poet
34
Shifted Horizon
34
Factory Complex
GFT REGULARS Access Film Club Crossing the Line Cult Classics
Film Discussion Group
Glasgore Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group Sound & Vision
27
Take 2 Access: Autism-friendly screenings
25
Tuesday Treats
27
Visible Cinema
28
Take 2
26
Useful Information
34
38 36
29/30
45 45
21/22 44 42-44
45 49 39
26
A large print version of this brochure is available at Box Office.
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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 p50 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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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 p45 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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BOX OFFICE AND BAR OPENING HOURS Until the completion of the renovation work in November, there will limited access to the building. We ask you to bear with us whilst the work continues. 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.
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
For details of the following films please check the website www.glasgowfilm.org Train to Busan I, Daniel Blake
Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World Burn, Burn, Burn
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4
DIARY
THU 3 NOV
Train to Busan 15.10 / 17.40 I, Daniel Blake 12.45 / 15.40 / 18.00 / 20.30 Lo and Behold, Reveries of the Connected World 16.00 / 20.45 Burn, Burn, Burn 13.40 / 18.15 Boyz n the Hood p31 20.15
FRI 4 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 13.30 £5.50 / 15.20 £5.50 17.50 / 20.20 You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 16.00 £5.50 / 21.00 After Love p9 18.20 Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny p10 16.20 £5.50 / 20.45 Sonita p9 14.15 £5.50 / 18.35
SAT 5 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 14.45 / 17.50 / 20.20 You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 21.05 After Love p9 14.15 Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny p10 14.40 / 18.45 Sonita p9 16.40 / 20.45 FFF: Cézanne et moi p25 18.10 Take 2: Finding Dory 3D p42 11.30 Take 2 Access: Finding Dory p44 £5.50 12.00
SUN 6 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 14.10 / 16.50 / 19.20 You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 17.40 After Love p9 19.40 Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny p10 13.30 Sonita p9 15.30 Bolshoi: The Bright Stream p48 14.45 CTL: Jarman Award 2016 Tour p36 19.00
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MON 7 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 14.00 / 17.50 / 20.20 You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 20.45 After Love p9 18.20 Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny p10 18.35 Sonita p9 16.30 / 20.35
TUE 8 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 13.15 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.30 You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 15.45 / 20.45 £5.50 After Love p9 18.20 Ethel & Ernest p10 13.00 / 15.30 Access Film Club: Life, Animated p38 18.00 £5.50 Elstree 1976 p38 20.20
WED 9 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.20 The Darkest Universe p11 13.45 / 18.20 After Love p9 15.50 / 20.45 To Sleep with Anger p31 15.00 / 20.35 Ethel & Ernest p10 12.30 Writing Ensemble p11 18.00
THU 10 NOV
Nocturnal Animals p9 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.20 The Darkest Universe p11 16.15 / 20.35 After Love p9 14.00 / 18.20 Boyz ‘n the Hood p31 13.15 Ethel & Ernest p10 15.45 / 20.50 FFF: La Grande Vadrouille p25 18.05
FRI 11 NOV
Arrival p11 13.00 £5.50 / 15.25 £5.50 17.55 / 20.25 Nocturnal Animals p9 12.40 £5.50 / 15.10 £5.50 17.40 / 20.10
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The Innocents p12 12.25 £5.50 / 14.55 FFF: My Men p25 18.10 Labyrinth p29 23.15 Akira p29 23.00
£5.50
/ 20.40
SAT 12 NOV
Arrival p11 12.20 / 15.25 / 17.55 / 20.25 Nocturnal Animals p9 15.10 / 20.10 The Innocents p12 13.30 / 18.10 / 20.40 FFF: In Bed with Victoria p26 16.00 FFF: Kill the Referee p26 17.40 Take 2: The Addams Family p42 £5.50 11.30
SUN 13 NOV
Arrival p11 14.45 / 17.00 / 19.30 Nocturnal Animals p9 17.30 / 20.00 The Innocents p12 12.30 / 17.15 FFF: The Battle of the Rails p26 15.00 FFF: Marseille p26 19.45 The Battle of the Somme with Live Score p21 13.00
MON 14 NOV
Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 17.55 / 20.25 Nocturnal Animals p9 13.20 / 15.45 / 18.15 / 20.45 The Innocents p12 12.30 / 15.00 / 17.30 FFF: Dark Inclusion p27 20.00
TUE 15 NOV
Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 20.25 £5.50 Nocturnal Animals p9 15.10 / 20.10 The Innocents p12 13.15 / 15.45 / 20.35 Viva p37 17.50 Cathy Come Home p12 12.45 FFF: Thanks Boss! p27 18.30
WED 16 NOV
Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 17.55 / 20.25
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Nocturnal Animals p9 12.40 / 15.10 / 20.10 The Innocents p12 13.15 / 15.45 / 17.40 FFF: A Journey Through French Cinema p27 18.45
FFF: The Death of Louis XIV p28 14.20 FFF: First Growth p28 19.30
MON 21 NOV
Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 17.55 / 20.25 Nocturnal Animals p9 12.40 / 15.10 / 17.40 The Innocents p12 13.10 / 15.40 / 20.35 Dancing with Margot p37 20.10 Sembene! p33 18.10
Gimme Danger p21 13.20 / 15.40 / 20.20 Arrival p11 12.30 / 15.00 / 20.30 The Innocents p12 15.15 / 20.05 I, Olga Hepnarová p13 12.45 / 17.45 Visible Cinema: Deafness/ Dawn of the Deaf p39 18.20 £5.50 Preview: Paterson p13 18.05
Gimme Danger p21 13.30 £5.50 / 15.50 / 20.40 Arrival p11 14.30 £5.50 / 17.55 / 20.25 The Innocents p12 15.10 £5.50 / 20.10 In the Heat of the Night p32 12.45 £5.50 / 17.40 FFF: The First, the Last p27 18.10
Gimme Danger p21 13.30 / 15.50 / 18.15 Arrival p11 14.30 / 17.55 / 20.25 The Innocents p12 12.55 / 17.40 I, Olga Hepnarová p13 15.25 / 20.10 £5.50 Shifted Horizon p34 20.40
THU 17 NOV
FRI 18 NOV
SAT 19 NOV
Gimme Danger p21 13.30 / 15.50 / 20.40 Arrival p11 15.10 / 17.55 / 20.25 The Innocents p12 12.40 / 17.40 In the Heat of the Night p32 20.10 FFF: The Red Turtle p28 14.30 FFF: From the Land of the Moon p28 18.10 Take 2: The BFG p42 £5.50 11.30
SUN 20 NOV
Gimme Danger p21 17.00 Arrival p11 13.15 / 19.15 The Innocents p12 12.20 / 17.15 In the Heat of the Night p32 14.50 Apocalypse Now p19 16.00 The Proud Valley p32 19.45
TUE 22 NOV
WED 23 NOV
Gimme Danger p21 13.30 / 15.50 / 20.35 Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 17.55 / 20.25 The Innocents p12 15.10 / 20.10 I, Olga Hepnarová p13 12.40 / 17.45 Factory Complex p34 18.10
THU 24 NOV
Gimme Danger p21 13.20 / 15.45 Arrival p11 12.55 / 15.25 / 20.25 The Innocents p12 12.40 / 15.10 / 18.05 Mooladé p33 17.50 Dong-Ju: The Portrait of a Poet p34 20.35
FRI 25 NOV
Paterson p13 13.05 £5.50 / 15.50 £5.50 17.55 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 13.20 £5.50 / 15.45 £5.50 18.10 / 20.35
Creepy p13 14.50 £5.50 / 20.05 United States of Love p14 17.40 Your Name p29 23.00 Vampire’s Kiss p29 23.15
SAT 26 NOV
Paterson p13 14.30 / 17.50 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 12.20 / 15.45 / 18.10 / 20.35 Creepy p13 17.15 United States of Love p14 14.50 / 20.05 Take 2: Peter Pan p43 £5.50 11.30
SUN 27 NOV
Paterson p13 14.10 / 19.20 A United Kingdom p14 17.10 / 19.35 The 39 Steps p14 14.25 The Last Picture Show p19 16.40 Creepy p13 13.45 / 19.05 United States of Love p14 16.30
MON 28 NOV
Paterson p13 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.50 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 13.15 / 15.40 / 18.20 / 20.35 Road to Peace p15 18.05 Creepy p13 14.45 United States of Love p14 12.20 / 20.45
TUE 29 NOV
Paterson p13 18.10 / 20.40 A United Kingdom p14 15.45 / 17.55 £5.50 Wunder der Schöpfung p22 20.20
WED 30 NOV
Paterson p13 16.00 / 17.50 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 15.45 / 18.10 / 20.35 16 Years till Summer p15 20.45
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Magnus p15 18.30
THU 1 DEC
CTL: Woman Tiger, Woman Dove p36 17.30
FRI 2 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 14.45 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 12.50 / 17.50 A United Kingdom p14 15.20 / 20.20 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 15.45 / 20.35 Paths of the Soul p16 13.15 / 18.05
Paterson p13 12.50 / 15.20 / 17.45 / 20.25 A United Kingdom p14 12.35 / 15.00 / 18.00 / 20.35 One More Time with Feeling 3D p22 20.10 16 Years till Summer p15 15.45 Magnus p15 13.45 / 18.30
MON 5 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 14.45 £5.50 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 15.20 £5.50 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 12.50 £5.50 / 17.50 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 13.30 £5.50 / 18.10 Paths of the Soul p16 15.40 £5.50 / 20.30
TUE 6 DEC
SAT 3 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 14.45 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 17.50 A United Kingdom p14 14.45 / 20.20 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 15.45 / 20.35 Paths of the Soul p16 13.15 / 18.05 Take 2: Pete’s Dragon p43 £5.50 11.30 Take 2 Access: Pete’s Dragon p44 £5.50 12.00
SUN 4 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 12.15 / 15.00 Paterson p13 17.15 A United Kingdom p14 12.30 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 14.45 Paths of the Soul p16 12.00 The War of the Worlds p20 15.15 Car Wash p32 17.45
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Chi-Raq p16 14.45 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 15.20 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 12.50 / 17.50 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 13.30 / 18.10 Paths of the Soul p16 15.40 / 20.30 £5.50 Glasgore Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group p45 18.30
WED 7 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 14.45 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 12.20 / 17.50 A United Kingdom p14 15.20 / 20.20 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 15.45 / 20.35 Paths of the Soul p16 13.15 Wild Style p33 18.40
THU 8 DEC
Chi-Raq p16 14.45 / 17.25 / 20.05 Paterson p13 15.20 / 20.20 A United Kingdom p14 12.50 / 17.50 Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words p22 13.30 / 18.10 Paths of the Soul p16 15.40 / 20.30
FRI 9 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 £5.50 / 20.05
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American Pastoral p23 17.20 The Pass p17 13.10 £5.50 / 18.15 Snowden p17 15.15 £5.50 / 20.20 The Black Hen p16 15.45 £5.50 / 20.40 Life, Animated p17 13.30 £5.50 / 18.30 Trading Places p30 23.00 Gremlins p30 23.15
SAT 10 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 17.15 American Pastoral p123 14.15 / 20.15 The Pass p17 15.50 / 20.50 Snowden p17 13.00 / 18.00 The Black Hen p16 13.45 / 18.20 Life, Animated p17 16.10 / 20.30 Take 2: Kubo and the Two Strings p43 £5.50 11.30
SUN 11 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 13.15 / 19.15 American Pastoral p23 17.05 The Pass p17 18.00 Snowden p17 12.15 The Black Hen p16 13.45 / 20.00 Life, Animated p17 15.50 In a Lonely Place p20 15.00 Calamity Jane Sing-a-long p40 16.20 Gremlins p41 19.45
MON 12 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 17.15 American Pastoral p23 14.15 / 20.15 The Pass p17 16.00 / 20.50 Snowden p17 13.10 / 18.00
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The Black Hen p16 15.40 / 20.30 Ace in the Hole p24 12.45 / 17.45
TUE 13 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 American Pastoral p23 17.40 Blue Velvet p24 20.20 The Pass p17 13.00 / 17.55 Snowden p17 15.00 / 20.05 £5.50 The Music of Strangers p22 15.30 / 20.35 Access Film Club: National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation p38 18.00 £5.50
WED 14 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Blue Velvet p24 13.00 The Pass p17 16.00 / 21.00 Snowden p17 12.30 / 18.00 The Music of Strangers p22 15.30 / 20.35 The Heroes of Telemark p24 18.15 Film Discussion Group p45 18.30
THU 15 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 12.15 / 15.15 The Pass p17 15.30 / 21.00 Snowden p17 12.45 / 17.40 The Music of Strangers p22 15.40 The Heroes of Telemark p24 12.30 Visible Cinema: It’s a Wonderful Life p39 18.00 £5.50 Blueprint: Scottish Independent Shorts p36 20.30 £5.50 NT Live: No Man’s Land p47 18.45
FRI 16 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 £5.50 / 17.15 / 20.15 Hunt for the Wilderpeople p23 16.00 £5.50 / 20.30
Julieta p23 13.30 £5.50 / 18.15 The Eagle Huntress p18 13.15 £5.50 / 20.00 Son of Joseph p18 15.15 £5.50 / 20.00
The Bishop’s Wife p40 13.30 / 18.15 £5.50 The Eagle Huntress p18 15.45 / 20.30 Son of Joseph p18 13.15 / 18.00
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Hunt for the Wilderpeople p23 13.30 / 18.15 Julieta p23 20.30 The Bishop’s Wife p40 15.50 The Eagle Huntress p18 13.15 / 18.00 Son of Joseph p18 15.15 / 20.00 Take 2: Scrooge p44 £5.50 11.30
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Julieta p23 20.30 Elf p41 13.30 / 18.20 The Bishop’s Wife p40 15.50 The Eagle Huntress p18 13.15 / 18.00 Son of Joseph p18 15.15 / 20.00
SAT 17 DEC
SUN 18 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 12.00 / 13.15 16.15 / 19.15 Hunt for the Wilderpeople p23 17.45 Julieta p23 19.45 The Bishop’s Wife p40 20.00 The Eagle Huntress p18 15.15 Son of Joseph p18 12.45 / 17.15 Bolshoi: The Nutcracker p448 14.45
MON 19 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Hunt for the Wilderpeople p23 13.30 Julieta p23 20.30 Elf p41 18.20 The Bishop’s Wife p40 15.50 The Eagle Huntress p18 13.15 / 18.00 Son of Joseph p18 15.15 / 20.00
TUE 20 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Julieta p23 16.00 Elf p41 20.40
WED 21 DEC
THU 22 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.15 / 17.15 / 20.15 Julieta p23 16.00 Elf p41 20.40 The Bishop’s Wife p40 18.15 The Muppet Christmas Carol p41 13.45 The Eagle Huntress p18 16.30 / 21.00 Son of Joseph p18 14.00 / 18.30
FRI 23 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 14.00 £5.50 / 17.00 / 20.00 Elf p41 20.30 The Bishop’s Wife p40 13.30 £5.50 / 18.00 The Muppet Christmas Carol p41 16.00 £5.50 Donnie Darko p18 15.15 £5.50 / 17.45 / 20.15 Die Hard p30 23.00 Bad Santa p30 23.15
SAT 24 DEC
It’s a Wonderful Life p40 13.15 / 13.50 / 16.15 16.50 / 19.15 / 19.50 Donnie Darko p18 13.30 / 16.30 / 19.30 Take 2: The Muppet Christmas Carol p44 £5.50 11.30
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Nocturnal Animals
Friday 4 - Thursday 17 November Tom Ford (A Single Man) returns to the big screen after seven years with this riveting adaptation of Austin Wright’s novel Tony and Susan. Susan (Amy Adams) is a successful Los Angeles art gallery owner whose marriage to her second husband appears to be unravelling due to his incessant travelling. As her suspicions begin to grow, she starts to read her ex-husband’s (Jake Gyllenhaal) novel, a violent thriller she interprets as a veiled threat and symbolic revenge tale. Nocturnal Animals is both an ambitious high-wire noir thriller and a psychological study of women in crisis. Director Tom Ford Cast Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Shannon, USA 2016, 1h57m, 15
Sonita
After Love
L’économie du couple
Friday 4 - Thursday 10 November Marie (Bérénice Bejo) and Boris (Cédric Kahn) are calling it quits after 15 years of marriage. However, as long they are still deciding on their separation agreement they remain living together in the magazine-photo-worthy apartment they both want to claim ownership of. The latest film from acclaimed Belgian director Joachim Lafosse (The White Knights) focuses on the ties that remain even when romance has gone, with constant arguing from the lead couple revealing the complexities of a long-term relationship and the depth of the rifts between them after love. Director Joachim Lafosse Cast Bérénice Bejo, Cédric Kahn, Marthe Keller, France/Belgium 2016, 1h40m, 12A: contains infrequent strong language
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Friday 4 - Monday 7 November Sonita, an 18-year-old Afghan refugee and the subject of this unique and inspiring documentary, harbours dreams of being a rapper. But her family has a very different future in mind: as a bride she is worth $9,000. In a culture where women are forbidden to sing, Sonita hopes to find a way to make her dreams come true. Director Rokhsareh Ghaemmaghami ends up becoming personally involved, taking Sonita on a journey to the United States, where this charismatic young woman defies her family’s expectations and channels her frustrations into a rousing rap video. Sonita is a soaring true story of a young woman discovering the power of her voice. Director Rokhsareh Ghaemmaghami, Germany/Switzerland/ Iran 2015, 1h30m, subtitles, PG
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You’ve Been Trumped Too
Friday 4 - Tuesday 8 November Anthony Baxter’s explosive and timely follow up to You’ve Been Trumped explores the continuing confrontation between a feisty 92-year-old Scottish widow, Molly Forbes, and a billionaire seeking to become the most powerful man in the world. Molly and her family are living in the shadow of the Trump International Golf Links in Aberdeen. When they refuse to leave to make way for more development, the Trump Organisation initiates a nefarious campaign of intimidation and bullying. You’ve Been Trumped Too is the must-see film that Donald Trump won’t want you to see. The Mon 7 Nov (20.45) screening is followed by a Q&A with director Anthony Baxter. Director Anthony Baxter, UK 2016, 1h35m, CTBC
Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny
Friday 4 - Monday 7 November Highlighting one of the most innovative American directors, this documentary explores the path travelled by the auteur, from his Texas roots to his warm reception on the awards circuit. Richard Linklater’s desire to create fuelled his work outside the Hollywood system, and his ability to showcase realistic characters and tell honest stories soon had others taking notice of his raw talent. Directors Louis Black and Karen Bernstein weave insightful discussions with Linklater amongst testimonies from long-time collaborators to look at his extraordinary career.
Ethel & Ernest
Tuesday 8 - Thursday 10 November Raymond Briggs is best-known as the author of fantastical children’s classics The Snowman and Fungus the Bogeyman, but this new feature adaptation comes from one of his most personal works. The story covers 40 years of marriage, the birth of their son, and many world-changing events filtered through their perspective. A deeply affecting character study brought to life with tender 2D animation and voice work from veteran actors Jim Broadbent and Brenda Blethyn. Director Roger Mainwood Cast Jim Broadbent, Brenda Blethyn, Pam Ferris, UK 2016, 1h34m, 12A: moderate innuendo
Director Louis Black, Karen Bernstein, USA 2016, 1h26m, CTBC
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Arrival
Friday 11 - Thursday 24 November The latest film from Denis Villeneuve (Sicario, Prisoners) is a visually inventive and emotionally arresting science fiction based on Ted Chiang’s award winning short story, ‘Story of Your Life’. When mysterious spaceships touch down across the globe, government agents bring together an elite team – led by expert linguist Louise Banks (Amy Adams) to investigate. As the world teeters on the verge of global war and the military manoeuvres around the operation become increasingly fraught, Louise and team race against time for answers – and in the process take a chance that could threaten her life, and the lives of all humans. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Denis Villeneuve Cast Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, USA 2016, 1h56m, 12A: infrequent strong language
Writing Ensemble: An Experiment in Theatre
Wednesday 9 November (18.00) Writers are often asked to explain where they get ideas from. This documentary follows acclaimed playwright Peter Arnott as he wrestles with his new play. Commissioned by leading academic Laura Bradley, the brief is to dramatise her research on theatre censorship in the former German Democratic Republic; but the unexpected always has a role to play and Arnott’s creative process takes a controversial turn after he is taken ill and unable to travel to Berlin. Followed by a Q&A with Peter Arnott, Susan Kemp and Laura Bradley. The film will be followed by a networking event nearby. Go to whoiswatchingwho.org for details. Director Susan Kemp, UK 2016, 1h42m, N/C 15+
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The Darkest Universe
Wednesday 9 & Thursday 10 November Zac is a lonely, highly-strung city trader on the edge of a psychological breakdown. He has lost his job, his girlfriend and, most devastatingly, his weird and wayward younger sister Alice, the only family he had left. Increasingly frustrated with the futile attempts of the police, Zac decides to take matters into his own inexpert hands – launching a video blog and scouring the dark canals where she went missing. With a kaleidoscopic narrative, bold cinematography and the occasional UFO, The Darkest Universe is a truly unique comedy psychodrama from the exciting UK directorial team Tom Kingsley and Will Sharpe (Black Pond). Director/actor Will Sharpe will join us for a Q&A after the Wed 9 Nov (18.20) screening. Directors Tom Kingsley, Will Sharpe Cast Will Sharpe, Tiani Ghosh, Joe Thomas, UK 2016, 1h30m, 15
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The Innocents Les innocents
Friday 11 - Thursday 24 November Mathilde Beaulieu is a young French Red Cross student working as part of a medical mission in Poland in late 1945. One day she is approached by a nun who pleads with her to come to a convent to help her fellow sister, who Mathilde finds was sexually abused by a soldier, leaving her pregnant and ashamed in the face of God. When more nuns come forward as having been abused, Mathilde finds her beliefs clashing with the devout spirituality of the convent in this emotionally charged and critically acclaimed take on the horrific cost of war. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Anna Fontaine Cast Lou de Laâge, Agata Buzek, Agata Kulesza, France/Poland 2016, 1h55m, subtitles, 15
Live Wise Age Well presents:
Cathy Come Home
Tuesday 15 November (12.45) In 1966, BBC’s ‘The Wednesday Play’ series screened Ken Loach’s Cathy Come Home, a drama about a young family’s slide into homelessness and poverty. With scenes of eviction, separation and loss broadcast on mainstream ‘60s television, Loach paints a grim political picture of midsixties London. After the screening, homelessness charity Shelter plus a panel of guest speakers will share their perspective on Glasgow’s current housing landscape. This event is only open to those aged 50+ (carers and support workers welcome). Followed by a panel discussion. All tickets £1. Director Ken Loach Cast Carol White, Ray Brooks, Geoffrey Palmer, UK 1966, 1h20m, PG
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Paterson
Preview: Monday 21 November (18.05) | Friday 25 November – Thursday 8 December In the latest film from cult auteur Jim Jarmusch, Adam Driver stars as Paterson – a bus driver in the city of Paterson, New Jersey, who spends much of his time in between routes writing observational poetry about his myriad experiences. In the evenings he returns to his loving wife Laura, has dinner and takes their dog for a walk, stopping for just one beer on the way. Jarmusch captures the history and feeling of Paterson as both a place and a person, astutely conveying small obstacles and quiet triumphs whilst observing the poetry of life’s smallest details. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Jim Jarmusch Cast Adam Driver, Golshifteh Farahani, Barry Shabaka Henley, USA 2016, 1h53m, CTBC
I, Olga Hepnarová
Creepy
Já, Olga Hepnarová
Monday 21 - Wednesday 23 November Olga Hepranová first attempted to suicide at the age of 13 and was subsequently sent to a psychiatric hospital, where she was tormented relentlessly. Throughout her teens and late adolescence she suffered from anxiety and depression, and on 10 July 1973, at the age of 22, she drove a truck into a group of 25 strangers in central Prague. This bracingly powerful film delves into Hepranová’s adolescence, a troubled mind fractured by an unloving family and a cruel society. Directors Petr Kazda, Tomás Weinreb Cast Michalina Olszanska, Martin Pechlát, Klára Melísková, Czech Republic/ Poland 2016, 1h45m, subtitles, 18
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Kurîpî: Itsuwari no rinjin
Friday 25 - Monday 28 November Creepy is Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s adaptation of an award-winning mystery novel by Japenese master Yutaka Maekawa. After narrowly escaping an attempt on his life at the hands of a psychopath, detective inspector Takakura quits active service, but his desire to solve cases remains. He jumps at the chance when former colleague Nogami asks for assistance on an unsolved case involving a disappearance under mysterious circumstances. As Takakura becomes immersed in the old files, his past and present suddenly become entangled and untangling them becomes a life-threatening task. Directors Kiyoshi Kurosawa Cast Hidetoshi Nishijima, Yûko Takeuchi, Toru Baba, Japan 2016, 2h10m, subtitles, CTBC
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A United Kingdom
Friday 25 November - Thursday 8 December A United Kingdom is the extraordinary true story of one of the great forbidden romances of the 20th century. In 1947, sparks fly when jazz lovers Prince Seretse Khama (David Oyelowo) and Ruth Williams (Rosamund Pike) meet at a Missionary Society dance. Their whirlwind romance and subsequent marriage are met with fierce opposition from their families and the British and South African governments. Their interracial union causes a further stir when Seretse returns home to assume his royal duties. Amma Asante’s follow up to Belle is a rousing yet intimate romantic drama. Director Amma Asante Cast Rosamund Pike, David Oyelowo, Jack Davenport, UK 2016, 1h51m, 12A: racist language, moderate violence
United States of Love Zjednoczone stany milosci
Friday 25 - Monday 28 November Poland, 1990: society is going through fundamental change that brings with it a wealth of new possibilities. This sparks four apparently happy women of different ages to decide that it’s time to change their lives. One of Poland’s most striking contemporary filmmakers, Tomasz Wasilewski brilliantly uses muted colours and subdued production design in this compelling film to capture the women’s pain, loneliness and desire for love and intimacy. Directors Tomasz Wasilewski Cast Julia Kijowska, Magdalena Cielecka, Dorota Kolak, Poland/Sweden 2016, 1h46m, subtitles, 18
The 39 Steps
Sunday 27 November (14.25) John Buchan’s classic novel seems tailor-made for screen adaptation with its breakneck speed plotting and country spanning locations, so it’s no surprise that it has been adapted multiple times. But it’s difficult to imagine Alfred Hitchcock’s original 1935 version ever being bettered. The story is perfectly served by Hitchcock’s signature ability to combine suspense, adventure and humour. Robert Donat is brilliantly unflappable as the everyman inadvertently caught up in a deadly spy game; add in sizzling chemistry between Donat and Madeleine Carroll for ageless movie magic. All audience members will receive a free surprise book from Book Week Scotland. Director Alfred Hitchcock Cast Robert Donat, Madeleine Carroll, Lucie Mannheim, UK 1935, 1h26m, U
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Magnus
Wednesday 30 November & Thursday 1 December Magnus Carlsen is unlike any other chess player, possessing an innate creative playing ability and photographic memory from an early age. Shot over more than a decade, Benjamin Ree’s documentary follows the intense journey of the young Norwegian, remaining courtside throughout his trials and triumphs – including becoming the youngest grandmaster at age 13 and world chess champion at 22. Released to coincide with the World Chess Championships in New York, which Magnus is competing in, his film allows a peek inside the unique world of chess as seen through the eyes of a prodigal genius. Director Benjamin Ree, Norway 2016, 1h18m, subtitles, U
Road to Peace: Ancient Wisdom of the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet
Monday 28 November (18.05) In a world dominated by suffering and violence, how can we create peace in our lives? This award-winning film embarks on an extraordinary journey with one of the most celebrated humanitarians of all time, the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet. Complete with rare behind the scenes access and candid personal interviews, this fly-on-the-wall documentary offers an intimate portrait of the man behind the myth with his remarkable warmth, integrity, humility and playful sense of humour. Witness his unique gifts connecting with people on a personal level. Followed by a Q&A with director Leon Stuparich.
16 Years till Summer
Wed 30 Nov & Thu 1 Dec This BAFTA Scotland nominated documentary focuses on Uisdean, who has been released from prison after serving 16 years for killing his friend. In their home in the beautiful but remote Highlands, Uisdean cares for his dying father while embarking on a new relationship with a woman he meets, and with these touching connections the hope is he can leave his troubled old life behind. With her feature debut, director Lou McLoughlan builds on the promise of her short documentary Caring For Calum with a beautifully observed exploration of pasts and futures and the healing power of love. Followed by a Q&A with director Lou McLoughlan on Wed 30 Nov (20.45). Director Lou McLoughlan, UK 2015, 1h20m, N/C 15+
Director Leon Stuparich, UK 2012, 1h5m, N/C 5+
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Chi-Raq
Friday 2 - Thursday 8 December The bold, imaginative and urgently topical film from Spike Lee relocates the ancient Greek drama ‘Lysistrata’ to the gangland wars of modern day Chicago. After the accidental murder of a young girl in a drive-by shooting, Lysistrata (Teyonah Parris) persuades the women of two rival gangs, Spartan and Trojan, to swear off sex with their men until the fighting stops. The movement goes on to inspire young women across the city and eventually the country. Chi-Raq is a vital and searing satire on American gun violence. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Spike Lee Cast Nick Cannon, Teyonah Parris, Wesley Snipes, USA 2015, 2h7m, 15
Paths of the Soul Kang rinpoche
Friday 2 - Thursday 8 December On the world’s highest plateau, the rarefied air makes the simplest task an arduous challenge. That does nothing to deter a group of Tibetan villagers from embarking on a bowing pilgrimage that requires them to lay their bodies flat on the ground after every few steps. They will travel 1,200 miles, enduring exhaustion, extreme weather and life threatening illness. Zhang Yang’s breath-taking film was shot over a year with non-professional actors and no script and reveals why the villagers have embarked on the pilgrimage.
The Black Hen Kalo Pothi
Friday 9 - Monday 12 December Nepal’s submission for the Foreign Language Oscar, The Black Hen already picked up the Best Film at the International Film Critics’ Week at Venice Film Festival. Following a temporary ceasefire in their war-torn village in Northern Nepal, young friends Prakash and Kiran begin to raise a hen with the hope of selling her eggs. However when the hen goes missing the young duo must embark upon a journey, unaware of the fragile truce that surrounds them. Director Min Bahadur Bham Cast Khadka Raj Nepali, Sukra Raj Rokaya, Jit Bahadur Malla, Nepal/France 2015, 1h30m, subtitles, 12A: contains occasional gory images
Director Zhang Yang Cast Yang Pei, Nyima Zadui, Tsewang Dolkar, China 2015, 1h55m, subtitles, N/C 12+
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Snowden
Friday 9 - Thursday 15 December Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden in this dramatic political thriller from director Oliver Stone (Platoon, JFK, Wall Street). Based on the book ‘The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Wanted Man’, this film recounts Snowden’s 2013 meeting in a Hong Kong hotel room with filmmaker Laura Poitras and journalist Glenn Greenwald (recounted in 2014’s Citizenfour) whilst also charting his rise as an intelligence operative and his budding romance with Lindsay Mills. A powerful and probing film that explores what drove Snowden to make the decision that shook a nation. Director Oliver Stone Cast Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Shailene Woodley, Melissa Leo, USA 2016, 2h14m, CTBC
The Pass
Friday 9 - Thursday 15 December Nineteen-year-olds Jason and Ade have been preparing themselves for a lifetime in professional football for as long as they can remember. On the evening before their first big match the two of them play out their insecurities in a Romanian hotel room; mock-fighting, preparing their kit, slinging insults, and then one of them kisses the other. The ramifications of this ‘pass’ reverberate throughout their careers: in a profession where image is everything, fame and fortune comes closely tied with secrets and lies. Director Ben A. Williams Cast Russell Tovey, Arinzé Kene, Lisa McGrillis, UK 2016, 1h28m, 15
Life, Animated
Friday 9 - Sunday 11 December In his early years, autistic child Owen Suskind would only engage with Disney films. One day his father had the idea to communicate with him using dialogue from Aladdin and remarkably Owen replied with words from the film. From there, the family used Disney films as a pathway to language and a connection to the world at large. Oscar-winning director Roger Ross Williams interweaves classic Disney scenes with real footage of Owen’s life to explore a young adult who faces insurmountable odds in his move towards living independently. This film will be previewed on Tuesday 8 November as part of Access FIlm Club see p 38. Director Roger Ross Williams, USA 2016, 1h31m, N/C 12+
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Son of Joseph Le fils de Joseph
Friday 16 - Thursday 22 December Discontented teen Vincent has lived in the centre of Paris with his single mother all of his life, but has now reached the age where he needs to know the identity of his father. When he finally tracks him down however, Vincent is horrified to find him an arrogant and callous philanderer who does not even care to remember the names of his children. He vows revenge, along the way meeting his uncle, who has been rejected by his rich sibling. A smart and entertaining look at the nature of family bonds that cleverly offers a modern take on Old Testament themes. Specially commissioned programme notes will be available. Director Eugène Green Cast Victor Ezenfis, Natacha Régnier, Mathieu Amalric, France/Belgium 2016, 1h55m, subtitles, CTBC
The Eagle Huntress
Friday 16 - Thursday 22 December Using breathtaking aerial cinematography and intimate verité footage, this spellbinding documentary follows the 13-year old Aisholpan, a Mongolian nomad who is fighting to become the first female eagle hunter in twelve generations of her Kazakh family. Not only an exploration of the young girl’s astonishing pursuit of her passion in the face of very strict gender barriers, the film is also an engaging glimpse into the lives of this remote community. Narrated by Daisy Ridley, this is one of the most inspirational films of the year – addressing the universal theme of female empowerment in today’s modern world.
Donnie Darko
Friday 23 & Saturday 24 December Quietly released in America in 2001, Donnie Darko debuted at Sundance to a bemused audience and negative buzz. However, a loyal DVD audience rallied around, elevating the film into the quintessential cult classic of the new millennium and making a mega-star of lead Jake Gyllenhaal. Donnie Darko is a young high-school outcast who is struggling to seek the meaning behind his doomsday-related visions. Prepare yourself for a journey through time and space with Frank the Rabbit – just don’t question your commitment to Sparkle Motion. Director Richard Kelly Cast Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Drew Barrymore, USA 2001, 1h58m, 15
Director Otto Bell, UK/Mongolia/USA 2016, 1h27m, CTBC
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CHECK THE GATE
As GFT re-opens with our fully refurbished building, we welcome this celebration of the big screen celluloid experience. Curated by some of the nation’s finest independent programmers, journalists and film fans, who scoured Park Circus’ collection of 35mm film prints, this is a programme united by one common passion – the love of seeing film on the big screen.
Apocalypse Now
Sunday 20 November (16.00) In Joseph Conrad’s novella ‘Heart of Darkness’, a ship captain leads an expedition up the Congo River to find ivory trader Kurtz, who has established himself like a god. In Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola transplants that story to the Vietnam War – where US Army Cpt. Willard must travel into the heart of the jungle to ‘terminate’ a once celebrated colonel who has become a dangerously lethal presence within a local tribe. As Willard travels further into the depths of the Vietnamese jungle he begins to submerge himself wholly into the insanity of war, revealing the fractured psychosis of the conflict. Director Francis Ford Coppola Cast Martin Sheen, Marlon Brando, Robert Duvall, USA 1979, 2h33m, 15
The Last Picture Show
Sunday 27 November (16.40) Between World War II and the Korean conflict, the tiny West Texas town of Anarene dies a quiet death as its residents head for the big cities to make their livings and raise kids. Sonny (Timothy Bottoms) and Duane (Jeff Bridges) are best friends in their late teens who pass their time with football, cinema and girls – including Duane’s steady girlfriend Jacy (Cybil Shepherd), who is herself at the crossroads of adolescence and adulthood. An evocative and bittersweet slice-of-life masterpiece by Peter Bogdanovich, based on the novel by Larry McMurtry, the film’s black and white cinematography perfectly captures the lyrical passing of time from America’s forgotten 1950s. Director Peter Bogdanovich Cast Jeff Bridges, Timothy Bottoms, Cybil Shepherd, USA 1971, 1h58m, 15
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The War of the Worlds
Sunday 4 December (15.15) The first attempt to bring H.G. Wells’ immortal story of alien invasion to the big screen remains one of the most dazzling pieces of science fiction cinema ever. When an unidentified object crash-lands near the US town of Linda Rosa, the locals are intrigued to find out what it is. However their inquisitiveness is met with deadly force when the ship’s extra-terrestrial inhabitants mercilessly wipe out the welcoming party and shut down all technology in the surrounding area. With reports of worldwide devastation, Dr. Clayton Forrester and Sylvia Van Buren must escape the alien invaders whilst the world tries to fight back. Director Byron Haskin Cast Gene Barry, Ann Robinson, Les Tremayne, USA 1953, 1h25m, PG
In a Lonely Place
Sunday 11 December (15.00) Five years before director Nicholas Ray captured adolescent rebellion in Rebel Without a Cause, he and Humphrey Bogart defined the film noir with this turbulent and suspenseful adaptation of Dorothy B. Hughes’ novel. Bogart plays Dixon Steele, a washed up screenwriter who becomes the prime suspect in a brutal Hollywood murder. His seductive neighbour Laurel offers an alibi for him, and the two begin to fall for one another, but soon Laurel begins to have her doubts about Dixon as his inner demons and shady past begin to catch up with him. Director Nicholas Ray Cast Humphrey Bogart, Gloria Grahame, Frank Lovejoy, USA 1950, 1h31m, PG
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SOUND & VISION
The Battle of the Somme with Live Score
Sunday 13 November (13.00) | £10 full price / £8 conc The Imperial War Museum’s iconic 1916 documentary and propaganda film The Battle of the Somme by Geoffrey Malins and JB McDowell screens in this unmissable event alongside a specially commissioned score from Laura Rossi, performed live by Glasgow Studio Orchestra. This screening forms part of the Battle of the Somme Centenary Tour and Somme 100 FILM Project. The Glasgow Studio Orchestra will perform as one of 100 orchestras participating in this one-of-a-kind project. Directors Geoffrey Malins, JB McDowell, UK 1916, 1h18m, PG
Gimme Danger
Friday 18 - Thursday 24 November 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, CTBC
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One More Time With Feeling 3D
Thu 1 Dec (20.10) | £11.00 / £9.00 conc This unique cinema event is another opportunity to hear Skeleton Tree, the sixteenth studio album from Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds. Directed by Andrew Dominik (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford), the film weaves the Bad Seeds’ filmed performance with interviews and footage shot by Dominik, accompanied by Nick Cave’s narration. One More Time With Feeling is fragile, raw and a true testament to an artist trying to find his way through the darkness. Screening in 3D. Director Andrew Dominik, USA 2016, 1h53m, 15
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Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words
Friday 2 - Thursday 8 December To many people, Frank Zappa is the ultimate outsider musician – a foul-mouthed mustachioed freak that reveled in an iconoclastic view and music so distinctive that it has since become its own genre. Made up entirely of pre-existing interview footage and often bewildering live performances, Thorsten Schütte’s film is a sharply edited and energetic celebration of Zappa through his public persona that allows us to witness first-hand Zappa’s complex character. With ideas as vital as his music, his outspoken efforts to rail against censorship and champion artistic freedom still resonate today. Director Thorsten Schütte, France/Germany 2016, 1h33m, 15
The Music of Strangers
Tuesday 13 - Thursday 15 December The latest documentary from Oscar-winning director Morgan Neville (20 Feet from Stardom) follows legendary Chinese-American cellist Yo-Yo Ma as musicians from all over the world join him to form a virtuoso band who believe in the power of a global musical dialogue. Battling with the limits of art in the face of crisis, the artists know that whilst music cannot stop a bullet or feed the hungry, it can bring empathy and joy to places where they are in short supply. Director Morgan Neville, USA 2015, 1h36m, CTBC
Wunder der Schöpfung
Tuesday 29 November (20.20) Acclaimed jazz duo Herschel 36 present their brand new electronica/acoustic soundscape score commissioned by HippFest for this ground-breaking silent documentary. An extraordinary and unique document of human knowledge about the world and the universe in the 1920s literally translated as ‘Wonder of Creation’. Fifteen special effects experts and nine cameramen were involved in the production of this beautifully tinted and toned film which combines documentary scenes, historical documents, fiction elements, animation scenes and educational impact. Screening material courtesy of Munich Filmmuseum and the Goethe Institut Glasgow. Supported by Film Hub Scotland, part of BFI’s Film Audience Network. Director Hanns Walter Kornblum, Germany 1925, 1h32m, some subtitles, N/C 5+
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DID YOU MISS?
American Pastoral
Friday 9 - Tuesday 13 December Ewan McGregor makes his directorial debut with this adaptation of Philip Roth’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about the ‘perfect’ American family, torn apart by the social and political upheavals of the 1960s. McGregor plays Seymour ‘Swede’ Levov, a former high school athlete and successful businessman, whose life is recounted by former classmate Nathan and Seymour’s brother Jerry. Through their recollections and encounters, they build a complex portrait of not only one man, but an entire generation faced with the deterioration of the American dream. Director Ewan McGregor Cast Ewan McGregor, Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning, USA 2016, 1h48m, 15
Hunt for the Wilderpeople
Julieta
Friday 16 - Monday 19 December 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
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Friday 16 - Thursday 22 December Pedro Almodóvar forgoes the energetic bravura of his last release; I’m So Excited and returns to his great subject, the emotional terrain and interior lives of women. Based on three short stories by Pulitzer-winning writer Alice Munro, Julieta follows the same character at three different stages of her life. In 2015, Julieta writes a letter to her daughter Antía, explaining the secrets she has kept from her over the last 30 years but doesn’t know where to send it as they’ve been estranged since Antía left her at the age of 18. Director Pedro Almodóvar Cast Adriana Ugarte, Inma Cuesta, Michelle Jenner, Spain 2016, 1h39m, subtitles, 15
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The Heroes of Telemark
Monday 12 December (12.45 & 17.45) Billy Wilder’s vicious portrait of flawed ethics in journalism (and the public appetite for them) features Kirk Douglas in one of his most iconic roles, as the fierce amoral newspaper reporter Chuck Tatum. Run out of the big city, Tatum becomes frustrated with the small-time stories he finds at his new job, until one day he happens across the scoop of a lifetime and will do anything to keep it in the headlines. Wilder’s scathing look at our relentless appetite for sensation has only become more relevant with time.
Wed 14 (18.15) & Thu 15 Dec (12.30) Based on the true story of the Norwegian resistance and their efforts to stop the German production of an atomic bomb component during World War II. Richard Harris plays resistance fighter Knut Straud, who enlists the help of reluctant physicist Rold Pederson (Kirk Douglas) in an effort to destroy the German heavy water production plant in rural Telemark. Shot on location in Norway by director Anthony Mann, The Heroes of Telemark is daring wartime action/adventure at its most classic. Screening on 35mm.
Director Billy Wilder Cast Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling, Robert Arthur, USA 1951, 1h51m, PG
Director Anthony Mann Cast Kirk Douglas, Richard Harris, Ulla Jacobsson, UK 1965, 2h11m, U
Blue Velvet
Tuesday 13 (20.20) & Wednesday 14 December (13.00) For a film that relies on familiar Hollywood conventions (the tortured femme fatale, the hideous villain and the loss of innocence), David Lynch’s masterpiece describing a sleepy small town with the seediest underbelly is one of the most unconventional and influential films of the 1980s. An outwardly simple Hardy Boys-style tale that descends into the darkest recesses of inhumanity, voyeurism and humiliation. Now celebrating its 30th anniversary, Blue Velvet has lost none of its power to both shock and seduce. Director David Lynch Cast Isabella Rossellini, Kyle MacLachlan, Dennis Hopper, USA 1986, 2h, 18
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KIRK DOUGLAS AT 100
Ace in the Hole
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL
French cinema is celebrated UK-wide in 36 leading cinemas and especially at GFT on the occasion of the 24th French Film Festival UK (in Glasgow from 10 to 20 November with a special preview on 5 November). Audiences will have a chance to catch some of the most anticipated French titles of the year. As always: Vive le cinéma!
Cézanne et moi
Saturday 5 November (18.10) A sumptuous 19th century period drama from Danièle Thompson (Avenue Montaigne, Le code a changé) starring Guillaume Gallienne as post-impressionist painter Paul Cézanne and Guillaume Canet as Émile Zola. Thompson’s sixth feature charts the decade-long friendship and eventual fallout between Cézanne, who was born into a wealthy family but struggled to make a living as a painter, and Zola, who came from a family of more straitened circumstances but achieved fame and prosperity as a politically-engaged novelist. UK Premiere preview screening Director Danièle Thompson Cast Guillaume Gallienne, Guillaume Canet, Alice Pol, France 2016, 1h56m, subtitles, N/C 12+
La Grande Vadrouille
Thursday 10 November (18.05) One of the biggest box office hits in French film history, this classic comedy tells the story of two Frenchmen who help a RAF bomber crew (shot down over Paris) make their way through German-occupied France. The film matches French comedians Bourvil and Louis de Funès with British comic legend Terry-Thomas for one of the most endearingly knockabout takes on war. Screening from a 50th anniversary restored print. Director Gérard Oury Cast Bourvil, Louis de Funès, Terry-Thomas, France 1966, 2h12m, subtitles, PG: mild language, violence and sex references
My Men
Un début prometteur
Friday 11 November (18.10) Emma Luchini’s second full-length feature is a tragi-comedy based on the novel by her partner Nicolas Rey, featuring her father Fabrice Luchini in one of the lead roles. Comedian Manu Payet plays against type as the alcoholic, drug-taking Martin. Chronically disillusioned with his life, Martin takes up residence in a mobile home parked in the garden of his romanticist father and his lovelorn younger brother. An irresistible and touching story that carefully balances humour, melancholy and madness. This screening is followed by a Q&A with director Emma Luchini. Director Emma Luchini Cast Fabrice Luchini, Manu Payet, Zacharie Chasseriaud, France 2015, 1h30m, subtitles, N/C 15+
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In Bed With Victoria Victoria
Saturday 12 November (16.00) Victoria is a thirty-something divorced lawyer on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Balancing a demanding working life with raising two daughters, whilst her ex-husband paints her as a harlot on his blog. Victoria’s life is further complicated when she reconnects with two figures from her past; a former drug dealer who wants to work for her and a friend who needs her to defend him in a bizarre case. A quirky, funny and memorable film. Director Justine Triet Cast Virginie Efira, Vincent Lacoste, Melvil Poupaud, France 2016, 1h37m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Kill the Referee À mort l’arbitre!
Saturday 12 November (17.40) In one of his blackest of black comedies, Jean-Pierre Mocky turns a satirical eye on football hooliganism, focussing on fans that are ready to commit random acts of violence the moment something goes wrong for ‘their’ team. Starring ‘60s pop singer Eddy Mitchell as Maurice Bruno, a referee who is hunted by a deranged supporter (Michel Serrault) after blowing the whistle on a player. This film has become a cult classic whilst being firmly routed in ugly reality. Introduced by James Steel. Screening on 35mm. Director Jean-Pierre Mocky Cast Michel Serrault, Carole Laure, Eddy Mitchell, France 1984, 1h22m, subtitles N/C 15+
The Battle of the Rails La bataille du rail
Sunday 13 November (15.00) René Clément tells the courageous story of French railroad workers who were part of an organised resistance during the German WWII occupation, risking their lives to sabotage Nazi trains. Shown at the 1946 Cannes Film Festival, the film won the Prix International du Jury and Clément won Best Director. Based on real life events and made soon after the war had finished, it remains one of the most vivid and accurate accounts of the conflict. Introduced by James Steel, chairperson of the French Film Festival. Director René Clément Cast Jean Clarieux, Jacques Desagneaux, Marcel Barnault, France 1946, 1h27m, subtitles, N/C 12+
Marseille
Sunday 13 November (19.45) Under pressure from his estranged brother Joseph, Paolo (Kad Merad) leaves his calm and harmonious life in Canada to return to Marseille to be by his dying father’s bedside. Leaving with his son, Paolo is determined not to linger in Marseille for any longer than is necessary. However when he is reminded of his family’s affection and the joyful solidarity of Marseille folk, not to mention an encounter with a young woman, his love of the city is slowly rekindled. Screening to mark the 10th anniversary of Glasgow’s twinning with Marseille. Director Kad Merad Cast Kad Merad, Patrick Bosso, Venantino Venantini, France 2016, 1h39m, subtitles, N/C 12+
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Dark Inclusion Diamant noir
Monday 14 November (20.00) After his father’s death, diamond dealer Pier Ulmann (Neils Schneider) returns to his family home in Antwerp. He vows vengeance against the relatives who abandoned him and returns to business with an elaborate robbery in mind. A visually striking heist thriller with a terrific cast, Dark Inclusion explores the moral complexities that plague criminal minds. Arthur Harari’s debut feature is a stylish and assured revenge thriller, with a standout performance by Schneider. This screening is followed by a Q&A with director Arthur Harari. Director Arthur Harari Cast Niels Schneider, August Diehl, Hafed Benotman, France 2016, 1h55m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Journey Through French Cinema Voyage à travers le cinéma français
Wednesday 16 November (18.45) Since the 1970s, director Bertrand Tavernier has been making world-renowned cinema, drawing upon a range of influences including Renoir, Vigo, Godard and Truffaut. With this documentary, Tavernier presents a study that is profound, insightful, entertaining and deeply personal. Vying for position as one of the very greatest accounts of French cinema’s history, he delves deep into the past, using archive footage and rare interviews. Tavernier’s personal connections and insider knowledge make this film a must-see for all cinema lovers. Introduced by James Steel. Director Bertrand Tavernier, France 2016, 3h15m, subtitles, N/C 15+
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Thanks Boss! Merci patron!
Tuesday 15 November (18.30) Thanks Boss! targets fashion powerhouse LVMH (owned by French magnate Bernard Arnault), a multinational company that owns such luxury brands as Dior, Louis Vuitton and Marc Jacobs. Journalist turned director, François Ruffin, targets the questionable business practices of billionaire boss Arnault in this provocative documentary. Teaming up with two former LVMH factory workers, the trio set out to seek compensation and capture the whole thing on film… Director François Ruffin, France 2016, 1h23m, subtitles, N/C 12+
The First, the Last
Les premiers, les derniers
Friday 18 November (18.10) Taking influence from western and gothic thrillers, this darkly absurd noir is set amidst the industrial ruins of a vast flatland. Cochise and Gilou (Albert Dupontel and director Bouli Lanners) are a pair of grizzly bounty hunters, hired by a wealthy stranger to obtain a phone currently in the possession of a young homeless couple. In this singular universe, everyone (including a rugged undertaker played by Max von Sydow) is adrift in an ominous and unnerving land. This screening is followed by a Q&A with actor and director Bouli Lanners. Director Bouli Lanners Cast Albert Dupontel, Bouli Lanners, Max Von Sydow, France/Belgium 2016, 1h38m, subtitles, N/C 18+
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The Red Turtle La tortue rouge
From the Land of the Moon Mal de pierres
Saturday 19 November (14.30) The latest film from acclaimed Japanese animation giant Studio Ghibli is their first international co-production. Oscar winning Dutch animator Michaël Dudok de Wit (Father and Daughter) contributes his talents to this enchanting story of a castaway who befriends an enormous sea turtle. Achieving its touching storytelling completely wordlessly, the film explores the freedom of isolation and emotion of companionship in the classic style of Ghibli’s finest work.
Saturday 19 November (18.10) A handsomely crafted adaptation of Italian author Milena Agus’ novel about oppressed female desire. Set just after WWII, Marion Cotillard plays a sensual and independent woman who finds herself locked in a loveless marriage. When she meets a dashing veteran who rekindles the passion inside of her, they vow to run away together. A classic romance filled with conviction, bolstered by stellar performances from Cotillard and co-star Louis Garrel.
Director Michaël Dudok de Wit, France/Belgium/Japan 2016, 1h20m, N/C 8+
Director Nicole Garcia Cast Marion Cotillard, Louis Garrel, Alex Brendemühl, France 2016, 1h56m, subtitles, N/C 15+
The Death of Louis XIV La mort de Louis XIV
First Growth Premiers crus
Sunday 20 November (14.20) When he returns from a hunting trip one day, King Louis XIV feels a pain in his leg. Two weeks later, he is on his deathbed in Versailles surrounded by relatives. Jean-Pierre Léaud (The 400 Blows) portrays the final, painful days of the Sun King in Albert Serra’s fourth feature. A neo-classical period film presenting a darkly witty evocation of 18th century French aristocracy reminiscent of Visconti and Rossellini, The Death of Louis XIV is a strange and haunting film with an exceptional central performance from Léaud.
Sunday 20 November (19.30) Bursting with sumptuous cinematography depicting the vineyards of Burgundy, an assured cast and a feel-good script, First Growth is classic French filmmaking about the art of making wine. Charlie, the son of a wine grower, spurned the family business to become a renowned Parisian oenologist. However, when the family’s enterprise begins to fail Charlie returns to help, struggling with temperamental weather, delicate grapes and the doubts of his father. This screening is followed by a Q&A with director Jérôme Le Maire.
Director Albert Serra Cast Jean-Pierre Léaud, Patrick d’Assumçao, Marc Susini, France 2016, 1h55m, subtitles, N/C 18+
Director Jérôme Le Maire Cast Jalil Lespert, Gérard Lanvin, Alice Taglioni, France 2015, 1h37m, subtitles, N/C 12+
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CULT CLASSICS
Akira
Friday 11 November (23.00) Regarded by many as a landmark production for Japan, Akira’s critical acclaim and box office success paved the way for the growth of anime culture across the world. 2030 Neo-Tokyo, which has sprung from the ruins of World War III, is experiencing a prolonged period of civil unrest. When Tetsuo, a young biker with telekinetic powers, is abducted by the military and used as an unwitting guinea pig for top-secret experiments, it falls to his best friend Kaneda to rescue him before it’s too late. A phenomenal achievement in animation that has rightly become a classic of Japanese cinema.
Labyrinth
Friday 11 November (23.15) Initially a box office flop, Labyrinth has since gained a cult following and is now considered an ‘80s classic. Fed up of babysitting for her baby brother Toby, 16-year-old Sarah (Jennifer Connelly) secretly wishes that he would just disappear. Her wish comes true when goblins from her fantasy world kidnap the boy. The Goblin King, Jareth (David Bowie) grants her just 13 hours to solve the labyrinth and rescue her brother before he turns into a goblin. Director Jim Henson Cast Jennifer Connelly, David Bowie, Toby Froud, UK/USA 1986, 1h38m, U
Director Katsuhiro Ôtomo Cast Mitsuo Iwata, Nozomu Sasaki, Mami Koyama, Japan 1988, 2h4m, subtitles, 15
Your Name Kimi no na wa
Friday 25 November (23.00) 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 earlier this 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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Vampire’s Kiss
Friday 25 November (23.15) ‘I’m a vampire! I’m a vampire!’ Nicolas Cage is known for giving outrageous performances, but nothing he has ever done has quite managed to top the performance he gives in the 1988 black comedy Vampire’s Kiss. He plays Peter Loew, a womanizing New York literary agent who is bitten on the neck after a one-night stand and becomes convinced he is turning into a blood-sucking creature of the night. With maniacal mood swings, fake plastic fangs and an increasingly loose grip on reality; Peter forces himself into becoming a true creature of the night. Screening on 35mm. Director Robert Bierman Cast Nicolas Cage, Maria Conchita Alonso, Jennifer Beals, USA 1988, 1h39m, 18
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Trading Places
Friday 9 December (23.00) A wealthy investor and a wily street con artist find their positions reversed as part of a bet by two callous millionaires. The morally bankrupt Duke brothers are curious as to what might happen in the battle of heredity versus environment. They arrange for impoverished street hustler Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) to be placed in the lap of luxury and reduce aristocratic yuppie Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd) to poverty and disgrace. Trading Places is a deft social satire with engaging performances from Aykroyd and Murphy.
Gremlins
Friday 9 December (23.15) An antidote to the artificial sweetness of the traditional Christmas movie, Gremlins tells the story of an inventor who inadvertently causes chaos when he purchases a cute creature for his son. When three vital instructions are ignored, a pack of mischievous gremlins are released on the town, causing mayhem and destruction. Director Joe Dante Cast Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, Hoyt Axton, USA 1984, 1h46m 12A: Contains moderate violence and fantasy horror
Director John Landis Cast Eddie Murphy, Dan Aykroyd, Ralph Bellamy, USA 1983, 1h56m, 15
Die Hard
Friday 23 December (23.00) One of the greatest action movies ever made opens with a festive setting as NYPD officer John McClane (Bruce Willis in his prime) takes on Alan Rickman’s archetypal European villain, Hans Gruber. When McClane goes to the Christmas party at his estranged wife’s office ‘by mistake’, he finds himself embroiled in an action-packed rescue mission to save the hostages being held by Gruber as he attempts to steal 600 million dollars. Yippee-ki-yay! Director John McTiernan Cast Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman, Bonnie Bedelia, USA 1988, 2h7m, 15
Bad Santa
Friday 23 December (23.15) Billy Bob Thornton has never been better: he stars as the world’s worst department store Santa – drunk on the job, verbally abusive to kids and trying to get laid while his dwarf assistant plans their next robbery. Directed by Ghost World helmer Terry Zwigoff, and with additional script duties by the Coen Brothers, Bad Santa has been dubbed ‘The Big Lebowski of festive films’. An absolute Christmas cracker. Director Terry Zwigoff Cast Billy Bob Thornton, Tony Cox, Brett Kelly, USA 2013, 1h31m, 15
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BLACK STAR
Black Star is a celebration of the range, versatility and power of black actors on film and TV, taking place in cinemas at BFI Southbank and nationwide, on DVD and on BFI Player. Black Star provides a meaningful and high-profile platform for audiences to explore a galaxy of black actors through history, spotlighting the creativity and charisma of trailblazing performers, and celebrating the transatlantic wave of black British talent currently breaking across our screens. #BFIBlackstar
Boyz n the Hood
Thursday 3 (20.15) & Thursday 10 November (13.15) Twenty-five years on from initial release, John Singleton’s seminal feature film debut - which he wrote and directed at the age of 23 - feels as urgent and relevant now as it did in 1991. Set against the backdrop of early ‘80s South Central L.A., Boyz n the Hood chronicles the trials and tribulations of three young African-American males, as they navigate life in a community ravaged by drug addiction, poverty, crime, gangs and police harassment. A hard-hitting and powerful examination of race, relationships, violence and future prospects in urban America. New Digital Restoration The special Boyz n the Hood screening, Thu 3 Nov, will be introduced by a special MOBO guest. Director John Singleton Cast Cuba Gooding Jr., Laurence Fishburne, Ice Cube, USA 1991, 1h52m, 15
To Sleep with Anger
Wednesday 9 November (15.00 & 20.35) Harry Mention (Danny Glover) is a soft-spoken and enigmatic drifter from the south who comes to stay at an old acquaintance’s residence in South Central L.A. Although his manner is charming at first, his presence begins to sour as he outstays his welcome and slowly begins to divide the family. Written and directed by Charles Burnett (Killer of Sheep) and with a remarkably haunting performance from Glover, To Sleep With Anger remains one of the finest films about the black experience in modern America. Director Charles Burnett Cast Danny Glover, Paul Butler, DeVaughn Nixon, USA 1990, 1h42m, 12
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In the Heat of the Night
Friday 18 - Sunday 20 November Sidney Poitier is devastatingly cool and charismatic as Virgil Tibbs, an African-American police detective asked to investigate a murder in a racially hostile southern town. When Tibbs first arrives in town to visit his mother, he is arrested by police simply for being black. However, when the police learn of his profession, he is teamed with racist redneck sheriff Gillespie (Rod Steiger) to help with a murder investigation. In the Heat of the Night is an atmospheric and insightful murder mystery, with a riveting relationship at its heart that reflects the era’s strained race relations. New Digital Restoration Director Norman Jewison Cast Sidney Poitier, Rod Steiger, Warren Oates, USA 1967, 1h49m, 12A: moderate threat, sex references, racist language
The Proud Valley
Sunday 20 November (19.45) This newly remastered Ealing comedy was filmed on location in the heart of a Welsh mining village, and stars American singer, actor and civil rights activist Paul Robeson. Robeson plays David Goliath, a drifter from the American South who arrives in pre-WWII Wales looking for work and wins the locals’ respect through his singing. Forming a bond with the miners, Goliath becomes something of a hero but is eventually called upon to make the ultimate sacrifice when a pit disaster threatens. A unique depiction of screen blackness, with the multi-faceted and politically active Goliath remaining Robeson’s favourite screen role. Screening on 35mm.
Car Wash
Sunday 4 December (17.45) Michael Schultz’s cult comedy focuses on a day-in-the-life of a group of close-knit employees working at a car wash in Los Angeles. In one day, the workers encounter all manner of eccentric customers including a smooth-talking preacher (Richard Pryor), a wacky cab driver and an ex-convict. As the employees deal with the rag-tag group of customers, some find love while others are just happy to get through another shift. Car Wash is a highly enjoyable comedy that cleverly pushed the boundaries of political correctness. Screening on 35mm. Director Michael Schultz Cast Richard Pryor, Franklyn Ajaye, Antonio Fargas, USA 1976, 1h32m, PG
Director Pen Tennyson Cast Paul Robeson, Edward Chapman, Simon Lack, UK 1940, 1h16m, PG
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Wild Style
Wednesday 7 December (18.40) Nothing comes close to capturing the early days of hip-hop and graffiti art like Charlie Ahearn’s 1983 cult classic. Starring legendary New York graffiti artist Lee Quinones as Zoro, New York’s hottest new talent, the plot shows how he is straining to balance his personal life with his passion for spray-can art. However, the plot is unimportant compared to the feeling of time and place Wild Style conveys through shots of subways, breakdancing, freestyle MCing, and appearances from hip-hop luminaries Fab 5 Freddy, The Cold Crush Brothers and even Grandmaster Flash. Director Charlie Ahearn Cast ‘Lee’ George Quinones, Lady Pink, Fab 5 Freddy, USA 1983, 1h22m, 15
Sembène!
Thu 17 Nov (18.100) In 1952, Ousmane Sembène, a dockworker and school dropout from Senegal, began dreaming an impossible dream: to become a storyteller for a new Africa. This documentary tells the true story of the ‘father of African cinema’, the self-taught filmmaker who fought a monumental, 50-year-long battle to give African stories to Africans. Using rare archival footage and more than 100 hours of exclusive material, Sembène! follows an ordinary man who transformed himself into a fearless spokesperson for the marginalised, and became a hero to millions. Followed by a Q&A with co-director Jason Silverman. The programme is coordinated by Aya Distribution with the support of the BFI, awarding funds from The National Lottery.
Moolaadé
Thu 24 Nov (17.50) Collé Gallo Ardo Sy, a circumcised woman, has managed to help her only daughter escape from the ritual of ‘purification’ organised every seven years. Now that the next ritual is about to happen, she starts a conflict that tears her village apart. Moolaadé is a moving and life-affirming film with the power to change long-held attitudes, a film regarded as Sembène’s masterpiece, made when he was already 81-years-old. Screening on 35mm. Director Ousmane Sembène Cast Fatoumata Coulibaly, Maimouna Hélène Diarra, Salimata Traoré, Senegal 2004, 2h4m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Director Samba Gadjigo,Jason Silverman, Senegal/USA 2015, 1h29m, some subtitles, 12A: moderate violence, references to female genital mutilation
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Eui-ro-gong-dan
Wednesday 23 November (18.10) Exploring issues of unionisation and using the documentary form to present issues of exploitation and marginalisation within South Korea’s post-war period of industrialisation, Factory Complex is a stunning essay film that was awarded the Silver Lion at the 56th Venice Biennale. Director Ima Heung-soon combines historical insight with experimental and autobiographical elements to provide an insight into the plight of female work, uniquely utilising a multitude of voices to complicate the standard discourse around labour issues in South Korea. Director Ima Heung-soon, South Korea 2014, 1h20m, subtitles, N/C 15+
Shifted Horizon – The Films of Seoungho Cho
Tuesday 22 November (20.40) Seoungho Cho was born in Pusan, South Korea in 1959 and studied at both Korea and New York Universities. He has been creating lyrical and visually striking video works for three decades, using a unique confluence of complex image processing and sound collage to reflect upon urban landscapes and create dreamlike abstractions. This programme, developed by LKFF and LUX, presents a selection of Cho’s work spanning from the early nineties through to today and shows the artist’s unique understanding of the cost of nature, urban living, landscape and language. Director Seoungho Cho, South Korea 1992 – 2016, 1h20m, N/C 15+
Dong-Ju: The Portrait of a Poet
Thursday 24 November (20.35) A bold black and white biopic of Lee Dong-ju, a young poet whose voice channeled the feelings of a generation in Korea when the country was a subject of the Japanese Colonial Empire. Kang Ha-neul features as the artist, whose lyrical verses had him arrested and tortured by the Japanese, while Park Jung-min shines as his headstrong resistance fighter friend. Director Lee Joon-ik brings a deft and sensitive touch to writer Shin Yeon-shcik’s powerful screenplay in a story that resonates across South Korea and beyond. Director Lee Joon-ik Cast Kang Ha-neul, Park Jung-min, Choi Moon, South Korea 2016, 1h50m, subtitles, N/C 12+
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LONDON KOREAN FILM FESTIVAL
Factory Complex
HOLLYWOOD DREAMS OF SCOTLAND Glasgow Film Festival celebrates St. Andrew’s Day with a trio of pop-up screenings in the beautiful and iconic Mackintosh Queens Cross.
Annie Laurie
Saturday 26 November (16.30) | £12 / £10 conc / £6 child This classic Hollywood tale of Highland romance casts the wonderful Lillian Gish as a plucky young woman who comes between the warring Campbell and MacDonald clans. Although Annie Laurie (Gish) and her friend Enid first view the MacDonald clan as savages, they come to love men from the clan after chance encounters, sending ripples throughout their communities. This screening will be accompanied with a live score by fiddle player Shona Mooney and her band, originally commissioned by Hippodrome Festival of Silent Cinema. Director John S Robertson Cast Lillian Gish, Norman Kerry, Creighton Hale, UK 1927, 1h30m, U
Brave
Sat 26 Nov (12.00) | All tickets £5.50 Determined to carve her own path in life, Princess Merida defies an age-old custom sacred to the uproarious lords of the land. But her actions inadvertently unleash chaos and fury in the kingdom, and when she turns to an eccentric old Wise Woman for help, she is granted an ill-fated wish. The ensuing peril forces Merida to discover the meaning of true bravery in order to undo a beastly curse before it’s too late. Preceded by an art workshop where you’ll design and make your own Scottish shield, plus learn some Highland dance moves like Merida! Directors Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman, Steve Purcell Cast Kelly Macdonald, Billy Connolly, Emma Thompson, USA 2012, 1h33m, PG
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Highlander
Sat 26 Nov (16.30) | £12 / £10 conc Sean Connery as a foppish Spaniard, Christopher Lambert as a French-accented Scotsman and a pulsating Queen score form the abiding memories of this classic 1980s fantasy adventure. Lambert’s immortal Connor MacLeod battles through the centuries with the help of Connery’s Ramirez, towards a showdown with The Kurgan in modern day New York. Revel once again in the glorious Highland locations, magical songs and oodles of head-lopping action. Preceded by a live performance. There can be only one Freddie Mercury tribute artist. And beware! There may be a claymore fight breaking out… Director Russell Mulcahy Cast Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery, Clancy Brown, UK 1986, 1h51m, 15
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Blueprint: Scottish Independent Shorts
Thursday 15 December (20.30) Our quarterly indie short film night returns, this time expanding into Cinema 2 for a Christmas special. Blueprint celebrates the Scottish talent that exists in the cracks of the film industry – where people make films simply because of their love of cinema. At the time of going to press, the final selection has yet to be made, but expect the weird, wonderful and passionate: from innovative and thoughtful drama to outrageous comedy and homemade special effects. Blueprint always sells out, so book early to avoid disappointment! Blueprint programmer Hans Lucas will conduct a short Q&A with some of the filmmakers after the screening. All tickets £5.50. Director Various, 2015-16, 1h30m, N/C 15+
Sunday 6 November (19.00) Inspired by visionary filmmaker Derek Jarman, the Jarman Award recognises and supports artists working with moving image and celebrates the spirit of experimentation, imagination and innovation in the work of artist filmmakers. This year’s shortlist presents a riotous explosion of colour, sound, skill and distinctive imagery. Be shocked, startled and entertained by the recent works from Sophia Al Maria, Cécile B. Evans, Shona Illingworth, Mikhail Karikis, Rachel Maclean and Heather Phillipson. This screening will be followed by a Q&A with nominated artist Rachel Maclean. Director Various, UK 2014/15, 1h47m, N/C 15+
LUX Scotland Presents:
Woman Tiger, Woman Dove
Sunday 4 December (17.30) As part of the 50th anniversary celebrations of LUX’s historical predecessor – the London Film-Makers’ Co-op – LUX Scotland presents a programme of films dedicated to the women filmmakers of this artist-led, cooperative organisation. Produced against a backdrop of growing feminist consciousness, these works built on the methods, processes and ethos associated with the Co-op to explore the political and activist potential of women’s experimental film. This programme is curated by Maud Jacquin and will be introduced by writer, artist and curator, Lucy Reynolds. Directors Various, UK 1966 – 2016, 1h25m, N/C 15+
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CROSSING THE LINE
Jarman Award 2016 Touring Programme
HAVANA GLASGOW FILM FESTIVAL
Havana and Glasgow were officially twinned in 2002, and whilst different in many ways, the cities share a love of cinema. For the 2nd year Havana Glasgow Film Festival brings the best of Cuban cinema to Glasgow with two special screenings and Q&As at the GFT. You don’t need a passport to experience Cuba. For further details please check the website www.hgfilmfest.com Facebook: Glasgow/Havana Film Festival Twitter: @hgfilmfest. This event has been made possible by the support of ICAIC the Cuban Film Institute, Glasgow City Council, and GSA Fine Art Dept. amongst others and a volunteer team of organisers.
Viva
Tuesday 15 November (17.50) When Jesus, a hair and make up artist for a troupe of drag performers in Havana, realises his dream of performing onstage, he is shocked by the surprise appearance of his estranged father in the audience. Dismayed with his son’s way of life, the former boxer clashes with Jesus as the two men struggle to understand one another’s opposing expectations and become a family again. This screening is followed by a Q&A with visiting filmmakers. Director Paddy Breathnach Cast Héctor Medina, Jorge Martinez, Luis Alberto García, Cuba/Ireland 2015, 1h38m, subtitles, 15
Dancing with Margot Bailando con Margot
Thursday 17 November (20.10) Set in 1950s Havana, Bailando con Margot follows the story of a wealthy widow who gets caught up in the investigation over the theft of a priceless painting. Margot must prove her innocence whilst concealing the secrets of her past when a detective comes to visit. Spanning genres from neo-noir to melodrama and musicals, this visually stunning film gloriously captures different eras of Havana’s history. This screening is followed by a Q&A with director Arturo Santana. Director Arturo Santana Cast Mirtha Ibarra, Edwin Fernández, Yenisse Soria, Cuba 2015, 1h45m, subtitles, N/C 15+
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La La Land
From Friday 13 January Book Now: Damien Chazelle’s award-winning musical masterpiece starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. The director of Whiplash returns with the story of a jazz pianist who falls for an aspiring actress underneath the twinkling neon light of Los Angeles. A dizzyingly heartfelt romance 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
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GFT, together with 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. 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: Life, Animated
Tuesday 8 November (18.00) At three years old, a chatty, energetic boy named Owen stopped speaking. He became locked in a world with no apparent way out. Four years later, the only stimuli that engaged Owen were Disney films. Life, Animated tells the remarkable story of how Owen found a pathway to language, empathy and a structure for making sense of the world. Owen rises to meet the challenges of adulthood in this moving testament to the many ways in which stories can help us make sense of life’s complexities. Followed by a Q&A with Jenny Paterson, director of The National Autistic Society for Scotland.
Access Film Club: National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
Tuesday 13 December (18.00) The third instalment of the National Lampoon Vacation film series (written by John Hughes) stars Chevy Chase and Beverly D’Angelo as the Griswolds, a family who can’t help but find trouble around every corner. This year it’s their turn to invite numerous dysfunctional relatives to the household to celebrate Christmas. Festive hijinks ensue! Director Jeremiah S. Chechik Cast Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo, Randy Quaid, USA 1998, 1h33m, PG
Director Roger Ross Williams, USA 2015, 1h31m, N/C 12+
Elstree 1976
Tuesday 8 November (20.20) Elstree 1976 is a documentary looking at the lives of the people behind the masks and beneath the helmets in the original Star Wars movie. Over the summer of 1976, a wide array of North American and British actors, along with an inexhaustible supply of film extras, donned crazy costumes and headgear to populate George Lucas’s universe. Few of them understood what the film even was, llet alone the global cultural impact it would go on to have. Filmmaker Jon Spira has tracked a cross section of these people down and explored the bizarre community they have formed, to find out what it means to exist in the shadow of such a phenomenon. Followed by Q&A with director Jon Spira and Angus Machines, one of the subjects of the film who appears as ‘Gold Leader’ in Star Wars: A New Hope. Director Jon Spira, USA 2015, 1h37m, 12
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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
Visible Cinema: RCS Curates: Visible Cinema Shorts
Monday 21 November (18.20) This month, Visible Cinema is being taken over by a group of Deaf artists. Join us for the first of four events co-programmed by GFT and the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland’s BA Performance students. They will screen selected shorts and host a lively discussion around them. Dawn of the Deaf When a strange sound wipes out the hearing population, a small group of Deaf people must band together to survive. Based on an original idea by Jed Shepard. Thanks to Shadowhouse LTD. Scottish Premiere. Director Rob Savage, UK 2016, 12m, N/C 15+
Deafness The police interrogation of a Deaf mute boy, next door to the boarding school he attends in Kiev, turns into a shocking experience in real-time. Thanks to Arthouse Traffic. Director Myroslav Slaboshpytskyi, Ukraine 2010, 10m, N/C 15+
Visible Cinema: It’s a Wonderful Life
Thursday 15 December (18.00) For the very first time, enjoy Frank Capra’s 1946 Christmas classic It’s a Wonderful Life enhanced by captions. Follow the story of ordinary man, George Bailey (James Stewart) who comes to wish he had never been born. But with the help of a clumsy angel (Henry Travers) George realises the difference he has made to the people around him, learning lessons of love, loyalty and what it means to lead a wonderful life. Director Frank Capra Cast James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, USA 1946, 2h10m, U
GFT supports Captioning Awareness Week 14-19 November #CAPaware
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CHRISTMAS AT GFT
It’s a Wonderful Life
Friday 9 - Saturday 24 December Frank Capra’s 1946 Christmas classic follows the tribulations of small town everyman George Bailey (James Stewart), who, at the end of his luck and deep in debt, contemplates suicide one snowy, bleak Christmas Eve. But when George wishes that he had never been born, his guardian angel Clarence (Henry Travers) takes a trip from the heavens to persuade him otherwise. After a nightmarish journey through an alternative Bedford Falls, George realizes the difference he has made to the people around him, learning lessons of love, loyalty and what it means to lead a wonderful life. Director Frank Capra Cast James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, USA 1946, 2h10m, U
The Bishop’s Wife
Saturda 17 - Friday 23 December Raising funds for a new cathedral, Bishop Henry Brougham has his prayers for divine guidance answered in the form of a guardian angel named Dudley. When Dudley assumes the identity of a guest in their home over Christmas, Brougham’s life is turned upside down, as he believes the charming angel is developing an interest in his wife Julia. Director Henry Koster Cast Cary Grant, Loretta Young, David Niven, USA 1947, 1h39m, U
Calamity Jane Sing-a-long
Sunday 11 December (16.20) Join us for a sing-a-long version of this Oscarwinning classic, starring Doris Day as the titular gun-toting, whip-cracking Wild West whirlwind. Experience the much-loved tale of Calamity Jane afresh, as she rolls in on the Deadwood Stage to feud, fight and fall head over heels for Howard Keel’s Wild Bill Hickok. With effervescent Technicolor scenery and joyous musical numbers, this is the perfect chance to discover (or rediscover) a cinematic classic and belt out your favourite musical numbers. Director David Butler Cast Doris Day, Howard Keel, Allyn Ann McLerie, USA 1953, 1h41m, U
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The Muppet Christmas Carol
Thursday 22 (13.45) & Friday 23 December (16.00) Join the Muppets as they tell their hilarious version of an old, bitter miser’s redemption on Christmas Eve. A merry, magical version of Charles Dickens’ festive tale complete with classic Muppets banter, brilliant songs, and Michael Caine as Ebenezer Scrooge. A perfect family film for the festive season. Director Jim Henson Cast Michael Caine, The Muppets, USA 1992, 1h25m, U
Elf
Monday 19 - Friday 23 December The best way to spread Christmas cheer is singing loud for all to hear! Will Ferrell stars as Buddy, a regular-sized man who was raised as an elf by Santa Claus (Edward Asner). When the news is finally broken to Buddy that he’s not a real elf, he decides to go to New York City in search of his biological family. Cue a highly entertaining ‘fish out of water’ romp with seasonal bells on. Director Jon Favreau Cast Will Ferrell, James Caan, Zooey Deschanel, USA/Germany 2003, 1h33m, PG
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Gremlins
Sunday 11 December (19.45) An antidote to the artificial sweetness of the traditional Christmas movie, Gremlins tells the story of an inventor who inadvertently causes chaos when he purchases a cute creature for his son. When three vital instructions are ignored, a pack of mischievous gremlins are released on the town, causing mayhem and destruction. Director Joe Dante Cast Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, Hoyt Axton, USA 1984, 1h46m 12A: Contains moderate violence and fantasy horror
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Finding Dory 3D
U - infrequent mild threat Sat 5 November 11.30am (1h33m) Dory, a wide-eyed, blue tang fish, suffers from memory loss. However, the one thing that she can remember is that, somehow, when she was very young, she became separated from her parents. With help from Nemo and Marlin, Dory sets out on an epic adventure to find them again.
The Addams Family
PG - contains mild comic violence and horror Sat 13 November 11.30am (1h35m) On the 25th anniversary of the release of the film, come and see how the Addams Family cope when a con artist plans to have them evicted from their mansion. When Gomez finally realizes that he’s being swindled he knows that he must launch a challenge to reclaim the family home.
The BFG
PG - mild threat Sat 19 November 11.30am (1h57m) When ten-year-old Sophie meets the Big Friendly Giant, she finds herself in a huge adventure. Scared at first, she learns that this giant is both gentle and charming. They soon realise that they need to work together to convince Queen Victoria to get rid of the bad giants once and for all.
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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.
Peter Pan
U - contains no material likely to offend or harm Sat 26 Nov 11.30am (1h17m) For 2016, the Book Week Scotland team have been considering the best screen adaptations from texts. As part of the activities, we’re screening the fabulous Disney Classic, Peter Pan. Join the JM Barrie characters as the Darling family children travel with Peter Pan to Never Never Land where he must vanquish the evil pirate, Captain Hook.
Pete’s Dragon
PG - mild bad language Sat 3 December 11.30am (1h43m) A woodcarver delights local children with stories of a mysterious dragon who lives nearby. When Grace, his daughter, meets Pete, a young orphan, who claims to live in the woods with a giant, friendly dragon, she decides to find out whether there could be some truth in her father’s tall tales after all.
Kubo and the Two Strings
PG - mild fantasy violence, scary scenes Sat 10 December 11.30am (1h42m) When Kubo accidentally summons a vengeful spirit from the past he must join forces with his friends Monkey and Beetle to unlock a secret legacy. Armed with a magical instrument Kubo battles the Moon King in order to save his family and to solve the mystery surrounding his father.
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Scrooge
U - contains very mild horror Sat 17 December 11.30am (1h37m) As part of our festive offering we have a special screening of this wonderful family Christmas Classic. Scrooge (Alastair Sim), takes to his bed after his door-knocker turns into the face of his dead partner, Jacob Marley, only to be visited by three spirits of Christmas, who show him the error of his miserly ways.
The Muppet Christmas Carol
U - contains mild scary scenes Sat 24 December 11.30am (1h25m) Join the Muppet characters as they tell their hilarious version of an old, bitter miser’s redemption on Christmas Eve. A merry, magical version of Charles Dickens’ classic tale.
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.
Finding Dory
U - infrequent mild threat Sat 5 November 12.00 noon (1h33m) Dory, a wide-eyed, blue tang fish, suffers from memory loss. However, the one thing that she can remember is that, somehow, when she was very young, she became separated from her parents. With help from Nemo and Marlin, Dory sets out on an epic adventure to find them again.
Pete’s Dragon
PG - mild threat Sat 3 December 12.00 noon (1h43m) A woodcarver delights local children with stories of a mysterious dragon who lives nearby. When Grace, his daughter, meets Pete, a young orphan, who claims to live in the woods with a giant, friendly dragon, she decides to find out whether there could be some truth in her father’s tall tales after all. 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.
You’ve Been Trumped Too p10 Tue 8 Nov (20.45)
A United Kingdom p14 Tuesday 29 Nov (17.55)
Paths of the Soul p16
Arrival p11
Tuesday 6 Dec (20.30)
Tue 15 Nov (20.25)
I, Olga Hepnarová p13 Tue 22 Nov (20.10)
Snowden p17
Tuesday 13 Dec (20.05)
The Bishop’s Wife p40 Tuesday 20 Dec (18.15)
Glasgore! Horror/Cult Film Discussion Group
Tuesday 6 December (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 Education 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 14 December (18.30) Free, GFT Project room This group meets on the second Wednesday of each month in the GFT Education 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: No Man’s Land
Thursday 15 December (18.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Following their hit run on Broadway, Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart return to the West End stage in Harold Pinter’s No Man’s Land, broadcast live to cinemas from Wyndham’s Theatre, London. One summer’s evening, two ageing writers, Hirst and Spooner, meet in a Hampstead pub and continue their drinking into the night at Hirst’s stately house nearby. As the pair become increasingly inebriated, and their stories increasingly unbelievable, the lively conversation soon turns into a revealing power game, further complicated by the return home of two sinister younger men. The broadcast will be followed by an exclusive Q&A with the cast and director Sean Mathias.
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
3h approx
NT Live: Hedda Gabler
NT Live: Amadeus
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).
Thursday 9 March (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.
Running time tbc.
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The Bolshoi Ballet: The Nutcracker
Sunday 6 November (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Alexei Ratmansky invokes the genius of Shostakovich’s score, creating a laugh-out-loud masterpiece with slapstick comedy, hilarious deceptions, false identities (including Principal Dancer Ruslan Skvortsov dressed as a sylph).
Sunday 18 December (14.45) £20 full price / £17.50 conc / £15 CineCard Christmas would not be complete without the enchanting tale of young Marie and her nutcracker prince. Russian ballet master Yuri Grigorovich’s staging of ETA Hoffmann’s fairy tale will transport children and adults alike to a world of wonder.
2h 30m
2h 15m
The Bolshoi Ballet: The Sleeping Beauty
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. 2h 40m
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
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BOLSHOI BALLET 2016/17
The Bolshoi Ballet: The Bright Stream
Events, Conferences & Private Hires
It’s easy to find us. We’re right in the city centre just off Sauchiehall Street.
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
By Train
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 valid for one year. The perfect gift for film lovers.
Car Parking
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If you are looking to hire please contact: dutymanager@glasgowfilm.org Find out more at www.glasgowfilm.org/hire
Gift Vouchers
Glasgow city centre is served by both Central and Queen Street Stations. www.nationalrail.co.uk
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GFT Accessible Programme
Accessible Screenings Nocturnal Animals (15) Fri 4 - Thu 17 Nov – All Shows Sun 6 Nov (16.50) Mon 14 Nov (18.15)
GFT offers both Audio Description and captioning on selected titles and selected screenings. Audio Description is a service for partially sighted or blind people (AD headphones are available to collect fromBox Office when you pick up your tickets prior to the film screening). Captioning is a service for deaf and hard of hearing audience members who rely on subtitling to enable them to follow the film’s dialogue.
Take 2 Access: Finding Dory (U) Sat 5 Nov (12.00) Access Film Club: Life, Animated (CTBC) Tues 8 Nov (18.00) Ethel and Ernest (CTBC) Tue 8 - Thu 10 Nov – All Shows Wed 9 Nov (12.30) Arrival (12A) Fri 11 - Thu 24 Nov – All Shows Sat 12 Nov (15.25) Thu 17 Nov (17.55)
Access Information
Take 2: The BFG (PG) Sat 19 Nov (11.30)
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.
GFT accepts the CEA Card. (www.ceacard.co.uk)
Visible Cinema: RCS Curates: Deafness & Dawn of the Deaf (N/C 15+) Mon 21 Nov (18.20) A United Kingdom (12A) Fri 25 Nov - Thu 8 Dec – All Shows Fri 25 Nov (15.45) Sun 4 Dec (12.30)
Please contact our Manager (0141) 352 8603 or email dutymanager@glasgowfilm.org with your specific access enquiries.
Paterson (CTBC) Tue 29 Nov (18.10) Tue 6 Dec (15.20) Take 2 Access: Peter’s Dragon (PG) Sat 3 Dec (12.00) It’s a Wonderful Life (U) Fri 9 - Sat 24 Dec – All Shows Sun 11 Dec (13.15) Mon 12 Dec (17.15)
Due to circumstances beyond our control, occasionally we are unable to provide these accessible screenings. You are advised to check with Box Office.
Access Film Club: National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (PG) Tue 13 Dec (18.00)
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!
Visible Cinema: It’s A Wonderful Life (U) Thu 15 Dec (18.00)
MLG McAllister Litho Glasgow Ltd.
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15-26 FEBRUARY GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL #GFF17 GFF17 Membership available now. For just ÂŁ10, members access 4 days of advance online booking before festival tickets go on general sale. Full details at glasgowfilm.org/gffmembership
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).