R
E P S H O W S |
Sun
13 Jun • Double bill
ELEPHANT (15) 1.45
(US 2003) dir.Gus Van Sant 81m.
Alex Frost, Eric Deulen, John Robinson, Elias McConnell.
“Gus Van Sant’s Palme d’Or winner began life
as a conventional Hollywood psychodrama inspired by the Columbine
high school massacre. Then it mutated into something more abstract,
more personal. Filmed in languorous Steadicam shots, ELEPHANT sucks
us into the lives of half a dozen or more students, slipping easily
between them over the course of what seems at first like an uneventful
school day. Some 30 minutes in we get a premonition of the terrible
atrocity in store. Van Sant’s film elicits unusually strong
responses; certainly it’s deeply harrowing.”
(Time Out)
+ 21 GRAMS (15) 3.35
US 2003) dir.Alejandro González Iñárritu
124m.
Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Benicio Del Toro, Charlotte Gainsbourg.
“Like a smashed mirror, Alejandro González Iñárritu's
enigmatic movie shows us broken lives in shards of fear. At its
centre is a terrible accident whose impact has shattered everyone
involved, and the movie itself is picking up the pieces and reassembling
the truth. The narrative is busted up, as if being remembered by
someone in shock. It lets the director dive boldly into the mystery
of individual experience and identity, and shows us the poetry as
well as the prose of his characters' lives. Most importantly, the
movie has three absolutely outstanding performances from Sean Penn,
Benicio Del Toro and Naomi Watts. Between them, they offer a compelling
triptych of human pain. Fluid, exhilarating, virtuoso cinema.”
(The Guardian) |
|
Tue
15 Jun • Parents & Babies Club
21 GRAMS (15) 12.30
(US 2003) dir.Alejandro González Iñárritu
124m.
Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Benicio Del Toro, Charlotte Gainsbourg.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
Thur 17 Jun • Parents & Babies Club
UZAK
(Distant) (15) 12.45
(Turkey 2002) dir.Nuri Bilge Ceylan 110m. Subtitles.
Muzafer Ozdemir, Mhemet Emin Toprak, Zuhal Gencer Erkaya, Nazan
Kirilmis.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
| Sun
20 Jun • Refugee Week treble bill
IN THIS WORLD (15) 2.00
(Br 2002) dir.Michael Winterbottom 90m.
“Inspired by the anti-immigrant xenophobia which surged
in the run-up to the last General Election, IN THIS WORLD is a vérité-style
dramatisation of the journey taken by two young men. They’re
not fleeing persecution, but seeking a better life. Winterbottom
shows us the hardships this illegal odyssey entails. The film expresses
the distances between peoples in the hope that it may bring us closer
together.”
(Time Out)
+ TOMATO DELIVERY (15) 3.45
(Br 2004) dir.Xiaosong Que 15m. Subtitles.
Supported by Hackney Film Fund.
An illegal Chinese immigrant dreams of a better life for himself
and his family. In the wake of the recent tragedy at Morecambe Bay,
this film becomes all the more pertinent – allowing us a glimpse
of the humanity usually hidden behind the headlines.
+
LILYA 4-EVER (18) 4.00
(Swe 2002) dir.Lukas Moodysson 109m. Subtitles.
Oksana Akinshina, Artiom Bogucharski, Elina Benenson.
16-year-old Lilja lives on a grim estate somewhere in the former
Soviet Union. When her mother flies off to America with her new
boyfriend, she is left to fend for herself. Her only friend is glue-sniffing
street urchin Volodya. Lilja’s inevitable descent is arrested
when she meets and falls in love with Andrej, who invites her to
emigrate with him to Sweden... “Fluid, exhilarating, virtuoso
cinema.”
(The Guardian)
www.refugeeweek.org.uk |
Tue
22 Jun • Parents & Babies Club
CONFIDENCE TROP INTIMES (15) 1.00
(France 2004) dir.Patrice Leconte 103m. Subtitles.
Fabrice Luchini, Sandrine Bonnaire, Michel Duchaussoy, Anne Brochet,
Gilbert Melki, Laurent Gamelon, Hélène Surgère,
Urbain Cancelier.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
|
Thur
24 Jun • Parents & Babies Club
CONFIDENCE TROP INTIMES (15) 1.00
(France 2004) dir.Patrice Leconte 103m. Subtitles.
Fabrice Luchini, Sandrine Bonnaire, Michel Duchaussoy, Anne Brochet,
Gilbert Melki, Laurent Gamelon, Hélène Surgère,
Urbain Cancelier.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
Sat
26 Jun • Matinee & Late Night
THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST (18) 1.15 & 11.15
(US 2004) dir.Mel Gibson 126m. Subtitles.
James Caviezel, Monica Belluci, Claudia Gerini.
Mel Gibson’s controversial epic provides a coruscating passage
through the last 12 hours of Jesus Christ’s life on Earth,
amalgamated from the Biblical gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and
John. In dramatic terms this takes Christ (Caviezel) from Judas’
betrayal in the Garden Of Gethsemane to his crucifixion and resurrection. |
|
Sun
27 Jun • Double bill
BIGGER THAN LIFE (12A) 2.00
(US 1956) dir.Nicholas Ray 95m.
James Mason, Barbara Rush, Walter Matthau.
“Mason plays Ed Avery, a 1950’s liberal smalltown
schoolteacher happily married to Lou (Rush). Except that they haven’t
the means to get out of suburbia, and it rankles with Ed. ‘We’re
dull‘ he tells Lou. ‘Our friends are dull and we’re
dull too.‘ The poison is in there deep, well before he’s
diagnosed with a potentially fatal blood condition and prescribed
a new ‘miracle‘ drug, cortisone. Ray’s masterful
shocking, movie works on any number of levels.”
(Time Out)
+
CAPTURING THE FRIEDMANS (15) 4.00
(US 2003) dir.Andrew Jarecki 107m. Documentary.
“On Thanksgiving weekend 1987, police in Long Island, pursuing
a US Post Office sting, broke down the Friedmans’ front door,
eventually hauling away a collection of child porn. Dweebish father-of-three
Arnold and his youngest son Jesse were subsequently arraigned for
child abuse. That’s one side of the story. Another, turning
on the family’s own doubts, disunity and recriminations was
remarkably captured on video by the home-video-obsessed family itself,
and subsequently discovered by Jarecki. An authentic American tragedy,
this film broaches a parade of modern taboos; it’s disturbing,
compelling viewing.”
(Time Out) |
Tue
29 Jun • Parents & Babies Club
THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST (18) 12.30
(US 2004) dir.Mel Gibson 126m. Subtitles.
James Caviezel, Monica Belluci, Claudia Gerini.
Mel Gibson’s controversial epic provides a coruscating passage
through the last 12 hours of Jesus Christ’s life on Earth,
amalgamated from the Biblical gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and
John. In dramatic terms this takes Christ (Caviezel) from Judas’
betrayal in the Garden Of Gethsemane to his crucifixion and resurrection.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
| Thur
1 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
CAPTURING THE FRIEDMANS (15) 12.45
(US 2003) dir.Andrew Jarecki 107m. Documentary.
“On Thanksgiving weekend 1987, police in Long Island, pursuing
a US Post Office sting, broke down the Friedmans’ front door,
eventually hauling away a collection of child porn. Dweebish father-of-three
Arnold and his youngest son Jesse were subsequently arraigned for
child abuse. That’s one side of the story. Another, turning
on the family’s own doubts, disunity and recriminations was
remarkably captured on video by the home-video-obsessed family itself,
and subsequently discovered by Jarecki. An authentic American tragedy,
this film broaches a parade of modern taboos; it’s disturbing,
compelling viewing.”
(Time Out)
Adm £5/£4 Concessions |
Sun 4 Jul •
Tape Slide Course Showcase
LIGHT FANTASTIC 12.30
A screening of work by students from the Rio Tape Slide Course.
Cafe open from 12.00.
Admission free. |
| Tue
6 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SHREK 2 (U) 11.30am
(US 2004) dirs.Kelly Asbury, Conrad Vernon. 105m. Animation.
Voices of Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Cleese, Julie
Andrews, Antonio Banderas, Rupert Everett.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
Thur
8 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SHREK 2 (U) 11.30am
(US 2004) dirs.Kelly Asbury, Conrad Vernon. 105m. Animation.
Voices of Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Cleese, Julie
Andrews, Antonio Banderas, Rupert Everett.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
| Sat 10 Jul
• Late Night
VAN HELSING (12A) 11.15
(US 2004) dir.Stephen Sommers 132m.
Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale, Richard Roxburgh, Samuel West.
“Loud, proud and very Hollywood, Van Helsing is a fantasy
blockbuster that never lets up. Hugh Jackman stars as the monster-mashing
vigilante of the title, who sets out to off Count Dracula (Richard
Roxburgh) in the depths of Transylvania. Teamed with vamp-hating
totty Anna Valerious (Kate Beckinsale), Van the Man must battle
the bloodsucker, his brutal brides, and the Wolfman (played by a
bundle of CGI). Bung in Frankenstein's Monster (Shuler Hensley),
Bondian gadgets and a tongue tucked firmly in its cheek and you've
a lot of campy fun - even if it never elicits any real emotion.”
(Nev Pierce, BBCi) |
Tue
13 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SHREK 2 (U) 11.30am
(US 2004) dirs.Kelly Asbury, Conrad Vernon. 105m. Animation.
Voices of Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Cleese, Julie
Andrews, Antonio Banderas, Rupert Everett.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
| Thur
15 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SHREK 2 (U) 11.30am
(US 2004) dirs.Kelly Asbury, Conrad Vernon. 105m. Animation.
Voices of Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Cleese, Julie
Andrews, Antonio Banderas, Rupert Everett.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
Sun
18 • Special Matinee
MAGNIFICO (12A) 12.30
(Philippines 2003) dir.Maryo de los Reyes 123m. Tagalog with English
subtitles.
“MAGNIFICO, a Filipino film about a boy who is a Christ
figure in miniature. Magnifico (Jiro Manio) does what he can to
help his struggling family – his father is a carpenter who
can barely make ends meet. He not only uncomplainingly cares for
his younger sister, made mute by cerebral palsy, but diligently
raises money for the funeral expenses of his grandmother, who is
dying of cancer. This may sound too goody-two-shoes to be true,
but Manio's Magnifico is an unaffected, sunny-spirited kid who just
does what comes naturally. De los Reyes, a veteran director in a
variety of genres, may not stint on melodrama, but as is often the
case with Filipino films, the story builds an irresistible emotional
momentum. By the end there was not a dry eye in the theatre –
and this reviewer was no exception.”
(Mark Schilling, The Japan Times)
(also showing Sun 25 Jul 12.30)
£7/£5.50 Concs/£4 Under 15’s |
| Tue
20 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SPIDER-MAN 2 (*) 12.00
(US 2004) dir.Sam Raimi 130m. (approx)
Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Mary Jane Watson, Alfred Molina, James
Franco, Elizabeth Banks.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
Thur
22 Jul • Parents & Babies Club
SPIDER-MAN 2 (*) 12.00
(US 2004) dir.Sam Raimi 130m. (approx)
Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Mary Jane Watson, Alfred Molina, James
Franco, Elizabeth Banks.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
| Sun
25 Jul • Special Matinee
MAGNIFICO (12A) 12.30
(Philippines 2003) dir.Maryo de los Reyes 123m. Tagalog with English
subtitles.
“MAGNIFICO, a Filipino film about a boy who is a Christ
figure in miniature. Magnifico (Jiro Manio) does what he can to
help his struggling family – his father is a carpenter who
can barely make ends meet. He not only uncomplainingly cares for
his younger sister, made mute by cerebral palsy, but diligently
raises money for the funeral expenses of his grandmother, who is
dying of cancer. This may sound too goody-two-shoes to be true,
but Manio's Magnifico is an unaffected, sunny-spirited kid who just
does what comes naturally. De los Reyes, a veteran director in a
variety of genres, may not stint on melodrama, but as is often the
case with Filipino films, the story builds an irresistible emotional
momentum. By the end there was not a dry eye in the theatre –
and this reviewer was no exception.”
(Mark Schilling, The Japan Times)
(also showing Sun 25 Jul 12.30)
£7/£5.50 Concs/£4 Under 15’s |
Sun
1 Aug • Double bill
THE TWILIGHT SAMURAI (12A) 1.15
(Jap 2002) dir.Yoji Yamada 129m. Subtitles.
Hiroyuki Sanada, Rie Miyazawa, Nenji Kobayashi.
“Putting Mutsuo Naganuma's gorgeously understated cinematography
to excellent use, director Yoji Yamada sketches the mundane reality
of life as a petty samurai – where bookkeeping is more important
than one's skill with a blade. Yamada hones an austere yet deeply
moving film that has all the serene confidence of a Zen master.
Building up its central character before unleashing a climactic,
close-quarter swordfight, it transforms Seibei into the real Last
Samuraii.” (BBCi)
+
ZATÔICHI (18) 3.45
(Japan 2004) dir.Takeshi Kitano 115m. Subtitles.
Takeshi Kitano, Tadanobu Asano, Gadarukanaru Taka.
“Feudal Japan, the nineteenth century: a time of cruel injustice,
corrupt clan-leaders and violent oppression. To a remote mountain
town comes Zatôichi (Kitano), an intinerant blind masseur
with a taste for drink and gambling. He’s also a master swordsman,
his acute hearing, innate cunning quick intelligence and ultra-precise
technique bringing him fame as a formidable foe. That’s why
innumerable opponents materialise when Zatôichi takes lodgings,
throws in his lot with two geishas out to avenge their parents’
murder, and accepts help from the well-meaning but clumsy Shinkichi
(Taka). Extremely enjoyable.”
(Time Out) |
| Tue
3 Aug • Parents & Babies Club
HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN (PG) 12.15
(US/Br 2004) dir.Alfonso Cuarón 142m.
Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint.
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions & Under 15’s |
Thur
5 Aug • Parents & Babies Club
FAHRENHEIT 9/11 (*) 12.30
(US 2004) dir.Michael Moore 112m. Documentary
An opportunity for parents with babies to visit the cinema without
having to find a baby sitter or worry about their babies causing
disturbance. A secure space is provided for pushchairs.
Adm £5/£4 Concessions
|
|
3rd London Kurdish Film Festival
Please note the festival has been postponed to 17 – 23 September.
The festival will present an exciting range of new films and documentaries
from Kurdish film makers living and working in many different countries.
There will be opportunities for discussion with film makers and
educational events. Further details will be posted here nearer the
time of the festival and a programme booklet will be available in
early September. Please send an e-mail with your address to kff@riocinema.org.uk
if you would like us to send you one by post. |
|
107
Kingsland High Street E8
(corner John Campbell Road)
Tel 020 7241 9410
|