Monday, February 27, 2023

Holy Spider - Sunday 5th March 5pm

 

Holy Spider is a crime thriller, based on a real serial killer in the early 2000s who targeted female sex workers in Mashad, but the reason we thought we should show it is that is portrays how hard it is for women in Iran. With the recent murder of Mahsa Amini, and the resulting women-led protests, this becomes doubly relevant. This may be a hard-watch in places, but should give us a lot to discuss. It is also the Danish entry for the Oscars and was nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes, where Zar Amir-Ebrahimi won best actress.

Festival Review

With a choice of 25 films and the best shorts in our Osprey Competition, there was really something for everybody last weekend. Where to begin? 

I guess the highlight was having the director Hassan Nazer to introduce his film ‘Winners’, the Iranian comedy which is the UK entry for the Best International Film at the Oscars. Always good to have guests, this was a real coup for our David Miller, our programmer.

I cannot hope to review all the films, so I will start with the most successful; ‘Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom’ was the most popular film at the festival: 181 people watched it at Rheged and 129 of them gave it 5 stars! With an overall score of 94%, this moving, beautiful story from Bhutan’s most remote school as a city boy is won over to love the village was both easy to watch AND it was from Bhutan – our first from there.

Return to Dust’ was very different, but almost as popular (89%). A middle-aged couple in a remote village in China are forced into an arranged marriage but, surprisingly to all those around them, the marriage is successful until she falls ill and dies. Watching them making bricks out of mud and their total dependence on their donkey was truly a story from another world.

Talking of donkeys, I must mention another Oscar nominee from Poland – ‘EO’. Not quite as popular with our audiences (70%), but fascinating (to me!): we watched a donkey’s world fall apart as he wanders away from the circus, from kindness to cruelty. A definite ‘animal-rights’ movie told from the donkey’s eye-view.

Our final film was by a director we love – Hirokazu Koreeda. From Japan, his latest film ‘Broker’ was filmed in South Korea. He likes to make up ‘families’ from a group of people, in this case a woman who has deserted her baby but gone back for it, two men who are trying to find a buyer for the baby and a small orphan boy who tags along for the ride. A clever, sometimes funny, sometimes sad story links the family together and we go along as they meet potential buyers… and much more. Another big hit (80%) with the audience.

I really enjoyed ‘Joyland’ (78%) which was a film full of surprises from Pakistan. The first Pakistani film to show at Cannes Festival, which featured a family dominated by a patriarch, but breaking all traditions with a house husband who gets a job with a trans dance group and falls in love with the group’s trans leader. 

But an Eastern world festival this was not. There were films from America, Europe and UK as well, including an action-packed, petrol-head motorbike gang movie from France – ‘Rodeo’. 

A great weekend: our thanks go to all who helped! See you all next year… and this Sunday at the Alhambra for ‘Holy Spider’, the Danish Oscar hopeful. 

Vaughan Ames

Monday, February 20, 2023

Keswick Film Festival This Weekend


The 23rd Keswick Film Festival starts on Thursday, make sure you have your passes and tickets ready. The programme looks as exciting as always, with 25 films over four days, shown at the Alhambra, Theatre By The Lake and Rheged.  The films have been receiving great critical acclaim as well as award nominations and prizes, so it should be a great long weekend. The Osprey Short Film Awards, featuring 10 Cumbrian short films are also on at the Theatre on Saturday at 2pm.  

Monday, February 13, 2023

You Resemble Me - Sunday 19th February 5pm


In You Resemble Me (Sunday 5pm) Hasna and Mariam are sisters, aged 9 and 7, running wild on the streets of Paris from a mother who doesn't want them. They are eventually sent to live in different foster homes, when Hasna's story (based on real life) takes a huge turn for the worst.

"An extraordinary directorial debut - based on actual events - in which form and content fuse to discover a new cinematic language." - Washington Post


Monday, February 06, 2023

Utama - Sunday 12th February 5:00 PM


Utama was the winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance 2022. A "slow and beautiful-looking drama set high on the Andean plateau... a gentle and superbly shot film" - Cath Clarke, Guardian.
"If you only see one film about Bolivian llama farmers this year, make it Utama." - David Hughes, Time Out

"A film of dazzling visual power and genuine poignancy." -  Glenn Kenny, Rogerebert.com