"A breezy and affable tale of bittersweet reconciliation, this quirky and well-acted comedy delivers its misanthropy with a hint of irascible charm" - Todd Jorgenson, Cinemalogue
Monday, February 24, 2025
The Problem With People - Sunday 2nd March 5pm
Labels:
2025,
Spring 2025
Monday, February 17, 2025
In The Mood For Love - Sunday 23rd February 5pm
In this beautiful film chosen by the Alhambra's Carol Rennie to fit in the Mint Chinese Film Festival weekend, we return to one of the first films ever shown by the club in 2001. Winner of more than 40 awards when it was released, including best actor and cinematography at Cannes, and rave reviews such as "probably the most breathtakingly gorgeous film of the year, dizzy with a nose-against-the-glass romantic spirit that has been missing from the cinema forever" – Elvis Mitchell, New York Times - whether you saw it then or not, this is a great chance to see this classic film.
Labels:
2025,
KFC,
Mint Chinese Film Festival
Monday, February 10, 2025
The Crime Is Mine - Sunday 16th February 5pm
Our members's picked François Ozon's The Crime Is Mine which takes a stage play from the 1930s and produces a frothy, beautiful, #MeToo film for the 2020s full of twists and turns, comedy and drama; what more could we ask for?
"Writer-director Francois Ozon creates a wonderfully engaging vibe that mixes in little jolts of realism amid the generally breezy, gleefully camp thrills." - Rich Cline, Shadows on the Wall
Labels:
2025,
KFC,
members choice
Monday, February 03, 2025
Black Dog - Sunday 9th February 5pm
What looks like a post-apocalyptic, Mad Max setting, or maybe a Clint Eastwood loner western, is in fact set on the fringes of the Gobi Desert in China, the loner here is Lang – just released from long-term jail and returning to his hometown. But the town is being destroyed to make ready for the 2008 Beijing Olympics; the population is being relocated and the only job he can find is as a dogcatcher helping to round up the seemingly endless pack of feral dogs… One of these, the Black Dog of the title, becomes Lang's buddy of course.
"Black Dog registers as an existential fable about isolation, redemption, the possibility of making connections against the odds." - Jonathan Romney, Financial Times
Labels:
2025,
Spring 2025
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