Films for 2009 - 2010

Sat 5th Sept - Slumdog Millionaire FREE special
Sat
3rd Oct - The Pope’s Toilet (El baño del Papa)
Sun
8th Nov - Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Sat
5th Dec - I’ve Loved You So Long (Il y a longtemps que je t'aime)
Sun
27th Dec - Guys & Dolls CHRISTMAS Special
Sat
6th Feb - Age of Stupid
Sat
6th Mar - Sleep Furiously
Sat
10th Apr - Looking for Eric

Upper Tweed Community Cinema – from Slumdog to Ooh Aah Cantona

The new season at the club starts next month with emotionally stunning masterpiece Slumdog Millionaire, which for many people, was the film of the year. Don’t be put off by the hype surrounding this film, it really is a great movie; an old fashioned story that fizzes with excitement from start to finish. As a special opening offer, entry is free, with a collection for the charity Plan India being made. See it at Broughton Hall on 5th September.

Bouncing between moments of humour and gentle drama, The Pope’s Toilet from Uruguay is set in a small town that is anxiously awaiting the arrival of Pope John Paul II. While the swell of visitors promises to be a boon for the local economy, small-time crook Beto (César Troncoso) thinks he has worked out a unique way to capitalise on the pope's visit. An offbeat charmer, The Pope's Toilet is a humorous, well-crafted tale with plenty of heart as well as a poignant social message, which will be shown on October 3rd.

November’s film on the 8th is Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona. It is a clever, sunny, frisky and extremely funny film starring Rebecca Hall and Scarlett Johansson as two American friends tempted into a romantic weekend with silver-tongued charmer Spanish painter Antonio (Javier Bardem).

December 5th sees the screening of the French film I’ve Loved You So Long. This top-of-the-range family melodrama, sparingly told and austerely framed, with grief and redemption, will have viewers thinking deep and long.

The Christmas special on 27th December takes us back to the 1950’s with the classic musical Guys and Dolls starring Marlon Brando, Frank Sinatra and Jean Simmons.

Age of Stupid, being shown on 6th February, is set in 2055, in a world in which almost all life has ended on earth. Pete Postlethwaite stars as an archivist, who looks back to the early 2000s, seeing how we got to a state in which the environment caused the collapse of civilisation. Its use of science fiction is also both effective and emotional: it's as if director Franny Armstrong hopes that the future can come to the aid of the present. Bold, supremely provocative, and hugely important, her film is a cry from the heart as much as a roar for necessary change.

Rural Wales is the setting for Sleep Furiously, showing on 6th March. Quietly observing the inhabitants of the sleepy hamlet of Trefeurig, the film builds a poetic picture not only of what stands to be lost through thoughtless modernisation, but how rapidly whole ways of life are being eroded. The film has received almost universal critical acclaim being called “entertaining and lovely", "quiet, off-beat, tender poetry", “unusually tender and eccentric” and “the most beautifully elemental documentary film to have emerged in Britain in over a decade”.

The season finishes on 10th April with Looking for Eric. Ken Loach is not generally described as an all-round crowd-pleaser, but with his latest film, Looking For Eric, he’s produced a masterpiece. It tells the story of a depressed, dysfunctional postman with a problematic family that threatens to drag him into even deeper waters. An apparition in the form of 90’s cult French footballer Eric Cantona proves to be the emotional lift to get his life back on track. A heady mix of high comedy, gritty realism, and the nonlinear philosophy of Eric Cantona, this film is an offbeat clever and moving piece of cinema.

To join or get more information contact Lesley Mason, Oliverbank East, Tweedsmuir, ML12 6QS, tel. 01899 880200. Membership costs just £18 per person (£30 for two family members). This gives free entry, with a glass of wine, to six standard screenings. All shows are in Broughton Village Hall, doors open at 7:30pm with the main feature at 8:15pm. Shorts are usually shown at about 8pm.


1 comment:

Unknown said...

What a lineup! I can't wait for the season to start!