JAN 2014 - Ipswich Film Theatre Trust
Transcription
JAN 2014 - Ipswich Film Theatre Trust
Who we are: IFT is a community based two screen cinema, specialising in independent and world cinema. This venture is run by the Ipswich Film Theatre Trust, a not-for-profit organisation staffed by volunteers. Screen Ticket prices: All tickets are priced at £6.50 and are available from the Box-Office before the film begins (cash or debit/credit card) or in advance from our website. Box-Office opens 30 minutes before performance starts. More information: For more information, to contact us, watch trailers of all the films being shown or read our film blog visit our website www.iftt.co.uk Email: [email protected] Find us on Facebook Search for Ipswich Film Theatre Trust Follow us on Twitter - @ipswichftt Use your smartphone to scan the QR code above. 1 Screen 2 Fri 3 Nebraska (15) Fanny (PG) 6.00 8.15 Floating Skyscrapers (18) Sat 4 Fanny (PG) Nebraska (15) 2.30 & 6.00 8.15 ...Skyscrapers (18) 2.30 & 7.30 Tue 7 Fanny (PG) Nebraska (15) 6.00 2.30 & 8.15 ...Skyscrapers (18) 2.30 & 7.30 Wed 8 Nebraska (15) Fanny (PG) 6.00 8.15 Thu 9 Nebraska (15) Fanny (PG) 6.00 2.30 & 8.15 Fri 10 Gravity (12A) A Long Way… (12A) 6.00 8.15 Fireworks... (12A) 7.30 Sat 11 A Long Way… (12A) Gravity (12A) 6.00 2.30 & 8.15 Fireworks... (12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Tue 14 A Long Way… (12A) 6.00 Saving Mr Banks (PG) 2.30 & 8.15 Fireworks... (12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Wed 15 Saving Mr Banks (PG) A Long Way… (12A) 6.00 8.30 Fireworks... (12A) 7.30 Thu 16 A Long Way… (12A) Blackmail (PG) 2.30 7.30 Fireworks... (12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Fri 17 Mandela… (12A) 7.30 The Missing Picture (12A) Sat 18 Mandela… (12A) 2.30 & 7.30 The Missing...(12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Tue 21 Mandela… (12A) 2.30 & 7.30 The Missing...(12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Wed 22 Mandela… (12A) 7.30 The Missing Picture (12A) Thu 23 Mandela… (12A) La Belle et La Bete (PG) 2.30 7.30 The Missing...(12A) 2.30 & 7.30 Fri 24 Philomena (12A) Kill Your Darlings (15) 6.00 8.15 Rear Window (PG) 7.30 Sat 25 Philomena (12A) 6.00 Kill Your Darlings (15) 2.30 & 8.15 Rear Window (PG) 2.30 & 7.30 Tue 28 Philomena (12A) 2.30 & 6.00 Kill Your Darlings (15) 8.15 Magic Trip (15) 2.30 & 7.30 Wed 29 Kill Your Darlings (15) Philomena (12A) 6.00 8.15 Magic Trip (15) 7.30 Thu 30 Kill Your Darlings (15) NT Live: Coriolanus 2.30 7.00 A Bout de Souffle (PG) 2.30 & 7.30 Fri 31 Age of Uprising (tbc) The Railway Man (12A) 6.00 8.30 A Bout de Souffle (PG) Floating Skyscrapers (18) ...Skyscrapers (18) 7.30 7.30 2.30 & 7.30 7.30 7.30 7.30 Ipswich Film Theatre Trust is a company limited by guarantee. Registered in England and Wales, number 07031196. Saracens House, St Margarets Green, Ipswich, IP4 2BN Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom Where we are: IFT is located in The Ipswich Corn Exchange, King Street, Ipswich, IP1 1DH. IFT is disabled accessible. JANUARY bringing independent, world and community cinema to Ipswich JAN 2014 www.iftt.co.uk Sponsored by Colourplan Print Thu 27 Feb/Sun 16 Mar - SOLD OUT Thursday 30 Jan at 7pm Coriolanus National Theatre’s War Horse Our programme of live screenings from The National Theatre and other venues continues. Please check our web site (www.iftt.co.uk) for the latest details. Live from the Donmar Warehouse, Shakespeare’s searing tragedy of political manipulation and revenge, with Tom Hiddleston in the title role and Mark Gatiss as Menenius, directed by the Donmar’s Artistic Director Josie Rourke. The National Theatre’s original stage production of War Horse, broadcast live from London’s West End to cinemas. All tickets £12. Available now from the Box-Office or our web site: www.iftt.co.uk Festival of the Beats bring the spirit and philosophy of the Beat Generation to audiences in Ipswich, through live poetry recitals and performances, jazz, film screenings and exhibitions of art and artefacts. See www. festivalofthebeats.com for the full programme. Fri 24 - Thu 30 Jan (Not 26 & 27) Kill Your Darlings (15) 1 Dir: John Krokidas, US, 2013, 104 mins. Daniel Radcliffe, Dane DeHaan, Michael C. Hall. Tue 28 - Wed 29 Jan Magic Trip (15) 2 Dir: Alison Ellwood & Alex Gibney, US, 2011, 105 mins. Stanley Tucci, Ken Kesey, Timothy Leary, Jack Kerouac. Thu 30 - Fri 31 Jan A Bout De Souffle (PG) 2 Dir: Jean-Luc Godard, Fr, 1960, 88 mins, French dialogue with subtitles. Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, Jean-Pierre Melville. In 1943 a young Allen Ginsberg enters Columbia University and meets up with fellow future Beat poets William Burroughs & Jack Kerouac, but amidst the start of a new literary movement fuelled by drugs and sex is a small case of murder. Buzzing with energy and giddily addictive, this is the story of a literary movement where anything went and frequently did. In 1964, Ken Kesey - author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest - set off on an LSD-fuelled road trip to the New York. Joined by ‘The Merry Band of Pranksters’ a renegade group of counterculture truth-seekers, the group hooked up with Timothy Leary and sundry Beat writers, resulting in many squares freaked out and social conventions overturned. A fascinating documentary about a legendary age. Perhaps the defining film of the French New Wave and highly influenced by the Beat Generation, Goddard’s masterpiece is as fresh now as it was on release. The story of a petty criminal and an American girl, it’s fresh, pacy and oozes style. Modern day hipsters watch it and weep. Ipswich Film Theatre www.iftt.co.uk JANUARY 2014 Please check diary for screening times. Fri 3 - Thu 9 Jan (Not 5 & 6) Fanny (PG) 1 Dir: Daniel Auteuil, Fr, 2013, 102 mins, French dialogue with subtitles. Daniel Auteuil, Victoire Bélézy, Jean-Pierre Darroussin. Fri 10 - Sat 11 Jan Gravity (12A) 1 Dir: Alfonso Caurón, US, 2013, 91 mins. Sandra Bullock, George Clooney. Nebraska (15) 1 Dir: Alexander Payne, US, 2013, 115 mins. Bruce Dern, Will Forte, June Squibb, Bob Odenkirk. Two astronauts on a space walk are stranded and with no means of communication with mission control when debris crashes into their shuttle. The most highly praised Hollywood movie this year, Gravity is a cinematic tour de force that merges spectacular special effects with an all too human story of survival against the odds. 1 Fri 24 - Wed 29 Jan (Not 26 & 27) Philomena (12A) 1 Dir: Stephen Frears, UK, 2013, 98 mins. Judi Dench, Steve Coogan, Charlie Murphy. The flirtatious girlfriend of a Scotland Yard detective accompanies an artist to his apartment and ends up killing him when he tries to rape her. Seen leaving the scene of the crime, she becomes the victim of blackmail. Hitchcock’s final silent film (he remade it as a talkie soon after release), Blackmail is a subtle thriller with great set pieces. We’re delighted to welcome Wendy Hiscock to accompany tonight’s screening. Fri 17 - Thu 23 Jan (Not 19 & 20) The Missing Picture (12A) 2 Dir: Rithy Panh, Cambodia/Fr, 2013, 96 mins, French dialogue with subtitles. Fri 10 - Thu 16 Jan (Not 12 & 13) Fireworks Wednesday (12A) Blackmail (PG) Dir: Alfred Hitchcock, UK, 1929, 89 mins. Sara Allgood, Anny Ondra, John Longden. With live piano accompaniment from Wendy Hiscock. In the sequel to Marius, Fanny is expecting his child, but he has run away to sea and she agrees to marry a prosperous shopkeeper. Meanwhile, Marius returns home to try to win back Fanny’s affections. A lush, gripping sun-dappled drama with a sting in the tail. Fri 3 - Thu 9 Jan (Not 5 & 6) Thu 16 Jan Grounded by two classy performances from the ever-reliable Judi Dench and the seemingly ever-present Steve Coogan, Philomena tells the true story of a woman’s search for the son that was taken from her and sold by nuns 50 years previously. Dench and Coogan adroitly navigate the shifts between drama and humour and imbue their real-life characters with depth, dignity and pathos. Fri 24 - Sat 25 Jan Rear Window (PG) 2 Dir: Alfred Hitchcock, US, 1954, 107 mins. James Stewart, Grace Kelly, Wendell Corey. 2 Dir: Asghar Farhadi, Iran, 2006, 99 mins, Farsi dialogue with subtitles. Hedieh Tehrani, Taraneh Alidousti, Hamid Farokhnezhad. Alexander (Sideways) Payne’s latest charts a trip taken from Montana to Nebraska by David with his father Woody, an irascible, forgetful old boozer who believes he’s won a million dollar lottery. Bitingly funny and undeniably sad, the film paints an affectionate but never sentimentalised portrait of the midwest and won Dern the Best Actor award in Cannes. Cambodian director Rithy Panh lost all his family during Pol Pot’s murderous regime. Looking back at his life he recreates the horrors of that time through an unusual mix of archive film and clay figures. A powerful and haunting documentary, it’s a fitting tribute to those who did not survive to tell their tale and a chilling reminder of Cambodia’s not so distant past. Fri 3 - Thu 9 Jan (Not 5 & 6) Floating Skyscrapers (18) Dir: Tomasz Wasilewski, Pol, 2013, 93 mins, Polish dialogue with subtitles. Mateusz Banasiuk, Marta Nieradkiewicz, Bartosz Gelner. Kuba, a champion swimmer, lives with his mother and girlfriend Sylwia and spends much of his time training. One evening, he and Sylwia attend a gallery opening where he meets Michal and a new relationship develops. A powerful and thought-provoking piece of cinema. When Rouhi, a young bride-to-be, takes a temporary job cleaning she finds herself in the middle of an explosive domestic conflict between Mojdeh and her husband Morteza over a suspected affair with the next door neighbour. Over the course of the day, the young woman, the sparring couple, their small son, the wife’s sister and husband, and the neighbour engage in a series of exchanges and confrontations as the truth unfolds. From the Oscar-winning director of A Separation and About Elly, this is an engrossing portrait of three marriages set against the backdrop of the Persian New Year. Tue 14 - Wed 15 Jan Saving Mr Banks (PG) 1 Dir: Virginia Gilbert, UK, 2013, 80 mins. James Fox, Brenda Fricker, Natalie Dormer, Paul Nicholls. In sunny Nimes, expat couple Joseph and Brenda enjoy a peaceful retirement with Radio 4 and English newspapers. However, a chance encounter with a pair of 30something holidaymakers upsets the precarious balance in their superficially calm life. With nuanced performances from the cast who explore the shifting emotional currents to perfection, this is a devastating portrait of temptation in a Provencal paradise. 1 Dir: Justin Chadwick, UK/SA, 2013, English, Afrikaans & Xhosa dialogue. Idris Elba, Naomie Harris, Tony Kgoroge. Dir: Arnaud des Pallières, Fr/Ger, 2013, 122 mins, French & German dialogue with subtitles. Mads Mikkelsen, Mélusine Mayance, Delphine Chuillot. The story of Nelson Mandela’s life from rural childhood to antiapartheid fighter, prisoner and finally to President of South Africa. Based on Mandela’s autobiography, this is powerful, moving and ultimately uplifting, with Idris Elba outstanding as the eponymous hero. Thu 23 Jan Fri 31 Jan - Thu 6 Feb (Not 2 & 3) La Belle Et La Bete (PG) 1 Dir: Jean Cocteau, Fr, 1946, 94 mins, French dialogue with subtitles. Jean Marais, Josette Day, Mila Parély. For 20 years, P L Travers, author of Mary Poppins, resisted Walt Disney’s attempts to persuade her to let him make a film of the children’s classic. Saving Mr Banks tells the story of the creation of the film and the culture clash between the brash American and the strait-laced Australian author. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious ! 1 A tale of injustice and revolt set in 16th century France, Age of Uprising follows the plight of Michael Kohlhaas, a happy and prosperous family man and horse trader, who after suffering an injustice at the hands of an arrogant baron followed by the murder of his wife, sets out on a path to vengeance. A sombre and brilliantly realised period revenge drama, armed with a lurking muscularity. 1 Dir: John Lee Hancock, US, 2013, 125 mins. Emma Thompson, Tom Hanks, Paul Giamatti. Fri 10 - Thu 16 Feb (Not 12 & 13) A Long Way From Home (12A) Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom (12A) Fri 31 Jan - Thu 6 Feb (Not 2 & 3) Age of Uprising (tbc) Fri 17 - Thu 23 Jan (Not 19 & 20) 2 The latest in our selection of film’s suggested by our ushers (thanks Brian) Rear Window shows Hitchcock at the height of his powers in this tale of an injured photographer confined to a wheelchair who thinks he witnesses a murder in an adjacent building. A thriller that continues to grip. More beautiful than ever in a new digital restoration, Cocteau’s spellbinding, sensuous masterpiece based on the classic fairytale was recently described by director Guillermo del Toro as ‘the most perfect cinematic fable ever told’. Quite simply, pure magic. The Railway Man (12A) 1 Dir: Jonathan Teplitzky, Aus/UK, 2013, 116 mins. Colin Firth, Nicole Kidman, Stellan Skarsgård. Based on the true story of a British officer captured and tortured by the Japanese during WWII. Traumatised by his experiences, it is only many years later that he can achieve closure. Sensitively told, this is a compelling and emotionally gratifying story of love and forgiveness.
Similar documents
FEB 2016 - Ipswich Film Theatre Trust
Following a sell-out run at London’s Royal Court Theatre, Olivier and Academy Award® winner Martin McDonagh (The Pillowman, The Cripple of Inishmaan, In Bruges) returns to the West End with Matthew...
More information