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SCFS @ EMPIRE
CINEMA SLOUGH
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October -
December 2006
17th
October
Tsotsi (15)
Dir. Gavin Hood.
South Africa/UK 2005 (94 mins)
Tsotsi (thug) is the perfect name for this violent, cold-hearted young gang
leader whose turf is the townships outside Johannesburg where he leads his
friends in vicious robberies and worse. One night, he shoots a young woman
and steals her car. Little does he know that the baby he later discovers in the
back seat will change his life forever. Based on Athol Fugard’s novel, Tsotsi
is shot with an urgent energy and music soundtrack that recalls films like
City of
God.
Tsotsi was this year’s Foreign Language Oscar-winner.
24th
October
The Squid and the
Whale (15)
Dir. Noah
Baumbach. USA 2005 (81 mins)
The
middle-class, Brooklyn-based Berkman family boasts two doctors – of literature.
Dad (Jeff Daniels) is a pompous, past-it author who teaches college creative
writing whilst Mom (Laura Linney) has just had her first novel published.
Following the split, 16-year-old Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and younger brother
Frank (Owen Kline) are forced to take sides. “I made an emotional movie about
intellectuals.” (Director Noah Baumbach)
31st
October
Hidden (Caché)
(15)
Dir. Michael
Haneke. Fr/Austria/Ger/It 2004 (118 mins)
Probably director Michael Haneke’s most accessible work, this
multi-layered thriller follows a well-off Parisian family whose life is
disturbed by a number of videos left on their doorstep. Creepily, each tape
records the family’s daily movements, taken from nearby. Yet they can never
find their tormenter. Soon, the video campaign escalates, causing increasing
paranoia and the eruption of old wounds.
7th
November
Good Night, and
Good Luck (PG)
Dir. George
Clooney. USA/Fr/UK/Jap 2005 (93 mins)
This film seamlessly melds B&W archive footage with meticulously
recreated period scenes to commemorate the televised 50s showdown between
journalist Edward R. Murrow and red-baiting, commie-hunting senator Joe
McCarthy. Despite pressure from sponsors, Murrow and his team publicly
challenged the validity of the House Un-American Activities Committee. John
Sayles’s stalwart Strathairn is marvellous as Murrow, with the role of McCarthy
filled by actual recordings of the man himself.
14th
November
The Child (L’Enfant)
(12A)
Dir. Jean-Pierre
and Luc Dardenne.
Belg/Fr 2005 (95
mins)
Bruno (Renier) is a feckless petty thief who shares his life with his
girlfriend Sonia (François) and would sell his mother for cash. Trouble arises
when he sells their new baby and is forced to seek his return.
21st
November
The Wind That
Shakes the Barley (15)
Dir. Ken Loach.
UK/Eire/Ger/It/Sp/Switz 2006 (127 mins)
An
impassioned and politically charged story of Ireland's fight for independence
that seeks to reveal the “true underbelly” of Britain's colonial history.
Damien (Murphy) joins his brother Teddy (Delaney) as a guerrilla freedom
fighter against the deadly British 'Black & Tan' units shipped over to halt the
bid for liberation. After desperate fighting, both sides finally agree to a
treaty, but not everyone agrees with its compromise and civil war erupts,
ripping apart friends and families. Winner of the Palme d'Or at the 2006 Cannes
Film Festival. "Maybe if you tell the
truth about the past, you might tell the truth about the present." (Ken
Loach)
28th
November
Forty Shades of
Blue (15)
Dir. Ira Sachs.
USA 2004 (110 mins)
The
2006 Sundance drama winner follows egotistical music producer Alan James, his
Russian trophy wife Laura and their young son. Alan rules their lives until his
semi-estranged grown son seeks refuge at his father's home - and finds Laura.
5th
December
The Three Burials
of Melquidas Estrada (15)
Dir. Tommy Lee
Jones. Fr/USA 2005 (121 mins)
With a time-shifting screenplay by Guillermo Arriaga (writer of Amores
Perros), Jones’ directorial début is a politically charged, Peckinpah-tinged
Western set in the Tex-Mex borderlands. Ranch foreman Pete kidnaps the man
responsible for the murder of his best friend, and the two make a long and
dangerous trek south to bring Estrada’s body home. Veteran British
cinematographer Chris Menges turns the stunning landscapes into an equally
important character.
12th
December
Volver (15)
Dir. Pedro
Almodóvar. Sp 2005 (121 mins)
In
Volver, director Pedro Almodóvar creates another wonderful
(Cannes-winning) female ensemble and elicits Penélope Cruz's best performance.
Spanish from top to toes, the film moves between a La Mancha village and
working-class Madrid where village daughter Raimunda (Penélope Cruz) struggles
to support her family. Circumstances seem to conspire against her, but
surrounded by three generations of women - hairdresser sister Sole, teen
daughter Paula, former neighbour Agustina and haunted by her dead mother,
Raimunda will do more than survive.
19th
December
Three Times (12A)
Dir. Hou Hsiao-hsien.
Fr/Taiwan 2005 (135 mins)
This is a triptych of love stories set in three eras - all with the same leads
as the central couple - Shu Qi and Chang Chen. In 1966 it's an army recruit and
a pool hall girl; in 1911 a prostitute and her largely absent patron; in 2005
an epileptic musician and a photographer.. |