4 NOV 16 1 DEC 16

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88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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FILMS WORTH TALKING ABOUT

H O M E O F T H E E D I NB U RG H I N T E R N AT I O N A L F I L M F E S T I VA L

ID E IL M S IN S ER 100 F P LU S O V

The numbers game... Every night, every cinema in the UK reports their Box Office to an agency who collate all the information on behalf of the film industry. As a result, we get a view on how we do vs. other cinemas in our locale, and film distributors get a view of how their film is doing nationally. On a Monday morning, the whole industry is consumed by poring over the weekend’s figures, and the subsequent post-mortems of why films did or did not perform as per expectation. Not a huge amount of what we show screens anywhere else, but when it does happen it’s undeniably fun measuring our performance vs. our peers and competitors, particularly when we outdo them, which we often do. And the reason I’m telling you all this? As I write, we are the #1 site in the whole of the UK on Hunt for the Wilderpeople! It’s a rare achievement outside the higher ticketpriced London, and no mistake. Big thanks to all, to date, 5349 of you! You would think with our demonstrably impressive audience-pulling power that we’d be able to pick and choose what films we play on release, but often we are simply made to wait a few weeks after our competitors for reasons I’ve never quite been able to fathom. It’s not so bad, we know you’ll wait for us to catch up… There’s a few of them in this programme actually, though I’m not going to tell you which ones! We’ll have screenwriter Paul Laverty himself here with us on our first day (4 Nov, 6:10pm) of screening his and Ken Loach’s devastating Palme d’Or-winner I, Daniel Blake. Tom Ford’s Nocturnal Animals is a supremely stylish noir thriller; A United Kingdom tells the incredible true story from the 1940s when Prince Seretse Khama of Botswana married a white Londoner; and the French Film Festival comes around in its 24th edition! Zut alors! Rod White, Head of Filmhouse

Filmhouse Explorer Buy A TICKET FOR... I, Daniel Blake (p 4) American Pastoral (p 4) Nocturnal Animals (p 5) A United Kingdom (p 5) The Beatles: Eight Days a Week (p 7)

GET A HALF PRICE TICKET for The Innocents (p 4) After Love (p 5) Under the Shadow (p 7) French Film Festival UK (p 11-16) Shakespeare on Film (p 24-25)

All tickets subject to availability. The half price voucher only applies to full price tickets. The Filmhouse Explorer ticket deal cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. The 50% discount is not valid for Friday matinee screenings.

Ticket Prices matinees (shows starting prior to 5pm) Mon - Thu: £8.00 / £6.00 concessions Fri: £6.00 / £4.50 concessions Sat - Sun: £10.00 / £8.00 concessions

evening screenings (starting 5pm and later) £10.00 / £8.00 concessions 3D SCREENINGS add £2 to ticket price.

filmhouse junior screenings Under 12s are £4.50 for any screening. CONCESSIONS Children (under 15s), Students (with matriculation card), Young Scot card, Senior Citizens, Disability (carers go free), Claimants (Jobseekers Allowance, Disability Living Allowance, Housing Benefit), NHS employees (with proof of employees).

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PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

ACCESS/AUDIO DESC./CAPTIONED BABY & CARER SCREENINGS SCREENING DATES AND TIMES

38 38 20-22

4 Kings 33 16 Years Till Summer 6 24 Weeks 33 Adapting Miss Highsmith Double Bills 9-10 After Love 5 Africa in Motion Film Festival 25 All the President’s Men 23 Almodóvar: Broken Embraces + Live Flesh 8 American Pastoral 4 April and the Extraordinary World 15 As I Open My Eyes 26 The Battle of the Rails 13 The Battle of the Somme + Short 6 The Beatles: Eight Days a Week... 7 Blindness 27 Cezanne and I 11 Chimes at Midnight 25 Christmas at Our House! 35-36 A Christmas Star 29 Come What May 12 Dark Inclusion 13 Demon 27 Discovery Film Festival: Shorts for Wee Ones 28 Dummy Jim 6 Edinburgh Artists’ Moving Image Festival 30-31 Edinburgh Greek Film Festival 34 Education and Learning 19 Edward Thomasson 30 Emma Finn + EAMIF Showcase 30 Ettrick 31 I, Daniel Blake 4 Fanny’s Journey 12 Fiddlesticks 29 Filmhouse Junior 28-29 Filmosophy: Mind and Consciousness 18 First Growth 16 The First, The Last 14 Fokus: Films from Germany 31-33 Forbidden Planet 25 French Film Festival UK 11-16 Frida 7 From Caligari to Hitler 32 From the Land of the Moon 14

4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

A Good American 5 The Green March 26 Hedi Schneider is Stuck 31 Henry V 24 Her 18 Hogmanay 36-37 The Ides of March 23 In Bed with Victoria 12 The Innocents 4 JFK 23 A Journey Through French Cinema 13 Kati Kati 25 Kill the Referee 12 Kubo and the Two Strings 29 La Grande Vadrouille 11 Life is Waiting: Referendum and Resistance... 26 Memento 18 My Men 11 A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy 24 The New Kid 28 Nocturnal Animals 5 Oh Boy 33 Over the Rainbow 7 People on Sunday 32 The People vs Fritz Bauer 32 Pépé le Moko 15 Play Poland Film Festival 27 The Red Turtle 13 Rosalie Blum 14 The Scent of the Mandarin 15 Shakespeare on Film 24-24 Shaun the Sheep: The Movie 29 Short Cuts 14 Sonita 7 Sunday Double Bills 8-10 Take Time: EAMIF Showcase 31 The Testament of Dr. Mabuse 32 Thanks Boss! 15 U.S. Politics in Film 23 Under the Shadow 7 A United Kingdom 5 Whale Rider 6 WILD 33 You’ve Been Trumped Too 4

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Index

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New Releases

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| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

NEW RELEASE

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NEW RELEASE

I, Daniel Blake

You’ve Been Trumped Too

Showing from Fri 4 Nov

Fri 4 to Tue 8 Nov

Ken Loach • UK/France/Belgium 2016 • 1h40m • Digital • 15 - Contains very strong language • Cast: Dave Johns, Hayley Squires, Dylan McKiernan, Briana Shann.

Anthony Baxter • UK 2016 • 1h15m • Digital • cert tbc • Documentary.

Ken Loach’s Palme d’Or win was a triumphant moment for a firebrand filmmaker whose career has spanned over 50 years, and also for this dignified and stirring film, I, Daniel Blake. It is the all-too-timely story of a widowed joiner (Dave Johns) in Newcastle, recovering from a near-fatal heart attack, who meets single mother Katie (Hayley Squires) as they both try to negotiate a complex, impersonal benefits system that confounds them at every turn. A deeply moving, essential cry for humanity from a master filmmaker. The 6.10pm screening on Fri 4 Nov will be followed by a Q&A with screenwriter Paul Laverty.

NEW RELEASE

This timely and explosive film explores the deeply troubling confrontation between a feisty 92-yearold Scottish widow and her family and a billionaire attempting to become the most powerful man in the world. As thousands of journalists hang on every Donald Trump utterance, wondering what he might say next, Director Anthony Baxter (You’ve Been Trumped) explores the consequences of his actions in this unique and remarkable document of an historic election, and a timeless tale of the unlikely encounter between a salt-of-the-earth Scottish widow and one of the planet’s richest and most famous people.

NEW RELEASE

American Pastoral

The Innocents

Showing from Fri 11 Nov

Showing from Fri 11 Nov

Ewan McGregor • USA 2016 • 2h6m • Digital • 15 - Contains strong language, sex. • Cast: Ewan McGregor, Dakota Fanning, Jennifer Connelly, Peter Riegert.

Anne Fontaine • France/Poland 2016 • 1h55m • Digital • French, Polish and Russian with English subtitles • 15 - Contains sexual violence. Cast: Lou de Laâge, Agata Buzek, Agata Kulesza, Joanna Kulig.

The directorial feature debut of Ewan McGregor adapts Philip Roth’s 1997 phenomally successful novel of the same name. Against the backdrop of late 1960s civil unrest and Vietnam protest, McGregor plays Seymour “Swede” Levov, a successful Jewish American businessman whose comfortable middleclass existence is shattered by the actions of his precocious teenage daughter (Dakota Fanning) and his wife (Jennifer Connelly)...

Mathilde Beaulieu (Lou de Lâage) is a young intern working with the French Red Cross in December 1945. They are on a mission to find, treat and repatriate French survivors of German camps in the aftermath of the war. One day, a Polish nun arrives in the hospital, begging Mathilde to come to her convent. Her life and beliefs are challenged when she discovers that several of the Sisters are in advanced stages of pregnancy. Anne Fontaine’s film is beautifully performed and exquisitely shot.

Les innocentes

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

NEW RELEASE

NEW RELEASE

Nocturnal Animals

A Good American

Showing from Fri 18 Nov

Fri 18 & Sat 19 Nov

Tom Ford • USA 2016 • 1h55m • Digital • 15 - Contains strong threat, violence, sexual violence, nudity, language. Cast: Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Shannon, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Isla Fisher.

Friedrich Moser • Austria 2015 • 1h40m • Digital • 15 - Contains images of real dead bodies. • Documentary.

The much-anticipated new film by Tom Ford (A Single Man), Nocturnal Animals is based on Austin Wright’s 1993 novel, Tony and Susan. In this vibrant, intoxicating noir, Susan (Amy Adams), a gallery owner, receives a book manuscript from her ex-husband (Jake Gyllenhaal) - the plot of which revolves around a family trip that turns deadly. As Susan reads, we are plunged into this dark, violent story, which she begins to fear is drawn directly from the author’s deep resentment of her and how she left him.

NEW RELEASE

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One of the most revealing and fascinating films of Take One Action Film Festival returns to Filmhouse. Before Snowden, there was Bill Binney: the captivating portrait of a high-ranking NSA analyst turned whistleblower. In the late 1990s, William Binney helped devise ThinThread: a cheap and effective meta-data analysis programme with built-in privacy protections. Keen to boost its budget, the NSA shut ThinThread down, mere weeks before 9/11, in favour of a more expensive, privacy-invasive system that would prove one of the largest failures in the agency’s history...

NEW RELEASE

Showing from Fri 25 Nov

After Love L’économie du couple Mon 28 Oct to Thu 1 Dec

Amma Asante • USA/UK/Czech Republic 2016 • 1h51m • Digital • 12A - Contains racist language, moderate violence. • Cast: David Oyelowo, Rosamund Pike, Tom Felton, Laura Carmichael, Jack Davenport.

Joachim Lafosse • France/Belgium 2016 • 1h40m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A - Contains infrequent strong language Cast: Bérénice Bejo, Cédric Kahn, Marthe Keller, Jade Soentjens.

Based on extraordinary true events, A United Kingdom is a high-stakes love story that pits the bond between two people against the politicking and intolerance of two governments. In 1947, Seretse Khama (David Oyelowo) - King of Botswana - meets Londoner Ruth Williams (Rosamund Pike), and the pair fall in love. Their marriage is challenged not only by their families, but by the British and S.African governments, the latter having recently introduced apartheid. Oyelowo and Pike shine in this stirring film, directed by BAFTA winner Amma Asante (Belle).

Marie (Bérénice Bejo) and Boris (Cédric Kahn) - a married couple from opposite ends of the financial ladder - fall out of love and are headed for divorce. Things hit an immediate snag when Boris is unable to afford to move out of the home they share with their two children. An uneasy cohabitation begins and their opposing senses of entitlement clash, with Boris demanding half of the property he worked so hard on. Joachim Lafosse’s drama is a compelling watch, as we observe the crumbling relics of a former love.

A United Kingdom

New Releases

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Special Events

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| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

THE FIRST WORLD WAR IN CINEMA

The Battle of the Somme Fri 18 Nov at 6.10pm

PLUS Short

1h33m • Silent with score • Exempt • £6.50/£5

This year, Imperial War Museums (IWM) and the First World War Centenary Partnership are working together to show UNESCO listed film The Battle of the Somme, to audiences across the world. Shot and screened in 1916, around 20 million people watched The Battle of the Somme many hoping to see the image of a loved-one, or friend captured on film. Laura Rossi’s soundtrack score was commissioned to mark the 90th anniversary of The Battle of the Somme.

SIGNED UP

Dummy Jim Sun 20 Nov at 12.45pm Matt Hulse • UK 2013 • 1h27m • Digital • English with captions • PG

The final Signed Up of 2016 features the story of James Duthie, a deaf man who in 1951 cycled from his Scottish village to the Arctic circle, a 3-month, 3,000-mile voyage costing just £12. Is Dummy Jim a “virtuoso blend” that is “quietly ahead of its time”, or just “the sort of protagonist one may classify alongside Forrest Gump, another golden child of the cinema that embodies saccharine-coated triumph over adversity”? The screening will be followed by a discussion with BSL interpretation. Curated in partnership with Heriot-Watt University sign language experts.

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GROWING PAINS

Whale Rider Sat 19 Nov at 1.15pm Niki Caro • New Zealand/Germany 2002 • 1h41m • 35mm • English and Maori with English subtitles • PG - Contains mild language and emotional intensity Growing Pains shows films dealing with some of the more complex aspects of childhood. All films followed by an informal chat and will be introduced by Jessie Moroney, who attended the Practical Programming course with the Independent Cinema Office, which assists participants to develop a fresh programme for their venues.

The Maori tribe from Whangara believe that the first person to come to their land was brought by a whale, and a male heir has always succeeded as chief of the village. This is challenged when the child destined to be the next chief dies at birth, while his twin sister, Pai, survives. As Pai approaches maturity, she must struggle to fight for her birthright as the new chief.

SPECIAL EVENT

16 Years till Summer Sun 20 Nov at 6.15pm & Wed 23 Nov at 4.00pm Lou McLoughlan • UK/Iceland 2015 • 1h20m • Digital • 12A Documentary.

Uisdean wants forgiveness. After 16 years in prison, he’s released to the Highlands to pursue his crofting dreams whilst taking care of his father. But it takes an extraordinary love story to elude growing accusations against him... 16 Years Till Summer tells a very human story of euphoric hope set against documented tragedy in a film about what is sacrificed when people need to see the best in each other. The screening on Sun 20 Nov will be followed by a Q&A with director Lou McLoughlan.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

OVer the rainbow

Frida Sat 26 Nov at 3.30pm & Sun 27 Nov at 6.00pm

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Maybe you missed

The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years

Julie Taymor • USA/Canada/Mexico 2002 • 2h3m • 35mm • English, French and Russian with English subtitles • 15 - Contains strong language and moderate sex and violence. • Cast: Salma Hayek, Alfred Molina, Geoffrey Rush, Antonio Banderas.

Fri 4 to Tue 8 Nov

Frida chronicles the extraordinary life Frida Kahlo shared unflinchingly and openly with the “fat man”, legendary artist Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina). From her complex relationship with her mentor and husband, to her illicit and controversial affair with Leon Trotsky (Geoffrey Rush), to her romantic entanglements with women, Frida Kahlo lived a passionate, bold and uncompromising life. Salma Hayek gives a genuinely great performance alongside an illustrious cast.

By the time The Beatles quit touring in August of 1966, they had performed 166 concerts in 15 countries and 90 cities around the world. The cultural phenomenon their touring helped create, known as ‘Beatlemania’, was something the world had never seen before and, arguably, hasn’t since. This is the not-to-be-missed story of the band’s exceptional touring years - an intimate portrait of the band, and a behind-the-scenes look at The Beatles on tour, with interviews, unheard music and concert footage.

Maybe you missed

Ron Howard • UK/USA 2016 • 2h10m • Digital • 12A - Contains infrequent strong language, drug references. • Documentary.

Maybe you missed

Under the Shadow

Sonita

Wed 9 & Thu 10 Nov

Wed 9 & Thu 10 Nov

Babak Anvari • Iran/Jordan/Qatar 2016 • 1h24m • Digital • Persian with English subtitles • 15 - Contains strong supernatural threat. Cast: Narges Rashidi, Avin Manshadi, Bobby Naderi, Ray Haratian.

Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami • Iran/Germany/Switzerland 2015 1h30m • Digital • Farsi, Dari and English with English subtitles • PG Documentary.

In 1988 post-revolution Tehran, Iran, Shideh (Narges Rashidi) - blacklisted from medical college by the new government - and her daughter Dorsa (Avin Manshadi) remain in their home amid the political and societal chaos. When a missile hits their apartment, failing to explode, mysterious events begin to occur. A superstitious neighbour claims the falling shell has brought with it evil spirits, that travel on the wind...

Winner - 2016 Take One Action Audience Award. This Sundance Audience Award winner captures a teenage Afghan rapper’s journey to empowerment. As an illegal immigrant in Iran, Sonita should be keeping her head down yet, in a country where women are not allowed to sing solo, she wants to succeed as a rapper. Her family have other plans. When Sonita learns she is to be sold as a bride, she pleads with the film’s director to intervene, turning her story - and the documentary - around.

Over the Rainbow/Maybe You Missed

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Sunday Double Bills

8

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

Double bill

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AlmodÓvar Double Bill:

Broken Embraces + Live Flesh Sun 6 Nov at 1.30pm

4h4m • 18 • £12/£10 • 15 minute break between films

The last in our series of Almodóvar Double Bills brings together two thrillers which play out across decades of Spanish history. Broken Embraces is a trademark tale of obsession, betrayal and lust starring Almodóvar regular Penélope Cruz. Following is Live Flesh, based on Ruth Rendell’s novel of the same name, which follows a man who is sent to prison after crippling a police officer, and his subsequent search for redemption. The film takes place against a backdrop of great social change, charting the final years and aftermath of the Franco regime. Broken Embraces (Los abrazos rotos) Pedro Almodóvar • Spain 2009 • 2h8m • Spanish with English subtitles • 15 - Contains strong language, sex and hard drug references

Live Flesh (Carne trémula)

Pedro Almodóvar • Spain/France 1997 • 1h41m • Spanish and Italian with English subtitles • 18

Double bill

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

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Adapting Miss Highsmith:

Strangers on a Train + Enough Rope Sun 13 Nov at 1.00pm 3h42m • 15 • £12/£10 • 15 minute break between films

The first in a series of Double Bills as part of our Adapting Miss Highsmith season brings together two of the earliest Patricia Highsmith adaptations. Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train, his take on Highsmith’s debut novel, tells the tale of a chance meeting which leads to a supposedly fool-proof murder swap: Bruno agrees to kill Guy’s wife if Guy disposes of Bruno’s father. Also screening is Enough Rope, Claude Autant-Lara’s adaptation of The Blunderer, which examines the dark obsessions that lead to murder... Strangers on a Train

Alfred Hitchcock • USA 1951 • 1h43m • 35mm • PG

Enough Rope (Le meurtrier)

Claude Autant-Lara • France/West Germany/Italy 1963 • 1h44m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 15

Double bill

Adapting Miss Highsmith:

Deep Water + Carol Sun 20 Nov at 1.30pm

3h47m • 15 • £12/£10 • 15 minute break between films

The second of our Adapting Miss Highsmith Double Bills brings together two films of obsession and desire. Deep Water is a tale of jealous infatuation in which middle-aged perfumer Vic is tormented by the extramarital flirtations of his young wife Mélanie (Isabelle Huppert), and soon has murder on his mind... It is paired with Carol, Todd Haynes’ stunning, dreamlike adaptation of Highsmith’s semiautobiographical romanctic novella The Price of Salt a lush melodrama with a first-rate performances from Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. Deep Water (Eaux Profondes)

Michel Deville • France 1981 • 1h34m • French with English subtitles 15

Carol

Todd Haynes • UK/USA/France 2015 • 1h58m 15 - Contains infrequent strong sex

Sunday Double Bills

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Sunday Double Bills

10

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

Double bill

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Adapting Miss Highsmith:

This Sweet Sickness + The Talented Mr Ripley Sun 27 Nov at 1.00pm

4h21m • 15 • £12/£10 • 15 minute break between films

The third Adapting Miss Highsmith Double Bill explores the question of identity. Even in a body of work populated with obsessives, David Kelsey (in this Francophone version Gérard Depardieu plays ‘David Martineau’), the protagonist of This Sweet Sickness, stands out - infatuated with an ex-girlfriend now happily married to another man, he spends his time preparing a house for them to live in. It screens with Anthony Minghella’s The Talented Mr. Ripley, in which Highsmith’s most enduring creation, Tom Ripley, is portrayed by Matt Damon, opposite Gwyneth Paltrow and Jude Law in a polished, suspenseful adaptation. This Sweet Sickness (Dites-lui que je l’aime)

Claude Miller • France 1977 • 1h47m French with English subtitles • 15

The Talented Mr Ripley

Anthony Minghella • USA 1999 • 2h19m • English and Italian 15 - Contains infrequent strong language and violence.

COMING SOON

ADAPTING MISS HIGHSMITH:

THE GLASS CELL + PLEIN SOLEIL

Matinee Special If you’re a Senior Citizen you can go to a matinee screening and get either Soup of the Day OR a cup of tea or filter coffee and a traycake for the special discounted price of £8 Offer runs from Mondays to Thursdays inclusive and only applies to screenings starting before 5.00pm. Ask for the Matinee Special deal at the box office and you’ll receive a voucher which can be exchanged in the Café Bar between 1.30pm and 5.30pm that day only. Offer is subject to availability and only available in person.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

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La Grande Vadrouille Fri 4 Nov at 3.15pm The biggest explosion of French and francophone cinema in the UK returns to Filmhouse - French Film Festival UK, an annual event now in its 24th edition. The numerous highlights include Cezanne and I with Guillaume Gallienne and Guillaume Canet and JeanPierre Mocky’s black comedy Kill the Referee. Festival director Richard Mowe: “While the UK postReferendum is about to become less European we are delighted to celebrate the cinematic culture of our French-speaking neighbours at more cinemas than ever through the UK.” www.frenchfilmfestival.org.uk

TICKET OFFER

Cezanne and I

Gérard Oury • France/UK 1966 • 2h12m • Digital • French, English and German with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Bourvil, Louis de Funès, Claudio Brook, Terry Thomas.

Prior to the arrival of Titanic in 1997, La Grande Vadrouille had been France’s all-time box-office champion for three decades. In terms of Frenchlanguage films, it was only displaced by Dany Boon’s Bienvenue chez les Ch’tis in 2008. Literally “The Great Stroll” deals with two ordinary Frenchmen helping the crew of a Royal Air Force bomber shot down over Paris make their way through German-occupied France to escape arrest. The ebullience of the comic performances is matched by Claude Renoir’s exuberant photography. This 50th Anniversary reissue is being shown on a restored copy. The screening will be preceded by an introduction.

Fri 4 Nov at 6.00pm

My Men Un début prometteur Thu 10 Nov at 8.30pm

Danièle Thompson • France 2016 • 1h57m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Guillaume Gallienne, Guillaume Canet, Alice Pol, Déborah François, Sabine Azéma, Gérard Melan.

Emma Luchini • France 2915 • 1h30m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Manu Payet, Zacharie Chasseriaud, Fabrice Luchini, Veerle Baetens.

Sumptuous 19th-century period drama starring Guillaume Gallienne as post-impressionist painter Paul Cézanne. Danièle Thompson’s sixth feature charts the friendship and eventual fallout between Cézanne, who was born into a wealthy family but struggled to make a living as a painter, and Émile Zola (Guillaume Canet), who came from a family of more straitened circumstances but achieved fame and prosperity as a politically-engaged novelist.

Emma Luchini’s second feature is a family affair. Based on the novel by her partner Nicolas Rey and with father Fabrice in a lead role, this tragi-comedy has top class credentials. Martin (Manu Payet) returns to the family home and takes up residence in a mobile home in the garden. Younger brother Gabriel (Zacharie Chasseriaud) is delighted to have Martin back and soon drags him into his plan to seduce Mathilde (Veerle Baetens), an older woman with whom he has fallen madly in love... The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Emma Luchini.

Cézanne et moi

The screening will be preceded by an introduction.

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French Film Festival UK

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French Film Festival UK

12

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

Kill the Referee

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

À mort l’arbitre!

Fri 11 Nov at 6.00pm Jean-Pierre Mocky • France 1984 • 1h22m • 35mm • French with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Michel Serrault , Carole Laure, Eddy Mitchell, Claude Brosset, Jean-Pierre Mocky.

In one of his blackest of black comedies Jean-Pierre Mocky turns his satirical eye on football supporters - especially the ones with Neanderthal tendencies who are likely to go on an orgy of self-destruction if their team fails to win a match. Starring pop singer Eddy Mitchell as the referee who is hunted by an axe-wielding Michel Serrault - a deranged supporter. Reckless about their own safety, the angry mob takes risks that cause a few accidental deaths - which only makes their murderous intent more focused. The screening will be preceded by an introduction.

In Bed with Victoria

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Come What May

En mai, fais ce qu’il te plaît Sat 12 Nov at 3.35pm Christian Carion • France/Belgium 2015 • 1h54m • Digital • French, German and English with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Olivier Gourmet, Mathilde Seigner, Alice Isaac, August Diehl.

To escape the German invasion in May 1940, the inhabitants of a small village in the north of France take to the road, like millions of other French people. On this exodus, the villagers bring with them a German child, whose father (August Diehl) opposed the Nazi regime and who has been jailed for lying about his nationality. During the chaos, the father is freed and sets out to find his son (Joshio Marlon), accompanied by a Scottish soldier (Matthew Rhys) who is trying to repatriate himself.

Fanny’s Journey

Victoria Sat 12 Nov at 8.40pm

Le voyage de Fanny Sun 13 Nov at 3.40pm

Justine Triet • France 2016 • 1h30m • Digital • French and English with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Virginie Efira, Vincent Lacoste, Melvil Poupaud, Laurent Poitrenaux.

Lola Doillon • France 2016 • 1h35m • Digital • French with English subtitles • PG • Cast: Léonie Souchaud, Cécile de France, Stéphane De Groodt, Fantine Harduin, Juliane Lepoureau.

First seen in one of several unfruitful therapy sessions, powerhouse blond lawyer Victoria (Virginie Efira), soon finds herself at a friend’s wedding where the plot officially kicks in. During the party, she runs into Sam (Vincent Lacoste), a former dealer she once defended in court, and who’s now looking to be her legal intern and/or man slave. She also crosses paths with Vincent (Melvil Poupaud), who’s engaged in a stormy relationship with Eve (Alice Daquet). This second feature from writer-director Justine Triet (Age of Panic) opened Critics’ Week in Cannes.

Poignant story of a brave and resourceful young girl leading a small band of orphans through Nazioccupied Europe. Based on the autobiography of Fanny Ben Ami, the journey starts in 1939. After the arrest of her father, Fanny and her younger sisters are sent to a refectory for Jewish children. For a time, she and her new friends are safe, but the war catches up with them soon enough. Fanny, now all of 13, has always relied on adults, but as Mussolini’s Italy collapses and the chaos of war closes in, Fanny has to be the adult for a group of eight children.

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Dark Inclusion

4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

Sun 13 Nov at 8.30pm

The Red Turtle La tortue rouge Mon 14 Nov at 1.10pm & 6.10pm

Arthur Harari • France/Belgium 2016 • 1h55m • Digital • French, German and English with English subtitles • 15

Michael Dudok de Wit • Japan/France/Belgium 2016 • 1h20m Digital • No dialogue • PG

Arthur Harari’s first feature is a stylish and assured thriller in which violence erupts suddenly amid tense, hushed stretches of dialogue. Pier Ulmann (Niels Schneider) comes from a family of powerful diamond dealers. After his estranged father’s death, he vows vengeance and returns to the business with an elaborate robbery in mind. With menacing tracking shots; a cool, metallic colour palette; and a terrific ensemble cast, Dark Inclusion is precisely attuned to the logistical and moral complexities that accompany lives of luxurious crime. We hope to follow with a post-film Q&A (TBC).

Although there is no dialogue, the big questions this film asks - about ambition, acceptance and the beauty of companionship - ring loud in every frame. A man is shipwrecked, and when he builds a wooden raft, he is confronted by the titular turtle. The story then follows the milestones in his life on the island which include meeting a woman and starting a family. Dutch animator Michael Dudok de Wit co-wrote the story with French filmmaker Pascale Ferran. It is the first international coproduction for Japanese animation house Studio Ghibli. Presented in Cannes Un Certain Regard.

The Battle of the Rails

A Journey Through French Cinema

Diamant noir

La bataille du rail Mon 14 Nov at 8.50pm & Tue 15 Nov at 1.00pm René Clément • France 1946 • 1h28m • Digital • French and German with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Jean Clarieux, Jacques Desagneaux, Charles Boyer, Fernand Rauzena.

René Clément tells of the courageous efforts by French railway workers to sabotage German troop transport trains. It was shown at the 1946 Cannes Film Festival where the film won the Prix international du jury and Clément won the Best Director Award. The film also won the inaugural Prix Méliès. The screening preludes next year’s Cannes 70th anniversary. The screening on Mon 14 Nov will be introduced by Dr Martine Pierquin.

Voyage à travers le cinéma français Tue 15 Nov at 6.30pm Bertrand Tavernier • France 2016 • 3h15m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A • Documentary.

A first-class French director since the 1970s, Bertrand Tavernier knows film history like few others. Here he has created a survey that is deep, insightful, extremely entertaining and personal. Undoubtedly one of the very greatest documentaries about the history of cinema, he delves into French classics, and includes interviews and footage from Jean Renoir, Claude Sautet, Jean-Luc Godard, Louis Malle, Francois Truffaut and Jacques Becker among many. A must for all film lovers. The screening will be introduced by Dr Martine Pierquin.

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French Film Fesitval UK

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| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

From the Land of the Moon

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The First, the Last

Mal de pierres Wed 16 Nov at 1.00pm & 8.30pm

Les Premiers, les derniers Thu 17 Nov at 1.00pm & 8.30pm

Nicole Garcia • France/Belgium 2016 • 2h • Digital • French and Spanish with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Marion Cotillard, Louis Garrel, Alex Brendemuhl, Brigitte Rouan.

Bouli Lanners • France 2016 • 1h38m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 18 • Cast: Albert Dupontel, Bouli Lanners, Suzanne Clément, Michael Lonsdale, Max Von Sydow.

A sensual, independent-minded woman is considered a danger to herself and the natural order of society in Nicole Garcia’s languid, handsomely crafted adaptation of Italian author Milena Agus’s novel. The ingredients of an old-fashioned romantic weepie are given class and conviction, bolstered by fine and under-stated performances from Marion Cotillard and Louis Garrel.

Cochise and Gilou (Bouli Lanners and Albert Dupontel), a pair of grizzled bounty hunters, have been hired by a wealthy stranger to obtain a phone in the possession of a homeless young couple that holds critical information. When they turn the phone on, Cochise and Gilou can get a lead on their whereabouts. In this singular and deeply personal universe, everyone, including a craggy undertaker played by Max Von Sydow, seems uprooted, set adrift in his or her own way. 8.30pm screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Bouli Lanners.

Short Cuts

Rosalie Blum

Thu 17 Nov at 6.00pm

Fri 18 Nov at 1.05pm & 8.30pm

1h42m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A

Julien Rappeneau • France 2015 • 1h36m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Noemie Lvovsky, Kyan Khojandi, Alice Isaaz, Anémone.

Short films can provide a fertile training ground for many of the most celebrated directors including Georges Méliès, the Lumière Brothers, and François Truffaut. This programme embraces film-makers who love the format, from FFF patron Sylvain Chomet (The Illusionist, Belleville Rendez-vous) to actor Félix Moati (All About Them), to newcomers. The selection has been curated by Federica Pugliese, Médéric Tampellini and Cannes award-winning film-maker and lecturer Irvine Allan from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh and includes Reflexions in the Cat’s Eyes by Aberdeen-based French film-maker Yannik Ruault who will be present. The screening will be followed by a Q&A.

Julien Rappeneau’s enchanting directorial debut is warm, witty and impeccably performed dramacomedy about a random encounter that has unexpected and far-reaching consequences. Thirtysomething Vincent Machot (Kyan Khojandi) is a hairdresser. Life rotates around work, his overbearing mother and a womanising cousin constantly trying to set him up. One morning he experiences powerful déjà-vu when he meets the gaze of a shop assistant, Rosalie Blum (Noémie Lvovsky)... With its themes of fraternity, love and human connection, Rosalie Blum is a timely reminder of the best that French culture has to offer. It’s a joy to watch.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

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April and the Extraordinary World

Avril et le monde truqué Sat 19 Nov at 3.40pm

Christian Desmares and Franck Ekinci • France/Belgium/Canada 2016 • 1h43m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A Cast: Marion Cotillard, Philippe Katerine, Jean Rochefort, Olivier Gourmet, Marc-André Grondin.

A beautiful, inventive and uncannily satisfying new example of animated sci-fi from directors Christian Desmares and Franck Ekinci, who have adapted a graphic novel by Jacques Tardi. April has an alternate-history peg that’s irrepressibly Gallic. In the late 19th century, a scheme hatched by Napoleon III to engineer super-soldiers scientifically goes horribly awry.

The Scent of the Mandarin

L’Odeur de la mandarine Sat 19 Nov at 6.00pm

Gilles Legrand • France 2015 • 1h50m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Olivier Gourmet, Georgia Scalliet, Dimitri Storoge, Hélène Vincent.

In the final months of the First World War, cavalry officer Charles (Olivier Gourmet) contemplates his future. Angèle (Georgia Scalliet) is his home-care nurse, recently widowed by the continuing conflict. After Angèle accepts Charles’ proposal of marriage without passion, their own battle begins as they come to terms with their fate and how to find some version of mutual happiness. Writer-director Gilles Legrand (You Will Be My Son) brings an intuitive and impassioned vision to this study of raw real emotions and a striking reflection on the Great War.

Pépé le Moko

Thanks Boss!

Sun 20 Nov at 3.40pm + Mon 21 Nov at 8.40pm

Sun 20 Nov at 8.45pm

Julien Duvivier • France 1937 • 1h34m • Digital • French and Arabic with English subtitles • PG • Cast: Jean Gabin, Mireille Balin, Gabriel Gabrio, Lucas Gridoux, Line Noro.

François Ruffin • France 2016 • 1h23m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A • Documentary.

The notorious Pépé le Moko (Jean Gabin) is a wanted man. In the labyrinthine Casbah of Algiers, Pépé is safe from the clutches of the police. But his clandestine life is unveiled when Gaby (Mireille Balin), a Parisian playgirl, compels him to risk his life and leave his past behind. The Sun 20 Nov screening will be introduced by Dr Martine Pierquin.

Merci Patron!

For Jocelyn and Serge Klur, nothing is going right: their factory that had made suits for Kenzo (Groupe LVMH) in the north of France was relocated to Poland. Now unemployed and deeply in debt, the couple stand to lose their home. That’s when François Ruffin, founder of the newspaper Fakir, knocks on their door. He is confident about one thing: he’s going to save them. He plans to take the Klur’s case before the LVMH annual general meeting, certain that he can appeal to the heart of its director, Bernard Arnault. Can they manage to pull one over on the world’s leading luxury group and France’s richest man?

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| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

First Growth

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Premiers crus

Mon 21 Nov at 5.50pm Jérôme Le Maire • France 2015 • 1h37m • Digital • French with English subtitles • 12A Cast: Jalil Lespert, Gérard Lanvin, Alice Taglioni, Laura Smet, Lannick Gautry.

Bursting with sumptuous cinematography depicting the vineyards of Burgundy, an assured cast and a feel-good script, First Growth is vintage French film-making about the art of making wine. Charlie, the son of a wine grower, left his vineyard home to become a renowned Parisian oenologist and the author of a hugely successful wine guide. When Charlie returns to help his family’s failing enterprise he struggles with temperamental weather, a delicate grape and the doubts of his father (Gérard Lanvin). Can the wine critic become a wine producer? The screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Jérôme Le Maire.

We offer a relaxed and comfortable place to meet for food, coffee or a drink. So whether popping in for a quick bite to eat, escaping the hustle and bustle of the busy Edinburgh West End or getting a meal before a film, then here is the place to come! All our dishes are prepared using fresh ingredients with our chefs serving up imaginative, fresh, affordable and exciting food from all round the world. We cater for most dietary needs and have a variety of daily specials which often can be adapted. The bar has an impressive range of wines as well as fair trade coffees, real ales, beers & spirits all served by our friendly, talented bar staff. Mon – Thur: 8am – 11.30pm Fri: 8am - 12.30am Sat: 10am – 12.30am Sun: 10am – 11.30pm 0131 229 5932

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Every month, our infamously tricky (but fun) Film Quiz, hosted by Sam Kitchener. Free to enter, teams of up to eight people to be seated in the Café Bar by 9pm. Next quiz is on Sunday 13 November We now offer an extensive and affordable Breakfast Menu including Full Scottish and Vegetarian cooked breakfast options, Eggs Benedict and hot fillings for Morning Rolls. Breakfast served every day until 12pm and Sunday till 3pm.

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Filmosophy: Mind and Consciousness

18

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

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Filmosophy: Mind and Consciousness Filmosophy returns for a seventh season of original and thought-provoking films and discussions. The films featured in this season offer an opportunity to reflect on a range of issues in the philosophy of mind. We will explore the nature of mind and consciousness, the importance of memory, and the possibility of artificial intelligence. Along the way we will consider various arguments and thought experiments proposed by philosophers in an attempt to better understand what it means to be a person. Each film will be preceded by a short introduction and followed by an accessible and informal post-screening discussion. Screenings will be introduced and discussion sessions hosted by James Mooney, Short Courses lecturer and course organiser at The University of Edinburgh. No previous knowledge of philosophy is required. For details of short courses, visit www.ed.ac.uk/short-courses. For more information on screenings and events or to continue the discussion, ‘like’ Filmosophy on Facebook or follow @film_philosophy on Twitter.

Memento Wed 16 Nov at 5.50pm Christopher Nolan • USA 2000 • 1h53m • 35mm • 15 - Contains strong language and violence • Cast: Guy Pearce, Carrie-Anne Moss, Joe Pantoliano, Mark Boone Junior, Jorja Fox.

Christopher Nolan’s groundbreaking neo-noir thriller follows Leonard Shelby (Guy Pearce) - who suffers from anterograde amnesia (the inability to form new memories) - as he searches for the man responsible for his wife’s death. The narrative unfolds in reverse chronological order, allowing us to identify with Leonard’s confused mental state in his quest for vengeance and his attempt to establish the truth.

Her Wed 14 Dec at 5.50pm Spike Jonze • USA 2013 • 2h6m • Digital • 15 - Contains strong language and sex references • Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams, Scarlett Johansson, Rooney Mara, Chris Pratt.

TICKET OFFER

Set in Los Angeles in the near future, Spike Jonze’s comedy-drama follows Theodore Twombly (Joaquin Phoenix), a lonely and introverted individual who develops a relationship with Samantha, an intelligent computer operating system (voiced by Scarlett Johansson). As their relationship evolves, so does Samantha, and we are invited to reflect on the nature of love and what it means to be human.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

Education and Learning SCHOOL SCREENINGS The Battle of the Somme Thur 18 November, 10.00am • 1h18m • PG • S1-S6, History, Media Studies In association with National Museums Scotland, we are delighted to announce this special screening of the seminal 1916 British documentary and war propaganda film. Laura Clouting, historian at the Imperial War Museum, will introduce the screening and discuss its history and impact. FOKUS: FILMS FROM GERMANY Fiddlesticks (Primary Screening) Tue 29 November, 10am • 1h12m • PG • German with English subtitles P4-P7, Modern Languages (German) In the small town of Bollarsville, people are desperate to stay as normal as possible. If that involves moving all grandparents into a care home to maintain the statistical average, then that’s what they’ll do! It’s up to a small band of children to save the day, embarking on an action-packed adventure to rescue their relatives. I Feel Like Disco (Ich fühl mich Disco) (Secondary Screening) Wed 30 November, 10am • 1h38m • 15 German with English subtitles • S4-S6, Modern Languages (German) Florian is an overweight, awkward teenager who loves dressing up and dancing to disco music, to the exasperation of his traditional father. When Florian’s mother suffers a stroke, father and son are forced to confront their differences. A refreshingly honest gay coming-of-age tale set to a fantastic disco soundtrack This screening will include a post-film discussion. INTO FILM FESTIVAL The Into Film Festival takes place all over the UK from 9-25 November (14-17 and 21-24 November at Filmhouse), with free film screenings, workshops and masterclasses. Go to www.intofilm.org/festival for more information and to book tickets. For the full list of autumn school screenings please visit wwww.filmhousecinema.com/learning/ Tickets cost £3 per pupil / free for teachers. To book please contact Flip Kulakiewicz on 0131 228 6382 or email [email protected] ANIMATION WORKSHOP How to Animate (for adults and 16+) Saturday 26 November • 10.00am-4.30pm • £40

A fun-packed introduction to the world of animation which will allow you to explore different 2D and 3D techniques to create your own short films. This hands-on workshop covers 2D drawn animation, 2D cut-out puppets, 3D Stop Motion animation and other techniques. You’ll learn about practical and affordable filming equipment, software and materials. Get tips from a professional animator and jump start development of your own ideas

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Education and Learning

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Screenings and Times

20

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

(AD) Audio Description (see p 38) (AiM) Africa in Motion (p 25-26) (F) (C) Captioned for deaf or hard of hearing (DE) Fokus: Films From Germany (p 31-33) (FF) (see p 38) (EA) Edinburgh Artists’ Moving... (p 30-31) (FJ) DATE SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

SCREENING TIMES

Fri 1 The Beatles: Eight Days... 1.05 4 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 3.50/8.55 6.10 +Q&A Nov 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 2 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1.00 3.15 +Intro 2 La Grande Vadrouille (FF) 2 Cezanne and I (FF) 6.00 +Intro 2 Kati Kati (AiM) 8.45 +Q&A 1.20/8.40 3 You’ve Been Trumped Too *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Sat 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1.00/3.15/6.00/8.35 5 2 You’ve Been Trumped Too 1.20 3.10/5.55 Nov 2 The Beatles: Eight Days... 2 As I Open My Eyes (AiM) 8.40 +Intro 3.30/6.05 3 You’ve Been Trumped Too *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Sun 1 The New Kid (FJ) 11.00am 6 1 Almodóvar Double Bill: Nov Broken Embraces + Live Flesh 1.30 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 6.10/8.35 2 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1.00 3.30 +Discussion 2 The Green March (AiM) 2 Life is Waiting... (AiM) 6.00 +Intro 2 The Beatles: Eight Days... 8.30 3 You’ve Been Trumped Too 1.20/8.40 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Mon 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 2.00/8.40 7 1 The Beatles: Eight Days... 5.50 Nov 2 The Beatles: Eight Days... 12.45 2 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 3.30 2 The Ides of March (POL) 5.55 +Discussion 2 A Midsummer Night’s...(SH) 8.50 +Intro 3 You’ve Been Trumped Too 1.20/8.40 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) For Crying Out Loud Baby & Carer screening - see page 38 Tue 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1.00 8 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) (C) 6.10 (captioned) Nov 1 The Beatles: Eight Days... 8.25 2 The Beatles: Eight Days... 12.45 2 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 3.30 2 Henry V (SH) 5.45 +Intro 2 Demon (PP) 8.50 +Intro 3 You’ve Been Trumped Too 3.40/6.05 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22)

DATE

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Filmosophy (p 18) French Film Festival UK (p 11-16) Filmhouse Junior (p 28-29)

SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

SCREENING TIMES

Wed 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 2.30/6.10/8.30 9 2 Sonita 1.20/9.00 3.40 Nov 2 Under the Shadow 2 All the President’s Men (POL) 5.40 +Discussion 3.30 3 Sonita 3 Under the Shadow 8.45 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Thu 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 2.30/6.10 8.30 +Q&A 10 1 My Men + short (FF) Nov 2 Sonita 1.20/6.15 2 Under the Shadow 3.40/8.25 3.30 3 Sonita 3 Blindness (PP) 6.00 +Intro *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Fri 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 11 1 The Innocents Nov 2 The Innocents 2 American Pastoral 2 Kill the Referee (FF) 3 American Pastoral 3 The Innocents

1.30/3.45/8.45 6.10 12.45/8.30 3.15 6.00 +Intro 12.35/5.55/8.40 3.25

Sat 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 12 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) Nov 2 The Innocents 2 Come What May (FF) 2 In Bed with Victoria (FF) 3 American Pastoral 3 The Innocents

1.30/3.45 6.15/8.45 12.45/6.10 3.35 8.40 12.35/5.55/8.35 3.25

Sun 1 Strangers on a Train 13 + Enough Rope (SDB) Nov 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1 The Innocents 2 Shorts for Wee Ones (FJ) 2 The Innocents 2 Fanny’s Journey (FF) 2 Dark Inclusion (FF) 3 American Pastoral 3 The Innocents

1.00 5.45 8.15 11.00am 12.45/5.50 3.40 8.30 +Q&A 12.35/5.55/8.40 3.25

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

(GP) Growing Pains (p 6) (OR) Over the Rainbow (p 7) (POL) U.S. Politics in Film (p 23) DATE SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

(PP) Play Poland Film Festival (p 27) (SDB) Sunday Double Bills (p 8-10) (SH) Shakespeare on Film (p 24-25) SCREENING TIMES

DATE

(WW) First World War in Cinema (p 6) All screenings in 2D unless marked (3D)

SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

SCREENING TIMES

Mon 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 1.30/6.15 14 1 American Pastoral 8.30 1.10/6.10 Nov 2 The Red Turtle (FF) 2 American Pastoral 3.15 8.50 +Intro 2 The Battle of the Rails (FF) 3 The Innocents 12.55/3.25/8.35 3 American Pastoral 5.55 For Crying Out Loud Baby & Carer screening - see page 38

Sun 1 Shaun the Sheep...(FJ) 11.00am 20 1 Deep Water + Carol (SDB) 1.30 6.05/8.40 Nov 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 2 Dummy Jim (SU) (C) 12.45 +Discussion 3.40 +Intro 2 Pépé le Moko (FF) 2 16 Years till Summer 6.15 +Q&A 2 Thanks Boss! (FF) 8.45 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22)

Tue 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 15 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) Nov 1 American Pastoral 2 The Battle of the Rails (FF) 2 American Pastoral 2 A Journey Through... (FF) 3 The Innocents 3 American Pastoral

1.30 3.50/6.15 8.30 1.00 3.15 6.30 +Intro 12.55/3.25/8.35 5.55

Mon 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 2.30 21 1 Pépé le Moko (FF) 8.40 Nov 2 Forbidden Planet (SH) 6.00 +Intro 8.30 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 3 First Growth (FF) 5.50 +Q&A *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) For Crying Out Loud Baby & Carer screening - see page 38

Wed 1 American Pastoral 16 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) Nov 2 From the Land of the... (FF) 2 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 2 Memento (F) 3 The Innocents 3 American Pastoral

2.30/5.55 8.40 1.00/8.30 3.35 5.50 +Discussion 12.55/3.25/6.05 8.35

Thu 1 I, Daniel Blake (AD) 17 1 American Pastoral Nov 2 The First, the Last (FF) 2 The First, the Last (FF) 2 American Pastoral 2 Short Cuts (FF) 3 The Innocents 3 American Pastoral

2.30/8.40 5.55 1.00 8.30 +Q&A 3.15 6.00 12.55/3.25/6.05 8.35

Fri 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 1.00/3.35/6.05/8.40 18 2 Rosalie Blum (FF) 1.05/8.30 Nov 2 A Good American 3.30 2 Battle of the Somme (WW) 6.10 +Intro +Short *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Sat 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 1.00/3.35/6.05/8.40 19 2 Whale Rider 1.15 +Discussion Nov 2 April and the...(FF) 3.40 2 The Scent of the Mandarin (FF) 6.00 2 A Good American 8.35 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22)

Tue 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 1.30 22 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) (C) 5.55 (captioned) Nov 2 Emma Finn + Showcase (EA) 8.30 +Q&A 3 JFK (POL) 6.00 +Discussion *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Wed 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 2.30/6.05/8.40 23 2 16 Years till Summer 4.00 Nov 2 Chimes at Midnight (SH) 6.00 +Intro 2 Edward Thomasson (EA) 8.30 +Q&A *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Thu 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 6.05/8.40 24 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 3.45 Nov 2 Ettrick (EA) 6.15 +Q&A 2 Take Time...showcase (EA) (C) 8.30 +Q&A *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22) Fri 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 12.55/3.25 25 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 6.05/8.40 Nov 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 1.00/3.35/6.10 2 Hedi Schneider is Stuck (DE) 8.45 3 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 8.45 *Plus films and times TBC (see page 22)

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Screenings and Times

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Screenings and Times

22

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

DATE SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

SCREENING TIMES

Sat 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 12.55/3.25 26 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 6.05/8.40 Nov 2 From Caligari to Hitler (DE) 12.45 3.30 2 Frida (OR) 2 The Testament...Mabuse (DE) 6.10 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 8.50 1.00/3.35/6.20 3 Nocturnal Animals (AD) *Plus films and times TBC (see below) Sun 1 Kubo and the Two Strings (FJ) 11.00am 27 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 1.15/3.50/6.15/8.50 Nov 2 This Sweet Sickness + The Talented Mr Ripley (SDB) 1.00 6.00 2 Frida (OR) 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 8.45 3 People on Sunday (DE) 1.30 3.35 3 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 3 The People vs Fritz Bauer (DE) 8.45 *Plus films and times TBC (see below) Mon 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 2.45 28 1 A United Kingdom (AD) (C) 6.05 (captioned) Nov 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 8.40 1.00/3.30 2 A United Kingdom (AD) 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 6.10 2 Oh Boy (DE) 8.45 3.45/6.05 3 After Love *Plus films and times TBC (see below) For Crying Out Loud Baby & Carer screening - see page 38 Tue 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 29 1 Nocturnal Animals Nov 1 A United Kingdom (AD) 2 A United Kingdom (AD) 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 2 WILD (DE) 3 After Love *Plus films and times TBC (see below)

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FILMHOUSEcinema.COM

DATE SCREEN NUMBER & FILM TITLE

SCREENING TIMES

Wed 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 30 1 A United Kingdom (AD) Nov 2 A United Kingdom (AD) 2 4 Kings (DE) 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 3 After Love *Plus films and times TBC (see below)

2.30 6.00/8.30 1.00/3.30 6.10 8.40 1.00/8.45

Thu 1 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 1 1 A United Kingdom (AD) Dec 2 A United Kingdom (AD) 2 24 Weeks (DE) 2 Nocturnal Animals (AD) 3 After Love *Plus films and times TBC (see below)

2.30 6.00/8.30 1.00/3.30 6.15 8.40 1.00/6.05

Please Recycle Filmhouse is part of the Green Arts Initiative and is committed to carrying out sustainable practices. Please use our recycling facilities when visiting and recycle this brochure when you’re finished with it. Thank You!

1.15 3.45 6.20/8.50 1.00/3.30 6.10 8.45 3.50/8.45

* The majority of our screenings are scheduled well in advance, and times published in the brochure and online. Most weeks we leave spaces in the schedule in order to allow us to keep on films that are proving popular for a little longer; these screenings will be added to our website on the Tuesday preceding the start of the new cinema week on Friday.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

23

U.S. Politics in Film There’s a long history of great filmmaking about U.S. elections, and about American politics more generally. Working in partnership with The Scottish Parliament’s Festival of Politics and the University of Edinburgh, with the support of the U.S. Consulate General Edinburgh, we present some of the highlights of this tradition. Each screening will be followed by a discussion about the film and the issues it raises. This unique season coincides with the Harry Benson: Seeing America exhibition on display at the Scottish Parliament until 3 December 2016. More information on this FREE exhibition can be found at www.visitparliament.scot/Benson

TICKET OFFER

The Ides of March Mon 7 Nov at 5.55pm George Clooney • USA 2011 • 1h41m • Digital • 15 • Cast: George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Evan Rachel Wood.

An incisive exploration of dirty politics on the campaign trail. Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling) is the ambitious press spokesman for Democrat Governor Morris (Clooney). Stephen reports to Paul Zara (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a campaign manager who is willing to do anything to beat the opposition... In association with the University of Edinburgh, The Ides of March will be introduced by Frank Cogliano, Professor of American History at the University. Joined by Mike Moffo, deputy field director for the Obama campaigns of 2008 and 2012, he will also lead a post-screening discussion.

All the President’s Men

JFK

Wed 9 Nov at 5.40pm

Tue 22 Nov at 6.00pm

Alan J Pakula • USA 1976 • 2h18m • 35mm • English and Spanish with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford, Jack Warden, Martin Balsam, Hal Holbrook, Jason Robards.

Oliver Stone • USA/France 1991 • 3h26m • Digital • English and Spanish with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Kevin Costner, Tommy Lee Jones, Kevin Bacon, Gary Oldman, Michael Rooker, Jack Lemmon.

Released during the Carter-Ford presidential race, this film may even have helped to turn the tide in Carter’s favour. It chronicles the real-life story of journalists Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman), as they uncover the facts behind an attempted burglary at the Democratic Party headquarters at Watergate...

Three years after the death of John F. Kennedy, District Attorney Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) decides to conduct an in-depth investigation into the President’s murder. Oliver Stone seamlessly blends real footage of Kennedy’s murder with his own re-staged scenes.

In association with The Scottish Parliament, All the President’s Men will be introduced by Deputy Presiding Officer Christine Grahame MSP who will lead a post-screen discussion with Kezia Dugdale MSP about the themes in the film.

The screening of JFK, hosted jointly by The University of Edinburgh and The Scottish Parliament, will be followed by a post-screening discussion with Deputy Presiding Officer Christine Grahame MSP, Professor Robert Mason and Dr. Fabian Hilfrich (The University of Edinburgh).

U.S. Politics in Film

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Shakespeare on Film

24

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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TICKET OFFER

In association with The University of Edinburgh, Filmhouse will present a varied programme of Shakespeare adaptations by some of the great filmmakers. Pushing across boundaries of language, genre and culture, the programme emphasises the diversity of approaches filmmakers have taken in responding to Shakespeare’s plays, going far beyond ‘conventional’ renditions of the text. The majority of screenings will be introduced by academics or other experts, thanks to a collaboration between The University of Edinburgh English and Film Studies departments.

A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy Mon 7 Nov at 8.50pm Woody Allen • USA 1982 • 1h28m • 35mm • 15 Cast: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Tony Roberts, Mary Steenburgen.

Inspired by Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night as well as A Midsummer Night’s Dream, this 1982 ensemble comedy was described by Woody Allen as “a small intermezzo with a few laughs” . Set in the early 1900s at a weekend party attended by three couples, the tone is light as their emotional, intellectual and sexual entanglements play out. The screening will be introduced by Dr Andrew Taylor, Head of the Department of English at The University of Edinburgh.

Henry V Tue 8 Nov at 5.45pm Kenneth Branagh • UK 1989 • 2h17m • Digital • English and French with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Kenneth Branagh, Derek Jacobi

Directed by and starring Kenneth Branagh, Henry V is a gritty adaptation of Shakespeare’s epic and brutal play. The BAFTA and Academy Award® winning film is widely considered one of the best film adaptations of The Bard’s work, commended for the performances and direction as well as the accessibility of its Shakespearean language. The screening will be introduced by Dr Dermot Cavanagh, Senior Lecturer in English at The University of Edinburgh.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

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Forbidden Planet

Chimes at Midnight

Mon 21 Nov at 6.00pm

Wed 23 Nov at 6.00pm

Fred M Wilcox • USA 1956 • 1h38m • 35mm • U - Contains mild horror sequence Cast: Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis, Leslie Nielsen.

Orson Welles • France/Spain/Switzerland 1965 • 1h53m • Digital • PG - Contains moderate violence • Cast: Orson Welles, Jeanne Moreau.

A US spaceship comes across a remote planet, deserted except for world-wearied Dr. Morbius (Water Pidgeon), his daughter (Anne Francis) and their robot Robby. Something has destroyed the other inhabitants, and now begins to pick on the crew... An iconic sci-fi flick, surprisingly but effectively based on The Tempest, with an ingenious script and special effects, Forbidden Planet also features a youthful Leslie Nielsen as Commander Adams.

Falstaff was described by Orson Welles as “Shakespeare’s greatest creation”. Often directly compared to him, his connection to the character is perhaps one of the most organic in all of cinema. Sir John Falstaff is re-imagined and resplendent through Welles’ vision and performance in this portmanteau of five plays. The comedy and warmth remain but, inevitably, these give way to tragedy.

The screening will be introduced by Professor James Loxley, Professor of Early Modern Literature at The University of Edinburgh.

Africa in Motion is Scotland’s major annual celebration of African cinema, and is delighted to return for the 11th year to bring audiences in Edinburgh and Glasgow a wide variety of creative stories from across the African continent. Artistically innovative and thought-provoking, the programme takes on bold narratives through a range of features, documentaries and shorts. In addition to screenings, the programme is once again packed with an eclectic array of director Q&As, discussions, children’s workshops and more. For the full festival programme, including the Glasgow programme, additional screenings and complementary events, pick up an AiM brochure in Filmhouse foyer or visit the AiM website.

TICKET OFFER

The screening will be introduced by Dr Daniel Yacavone, Lecturer in Film Studies at The University of Edinburgh.

Kati Kati Fri 4 Nov at 8.45pm Mbithi Masya • Kenya/Germany 2016 • 1h15m • Digital • Swahili and English with English subtitles • 15 • .

When Kaleche, a young amnesiac, wakes up in the middle of the Kenyan wilderness, she has no memories and no idea how she got there. She makes her way to Kati Kati, a nearby lodge, where she meets a mysterious motley crew of residents. This unusual fantasy, set in a purgatory space-time, is an allegory of finding peace and reconciliation against the backdrop of Kenya’s violent recent past. This screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Mbithi Masya.

Shakespeare on Film/Africa in Motion Film Festival

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AFrica in Motion Film Festival

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| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

As I Open My Eyes

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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The Green March

À peine j’ouvre les yeux Sat 5 Nov at 8.40pm

Al Massira: La Marche Verte Sun 6 Nov at 3.30pm

Leyla Bouzid • France/Tunisia/Belgium/United Arab Emirates 2015 1h42m • Digital • Arabic and French with English subtitles • 15

Youssef Britel • Morocco 2015 • 1h30m • Digital • Arabic, French and Spanish with English subtitles • 15

It is summer 2010 in Tunis, at a point when the first waves of the Arab Spring are beginning to swell. Ben Ali’s government nears the end as Farah joins ‘Joujma’, a political underground rock band. She is a principled and articulate young girl, but also strong-willed and searching, constantly pushing boundaries. This highly acclaimed debut by Leyla Bouzid advocates the noble idealism, determination and exuberance of youth.

Youssef Britel’s La Marche Verte is a patriotic account of 350,000 Moroccan civilians’ dramatic 1975 March into the Southern Moroccan territory of the Western Sahara. The ensemble of diverse characters has one thing in common: a deep, uncomplicated love for their country. This sweeping historical drama, boasting fantastic settings and grand location shooting, won awards at the Festival National du Film in Tangiers in February 2016. The screening will be followed by panel discussion on migration, post-colonialism and the Western Sahara.

Life is Waiting: Referendum and Resistance in Western Sahara Sun 6 Nov at 6.00pm Iara Lee • Western Sahara/USA/Spain 2015 • 59m • Digital Hassaniya Arabic, Spanish, French and English with English subtitles 15 • Documentary.

Most people think that colonialism in Africa has ended. But in the territory of Western Sahara, the end of European rule only gave way to a new occupation, this time by Morocco. Four decades later the Sahrawi people still face arrests, torture and disappearances for demanding their independence. The film gives voice to a brave cast of Sahrawi activists and artists as they offer their points of view.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

Demon Tue 8 Nov at 8.50pm Play Poland Film Festival is an annual event promoting Polish art and cinema abroad, especially in Great Britain. Each year in mid October and November several British cities present screenings of the best contemporary Polish films as well offer a series of accompanying events. At the festival apart from feature films, there are also short films and animations. All of them specially selected in cooperation with strategic partners from Poland – film schools, production studios, film festivals. The aim is to reach to the widest audience possible, both Polish and local.

Marcin Wrona • Poland/Israel 2015 • 1h34m • Digital • Polish, English and Yiddish with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Itay Tiran, Tomasz Schuchardt, Andrzej Grabowski, Adam Woronowicz, Włodzimierz Press, Tomasz Ziętek.

A young man is a stranger visiting the hometown of his future wife. As a wedding gift from the bride’s grandfather, he receives a piece of land where the two can build a house and raise a happy family. While preparing the land to build the house, he finds the bones of human bodies in the ground beneath his new property. Strange things begin to happen to change this happy couple’s life forever.

TICKET OFFER

www.playpoland.org.uk

Blindness

Zacma

Thu 10 Nov at 6.00pm Ryszard Bugajski • Poland 2016 • 1h50m • Digital • Polish with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Maria Mamona, Malgorzata Zajaczkowska, Janusz Gajos, Marek Kalita.

A Stalinist criminal, Julia Brystiger’s nickname was “Bloody Luna” because of her extreme cruelty. At the beginning of the 1960s she appeared in Laski near Warsaw in the Institute for the Blind, where the Primate of Poland, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński, was also a frequent visitor. His imprisonment between 1953-1956 was supervised by Brystiger. During a difficult and tempestuous conversation with the Primate, Julia Brystiger rejects the communist ideology, asks for her crimes to be forgiven and for help in finding God...

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Play Poland Film Festival

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Filmhouse Junior

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

28 | 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

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JUN I OR Films for a younger audience, weekly on Sundays at 11am. Tickets cost £4.50 (£5.50 for 3D screenings) per person, big or small! For these shows we choose to screen dubbed versions where these are available, but some films will be in their original language with subtitles – these are marked on individual film descriptions. Please note: although we normally disapprove of people talking during screenings, these shows are primarily forkids, so grownups should expect some noise!

The New Kid Le nouveau Sun 6 Nov at 11.00am Rudi Rosenberg • France 2015 • 1h21m • Digital • French with English subtitles • cert tbc - Expected 12A • Cast: Réphaël Ghrenassia, Joshua Raccah, Géraldine Martineau.

Benoît is 13 years-old, a bit shy and wants to make friends so that he can stop worrying about where to sit in the school canteen and wandering around on his own in the playground. But how? He organises a party, and only three students turn up... but what if this bunch of losers turned out to be the best gang ever?

Discovery Film Festival: Shorts for Wee Ones Sun 13 Nov at 11.00am 46m • Digital • U

We know your little ones like nothing more than a colourful collection of animated stories from around the world. So we’ve looked high and low and found these wee treasures from Belgium, Brazil, Germany, the USA, France and the UK. You’ll meet a baby lamb who definitely thinks outside the field, an elephant who dreams of riding a shiny new bicycle and a cartoon stick-man who refuses to stay on the page. There is a rather vain fox with the most beautiful tail in the world, and a cat and a dog for whom a lightning storm brings amazing changes to their lives. All these short films are in English or are dialogue free, so will be accessible for everyone. These magical tales will delight children age 3+ and are a colourful introduction to the cinema experience.

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PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

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Shaun the Sheep: The Movie Sun 20 Nov at 11.00am

Kubo and the Two Strings Sun 27 Nov at 11.00am

Mark Burton & Richard Starzack • UK/France 2015 • 1h25m Digital • U - Contains mild slapstick, threat, rude humour

Travis Knight • USA 2016 • 1h42m • Digital • PG - Contains mild fantasy violence, scary scenes. • With the voices of Art Parkinson, Charlize Theron, Ralph Fiennes, Matthew McConaughey.

Characteristically witty and brilliant Aardman animated adventure. When Shaun decides to take the day off and have some fun, he gets a little more action than he bargained for! A mix-up with the farmer, a caravan and a very steep hill lead them all to the big city, and it’s up to Shaun and the flock to return everyone safely to the green grass of home.

Fiddlesticks

Quatsch und die NasenbÄrenbande

Sun 4 Dec at 11.00am Veit Helmer • Germany 2014 • 1h22m • Digital • German with English subtitles • PG

Fiddlesticks takes place in a small, ordinary town in the middle of Germany, a place so average that it has become the centre for all kinds of market research. This results in all old people being put in nursing homes in order to keep down the average age! A group of six rambunctious kids set out to rescue their fun-loving grannies and grandads!

Kubo lives a quiet, normal life in a small shoreside village until a spirit from the past turns his life upside down by re-igniting an age-old vendetta. This causes all sorts of havoc as gods and monsters chase Kubo who, in order to survive, must locate a magical suit of armor once worn by his late father, a legendary Samurai warrior. This spellbinding animated tale tells its story masterfully.

A Christmas Star Sun 11 Dec at 11.00am Richard Elson • UK 2015 • 1h22m • Digital • U - Contains no material likely to offend or harm • Cast: Robert James-Collier, Bronagh Waugh, Suranne Jones, Pierce Brosnan.

Set in the picturesque village of Pottersglen in Northern Ireland, A Christmas Star follows young and spirited Noelle who, born in dramatic circumstances under the Christmas Star, believes she has the gift to perform strange miracles. When conniving developer McKerrod threatens her peaceful life, she teams up with a misfit gang of local kids to save the village from demolition.

Filmhouse Junior

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Edinburgh Artists’ Moving Image Festival

30

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

Celebrating video art and experimental film, the Edinburgh Artists’ Moving Image Festival (EAMIF) is a chance to see something truly different. Take a leap from conventional cinema into our diverse selection of contemporary artists who challenge what we might expect to see on the screen. From animated shorts featuring talking mountains, to cinematic stories of fights in Vietnamese restaurants, our eclectic programme features both short and long-form films from Scotland-based and international artists. With Q&As and specially commissioned texts at every screening, and a live sousaphone performance on our opening night, there is plenty to explore. Plus, catch more of our events at the Fruitmarket, Talbot Rice and Collective galleries and at Edinburgh College of Art. www.eamif.com

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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Emma Finn plus EAMIF Showcase Tue 22 Nov at 8.30pm 1h45m • Digital • German and Gaelic with English subtitles and unsubtitled English • 12A • Films by Natasha Cantwell, Catherina Cramer, Emma Finn, Kevin Gaffney, Michelle Hall, Jennifer Levonian

Talking mountains, strange characters in masks, and fur bearing trout inhabit the worlds of artist Emma Finn’s films. This screening will include the premiere of her new video Diorama, plus her recent films Double Mountain and First a Tent. Also featuring a diverse showcase of short films by international artists, encompassing animated tales of young motherhood, baking-related bureaucracy, and misprinted book covers. Followed by Q&A with Emma Finn, led by Louise Milne. First a Tent will be accompanied by a live sousaphone performance.

TICKET OFFER

Edward Thomasson Wed 23 Nov at 8.30pm 1h35m • Digital • 15

Moving between a massage class, an office space and a sexual role play, Pressure, the latest video by Edward Thomasson looks at how people voluntarily allow themselves to be used by others. This will be accompanied by a series of Thomasson’s earlier videos, in the first screening of his work in Scotland. His narrative-based works are performed by trained and untrained performers and often employ song to describe the spoken and unspoken rules of social interaction. Followed by a Q&A with Edward Thomasson. The artist will be giving a talk at ECA earlier in the day.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

Ettrick

Take Time: EAMIF showcase

Thu 24 Nov at 6.15pm

Thu 24 Nov at 8.30pm

Jacques Perconte • France 2015 • 57m • Digital • No dialogue • 12A

1h43m • Digital • Vietnamese with English subtitles and English with English subtitles. • 12A • Courtney Asztalos, Christoph Oertli, Guy Oliver, Pham Ngoc Lân, Scout Stuart

As part of EAMIF, Alchemy Film & Moving Image Festival present Ettrick by artist filmmakerJacques Perconte. Made over the course of several visits to the Scottish Borders, the feature length film interrogates a unique heritage of sheep farming, fabrics, the woollen mill tradition and a distinctive landscape, all rendered in an impressionistic arc of colour and movement. Followed by Q&A with Jacques Perconte.

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A muscular stranger invites us to explore his mind and a shopping mall in South Coast Plaza by Courtney Asztalos, and a 33-year-old man learns to ride a bike in Easy Rider by Guy Oliver. Shown alongside Another City, Ethiopian Run and Leg, Arm, Head, this series of shorts by international artists uses movement, dance and choreography to explore self-image, performance, song, and body improvement. Followed by Q&A (BSL interpreted) with Courtney Asztalos and Guy Oliver, led by Daisy Lafargue.

Hedi Schneider is Stuck

Hedi Schneider steckt fest Fri 25 Nov at 8.45pm The Goethe-Institut and Filmhouse are working together for a second year to bring you a brilliant selection of recent German films, and this year the topic of personal struggle takes centre stage whether it is a political struggle, a struggle against mental illness or the struggle for acceptance by a mainstream society. In addition we are looking back to Weimar cinema with the documentary From Caligari to Hitler, and other gems that encapsulate the powerful cinema of that period.

TICKET OFFER

Sonja Heiss • Germany/Norway 2015 • 1h30m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Laura Tonke, Hans Löw, Leander Nitsche, Melanie Straub, Simon Schwarz, Margarita Broich.

A story about how life can slip out of control. Uli, Hedi and Finn are a happy, loving family. They get by with various odd jobs, and Hedi particularly uses humour to deal with every setback. But when she begins to suffer from panic attacks, everything that seemed to be certain is not anymore. Well-meant advice, hysterical parents, bored therapists and unfulfilled wishes – all of these create a tragicomedy about fear and the influence of love.

Edinburgh Artists’ Moving Image Festival/ Fokus: Films from Germany

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Fokus: Films from Germany

32

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

From Caligari to Hitler

Von Caligari zu Hitler Sat 26 Nov at 12.45pm

Rüdiger Suchsland • Germany 2015 • 1h58m • Digital • German with English subtitles • U • Documentary.

The Weimar Republic (1918 to 1933), was the freest state on German soil: a wild era characterised by disruption, crisis, and cultural brilliance. It was also arguably the most important period of German cinema. The aesthetic foundations were laid for the “seventh art”; directors like Murnau, Lang, Lubitsch, Pabst and Wilder, are still legendary today, their stars Marlene Dietrich, Louise Brooks, Emil Jannings and Conrad Veidt are unforgotten. This essential documentary gives a insight into these great films, and this turbulent time.

People on Sunday

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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FILMHOUSEcinema.COM

The Testament of Dr Mabuse

Das Testament des Dr Mabuse Sat 26 Nov at 6.10pm Fritz Lang • Germany 1933 • 2h2m • 35mm • German with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Oskar Bereg, Karl Meixne.

Often considered a decidedly anti-fascist film, this continues the tale of the first two parts of Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler. The villain continues his demonic dealings in the lunatic asylum, where he has managed to hypnotize the asylum’s director Dr. Baum, bringing him under his control. With his assistance, he commands a band of unscrupulous gangsters. As though driven by the furies, Mabuse sits in his cell planning one violent act after another: assassinations, arson, and counterfeit money.

The People vs Fritz Bauer

Menschen am Sonntag Sun 27 Nov at 1.30pm

Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer Sun 27 Nov at 8.45pm

Curt Siodmak, Robert Siodmak, Edgar G Ulmer, Fred Zinnemann & Rochus Gliese • Germany 1930 • 1h14m • Digital • Silent • PG • Cast: Erwin Splettstosser, Wolfgang von Waltershausen, Brigitte Borchert.

Lars Kraume • Germany 2015 • 1h45m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Burghart Klaussner, Ronald Zehrfeld, Sebastian Blomberg, Jörg Schüttauf, Lilith Stangenberg.

One of the earliest movies to renounce stars, drama and the other paraphernalia of commercial cinema in favour of a non-professional cast and an unmomentous, everyday storyline. Most of it centres around a Sunday excursion from the bustle of Berlin to a countryside lake, where a bachelor and his married friend drift in and out of flirtations with two young women. Hardly anything happens, but the play of gazes, emotions and counterpoints becomes deeply engrossing. You end up not only learning a lot about life in 1929, but also realising how little sexual mores have changed.

Attorney General Bauer, himself Jewish, has been trying to take crimes from the Third Reich to court ever since his return from Danish exile. In 1957, Bauer receives crucial evidence on the whereabouts of Adolf Eichmann - the Lieutenant Colonel responsible for the mass deportation of the Jews. However, there has been no success in finding him so far due to the fierce German determination to repress its sinister past. Fritz Bauer contacts the Israeli secret service Mossad, and, in doing so, commits treason. Bauer is not seeking revenge for the Holocaust – he is deeply concerned with the future of Germany...

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

Oh Boy

WILD

Mon 28 Nov at 8.45pm

Tue 29 Nov at 8.45pm

Jan Ole Gerster • Germany 2012 • 1h28m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 12A • Cast: Tom Schilling, Friederike Kempter, Marc Hosemann, Katharina Schüttler, Justus von Dohanányi.

Nicolette Krebitz • Germany 2016 • 1h37m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Lilith Stangenberg, Georg Friedrich, Silke Bodenbender, Saskia Rosendahl.

Oh Boy is a self-deprecating portrait of a young man and his city that addresses the desire to participate in life and the difficulty in finding one’s place. Niko is in his late 20s and recently dropped out of college. He is drifting through the streets of Berlin, observing the people around him with curiosity as they manage their daily lives, oblivious to his own growing status as an outsider. One day everything changes, and Niko is forced to confront the consequences of his inaction. And all Niko wants is a decent cup of coffee.

Ania has a strange encounter on the way to work: in the middle of a park she meets a wolf. She seeks to have a relationship with this presumed untameable animal, which develops far beyond that of master and pet. Director Nicolette Krebitz (Jeans, The Heart is a Dark Forest) tells this story of freedom and happiness. Powerful, sensual, and as fascinating as it is disturbing, WILD leads you into the world of a young woman who rejects the tacit contract we’ve made with civilisation.

4 Kings

4 Könige Wed 30 Nov at 6.10pm

24 Weeks 24 Wochen Thu 1 Dec at 6.15pm

Theresa von Eltz • Germany 2015 • 1h38m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Paula Beer, Jella Haas, Jannis Niewöhner, Moritz Leu, Clemes Schick, Anneke Kim Sarnau.

Anne Zohra Berrached • Germany 2016 • 1h42m • Digital • German with English subtitles • 15 • Cast: Julia Jentsch, Bjarne Maedel, Johanna Gastdorf, Emilia Pieske.

Christmas is approaching, and with it, the desire for harmony, beauty, light and hope. Being unable to cope with her parents’ conflict, Alex makes a radical decision. A day later she finds herself in the adolescent psychiatric emergency unit. There she meets three other young people: Lara, the striking daughter from an academic family, who’s having acid flashbacks; shy Fedja, who is being bullied at school; and violent Timo, who has just been moved from the closed ward. Under the care of the young psychiatrist Dr. Wolff, they will spend a Christmas together that none of them will ever forget...

This harrowing and emotionally-taut German drama – the second film from talented director Anne Zohra Berrached – details the terrible decision pregnant television comedienne Astrid (the excellent Julia Jentsch) has to make when she must choose whether or not to have a late abortion when she finds out her unborn son has Down’s syndrome and a serious heart defect. Jentsch delivers a raw and moving performance as she struggles to make her decision, with the added pressure that her celebrity implies that her ordeal is considered public property. 24 Weeks had its European Premiere at Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2016.

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Fokus: Films from Germnay

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Edinburgh Greek Film Festival

34

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

88 LOTHIAN ROAD

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FILMHOUSEcinema.COM

Edinburgh Greek Film Festival

Coming soon

Coming soon

Suntan

Short Fuse

Fri 2 Dec at 8.45pm

Sat 3 Dec at 8.45pm

Argyris Papadimitropoulos • Greece 2016 • 1h44m • Digital • Greek and English with English subtitles • 18

Kostas Skiftas, Andreas Lampropoulos • Greece 2016 • 1h26m • Digital • Greek with English subtitles • 18

Followed by a Q&A with director Argyris Papadimitropoulos.

Followed by a Q&A with director, co-screenwriter Kostas Skiftas and Producer/co-screenwriter Konstantinos Moutsinas.

Coming soon

Coming soon

Cloudy Sunday

Ouzeri Tsitsanis

Sun 4 Dec at 8.45pm Manousos Manousakis • Greece 2015 • 1h52m • Digital • Greek with English subtitles • 18

Coming soon

A Family Affair

Mia Oikogeneiaki Ypothesi Mon 5 Dec at 8.45pm Angeliki Aristomenopolou • Greece 2015 • 1h27m • Digital • Greek with English subtitles • 15 • Documentary

Coming soon

Chevalier

OXI: An Act of Resistance

Tue 6 Dec at 8.45pm

Wed 7 Dec at 8.45pm

Athina Rachel Tsangari • Greece 2015 • 1h45m • Digital • Greek with English subtitles • 18 - Contains strong nudity, sex references.

Ken McMullan • UK/Greece 2014 • 1h40m • Digital • English, French and Greek with English subtitles • 15 • Documentary

Followed by a Q&A with Ken McMullan and producer Martin McQuillan.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

Christmas at Our House!

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Full info on Christmas and Hogmanay screenings at Filmhouse available at www.filmhousecinema.com

It’s a Wonderful Life

The Muppet Christmas Carol

Fri 16 to Sat 24 Dec

Fri 16 to Sat 24 Dec (screening on select dates only)

Frank Capra • USA 1946 • 2h10m • Digital • U - Contains mild violence

Brian Henson • USA 1992 • 1h26m • Digital • U - Contains infrequent very mild peril

Comfort and Joy

The Wizard of Oz

Fri 16 to Fri 23 Dec (screening on select dates only)

Fri 16 to Wed 21 Dec (screening on select dates only)

Bill Forsyth • UK 1984 • 1h46m • Digital • English and Italian with English subtitles • PG - Contains mild language, sex references, violence

Victor Fleming • USA 1939 • 1h38m • Digital • U - Contains mild fantasy horror

Miracle on 34th Street

Carol

Sat 17 to Fri 23 Dec (screening on select dates only)

Sat 17 Dec at 5.55pm & Tue 20 Dec at 8.40pm

George Seaton • USA 1947 • 1h34m • Digital • English and Dutch with English subtitles • U

Todd Haynes • UK/USA/France 2015 • 1h58m • Digital • 15 - Contains infrequent strong sex

Gremlins

Joyeux NoËl Merry Christmas Mon 19 Dec at 5.55pm & Wed 21 Dec at 3.45pm

PRESENTED BY FILMISH

Sun 18 Dec at 8.50pm Joe Dante • USA 1984 • 1h46m • Digital • 12A - Contains moderate violence and fantasy horror.

Christian Carion • France/Germany/UK/Belgium/Romania/Norway 2005 • 1h56m • Digital • French, German and English with English subtitles • 12A - Contains moderate battle violence, sex, and one use of strong language

Christmas at Our House

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Christmas at Our House!/Hogmanay

36

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

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Wallace & Gromit Sat 24 Dec at 11.00am & Wed 28 Dec at 11.00am 1h25m • Digital • U

There’s no better time to watch this trio of Aardman classics than the festive period - and there’s no better place than Filmhouse! These unforgettable, inventive animations about hapless Yorkshire inventor Wallace and his long-suffering dog Gromit (the brains of the operation) are an absolute joy for filmgoers of all ages! Cheese and crackers optional. A Grand Day Out Nick Park • UK 1989 • 24m • Digital • U The Wrong Trousers Nick Park • UK 1993 • 30m • Digital • U A Close Shave Nick Park • UK 1995 • 31m • Digital • U

Scotland Galore!

Full info on Christmas and Hogmanay screenings at Filmhouse available at www.filmhousecinema.com

The Angels’ Share

‘I Know Where I’m Going!’

Tue 27 Dec to Thu 5 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Tue 27 Dec to Sun 8 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Ken Loach • UK/France 2012 • 1h41m • Digital • 15 - Contains very strong language and strong violence

Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger • UK 1945 • 1h28m • Digital U - Contains mild peril

The Apartment

What We Did on Our Holiday

Tue 27 Dec to Tue 3 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Wed 28 Dec to Thu 5 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Billy Wilder • USA 1960 • 2h5m • Digital • PG - Contains mild sex references, violence and suicide attempt

Andy Hamilton & Guy Jenkin • UK 2014 • 1h35m • Digital • 12A - Contains moderate bad language, discriminatory language, moderate sex references.

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

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From Scotland With Love

Sunset Song

Wed 28 Dec to Fri 6 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Wed 28 Dec to Wed 4 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Virginia Heath • UK 2014 • 1h16m • Digital • U - Contains no material likely to offend or harm

Terence Davies • UK/Luxembourg 2015 • 2h16m • Digital 15 - Contains strong implied sex, scene of sexual violence

The 39 Steps Thu 29 Dec to Sun 8 Jan (screening on select dates only)

The Illusionist L’illusionniste Thu 29 Dec to Sat 7 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Alfred Hitchcock • UK 1935 • 1h27m • Digital • U - Contains very mild language and violence

Sylvain Chomet • UK/France 2010 • 1h20m • Digital • PG - Contains a scene of aborted suicide and images of smoking

Hamish

Highlander

Fri 30 Dec to Fri 6 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Sat 31 Dec to Sat 7 Jan (screening on select dates only)

Robbie Fraser • UK 2016 • 1h30m • Digital • English and Gaelic with English subtitles • PG - Contains mild bad language, sex references. Documentary.

Russell Mulcahy • UK 1986 • 1h56m • Digital • 15

EIFF Presents Hogmanay

Celebrate 2017 with two films that screened at Edinburgh International Film Festival in 1977!

Annie Hall

Assault on Precinct 13

Sun 1 Jan at 3.00pm

Sun 1 Jan at 8.35pm

Woody Allen • USA 1977 • 1h33m • 35mm • 15 - Contains drugs use and references

John Carpenter • USA 1976 • 1h31m • 35mm • 15 - Contains strong language and violence.

Hogmanay

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38

| 4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16

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FILMHOUSEcinema.COM

Access Filmhouse foyer and Box Office are accessed from Lothian Road via a ramped surface and two sets of automatic doors. Our Cafe Bar and accessible toilet are also at this level. The majority of seats in the Cafe Bar are not fixed and can be moved. There is wheelchair access to all three screens. Cinema One has space for two wheelchair users and these places are reached via the passenger lift. Cinemas Two and Three have one space each and to get to these you need to use our platform lifts. Staff are always on hand to help operate them – please ask at the box office when you purchase your tickets. A second accessible toilet is situated at the lower level close to Cinemas Two and Three. Advance booking for wheelchair spaces is recommended. If you need to bring along a helper to assist you in any way, then they will receive a complimentary ticket. There are induction loops and infra-red in all three screens for those with hearing impairments. This programme and our website carry information on which films have subtitles. We regularly have screenings with audio description for customers with visual impairments and subtitles for those with hearing difficulties – see below for details of these. Email [email protected] or call the Box Office on 0131 228 2688 if you require further information or assistance.

There is a large print version of the programme available which can be posted to you free of charge Audio Description and Captions

For Crying Out Loud

In all three screens we have a system which enables us, whenever the necessary digital files are available, to show onscreen captions, and provide audio description (via infra-red headsets) for those who are sight-impaired.

Screenings for carers and their babies! Tickets £4.50/£3.50 concessions per adult. Screenings are strictly limited to babies under 12 months accompanied by no more than two adults. Babychanging, bottle-warming and buggy parking facilities are available.

This issue, all screenings of I, Daniel Blake, Nocturnal Animals and A United Kingdom have audio description, and the following screenings will have captions: Tue 8 Nov at 6.10pm I, Daniel Blake Sun 20 Nov at 12.45pm Dummy Jim Tue 22 Nov at 5.55pm Nocturnal Animals Thu 24 Nov at 8.30pm Take Time: EAMIF... Mon 28 Nov at 6.05pm A United Kingdom

Mon 7 Nov at 11am The Beatles: Eight Days... Mon 14 Nov at 11am The Red Turtle Mon 21 Nov at 11am Forbidden Planet Mon 28 Nov at 11am A United Kingdom

BOX OFFICE 0131 228 2688

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4 NOV 16 - 1 DEC 16 |

PROGRAMME INFO 0131 228 2689

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Support Filmhouse Donations Filmhouse is a registered charity and one of the few truly independent cinemas left in Scotland. Make a donation today and help us to do more! Donations are vital in enabling us to continue in our mission to provide a diverse and ambitious programme of films and events for our audiences, as well as helping us to run educational projects, community activities, school screenings and other work to engage people with the moving image throughout the year. Your support is greatly received and, big or small, your donation will be helping us in our ambitions to do more. You can also increase your charitable donation at no extra cost, thanks to the Gift Aid scheme that allows Filmhouse to reclaim the tax on donations. If you wish to make a donation, please fill in and sign the form available at Box Office and send it back to us or give it directly to our Front of House staff.

Legacy For almost 35 years Filmhouse has been Edinburgh’s foremost independent cinema. We wish to ensure that future generations are able to enjoy and be inspired by the exciting programme of films, events and learning opportunities we are presenting all year round. By remembering Filmhouse in your will, you will be helping us to continue investing in showing incredible films each year, celebrating world cinema in all its brilliance and diversity as well as in continuing to develop our ambitious film education programme. If you wish to discuss donations, Gift Aid or Legacies, please feel free to contact the Filmhouse Development team [email protected] or call 0131 228 6382

Funding Filmhouse

Filmhouse, 88 Lothian Road Edinburgh EH3 9BZ www.filmhousecinema.com Box Office: 0131 228 2688 (10am - 9pm Administration: 0131 228 6382 email: [email protected] @filmhouse facebook.com/FilmhouseCinema Filmhouse is a trading name of Centre for the Moving Image, a company limited by guarantee, registered in Scotland No. SC067087.

Corporate Members The Leith Agency Blonde Digital Freakworks

Registered office, 88 Lothian Road, Edinburgh EH3 9BZ. Scottish Charity No. SC006793. VAT Reg. No. 328 6585 24

88 Lothian Road, Edinburgh EH3 9BZ www.filmhousecinema.com Lothian Buses: 1, 2, 10, 11, 15, 16, 22, 24, 34, 35, 47 www.lothianbuses com

MEMBERSHIP Great Films, Special Discounts, Amazing Offers All whilst supporting your local cinema!

FILMHOUSE MEMBERSHIP • £1.50 off future ticket purchases • 10% discount on all DVDs, merchandising, food, snacks and drinks • £5 loyalty points on signing up and accrue loyalty points on all future box office purchases • Exclusive Membership email offers, information and e-newsletters • Priority booking for the Edinburgh International Film Festival, the world’s longest continually running film festival • Free monthly mail-out of the Filmhouse brochure direct to your home Get your Membership at the Filmhouse Box Office or online at www.filmhousecinema.com. We can also send your Membership by post to the person of your choice as a surprise present. Terms and conditions apply, see www.filmhousecinema.com/support for details.