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Start: 21:15
End: 23:00
A fractured, challenging thriller from first-time British director Simon Welsford that has prompted comparisons with Christopher Nolan's early films Following and Memento. A woman is washed up on a beach with no idea how she got there. When a man tries to kill her, she flees in search of answers about her past while trying to survive in a world of spies, betrayal and obsession. Playing at the ICA 28 Aug, 2, 4 - 6, 8 - 10 Sept Start: 12:13
End: 12:13
Canary Wharf Film Festival 2009 (CWFF 09) takes centre stage this September with a film offering unlike any other festival this year. The festival will host UK and international short film premieres along with programmes focussing on Serbian film and international award winning short films which rarely touch these shores. CWFF’s film strands consist of Mix: UK, Mix: International, Showcase and Focus Serbia, all of which will be showing the best that short film has to offer. Mix: UK will be providing a glimpse of the UK’s rising stars of short films with world premieres from directors of the future Matthias Hoegg, James Rogan and Lisa Forrest. Mix: International will provide festival goers with a glimpse of films from all corners of the globe from Luxembourg to the USA, Spain to Lebanon. Films featured will touch on issues as varied as the human body in Divers, to women defying gender roles in Islamic society in Thorns and Silk. CWFF 09 is going on all over Canary Wharf and West India Quay. Start: 12:00
End: 22:50
“Whitby in Shorts” International Short-Film Festival 2009 Whether you make it or watch it, short-film has the power to move people like no other medium on earth. And few places on earth can offer such a breath-taking palette of filmic locations as Whitby – historic whaling-port at the foot of the North Yorkshire Moors. Of course, Whitby and Film go together like Montreux and Jazz. So, for these reasons, and a thousand others, 2009 will see Whitby hosting the first “Whitby In Shorts” International Short-Film Festival. The 5–13th September 2009 is when Whitby will be buzzing with the creative talents of hundreds of short-film makers, animators, directors, actors, film-lovers and goodness knows who else. We'll be completing the programmes of events soon, but until then, here’s a taster of what you can expect. Saturday 5th September – come along to our Grand Welcome Party; meet the movie people, drink the wine and listen to the band – it’s Opening Night. Sunday 6th - Friday 11th September – for the next six days, the twenty best short-films in each of twelve Genres – the WiSiS-FF Finalists – will be screened in five star venues in and around Whitby; that’s four ten-film sessions per day; two in the afternoon, and two in the evening – plus a host of ‘fringe’ events all over the town. Fiction/Drama – Documentary – Comedy – Horror - Sci-Fi – Animation - Computer Graphics (CGI) - Music Video – Environment – Sport – Travel –and Religion From these 240 Finalists will be honed down to 24 Nominations – two from each Genre. Saturday 12th September - From these 24 Nominations, our international panel of Judges will select the 12 Genre Award Winners. Then, on Sunday 13th September, at the WiSiS-FF Grand Gala Award Ceremony, the ‘Best of Festival’ overall winners will be acclaimed in each of the following major Categories: The WiSiS-FF Best Short-Film Award 2009 – The WiSiS-FF Best Individual Performance Award 2009 – The WiSiS-FF Best Score/Soundtrack 2009and TheWiSiS-FF Best Special Effects Award 2009 That’s a total of 16 prestigious Awards, each carrying substantial Prizes, to be announced during the build-up to the Festival. So if you’ve made a short-film between three and fifteen minutes long, then click on the Entries button and find out how you can be part of WiSiS-FF (that's pronounced ‘wississiffi’), the best-located Short-Film Festival in the world. Start: 18:20
End: 20:45
A veteran of successfully filming Oscar Wilde’s best loved works (The Importance of Being Earnest, An Ideal Husband), director Oliver Parker’s third Wilde is an altogether spookier affair, in which a beautiful young man makes a devilish pact for eternal youth, only to discover a torturous price must be paid. Deliciously atmospheric - shot on location in Wilde’s London stomping ground - stars including Colin Firth, Emilia Fox, Rebecca Hall and Ben Barnes (as Gray) devour this superlative adaptation of Wilde’s gothic horror with evident relish. The Script Factory, together with The Barbican, are thrilled to preview Dorian Gray and follow it with a ScreenTalk with director Oliver Parker and debut screenwrier, Toby Finlay. | ||