Review: Prevenge at the Goods Shed by Nikki Owen

First up, Prevenge is not a film for the faint-hearted. This movie about a pregnant killer – which screened to a packed and eager audience at the Goods Shed on the evening of April 29th - was no fluffy baby-shower affair. Oh no. Think more a murder-fest with knives, blood and guts. And not in a cesarean way (although, heads up: watch out for that, too…)

Directed by the very talented Alice Lowe (who many might recognise from Garth Marenghi's Dark Place, the Mighty Boosh, Little Britain, Hot Fuzz and Sightseers), Prevenge is a dark thriller with subtle wit and lashings of deep, multi-layered black humour. Lowe plays expectant mother, Ruth, who, after her partner dies in a climbing accident, decides to go on a killing spree of those involved. But there’s a twist: the killings are led by the baby she’s expecting. The baby who’s voice she can hear.

There’s no doubt about it, Prevenge is a thought-provoking, visually intriguing film and showing the feature at the Goods Shed, with its tall, wrought ceiling, leather sofas and red heating lights, meant the whole evening had an eerie feel, a suspenseful atmosphere of what was inevitably to come. And when it did come, boy, it was with a shock. I don’t want to give anything away, but let’s just say that, during the opening scene, the whole audience made an audible, collective gasp. You have been warned.

The reason for such a definable audience reaction – something which many films only aspire to create – is that Prevenge, in truth, is a daring film. It tackles cosy pregnancy and turns it on its head – and it does this very well. In many ways, this is down to the quick, often improv-inspired acting of actor/director Alice Lowe and her stellar cast. Lowe, while shooting the film, was actually six months pregnant with her first child. Indeed, in the Q&A held straight after the showing (conducted by Stroud based award winning illustrator and film make Joe Magee), Lowe revealed that she wrote the screenplay in two weeks, and due to her pregnancy, shot the entire movie in just eleven days (normally, shooting can take up to at least six weeks.) The good news is that, in so many ways, this shorter filming time was actually a beneficial thing in terms of creative screen results. 

What Lowe has created in this, her directorial debut, is a fast-moving, edgy, dark and, dare I say it, distinctly British film that takes itself up and doesn’t shy away from having a probe at how we really are and what, perhaps, we are really thinking. And, most importantly, it tackles the often undiscussed issue of how expectant mothers are treated, both in society and by medical professionals, and with this Lowe and her cast do a frankly superb job at getting the subtle nuances of this often frustrating issue for women absolutely bang on. 

There’s no doubt that what Lowe’s challenged, often uncertain character Ruth does is shocking. I mean, she’s a killer. But, as with other films of the same genre, such as Tarantino’s bride-killer movie series, Kill Bill, Prevenge showcases its protagonist in often subtle yet thought provoking ways. However, at the end of the film, I did come away thinking we could have done with knowing just a little more about the main character to give it a full three dimensional result. Interestingly, in the Q&A, Lowe said that she deliberately held back on telling too much about the characters’ past, for fear that it would come across as contrived or, indeed, create a different film altogether than the one she wanted. As a writer myself, I can understand this, yet, just a tad more on the character psyche or background, for me, would have really been the icing on the viewing cake.

But that’s picky, and, to be honest, Prevenge is a hit with so many amazing national and international reviews – including The New York Times - that it’s a real pleasure to see the reception such a ground-breaking film has achieved.

 If I had to change one thing in the film, it would be the baby voice. For me, it didn’t work, but like I said – picky. Prevenge, bottom line, is dark and witty and at times deliciously funny. Often like pregnancy, in truth, but with Prevenge? Its pregnancy, but with an unexpected twist...

Nikki Owen is an author and writer. Her third (and final) book in the Project Trilogy – the Girl Who Ran (Harper Collins), is out on the 15th June. Visit her blog nikkiowen.wordpress.com and website nikkiowenauthor.com

Film Listings May 2017

SUBSCRIPTION ROOMS

Fri 12th The Great Film Club: Royal Opera House – Giselle The greatest of all Romantic ballets, Peter Wright’s production of Marius Petipa’s classic is a tale of betrayal, the supernatural and love that transcends death. 8pm £6

subscriptionrooms.org.uk

THE PAINSWICK CENTRE

Fri 5th Wick Flix: A United Kingdom A powerful story of love an politics, set against the era of apartheid, starring David Oyelowo and Rosamund Pike. In 1947, Seretse Khama, the future King of Botswana, met Ruth Williams, a London office worker. They were deeply in love, yet their proposed marriage was challenged not only by their families but by the British and South African governments. The latter had recently introduced the policy of apartheid and found the notion of a biracial couple ruling a neighbouring country intolerable. South Africa threatened the British: either thwart the couple or be denied access to South African uranium and gold and face the risk of South Africa invading Botswana. (Cert 12A). 7:45pm £6 (includes one free drink!)

painswickcentre.com

THE LOST CINEMA Open Air Cinema, Tetbury Westonbirt House

Fri 26th The Lost Boys Brothers Michael and Sam move to their grandfather’s house in a town nicknamed “The Murder Capital of the World.” Michael gets involved with a hell-raising motorcycle gang of vampires. But when Sam becomes involved with undercover Vampire hunters, he realizes they must save Michael and the rest of the town from the vampire gang. (Cert 15) 9:30pm See website for tickets and further info.

Sun 28th Top Gun Cruise plays Maverick, a hotshot young flyer who is sent to the Navys prestigious Top Gun program. In order to become 'The Best' he'll need the help of his wingman 'Goose' (Anthony Edwards) and new found love 'Charlie' (Kelly McGillis). (Cert 12) 9:30pm See website for tickets and further info.

Mon 29th Dirty Dancing 2017 sees the the 30 year anniversary of this classic film. Set in 1963, Frances "Baby" Houseman, a sweet daddy's girl, goes with her family to a resort in upstate New York's Catskill Mountains. Baby has grown up in privileged surroundings and all expect her to go on to college, join the Peace Corps and save the world before marrying a doctor, just like her father. Unexpectedly, Baby becomes infatuated with the camp's dance instructor, Johnny Castle, a man whose background is vastly different from her own. (Cert 12) 9:30pm See website for tickets and further info.

Film Listings April 2017

SVA

Sun 23rd Situation Sounds Presents: Northern Disco Lights A film screening about the history of Norwegian dance music followed by an evening of Norwegian dance music with Situation Sounds playing the tunes. Northern Disco Lights tells the untold story of a group of teenagers in the arctic city of Tromsø, who set off a chain of events that would go on to transform their country. To escape the boredom of growing up in a remote outpost they created their own music scene, setting up radio stations, parties, building synthesizers and making tunes. Word spread as like-minded souls recognised the call to arms and inspired a generation of kids who would go on to change dance music and Norway forever. 7:30pm £5otd Click here for facebook event page (Goods Shed)

Sat 29th Prevenge plus Q&A w/ director Alice Lowe Alice Lowe, co-writer of Ben Wheatley’s Sightseers, has made her directorial debut with Prevenge, a darkly satirical slasher film in which she plays a pregnant woman who is convinced her foetus is ordering her to kill. A pitch black, wryly British comedy, Prevenge follows Ruth, a pregnant woman on a killing spree that's as funny as it is vicious. It's her misanthropic unborn baby dictating Ruth's actions, holding society responsible for the absence of a father. Struggling with her conscience, loneliness, and a strange strain of prepartum madness, Ruth must ultimately choose between redemption and destruction at the moment of motherhood. There will be a Q&A after the screening with Alice Lowe and Joe Magee, an award winning UK illustrator, artist and film maker. 7:30pm £6.50adv/£8otd Click here for facebook event page (Goods Shed)

sva.org.uk

SUBSCRIPTION ROOMS

Sun 23rd The Great Film Club: 1984 Winston Smith, a bureaucratic flunky living in a totalitarian state, breaks the law by falling in love. The lovers are tracked down by the Thought Police and ‘re-educated’ into loving the State. Starring John Hurt and Richard Burton. 8pm £6

subscriptionrooms.org.uk

VUE

Weds 5th The Good Grief Project: A Love That Never Dies How do we grieve? Why do we grieve? And why are we afraid of those that do grieve? A Love That Never Dies is a personal journey by two bereaved parents Jane Harris and Jimmy Edmonds. Their son died in a road accident in Vietnam five years ago and they now honour him with their own road trip across the USA and Mexico. On the way they meet with other families who have also lost a child. Plus Q&A with directors Jimmy Edmonds and Jane Harris. 7pm £10.79 from ourscreen.com

thegoodgriefproject.co.uk

THE ARKELL CENTRE Nailsworth

Fri 7th Nailsworth Film Club: What We Do In the Shadows A mockumentary from New Zealand (the film makers obtained a special dispensation not to be eaten!), which lives up to the description ‘Best Comedy of 2014’. In present day Wellington a group of vampires share a house, squabbling about house-work and washing up and squaring up to a rival gang of reformed werewolves. Not sophisticated, not intellectual just a plain funny film to end the season! (Cert 15) Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

nailsworthfilmclub.co.uk

THE PAINSWICK CENTRE

Fri 14th Wick Flix: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Easter Special screening with Eddie Redmayne starring in JK Rowling’s latest foray into the parallel world of wizardry. However, a Harry Potter film it is not! Set in 1926, a young wizard, Newt Scamander, arrives in New York with a suitcase full of extraordinary magical creatures. Unfortunately the suitcase is misplaced and their subsequent escape spells trouble.  Children aged 12 and older only with an adult please! (Cert 12A). 7:45pm £6 (includes one free drink!)

Film Listings March 2017

ATELIER

Sun 12th The Death of Klinghoffer (Stroud Film Festival) Penny Woolcock’s powerful film adaptation of John Adams’ critically acclaimed and controversial opera The Death of Klinghoffer. Based on a 1985 hijacking of a Mediterranean cruise ship by Palestinian terrorists, culminating in the murder of passenger Leon Klinghoffer. Introduced by composer Emily Hall and sound designer David Sheppard. 3pm £6

atelierstroud.com

THE BRITISH SCHOOL

Thurs 9th Halas and Batchelor (Stroud Film Festival) For 50 years John Halas and Joy Batchelor ran the UK's prime and most prolific animation studio in Stroud. Stroud Film Festival welcomes Vivien Halas to present their local involvement and introduce Animal Farm based on George Orwell's brilliant satire, and shorts The Symphony Orchestra, Birds, Bees & Storks, and Automania 2000. 8pm £6.50/£5.50concs

stroudfilmfestival.org

THE MALTHOUSE BAR AND KITCHEN

Weds 15th The Lunchbox The first of a series of fabulous films inspiring fabulous food at The Malthouse Bar and Kitchen. Alongside a local, Indian cook, the Malthouse Chef will deliver a wonderful Indian meal after the film. Award-winning The Lunchbox is a gentle romance flowering after one man’s lunchbox is delivered to the wrong desk in Mumbai. (Cert PG) 7pm £20 (includes film and Indian meal)

stroudmalthouse.com

LANSDOWN HALL

Sat 11th Lansdown Film Club: The Red Turtle (Stroud Film Festival) Animation for all the family from Studio Ghibli, Japan, this film won’t be officially released in the UK until May. Michael Dudok de Wit’s hypnotizing and entrancing fable of a boy and a turtle.2:30pm £5/£4concs/£3children

Sun 12th Lansdown Film Club: All Sorts of Shorts (Stroud Film Festival) An evening of screenings of a superb variety of short films, from 10 to 20 minutes each, to include drama, horror, romance, comedy and the bizarre. A stimulating feast of contemporary cinematography. 7:30pm £6/£5concs

Sun 19th Lansdown Film Club: Versus – the Life and Films of Ken Loach (Stroud Film Festival) A sharp-witted documentary about the work of film director Ken Loach. The making of I, Daniel Blake, which brought the 79-year-old Loach out of retirement to rail against punitive Tory austerity policies and their ramifications, forms a central component of this film, but also there are well chosen clips from his incendiary early work for the BBC. 7:30pm £6/£5concs

Sun 26th Lansdown Film Club: Under the Shadow After Shideh's building is hit by a missile during the Iran-Iraq War, a superstitious neighbor suggests that the missile was cursed and might be carrying malevolent Middle-Eastern spirits. She becomes convinced a supernatural force within the building is attempting to possess her daughter Dorsa, and she has no choice but to confront these forces if she is to save her daughter and herself. 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members

lansdownhall.org

OPEN HOUSE

Thurs 9th Stroud Film Society: Phoenix Nelly (Nina Hoss) is a concentration camp survivor, who has had her shattered face reconstructed. She returns to Berlin seeking her husband Johnny (Ronald Zerfeld). He was the pianist, she the singer, in nightclubs before the war. She finds him, he does not recognise her but asks her to pose as his dead wife. She does so but is warned that he was the one who betrayed her to the Nazis. (Cert 12A). 7:30pm £40 for full year membership/£22 from Jan 2017. Contact Beth Cheyne on 01453 823551 for membership details and guest tickets, which cost £6 and must be booked in advance.

Thurs 30th Stroud Film Society: The Pearl Button Beautiful, haunting and tinged with melancholy, this film is a fascinating journey through Chiles troubled past. Tracing back 3000 years, with archival images and gorgeous new footage, Guzman tells a deeply affecting history of Chile's lost tribes and political prisoners.(Cert 12A) 7:30pm see booking details above.

stroudfilmsociety.org.uk

THE PRINCE ALBERT

Weds 29th I, Daniel Blake Highly acclaimed by critics and festival audiences across the globe, director Ken Loach  (Cathy, Come Home) took home his second Palme d'Or from Cannes Film Festival for this unapologetic criticism of a flawed system that seems to hurt the people it's designed to help...(Cert 15) 7pm Free

theprincealbertstroud.co.uk

THE ARKELL CENTRE Nailsworth

Fri 17th Nailsworth Film Club: Mustang A tale of five sisters who are subjected to the norms and values of their rural society in northern Turkey with sometimes hilarious, sometimes sombre results. Conflict is always there and despite its languid human style, it bristles with tension. A Turkish Delight of a film. (Cert 15) Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

nailsworthfilmclub.co.uk

THE PAINSWICK CENTRE

Fri 3rd Wick Flix: Sully Tom Hanks stars in this thrilling portrait of Chesley Sullenberger, the US Airways pilot who, in 2009, brilliantly landed his damaged Airbus on the Hudson River saving the lives of all his passengers and crew. (Cert 12A). 7:45pm £6 (includes one free drink!)

Stroud Community TV Awards 2017 by Philip Booth

On Saturday 18th March at Lansdown Hall we invite you all to join us for the Stroud Community TV Awards 2017! Local filmmaker Jimmy Edmonds perhaps best sums it up when he writes of a previous Awards evening: “There was no red carpet and no tuxedos, no massed ranks of photographers and no star spotters - neither was there a big name celebrity to clutch a golden statue to her breast before revealing the winner. But what there was, was pure Stroud……The audience fed on…small but intense delicacies with enthusiasm and true appreciation of the ability of film and video to reach the parts that bigger movies might not - a community recorded and represented in its own way, unmediated by any need to make a profit or sell an idea.”

'Autos' by Callum Bonner winner of Best Local Film, Stroud Community TV Awards 2016

The Awards evening is indeed a wonderful celebration of local talent, beauty, quirkiness and more - all produced in the Five Valleys. The evening, which is part of the third Stroud Film Festival, will include winning short films and local filmmakers sharing thoughts, including the film team at Slimbridge Wildlife Wetlands Trust. The event is free, doors open 7pm with the proceedings starting at 7:30pm and the bar will be open with cafe-style tables. All welcome - so get the date in your diary now!

'Tilly's Song' by Hattie Briggs winner of Best Music Film, Stroud Community TV Awards 2016

Still time for your film nominations!
As in previous years, we are asking the public to nominate their favourite Stroud films of 2016. To qualify the films have to be among the 480 or so local films that have been uploaded to Stroud Community TV during the year. The categories are Best Local film, Best Campaign film, Best Stroud Music film, Best Community Event Film, Best Local Business Film, Best Community Project Film and Best ‘Green’ Film. Nominations close on Saturday 14th January and then a team of prestigious local judges will view and vote on the films. Winners will be announced on 18th March.

We’d love to hear your thoughts or if you have ideas for the Award evening please do get in touch. More information, how to nominate films and how to contact us, are all our website at stroudcommunity.tv/awards-2017

Philip Booth is the co-founder of Stroud Community TV and an organiser of the Awards
 

Film Listings January 2017

STROUD FILM SOCIETY @ OPEN HOUSE

Thurs 5th ROOM 5-year-old Jack (Jacob Tremblay) and his mother Ma (Brie Larson) are trapped in a windowless room. This is all the child has ever known. Ma tries to create a safe universe for him. At last, they escape to the bewilderment of the real world. A brilliant film of a well-read novel by Emma Donohue. (Cert 15) 7:30pm £40 for full year membership/£22 from Jan 2017. Contact Beth Cheyne on 01453 823551 for membership details and guest tickets, which cost £6 and must be booked in advance.

Thurs 26th DHEEPAN Sri Lanka and Paris, the recent past. Dheepan (Jesuthasan Anthonythasan) is a Tamil Tiger engaged in the Civil War. As the Tamil's face defeat, he flees to France, taking a woman Yalini (Kalieasawri Srinivasan) and a little girl to pose as a family and seek asylum. (Cert 15) 7:30pm (see ticket details and contact info in listing above).

stroudfilmsociety.org.uk

NAILSWORTH FILM CLUB @ THE ARKELL CENTRE

Fri 6th MACBETH This searing retelling of the Scottish play is powerfully cinematic, shot on location in winter on the Isle of Skye, with stunning and bloody battlefield scenes, it is not a tale for the squeamish. Fassbender and Cotillard both give powerful performances in the lead roles and we are invited to consider that their actions are driven by grief at the loss of their child rather than simple lust for power. (Cert 15) Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

Fri 27th LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP Kate Beckinsale turns in perhaps the best performance of her career in a film based on the novel Lady Susan by Jane Austen, in which the beautiful, amoral and penniless widow causes mayhem in the lives of all around her. (Cert U) Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

nailsworthfilmclub.co.uk

WICK FLIX @ THE PAINSWICK CENTRE

Fri 6th FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS A comedy/drama set in the 20’s and 30’s and based on the incredibly true story of Florence Foster Jenkins (Meryl Streep), a New York heiress and socialite who dreamed of becoming an opera singer, despite having the most terrible singing voice! Her husband (Hugh Grant) supports her in her journey to stardom at New York’s Carnegie Hall – an achievement that eventually allowed her to count Cole Porter and Sir Thomas Beecham among her many fans. (Cert PG) 7:45pm £6 (includes one free drink!)

Film Listings December 2016

STROUD FILM SOCIETY @ OPEN HOUSE

Thurs 15th JULIETA Three stories about Julieta, starring Emma Suarez and Andriana Ugarte as the younger and older Julieta. In her youth, she had a daughter in a relationship that ended tragically. She has lied to her father, and her daughter, from whom she has been estranged for many years. She writes a long letter to her daughter to explain the secrets kept from her for 30 years. Another excellent film from this director. Directed By: Pedro Almodovar. Cert 15 7:30pm £40 for full year membership/£22 from Jan 2017. Contact Beth Cheyne on 01453 823551 for membership details and guest tickets, which cost £6 and must be booked in advance.

stroudfilmsociety.org.uk

THE PAINSWICK CENTRE

Fri 2nd THE REVENANT The winner of three Oscars in 2016 – Best Actor, Best Director, Best Cinematography – the Revenant, inspired by true events, is an immersive and visceral cinematic experience capturing one man’s epic adventure of survival and the extraordinary power of the human spirit. In an expedition to the uncharted American wilderness, legendary explorer Hugh Glass (Leonardo DiCaprio) is brutally attacked by a bear and left for dead by members of his own hunting team. In a quest to survive, Glass endures unimaginable grief as well as the betrayal of his confidant John Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy). Guided by sheer will and the love of his family, Glass must navigate a vicious winter in a relentless pursuit to live and find redemption..Cert 15 7pm £6

thepainswickcentre.com

NAILSWORTH FILM CLUB @ THE ARKELL CENTRE

Fri 9th RED DOG Set in 1970s Western Australia, Red Dog is based on the legendary true story of a red dog who united a disparate local community while roaming the Australian outback in search of his long lost master. This is a delightfully heart-warming, moving and often very funny film, which will put you in just the right mood for Christmas.Cert PG. Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

Film Listings November 2016

LANSDOWN FILM CLUB @ LANSDOWN HALL

Sun 6th COURT A 2014 Indian independent legal drama film, written and directed by Chaitanya Tamhane in his directorial debut. Featuring a cast of newcomers, the film examines the Indian legal system through the trial of an ageing folk singer at a Sessions Court in Mumbai.7:30pm £6/£5concs/£2annual membership

Sun 20th CHEVALIER Six competitive men play a series of bizarre games while sailing on a luxury yacht in the Aegean Sea. It was named the Best Film in the Official Competition at the London Film Festival in 2015. 7:30pm £6/£5concs/£2annual membership

lansdownhall.org

MALTHOUSE CINEMA

Thurs 10th THE BIG LEBOWSKI When Jeff ‘The Dude’ Lebowski (Jeff Bridges) – White Russian drinking hippie and avid bowler – is assaulted in a case of mistaken identity, he enlists the help of his bowling buddy Walter (John Goodman) to assist in a one-time job with a big pay-off. If the film itself isn’t enough to tempt you along, the Malthouse Bar and Kitchen's White Russians will be two-for-one, to save you a couple of trips to the bar. Plus, Stroud Bowl is just down the road if you fancy a couple of post-Lebowski games...Opens 7pm Film @ 8pm Free 

stroudmalthouse.com

STROUD FILM SOCIETY @ OPEN HOUSE

Thurs 3rd MUSTANG A 2015 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Turkish-French film director Deniz Gamze Ergüven. The film is set in a remote Turkish village and depicts the lives of five young orphaned sisters and challenges they face growing up as girls in a conservative society. The event that triggers the family backlash against the five sisters at the beginning of the film is based on Ergüven's personal life. Cert 15. 7:30pm £40 for full year membership/£22 from Jan 2017. Contact Beth Cheyne on 01453 823551 for membership details and guest tickets, which cost £6 and must be booked in advance.

Thurs 24th TANGERINES Georgia, 1992. As the war between the Chechens and the Georgians breaks out, Estonian immigrants return to Estonia; but Ivo and Margus stay on to harvest their crops of tangerines and transport them home. When the war arrives, Ivo gives shelter to 2 wounded soldiers, Ahmed, a Chechen and Niko, a Georgian. These two swear to kill each other. Ivo is a peacemaker and this film is a plea for reconciliation and understanding in a belligerent world. Cert 15. 7:30pm (see ticket details in above listing)

stroudfilmsociety.org.uk

NAILSWORTH FILM CLUB @ THE ARKELL CENTRE

Fri 11th DHEEPAN Winner of the Palme d’Or at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, Dheepan is a heart rending story of three strangers united by circumstances. Both a thriller and a powerful depiction of the immigrant experience. Cert 15. Bar opens at 7:30pm/film starts at 8pm See website for membership details.

nailsworthfilmclub.co.uk

VUE CINEMA

Thurs 10th REVOLUTION - NEW ART FOR A NEW WORLD A bold and exciting feature documentary that encapsulates a momentous period in the history of Russia and the Russian Avant-Garde. Drawing on the collections of major Russian institutions, contributions from contemporary artists, curators, and performers and personal testimony from the descendants of those involved, the film brings the artists of the Russian Avant-Garde to life. 7pm (see website for ticket details)

myvue.com      

 

 

Film Listings July 2016

LANSDOWN HALL

Sun 10th We Are Many A critically acclaimed film by Amir Amirani which tells for the first time the remarkable story of the biggest protest in history, and how it changed the world. Eight years in the making, filmed in seven countries, and including interviews with John Le Carre, Damon Albarn, Brian Eno, Danny Glover, Mark Rylance, Richard Branson, Hans Blix and Ken Loach amongst others, it charts the birth and rise of the people power movements that are now sweeping the world, all through the prism of one extraordinary day. On February 15th 2003, over 15 million people marched through the streets of 800 cities on every continent to voice their opposition to the proposed war in Iraq. This unprecedented global march was organised, against all odds, by a patchwork of peace campaigners in many countries, who reveal how they pulled of the historic demonstration, and whose legacy is only now unfolding.7:30 - 10pm £6/£5concs Click here for facebook event page

lansdownhall.org


WOODCHESTER MANSION

Sat 16th Horror Night: Nightmare On Elm Street This fundraising night of scares features a screening of cult horror movie A Nightmare On Elm Street, hot food, and then a real ghost hunt with paranormal investigators and a celebrity medium! All of this within the world-famous, gothic haunted house that is Woodchester Mansion...7:30pm - 3am £75 in advance click here for facebook event page

Square Bomb - Kickstarter Video

Stroud’s own situationist New Wave band Square Bomb featuring Pav (Pavinyl), Nick (Thee Ones) a drum machine and artist/performance poet Uta on vocals need your help to turn their forthcoming debut album Kitchenette into a beautiful, shiny vinyl... 

Click here to visit their kickstarter page to pledge your pesos and pick up issue #16 (out now) for an interview with the band by Sarah Phaedre Watson...

Do it.
 

Film Listings June 2016

LANSDOWN FILM CLUB

Sat 11th Rams In a secluded valley, estranged brothers Gummi and Kiddi, who haven’t spoken in 40 years, live side by side tending to their prized ancestral sheep. When a lethal disease suddenly infects Kiddi’s sheep, all the animals in the area are culled to contain the outbreak, with many farmers abandoning their land. But the brothers don’t give up so easily – and each tries to stave off disaster in his own fashion: Kiddi by using his rifle and Gummi by using his wits. As the authorities close in, they will need to come together to save the special breed passed down for generations – and themselves – from extinction. Doors open at 7:30pm, film starts at 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members 

Sun 26th The New Girlfriend Claire’s closest friend since childhood, Lea, passes away leaving behind a husband, David, and a newborn baby. When Claire visits David’s house unexpectedly she finds him dressed in his dead wife’s clothes and feeding their baby with a bottle. He explains that Lea was well aware of his predilection, and eventually, so relieved that he has someone to share his secret with, David and Claire create a female persona for him named Virginia. As David begins to identify more strongly as Virginia, Claire, faces her own emotional watershed as her feelings for Virginia conflict with those she feels for her husband. Doors open at 7:30pm, film starts at 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members 

www.lansdownhall.org

MUSEUM IN THE PARK

Thurs 16th A Great Day In Harlem In keeping with the musical theme of Fred Chance and David Corio’s Keeping Time exhibition, the Museum in the Park will be screening two of the best films ever made about Jazz. A Great Day in Harlem, in the story of a still photograph. Jean Bach made the film in 1958, recording the moment when photographer Art Kane made his iconic image of 57 of the greatest Jazz musicians on a street in Harlem. 8pm £5/£4(concs) to book call the Museum on 01453 763394

Thurs 23rd Jazz On A Summers Day In this film, the connection to still photography is through the director, Bert Stern, one of the great photographers of the 1950's. It was made in the same year as A Great Day in Harlem, during the Newport Jazz Festival. Stern's skill at framing images is apparent throughout. 8pm £5/£4(concs) to book call the Museum on 01453 763394

www.museuminthepark.org.uk

STROUD BAPTIST CHURCH

Sat 18th Sicko Michael Moore's devastating, convincing, and very entertaining documentary about the state of America's health care system. Screening as part of a fundraising weekend of events celebrating and defending the NHS organised by Stroud Against the Cuts.Visit the facebook event page here and the website below for further info. 7-9pm 

 

 

 

 

Film Listings May 2016

ATELIER

Thurs 26th Alasdair Ogilvie: An Evening of Stroud DelightsLocal film maker Alasdair Ogilvie shows a selection of his recent films including a film about poet, activist, letterpress printer and one of Stroud's most cherished characters Dennis Gould 7:30pm £5

Sun 29th Mary Trunk: Lost in Living - Behind the domestic curtain of motherhood, where the creative impulse can flourish or languish, are four women determined to make a go of it. Filmed over seven years, Lost in Living, confronts the contradictions inherent in personal ambition and self-sacrifice, female friendship and mental isolation, big projects and dirty dishes. The complex realities of family life unfold in this documentary film about the messy intersection of motherhood and artistic expression 2:30pm £3 (Select Festival)

atelierstroud.co.uk

LANSDOWN FILM CLUB

Sun 1st Song from the Forest - As a young man, American Louis Sarno heard a song on the radio that ignited his imagination. He followed its melody into the Central African rainforest to the Bayaka Pygmies, a tribe of hunters and gatherers. He never left. Now after 25 years living with the Bayaka and recording their music Louis is fulfilling an old promise to his pygmy son, Samedi. Together they travel from Africa to the concrete jungle of New York. With a fascinating soundtrack and stunning imagery contrasting rainforest and urban cityscape, Louis’ and Samedi’s stories are interwoven into a touching portrait of an extraordinary man and his son. Doors 7:30pm Film starts at 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members

Sun 15th Gueros - Ever since the Mexico University strike broke out, Sombra and Santos have been living in angst-ridden limbo. Education-less, motionless, purposeless, and unsure of what the strike will bring, they begin to look for strange ways to kill time. But their idiosyncratic routine is interrupted by the unexpected arrival of Tomas, Sombra’s kid brother. Unable to fit in amongst these older slackers, Tomas discovers that unsung Mexican folk-rock hero Epigmenio Cruz has been hospitalized somewhere in the city. Tomas convinces Sombra and Santos they must track him down in order to pay their final respects at his deathbed. But what they thought would be a simple trip to find their childhood idol soon becomes a voyage of self-discovery across Mexico City’s invisible frontiers. Doors 7:30pm Film starts at 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members

Sun 29th Dark Horse - An inspirational true story set in the village of Cefn Fforest in one of the poorest mining valleys in Wales. Jan Vokes, a local barmaid, decides to breed a racehorse when she overhears a regular talking about the time he owned a share of a horse. Together with the regular and her husband she buys a £300 thoroughbred mare, pairs her with an aging stallion, then forms a syndicate with 23 friends in the village who each pay £10 a week to raise the foal. Raised on a slagheap allotment, to the astonishment of the racing elite, Dream Alliance grows up to be an unlikely champion, until one day disaster strikes…Doors 7:30pm Film starts at 8pm £6/£5concs/£2members

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VUE CINEMA

Sun 1st Royal Opera House - Lucia Di Lammermoor 1:50pm (15)

Tues 10th Globe On Screen - Measure for Measure 6:45pm (CTBC)

Thurs 12th National Theatre - A View From The Bridge 6:50pm (12A)

Weds 18th + Sun 22nd Royal Opera House - Frankenstein Weds 7pm/Sun 1:50pm (12A)

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Film Screenings @ SITE Festival 2016


Sat 2nd - Sun 3rd April: Pilgrimage from Scattered Points by Luke Fowler
‘Pilgrimage from Scattered Points’ is a film about the English composer Cornelius Cardew (1936-1981) and The Scratch Orchestra (1968-73). Cornelius Cardew formed the orchestra with Michael Parsons and Howard Skempton in 1968 and published their draft constitution in “The Musical Times” in June 1969. The constitution set out the framework, which would dominate the orchestra’s musical work for the first half of its existence. It proposed a fluid community where students, office workers, amateur musicians and some professional composers would gather together for performance, music making and edification.
A film-maker and musician raised in Glasgow in the eighties, Luke Fowler is recognised as an artist, film-maker and musician who creates new grammar from old forms. A 2012 Turner Prize nominee who won the Jarman Award in 2008, Fowler produces, via sound, text and image, a layered portrait of the real life characters he focuses on, most of whom stem from a counter-cultural background. His structuralist
film essays contain sonic and visual fragments that intriguingly link diverse references, theories, views and notions, proposing more and more portals of viewing and understanding, rather than neat/limited summarisations. His brazen and bold use of archive and 16mm film, text and sound/music makes the media and the message fizz with possibilities. A new kind of portrait artist. Sat 2nd 11am-4pm + 6-8pm/Sun 3rd 11am - 4pm The Goods Shed


Thurs 7th April: All Divided Selves by Luke Fowler
The social and cultural revolutions of the 1960s were spearheaded by the charismatic, guru-like figure of Glasgow born Psychiatrist R.D. Laing. In his now classic text "The Politics of Experience" (1967) Laing argued that normality entailed adjusting ourselves to the mystification of an alienating and depersonalizing world. Thus, those society labels as 'mentally ill' are in fact 'hyper-sane' travelers, conducting an inner voyage through aeonic time. The film concentrates on archival representations of Laing and his colleagues as they struggled to acknowledge the importance of considering social environment and disturbed interaction in institutions as significant factors in the aetiology of human distress and suffering. All Divided Selves reprises the vacillating responses to these radical views and the less forgiving responses to Laing's latter career shift; from eminent psychiatrist to enterprising celebrity. A dense, engaging and lyrical collage- Fowler weaves archival material with his own filmic observations—marrying a dynamic soundtrack of field recordings with recorded music by Éric La Casa, Jean-Luc Guionnet and Alasdair Roberts. 
Luke Fowler a filmmaker and musician based in Glasgow was a 2012 Turner Prize nominee and won the Jarman Award in 2008 8pm £4adv/£5otd 4 John Street


Sat 9th - Sun 10th April: Klipperty Klopp by Andrew Kotting
Shot by Leila McMillan, (ongoing collaborator and lover) with 8 rolls of Super 8 mfa, the film is perhaps my first. A post punk piece of pagan sensibility, complete with bestiality, buggery and boundless energy, the film combines frenetic performance in a field with a monotonous one take recital and tune full songs. Perhaps inspired by Beckett and as a reaction to some of the preciousness of the Land Art tradition as
exemplified by Richard Long and Hamish Fulton.Joseph Beuys meets Carry On in a Running-jumping-standing-still film. A post-punk piece of pagan sensibility, complete with bestiality, buggery and boundless energy, the work combines frenetic performance and Beckettian other-worldly rantings. An artefact, dug up and re-presented in the great-out-of-doors 11am-4pm Free The Goods Shed


Weds 13th April: By Our Selves by Andrew Kotting  
By Our Selves documents a four-day walk made by the English Poet John Clare from an asylum in the Epping Forest up into Northamptonshire. Toby Jones, Iain Sinclair and a Straw Bear follow in his footsteps exactly 150 years after his death. En route they bump into Highland musician and poet MacGillivray, and graphic novelist Alan Moore. Captured in black & white photography, they discover the only truth of the road: whatever our hopes and delusions, we are always By Our Selves 7.30pm £4adv/£5otd 4 John Street

 
Sat 16th - Sun 17th April: Remembering Jelly by Joe Magee

Newly developed films using jelly as a medium to explore memory, identity and the contemporary human mind.  This screening is in connection with Joe Magee’s exhibition for the Site Festival in the Line Gallery at SVA, John St, Stroud, GL5 2HA. Joe Magee is an award winning artist filmmaker living in Stroud 11am-4pm  Free The Goods Shed


Weds 27th April: MOULD - The Short Show
The Short Show is a cinematic experience of exciting young film makers work showcased as an fantastic evening of film and sound as part of this years Site festival! MOULD, in conjunction with SVA, is a youth arts collective dedicated to bringing contemporary arts to a younger generation. The group is led by local
young people between the ages of 15 and 21, whose ambition for MOULD is to raise the profile of young aspiring artists by providing them with the means to develop ideas, and give them a platform to show their works to others 7:30pm Free The Goods Shed


Sat 30th April INDEX Presents 3 artists films
(5-8pm, The Baptist Hall, Union St)
Portrait of Ga by Margaret Tait (1952)
"A Haiku from one of cinemas true poets.” Tilda Swinton. An intimate and abstract portrait of the flm maker's mother ‘walking and skipping’ through the Orkney landscape.

Buoyed By The Irrelevance Of Their Own Insignifcance by Andrew Kötting (2014) 
Buoyed By The Irrelevance Of Their Own Insignifcance’ sees Andrew Kotting wearing a cow's head whilst foundering around in the waves of the English Channel .‘A ridiculous attempt to re-enact moments from my past’ says Andrew Kotting of his flm which was inspired by the glimpse of a giraffe and an ostrich through the shop window of Get Stuffed a taxidermist shop on the Essex road - 'Animals all-
atsea; a cow’s head struggling to make for shore'.

The Green Ray by Tacita Dean (2001)
A beautiful flm in pursuit of the green ray of the setting sun, a phenomena that often eludes the naked eye and remains uncaptured by digital pixellation . Here it is revealed by the light of the transparent images of 16 mm film.

Pick up issue #13 April 2016 (out now!) for our feature on this year's SITE Festival and visit our event page here for a series of film screenings and live soundtracks brought to you by Good On Paper and the SVA. The free official festival programme is available in various venues through out Stroud and as a download via www.sitefestival.org.uk