kids - cinecenta · 2016. 4. 1. · of john williams’ classic score. the force awakens is the...

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apr 25 (7:00 & 9:20) BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT Ridley Scott, USA/UK, 1982, 117 min; 14A Visually spectacular, intensely action- packed and powerfully prophetic. Harrison Ford stars as a detective who hunts for fugitive, murderous replicants. M E M B E R S H I P cinemagic TWO COMPLIMENTARY TICKETS $6.75 ADMISSION FOR YOU + 1 ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION E veryone is welcome at Cinecenta! We are a non-profit division of the University of Victoria Students’ Society, conceived as an inexpensive alternative for students, the University community and the public. The theatre is in the Student Union Building at UVic. Many buses come to UVic and stop right outside the SUB. The university charges a fee of $2.50 for parking on campus after 6pm and all day on Saturdays. There is no charge for parking on Sundays and holidays. Tickets and memberships go on sale 40 minutes before showtime. Please arrive early to avoid disappointment. Cinecenta office: 250-721-8364 24-hour info Line: 250-721-8365 D O L B Y S T E R E O APR - MAY 2016 $5.75 $4.75 $5.75 $6.75 $6.75 $6.75 $7.75 $50.00 $57.50 UVSS Students Special for UVSS students 9pm shows (or later) Seniors, Children (12 & under) Other Students Cinemagic Members UVic Alumni, Faculty, Staff, and guests(1 only) of above Non-members TEN FILM DISCOUNT PASS UVSS Students, Seniors Members, UVic Staff (unavailable to non-members) But if you aren’t affiliated with UVic and are going to come more than once a year, you can save money by purchasing a Cinemagic Membership! All films are in English, or with English subtitles where noted. $17. 50 LOCATED IN THE STUDENT UNION BUILDING EVERYONE’S WELCOME AT CINECENTA! UVic SUB, 3800 Finnerty Rd., Mon - Fri 9:00-5:00 250 721-3400 • www.HeartPharmacy.com • Fill / Transfer Prescriptions • Prescription Billing (including staff and student plans) • Medical Reviews • Vaccine Injections • Process Paper Claims to Blue Cross ALL UVIC STAFF FULL SERVICE POST OFFICE Not Just for Students, Everyone Welcome! SERVICES INCLUDE: “FEATURES AN ENDLESS ARRAY OF ASTONISHINGLY CHOREOGRAPHED AND EXECUTED DANCING.” exclaim! Manager: Lisa Sheppard Programmer: Michael Hoppe Design: Katie H. & Calum M. SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY apr 17 (3:00 MATINEE & 5:00 & 7:00) IN SEARCH OF THE GREAT SONG Michael Stillwater, Switzerland, 2016, 81 min In spoken word, sound and music this docu- mentary explores and celebrates the uni- versal current pulsing through all life. The question asked of people from different cultures and traditions: “What is the Great Song for you?” apr 18 (7:00 & 9:10) CASABLANCA Michael Curtiz, USA, 1942, 102 min, G THE MOST SPLENDIDLY ROMANTIC MOVIE EVER MADE. Set against the backdrop of espionage in WWII French Morocco, the story of enig- matic Casablanca nightclub owner Rick (Humphrey Bogart) and his unwitting reunion with an old flame (Ingrid Bergman) unfolds. --Mr. Showbiz apr 20 (7:00 & 8;45) GUANTANAMO’S CHILD: Omar Khadr Patrick Reed & Michelle Shephard, Canada, 2015, 80 min Omar Khadr: child soldier or unrepentant terrorist? An intimate portrait of how a teenager from a Toronto suburb became the center of a U.S. war crimes trial. Finally, his story, in his own words. –White Pine Pictures apr 21 (7:10 & 8:45) LOVE THY NATURE Sylvie Rokab, USA, 2014, 76 min We’ve lost touch with nature. This dis- connect hurts our health, dulls our spirit, and threatens our future. Narrated by Liam Neeson, this is a cinematic journey through the beauty and intimacy of our relationship with the natural world. And it shows that a renewed connection with nature is key not only to our well being, but also to solving our climate and environmental crises. apr 19 (7:00 & 9:30) THE BIG SHORT Director: Adam McKa USA, 2015, 131 min; 14A Cast: Ryan Gosling, Steve Carell, Christian Bale, Brad Pitt A true crime story and a madcap comedy, a heist movie and a scalding polemic. The film wants not only to explain the financial crisis of 2008 — following Michael Lewis’s book — but also to make the dry, complex abstractions of high finance exciting and fun. It’s a trip. –The New York Times apr 22 & 23 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00 & 9:10) THE LADY IN THE VAN Director: Nicholas Hytner, UK, 2015, 105 min; PG A fine, moving comedy of English manners between a writer (Alex Jennings) and his eccentric tenant (Maggie Smith), which slowly deepens into an exploration of human bonds. Based on the “mostly true” book and stage accounts of the peculiar van-lady who took refuge on his property, Alan Bennett’s deceptively light-hearted brew of social observation and self-examination comes to the screen. Maggie Smith is shrill and hilari- ous, but not a joke. Her abandoned life haunts both Bennett’s conscience and his art. Who is she? How did she end up like this? And why does he care so much? —Empire BIG SCREEN Classic “TINA FEY AT HER BEST!” Toronto Star 1044a Fort Street 250-590-4486 apr 10 (3:00 matinee & 5:00 & 7:00) 45 YEARS Director: Andrew Haigh, UK, 2015, 96 min; PG Screen legends Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay won Best Actress & Best Actor at the Berlin Film Festival for this emotional tour-de-force about a couple preparing for their 45th anniversary who make a discovery that calls into question the life they have built together. —Seattle International Film Festival apr 11 (7:00 & 9:00) apr 24 (3:00 matinee & 5:10 & 7:15) THE LADY IN THE VAN Director: Nicholas Hytner, UK, 2015, 105 min; PG PLEASE SEE APRIL 23 & 24 FOR DESCRIPTION “MAGGIE SMITH’S BEST WORK IN YEARS!” --Hitfix “A QUIETLY EXPLOSIVE FILM, A POTENT DRAMA WITH A NUANCED FEEL FOR SUBTLETY AND EMOTIONAL COMPLICATIONS.” Los Angeles Times “HALF REBOOT, HALF REMAKE, AND ALL FUN.” –Philadelphia Inquirer apr 12 (7:15 ONLY) VANISHING POINT (Julia Szucs & Stephen Smith, Canada, 2012, 82 min; Inuktitut with subtitles) “As the world melts under our feet, we must find the best way for our journey.” Two communities of the Arctic — one in Northwest Greenland, the other on Canada’s Baffin Island — are linked by a migration led by a shaman. Navarana, a Polar Inuit elder and descendant of the shaman, wonders about the future. apr 15 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00, 9:40) apr 16 (12:00 NOON, 3:00, 7:00, 9:40) STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENS Director: J.J. Abrams, USA, 2015, 136 min; PG Cast: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac The Star Wars movie fans have been waiting for, lo these many years. As much a restora- tion as it is a reboot of a cherished movie franchise, it’s a complete pleasure to behold from start to finish: from the familiar scene-setting scroll to the final triumphant notes of John Williams’ classic score. The Force Awakens is the best movie of 2015, full stop. Toronto Star apr 13 & 14 (9:00 only) STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENS SEE APRIL 15 & 16 FOR DESCRIPTION. may 1 (3:00 MATINEE & 5:30, 8:00) WHERE TO INVADE NEXT Director: Michael Moore USA, 2015, 121 min; PG PLEASE SEE APR 29 & 30 FOR DESCRIPTION may 2 (7:00 & 9:00) DON’T LOOK BACK D.A. Pennebaker, USA, 1967, 96 min Bob Dylan is captured on-screen as he never would be again in this groundbreaking film. The legendary documentarian finds Dylan in England during his 1965 tour, which would be his last as an acoustic artist. Featuring some of Dylan’s most famous songs. APR 26, 27, 28 (7:00 & 9:15) THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT Director: Jaco Van Dormael, Belgium, 2015, 113 min; French/German with subtitles God is a mean bastard from Brussels, but his daughter is determined to set things straight in this madcap fantasy. Imagining God as a wrathful bastard, and his 10-year-old daughter Ea as humanity’s # 2 Saviour after her brother JC retires to become a statue, Jaco Van Dormael confirms his title as Belgium’s wacky philosopher-king of filmmakers. “Testament” is irresistibly laugh-out-loud and feel-good. When the film pops the age-old question about why evil exists in the world, it places the blame squarely and solely on Mr. Big. The Hollywood Reporter may 8 (5:00 & 7:00) MAY 9 & 10 (7:10 & 9:00) OUR LAST TANGO Director: German Kral, Argentina, 2015, 85 min; Spanish with subtitles Juan Carlos Copes and María Nieves Rego are the Fred and Ginger of Argentinian tango. In this beautifully photographed film full of stunning dance sequences, they recount their complicated history over several decades. Starting out in the 1950s, Juan had a vision to turn his country’s dance into an international phenomenon. He accomplished that dream with his dance partner Maria in the hit Broadway show Tango Argentino and other travelling performances. Yet, behind the scenes, their relationship was tumultuous, and remains so now. Director German Kral divides his time between Argentina, where he grew up, and Germany, where he studied and worked with Wim Wenders. Kral takes an inventive approach to evoking the early days of Juan and Maria by casting young dancers to portray them in recreations. –Toronto International Film Festival may 22 (4:45 & 7:00) MAY 23 (7:00 only) TOUCHED WITH FIRE Director: Paul Dalio, USA, 2015, 107 min; PG There’s something terribly, painfully poignant this under-the-radar movie that’s much better than you think it might be. Its plot summary — two bipolar poets (Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby) fall in love — sounds like an indie-movie cliché. But writer/director Paul Dalio, who based the film on his own struggles with bipolar disorder, establishes a gentle, honest tone that never wavers — and demonstrates a knack for vivid imagery that makes him a filmmaker to watch. — Seattle Times apr 13 & 14 (7:15 ONLY) REQUIEM FOR THE AMERICAN DREAM Peter D. Hutchison, Kelly Nyks, Jared P. Scott, USA, 2015, 73 min This is the definitive discourse with Noam Chomsky, widely regarded as the most impor- tant intellectual alive, on the defining characteristic of our time - the deliberate concentra- tion of wealth and power in the hands of a select few. Filmed over four years, Chomsky unpacks the principles that have brought us to the crossroads of historically unprec- edented inequality while also looking back on his own life of activism. A potent reminder that power ultimately rests in the hands of the governed, REQUIEM is required viewing for all who maintain hope in a shared stake in the future. Blue Ice Docs may 3, 4, 5 (7:00 & 9:20) EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT Director: Ciro Guerra, Colombia/Venezuela/Argentina, 2015, 125 min; Spanish/Portuguese/German with subtitles In Ciro Guerra’s vibrant and wildly original feature, two explorers (Jan Bijvoet and Brionne Davis) embark on parallel journeys—40 years apart—down the Colombian Amazon. Both are in search of a sacred flower with mythical healing powers. Both encounter Karamakate (initially Nilbio Torres; then Antonio Bolívar), an Amazonian shaman who shares with them his tales of colonialism’s devastating toll on his people. As unlikely friendships take root, this drama cuts between timelines and enwraps viewers in seductive visuals and alluring ethnographic details. Looking to the journals of German ethnologist Theodor Koch-Grunberg and American botanist Richard Evans Schultes for inspiration, Guerra also employs black-and-white cinematography to lend an ethereal quality to this untamed place. Vancouver International Film Festival may 6 & 7 (7:00 & 9:15) DEADPOOL Director: Tim Miller, USA, 2016,108 min; 14A Based upon the Marvel Comics anti-hero, this is the origin story of former Special Forces operative turned mercenary Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds), who adopts the alter ego Deadpool. Armed with a dark and twisted sense of humor, Deadpool hunts down the man who nearly destroyed his life. APR 29 & 30 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00 & 9:20) WHERE TO INVADE NEXT Director: Michael Moore, USA, 2015, 121 min; PG Shucking his usual sarcasm and rediscovering his funny bone, Michael Moore happily treks far and wide for quality-of-life ideas. He’s made his most enjoyable film in years and also his most inspiring, the antidote to global doom and gloom. Moore’s travels mostly to Europe and visits countries (Italy, France, Germany, Portugal, Slovenia, Iceland, Tunisia) that each seem to have found better ways of delivering education, nutrition, employment, drug control, justice, women’s rights and many other social benefits. Toronto Star may 11 & 12 (7:00 & 9:25) CHI-RAQ Director: Spike Lee, USA, 2015, 127 min; 18A Spike Lee’s kinetic reimagining of Aristophenes’ 411 BC comedy “Lysistrata.” This is a deeply serious, biting picture that also has joy in its heart. Lee has transplanted the play to the south side of modern-day Chicago. Young black men are killing each other and innocent children. Lysistrata (the effervescent Teyonah Parris), hatches a plan: All of the women in the community vow to withhold sex from their men until the killing stops. Their slogan: “No peace, no piece.” All of the local hookers and strippers comply too. The guys, needless to say, are miserable. Time may 13 & 14 (7:00 & 9:10) HAIL, CAESAR! Directors: Joel and Ethan Coen, USA, 2015, 106 min; PG Cast: Josh Brolin, George Clooney, Ralph Fiennes, Scarlett Johansson, Channing Tatum, Tilda Swinton, Frances McDormand, Jonah Hill Set during the latter years of Hollywood’s Golden Age, “Hail, Caesar!” follows a single day in the life of a studio fixer (Josh Brolin) who is presented with plenty of problems to fix. may 15 (5:00 & 7:00) MAY 16 (7:00 & 9:00) THE LEGEND OF BARNEY THOMSON Director: Robert Carlyle, UK/Canada, 2015, 97 min; 14A Cast: Robert Carlyle, Emma Thompson Taking a page from “Sweeney Todd,” this macabre comedy is set in a Glasgow barbershop. Barney (Robert Carlyle) is a grumpy barber who accidentally stabs his boss. Luckily, his mum (Emma Thompson), a no-nonsense party girl, thinks to chop up the body and tuck it in the freezer. But the police are soon sniffing about the barbershop….Emma Thompson is deliciously cast against type as bingo-playing mama with a personality as brassy as her hair, and puts in a performance that is worth the price of admission. --The Globe and Mail may 17, 18, 19 (7:10 & 9:00) SONG OF LAHORE Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy & Andy Schocken, Pakistan/USA, 2015, 82 min; English & Urdu with subtitles This excellent documentary follows a group of Pakistani classical musicians who found themselves invited to perform at Lincoln Center. They must travel to New York to gain some measure of the respect and acclaim their ancestors enjoyed as inheritors of a centuries-long tradition of artistic excellence. With the imposition of sharia law in the late 1970s, Pakistani orchestras were disbanded and musicians vilified, even killed. But when an amazing recording of Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” on traditional Pakistani instruments goes viral, East meets West in improvisational harmony. A fascinating study in cross-cultural pollination, “Song of Lahore” positively sings. Variety may 20 & 21 (7:00 & 9:20) THE LOBSTER Director: Yorgos Lanthimos, Ireland/UK, 2015, 119 min; 14A Cast: Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, Lea Seydoux, John C. Reilly, Olivia Colman, Ben Whishaw Lonelyhearts who fail to find a suitable partner at a dating boot camp are transformed into animals, or else forced to hide out in the forest, in “Dogtooth” director Yorgos Lanthimos’ jury prize-winning absurdist social satire. Taking aim at the way modern society imposes a narrow definition of marriage on everyone, the crafty Greek allegorist begins in the darkly comic Bunuel tradition, before turning its bachelor protagonist (Colin Farrell) loose in its unexpectedly tender second half. Variety may 24 (7:00 & 9:15) HUNTINGTON’S DANCE Chris Furbee, USA, 2014, 85 min An intensely personal window into one family’s struggle with a devastating genetic disease, Huntington’s. The director began making the video diary in 1996 when 28 years old, as he looks after his mother Rosemary, and concludes 18 years later. may 27 & 28 (7:00 & 9:10) EYE IN THE SKY Director: Gavin Hood, USA, 102 min; PG Cast: Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul, Alan Rickman An alternative title to this riveting thriller about drone warfare and its perils, might be “Passing the Buck.” When urgent life-or-death decisions are required in a race against time to kill terrorists, officials, wary of being held responsible for civilian casualties, repeatedly “refer up” to higher authorities for final approval. Helen Mirren, in one of her fiercest screen performances, plays Col. Powell, the chilly officer in charge of an operation to capture a radicalized English woman meeting with terrorists in Nairobi. The New York Times may 25 & 26 (6:45 & 9:20) MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART Director: Jia Zhangke, China, 2015, 131 min; Cantonese/Mandarin with subtitles At once an intimate drama and a decades-spanning epic that leaps from the recent past to the present to the speculative near-future, Jia Zhangke’s new film is an intensely moving study of how China’s economic boom and the materialism it has spawned has affected the bonds of family, tradition, and love. —Kino Lorber Set in 1999, 2014 and 2025, “Mountains” revolves mostly around its everyday heroine, Tao (Zhao Tao), a woman caught somewhere between the dream and the reality of modern China. San Francisco Chronicle may 29 (5:00 & 7:00) PEGGY GUGGENHEIM: ART ADDICT Lisa Immordino Vreeland, USA, 2015, 96 min Peggy Guggenheim not only amassed one of the world’s most impressive collections of contemporary art but also earned a reputation as the consummate bohemian. may 30 (7:00 & 9:00) THE WITCH Robert Eggers, USA, 2016, 93 minutes; 14A New England, 1630. AN English farmer moves his wife and five children to a remote plot of land on the edge of an ominous forest - within which lurks an unknown evil. Strange and unsettling things begin to happen almost immediately .... may 31 (7:00 & 9:30) SPOTLIGHT Director: Thomas McCarthy; USA, 2015, 129 min; 14A The riveting true story of the Boston Globe investigation. When the team of reporters delve into allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church, they uncover a decades- long cover-up at the highest levels. JUNE 1 (7:00 & 9:20) YOUTH Director: Paolo Sorrentino; Italy/ Switzerland, 2015, 124 min; PG Cast: Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Jane Fonda “Youth” asks if our most important and life- changing experiences can come at any time – even late in life. JUNE 2 (7:00 & 9:00) MUSTANG Deniz Gamze Ergüven, Turkey/France, 2015, 98 min; Turkish w/ subtitles; PG Mustang” refers to the untamed spirits of its five teenage sisters living under the watchful eyes of their grandmother and uncle who clamp down on the girls’ freedom, locking them up at home. june 3 & 4 (7:00 & 9:20) WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROT Director: Glenn Ficarra & John Requa; USA, 2016, 112 min; 14A Cast: Tina Fey, Margot Robbie, Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman. In this savvy comedy, a news producer (Tina Fey) leaves behind a cushy job for the madness of war-torn Afghanistan, becoming something of an adrenaline junkie in the process. The dialogue is fast and darkly funny and while our heroine falls for a fellow reporter (Martin Freeman), “WTF” refuses to bog down in a love story. Covering the Taliban as a woman, of course, presents a unique set of challenges…. –The Wrap 9 BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! 0 “A TYPICALLY SLY, OFF-CENTER COMEDY.” The New York Times “A JOYOUS AND RIVETING FILM. WILL HAVE AUDIENCES GRINNING FROM EAR TO EAR!” The Wrap “A RICH AND SUBSTANTIAL COMEDY.” The Playlist “ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY.” Toronto Sun “THE MOVIE REALLY COULD BE CALLED THE LEGEND OF EMMA THOMPSON.” Georgia Straight IS THERE ANYTHING WRONG WITH BEING A EUPHORIC VISIONARY ARTIST? THAT QUESTION CUTS TO THE ESSENCE OF PAUL DALIO’S EXTRAORDINARILY SENSITIVE, NONJUDG- MENTAL EXPLORATION.” The New York Times “THE JOY OF THE FILM COMES IN WATCHING SMITH WORK HER MAGIC.” Toronto Star “A SOULFUL, STRANGE AND STUNNING DISCOVERY…. SIMPLY A WORK OF ART.” IndieWIRE “AN ENTERTAINING, HOT-BLOODED LOOK AT PERSONAL AND ARTISTIC INDEPENDENCE.” –NOW Toronto Wier! BEST FEATURE FILM -VFF “A WELL-PACED AND COGENT SEMINAR.The New York Times Special Event! Julia Szucs, co-director and producer, will be here for a Q&A! BIG SCREEN Classic yyyy “MOORE’S FRIENDLIEST FILM TO DATE.” Georgia Straight “A RATHER GRACEFUL, WITTY, AND STYLISH FILM.” Philadelphia Inquirer BIG SCREEN Classic “SMART, SEXY AND OUTRAGEOUS!” St. Louis Post-Dispatch “DEADPOOL’S BRATTY ENERGY FEELS LIBERATING!” Screen International “A COMIC FABLE THAT’S BOTH DEFTLY CLEVER AND IRREPRESSIBLY GOOFY.” RogerEbert.com Special Event! There will be a Q&A after the screening! KIDS MATINEE APR. 24 1PM THE LITTLE PRINCE KIDS MATINEE MAY. 1 1PM KUNG FU PANDA 3 KIDS MATINEE APR. 10 1PM KAHLIL GIBRAN’S THE PROPHET KIDS MATINEE APR. 16 NOON STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS KIDS MATINEE APR. 23 1PM THE LITTLE PRINCE KIDS MATINEE APR. 17 NOON STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS KIDS MATINEE APRIL. 30 1PM KUNG FU PANDA 3 Canadian Film Day SATURDAY & SUNDAY MATINEES ALL SEATS $4.75 APR 16 & 17 *SHOWTIME: 12:00 NOON!* STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENS USA, 2015, 136 min; PG - violence APR 23 & 24 1pm THE LITTLE PRINCE France/Canada, 2015, 107 min; rated G APR 30 & MAY 1 1pm KUNG FU PANDA 3 USA, 2015, 95 min; rated G Cast: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac. The Force Awakens is the best movie of 2015, full stop. –Toronto Star A beautifully animated new adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s beloved book, with voices by Rachel McAdams, Jeff Bridges, Paul Rudd, Marion Cotillard. When Po’s long-lost panda father suddenly reappears, the reunited duo travels to a secret panda paradise to meet scores of hilarious new panda characters. MATINEES will return in SEPTEMBER fOr kidS matinees EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART SONG OF LAHORE 45 YEARS APR-MAY 2016 CINECENTA.COM Big Screen Classics BLADE RUNNER CASABLANCA DON’T LOOK BACK SPOTLIGHT ON INTERNATIONAL CINEMA EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT SONG OF LAHORE MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART SPOTLIGHT ON INTERNATIONAL CINEMA EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT MAY 3, 4, 5 MAY 17, 18, 19 MAY 25, 26 SONG OF LAHORE MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART APR 25 MAY 2 APR 18 “NO DIRECTOR HAS DONE MORE TO CHRONICLE CONTEMPORARY CHINA” Village Voice “THIS RIVETING DRONE THRILLER IS CONTEMPORARY EDGE-OF-YOUR-SEAT STUFF” Toronto Star UVIC UNDERGRADS: $4.75

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Page 1: kidS - cinecenta · 2016. 4. 1. · of John Williams’ classic score. The Force Awakens is the best movie of 2015, full stop. — Toronto Star apr 13 & 14 (9:00 only) STAR WARS:

apr 25 (7:00 & 9:20)

BLADE RUNNER:T H E F I N A L C U TRidley Scott, USA/UK, 1982, 117 min; 14AVisually spectacular, intensely action-packed and powerfully prophetic. Harrison Ford stars as a detective who hunts for fugitive, murderous replicants.

MEMBERSHIPcinemagic

TWO COMPLIMENTARY TICKETS

$6.75 ADMISSION FOR YOU +

1 ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION

Everyone is welcome at Cinecenta! We are a non-profit division of the University of Victoria Students’ Society, conceived as an inexpensive alternative for students, the University community and the public. The theatre is in the Student Union Building

at UVic. Many buses come to UVic and stop right outside the SUB. The university charges a fee of $2.50 for parking on campus after 6pm and all day on Saturdays. There is no charge for parking on Sundays and holidays. Tickets and memberships go on sale 40 minutes before showtime. Please arrive early to avoid disappointment.

Cinecenta off ice : 250-721 -8364 24-hour info L ine : 250-721 -8365

D O L B Y S T E R E O

A P R - M AY 2 0 1 6$5.75

$4.75

$5.75

$6.75

$6.75

$6.75

$7.75

$50.00

$57.50

UVSS StudentsSpecial for UVSS students9pm shows (or later)

Seniors, Children (12 & under)

Other Students

Cinemagic Members

UVic Alumni, Faculty, Staff, and guests(1 only) of above

Non-members

TEN FILM DISCOUNT PASSUVSS Students, SeniorsMembers, UVic Staff(unavailable to non-members)

But if you aren’t affiliated with UVic and are going to come more than once a year, you can save money by purchasing a Cinemagic Membership!All films are in English, or with English subtitles where noted. $1

7.5

0

LOCATED IN THE STUDENT UNION BUILDINGEVERYONE’S WELCOME AT CINECENTA!

UVic SUB, 3800 Finnerty Rd., Mon - Fri 9:00-5:00250 721-3400 • www.HeartPharmacy.com

•Fill/TransferPrescriptions

•PrescriptionBilling(including staff and student plans)

•MedicalReviews

•VaccineInjections•ProcessPaper

Claims toBlueCross

ALL UVIC STAFF

FULL SERVICE POST OFFICE

Not Just for Students, Everyone Welcome!

SERVICES INCLUDE:“FEATURES AN ENDLESS ARRAY OF ASTONISHINGLY CHOREOGRAPHED

AND EXECUTED DANCING.” –exclaim!

M ana ge r : L is a S h e p par d P ro g ra m m e r : M i c ha e l H o p p e D es i g n : K at i e H . & C a l u m M .

[and get new ones for the summer]uvss.ca/subtext

sell yourtextbookswhen you’re done with them!

$

$

$

SUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAY

apr 17 (3:00 MATINEE & 5:00 & 7:00)

IN SEARCH OF THE GREAT SONG Michael Stillwater, Switzerland, 2016, 81 min In spoken word, sound and music this docu-mentary explores and celebrates the uni-versal current pulsing through all life. The question asked of people from different cultures and traditions: “What is the Great Song for you?”

apr 18 (7:00 & 9:10)

CASABLANCA Michael Curtiz, USA, 1942, 102 min, G THE MOST SPLENDIDLY ROMANTIC MOVIE EVER MADE. Set against the backdrop of espionage in WWII French Morocco, the story of enig-matic Casablanca nightclub owner Rick (Humphrey Bogart) and his unwitting reunion with an old flame (Ingrid Bergman) unfolds. --Mr. Showbiz

apr 20 (7:00 & 8;45)

GUANTANAMO’S CHILD: Omar Khadr Patrick Reed & Michelle Shephard, Canada, 2015, 80 min Omar Khadr: child soldier or unrepentant terrorist? An intimate portrait of how a teenager from a Toronto suburb became the center of a U.S. war crimes trial. Finally, his story, in his own words. –White Pine Pictures

apr 21 (7:10 & 8:45)

LOVE THY NATURE Sylvie Rokab, USA, 2014, 76 min We’ve lost touch with nature. This dis-connect hurts our health, dulls our spirit, and threatens our future. Narrated by Liam Neeson, this is a cinematic journey through the beauty and intimacy of our relationship with the natural world. And it shows that a renewed connection with nature is key not only to our well being, but also to solving our climate and environmental crises.

apr 19 (7:00 & 9:30)

THE BIG SHORT Director: Adam McKa USA, 2015, 131 min; 14A Cast: Ryan Gosling, Steve Carell, Christian Bale, Brad Pitt A true crime story and a madcap comedy, a heist movie and a scalding polemic. The film wants not only to explain the financial crisis of 2008 — following Michael Lewis’s book — but also to make the dry, complex abstractions of high finance exciting and fun. It’s a trip. –The New York Times

apr 22 & 23 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00 & 9:10)

THE LADY IN THE VAN Director: Nicholas Hytner, UK, 2015, 105 min; PG A fine, moving comedy of English manners between a writer (Alex Jennings) and his eccentric tenant (Maggie Smith), which slowly deepens into an exploration of human bonds. Based on the “mostly true” book and stage accounts of the peculiar van-lady who took refuge on his property, Alan Bennett’s deceptively light-hearted brew of social observation and self-examination comes to the screen. Maggie Smith is shrill and hilari-ous, but not a joke. Her abandoned life haunts both Bennett’s conscience and his art. Who is she? How did she end up like this? And why does he care so much? —Empire

BIG SCREENClassic

“TINA FEY AT HER BEST!” –Toronto Star

1044a Fort Street • 250-590-4486

apr 10 (3:00 matinee & 5:00 & 7:00)

45 YEARS Director: Andrew Haigh, UK, 2015, 96 min; PGScreen legends Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay won Best Actress & Best Actor at the Berlin Film Festival for this emotional tour-de-force about a couple preparing for their 45th anniversary who make a discovery that calls into question the life they have built together. —Seattle International Film Festival

apr 11 (7:00 & 9:00)apr 24 (3:00 matinee & 5:10 & 7:15)

THE LADY IN THE VANDirector: Nicholas Hytner, UK, 2015, 105 min; PGPLEASE SEE APRIL 23 & 24 FOR DESCRIPTION

“MAGGIE SMITH’S BEST WORK IN YEARS!” --Hitfix

“A QUIETLY EXPLOSIVE FILM, A POTENT DRAMA WITH A NUANCED FEEL FOR SUBTLETY AND EMOTIONAL COMPLICATIONS.” – Los Angeles Times“HALF REBOOT, HALF REMAKE, AND ALL FUN.” –Philadelphia Inquirer

apr 12 (7:15 ONLY)

VANISHING POINT (Julia Szucs & Stephen Smith, Canada, 2012, 82 min; Inuktitut with subtitles) “As the world melts under our feet, we must find the best way for our journey.” Two communities of the Arctic — one in Northwest Greenland, the other on Canada’s Baffin Island — are linked by a migration led by a shaman. Navarana, a Polar Inuit elder and descendant of the shaman, wonders about the future.

apr 15 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00, 9:40) apr 16 (12:00 NOON, 3:00, 7:00, 9:40)

STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENS Director: J.J. Abrams, USA, 2015, 136 min; PG Cast: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac The Star Wars movie fans have been waiting for, lo these many years. As much a restora-tion as it is a reboot of a cherished movie franchise, it’s a complete pleasure to behold from start to finish: from the familiar scene-setting scroll to the final triumphant notes of John Williams’ classic score. The Force Awakens is the best movie of 2015, full stop. —Toronto Star

apr 13 & 14 (9:00 only)

STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENS SEE APRIL 15 & 16 FOR DESCRIPTION.

may 1 (3:00 MATINEE & 5:30, 8:00)

WHERE TO INVADE NEXTDirector: Michael MooreUSA, 2015, 121 min; PGPLEASE SEE APR 29 & 30 FOR DESCRIPTION

may 2 (7:00 & 9:00)

DON’T LOOK BACKD.A. Pennebaker, USA, 1967, 96 minBob Dylan is captured on-screen as he never would be again in this groundbreaking film. The legendary documentarian finds Dylan in England during his 1965 tour, which would be his last as an acoustic artist. Featuring some of Dylan’s most famous songs.

APR 26, 27, 28 (7:00 & 9:15)

THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENTDirector: Jaco Van Dormael, Belgium, 2015, 113 min; French/German with subtitlesGod is a mean bastard from Brussels, but his daughter is determined to set things straight in this madcap fantasy. Imagining God as a wrathful bastard, and his 10-year-old daughter Ea as humanity’s # 2 Saviour after her brother JC retires to become a statue, Jaco Van Dormael confirms his title as Belgium’s wacky philosopher-king of filmmakers. “Testament” is irresistibly laugh-out-loud and feel-good. When the film pops the age-old question about why evil exists in the world, it places the blame squarely and solely on Mr. Big. —The Hollywood Reporter

may 8 (5:00 & 7:00) MAY 9 & 10 (7:10 & 9:00)

OUR LAST TANGODirector: German Kral, Argentina, 2015, 85 min; Spanish with subtitlesJuan Carlos Copes and María Nieves Rego are the Fred and Ginger of Argentinian tango. In this beautifully photographed film full of stunning dance sequences, they recount their complicated history over several decades. Starting out in the 1950s, Juan had a vision to turn his country’s dance into an international phenomenon. He accomplished that dream with his dance partner Maria in the hit Broadway show Tango Argentino and other travelling performances. Yet, behind the scenes, their relationship was tumultuous, and remains so now. Director German Kral divides his time between Argentina, where he grew up, and Germany, where he studied and worked with Wim Wenders. Kral takes an inventive approach to evoking the early days of Juan and Maria by casting young dancers to portray them in recreations. –Toronto International Film Festival

may 22 (4:45 & 7:00) MAY 23 (7:00 only)

TOUCHED WITH FIREDirector: Paul Dalio, USA, 2015, 107 min; PGThere’s something terribly, painfully poignant this under-the-radar movie that’s much better than you think it might be. Its plot summary — two bipolar poets (Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby) fall in love — sounds like an indie-movie cliché. But writer/director Paul Dalio, who based the film on his own struggles with bipolar disorder, establishes a gentle, honest tone that never wavers — and demonstrates a knack for vivid imagery that makes him a filmmaker to watch. — Seattle Times

apr 13 & 14 (7:15 ONLY)

REQUIEM FOR THE AMERICAN DREAM Peter D. Hutchison, Kelly Nyks, Jared P. Scott, USA, 2015, 73 minThis is the definitive discourse with Noam Chomsky, widely regarded as the most impor-tant intellectual alive, on the defining characteristic of our time - the deliberate concentra-tion of wealth and power in the hands of a select few. Filmed over four years, Chomsky unpacks the principles that have brought us to the crossroads of historically unprec-edented inequality while also looking back on his own life of activism. A potent reminder that power ultimately rests in the hands of the governed, REQUIEM is required viewing for all who maintain hope in a shared stake in the future. —Blue Ice Docs

may 3, 4, 5 (7:00 & 9:20)

EMBRACE OF THE SERPENTDirector: Ciro Guerra, Colombia/Venezuela/Argentina, 2015, 125 min; Spanish/Portuguese/German with subtitlesIn Ciro Guerra’s vibrant and wildly original feature, two explorers (Jan Bijvoet and Brionne Davis) embark on parallel journeys—40 years apart—down the Colombian Amazon. Both are in search of a sacred flower with mythical healing powers. Both encounter Karamakate (initially Nilbio Torres; then Antonio Bolívar), an Amazonian shaman who shares with them his tales of colonialism’s devastating toll on his people. As unlikely friendships take root, this drama cuts between timelines and enwraps viewers in seductive visuals and alluring ethnographic details. Looking to the journals of German ethnologist Theodor Koch-Grunberg and American botanist Richard Evans Schultes for inspiration, Guerra also employs black-and-white cinematography to lend an ethereal quality to this untamed place. —Vancouver International Film Festival

may 6 & 7 (7:00 & 9:15)

DEADPOOLDirector: Tim Miller, USA, 2016,108 min; 14ABased upon the Marvel Comics anti-hero, this is the origin story of former Special Forces operative turned mercenary Wade Wilson (Ryan Reynolds), who adopts the alter ego Deadpool. Armed with a dark and twisted sense of humor, Deadpool hunts down the man who nearly destroyed his life.

APR 29 & 30 (3:00 MATINEE & 7:00 & 9:20)

WHERE TO INVADE NEXTDirector: Michael Moore, USA, 2015, 121 min; PGShucking his usual sarcasm and rediscovering his funny bone, Michael Moore happily treks far and wide for quality-of-life ideas. He’s made his most enjoyable film in years and also his most inspiring, the antidote to global doom and gloom. Moore’s travels mostly to Europe and visits countries (Italy, France, Germany, Portugal, Slovenia, Iceland, Tunisia) that each seem to have found better ways of delivering education, nutrition, employment, drug control, justice, women’s rights and many other social benefits. —Toronto Star

may 11 & 12 (7:00 & 9:25)

CHI-RAQDirector: Spike Lee, USA, 2015, 127 min; 18ASpike Lee’s kinetic reimagining of Aristophenes’ 411 BC comedy “Lysistrata.” This is a deeply serious, biting picture that also has joy in its heart. Lee has transplanted the play to the south side of modern-day Chicago. Young black men are killing each other and innocent children. Lysistrata (the effervescent Teyonah Parris), hatches a plan: All of the women in the community vow to withhold sex from their men until the killing stops. Their slogan: “No peace, no piece.” All of the local hookers and strippers comply too. The guys, needless to say, are miserable. —Time

may 13 & 14 (7:00 & 9:10)

HAIL, CAESAR!Directors: Joel and Ethan Coen, USA, 2015, 106 min; PG Cast: Josh Brolin, George Clooney, Ralph Fiennes, Scarlett Johansson, Channing Tatum, Tilda Swinton, Frances McDormand, Jonah Hill Set during the latter years of Hollywood’s Golden Age, “Hail, Caesar!” follows a single day in the life of a studio fixer (Josh Brolin) who is presented with plenty of problems to fix.

may 15 (5:00 & 7:00) MAY 16 (7:00 & 9:00)

THE LEGEND OF BARNEY THOMSONDirector: Robert Carlyle, UK/Canada, 2015, 97 min; 14ACast: Robert Carlyle, Emma ThompsonTaking a page from “Sweeney Todd,” this macabre comedy is set in a Glasgow barbershop. Barney (Robert Carlyle) is a grumpy barber who accidentally stabs his boss. Luckily, his mum (Emma Thompson), a no-nonsense party girl, thinks to chop up the body and tuck it in the freezer. But the police are soon sniffing about the barbershop….Emma Thompson is deliciously cast against type as bingo-playing mama with a personality as brassy as her hair, and puts in a performance that is worth the price of admission. --The Globe and Mail

may 17, 18, 19 (7:10 & 9:00)

SONG OF LAHORESharmeen Obaid-Chinoy & Andy Schocken, Pakistan/USA, 2015, 82 min; English & Urdu with subtitlesThis excellent documentary follows a group of Pakistani classical musicians who found themselves invited to perform at Lincoln Center. They must travel to New York to gain some measure of the respect and acclaim their ancestors enjoyed as inheritors of a centuries-long tradition of artistic excellence. With the imposition of sharia law in the late 1970s, Pakistani orchestras were disbanded and musicians vilified, even killed. But when an amazing recording of Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” on traditional Pakistani instruments goes viral, East meets West in improvisational harmony. A fascinating study in cross-cultural pollination, “Song of Lahore” positively sings. —Variety

may 20 & 21 (7:00 & 9:20)

THE LOBSTERDirector: Yorgos Lanthimos, Ireland/UK, 2015, 119 min; 14ACast: Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, Lea Seydoux, John C. Reilly, Olivia Colman, Ben WhishawLonelyhearts who fail to find a suitable partner at a dating boot camp are transformed into animals, or else forced to hide out in the forest, in “Dogtooth” director Yorgos Lanthimos’ jury prize-winning absurdist social satire. Taking aim at the way modern society imposes a narrow definition of marriage on everyone, the crafty Greek allegorist begins in the darkly comic Bunuel tradition, before turning its bachelor protagonist (Colin Farrell) loose in its unexpectedly tender second half. —Variety

may 24 (7:00 & 9:15)

HUNTINGTON’S DANCEChris Furbee, USA, 2014, 85 minAn intensely personal window into one family’s struggle with a devastating genetic disease, Huntington’s. The director began making the video diary in 1996 when 28 years old, as he looks after his mother Rosemary, and concludes 18 years later.

may 27 & 28 (7:00 & 9:10)

EYE IN THE SKYDirector: Gavin Hood, USA, 102 min; PG Cast: Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul, Alan RickmanAn alternative title to this riveting thriller about drone warfare and its perils, might be “Passing the Buck.” When urgent life-or-death decisions are required in a race against time to kill terrorists, officials, wary of being held responsible for civilian casualties, repeatedly “refer up” to higher authorities for final approval. Helen Mirren, in one of her fiercest screen performances, plays Col. Powell, the chilly officer in charge of an operation to capture a radicalized English woman meeting with terrorists in Nairobi. —The New York Times

may 25 & 26 (6:45 & 9:20)

MOUNTAINS MAY DEPARTDirector: Jia Zhangke, China, 2015, 131 min; Cantonese/Mandarin with subtitlesAt once an intimate drama and a decades-spanning epic that leaps from the recent past to the present to the speculative near-future, Jia Zhangke’s new film is an intensely moving study of how China’s economic boom and the materialism it has spawned has affected the bonds of family, tradition, and love. —Kino LorberSet in 1999, 2014 and 2025, “Mountains” revolves mostly around its everyday heroine, Tao (Zhao Tao), a woman caught somewhere between the dream and the reality of modern China. —San Francisco Chronicle

may 29 (5:00 & 7:00)

PEGGY GUGGENHEIM: ART ADDICTLisa Immordino Vreeland, USA, 2015, 96 minPeggy Guggenheim not only amassed one of the world’s most impressive collections of contemporary art but also earned a reputation as the consummate bohemian.

may 30 (7:00 & 9:00)

THE WITCHRobert Eggers, USA, 2016, 93 minutes; 14ANew England, 1630. AN English farmer moves his wife and five children to a remote plot of land on the edge of an ominous forest - within which lurks an unknown evil. Strange and unsettling things begin to happen almost immediately....

may 31 (7:00 & 9:30)

SPOTLIGHTDirector: Thomas McCarthy; USA, 2015, 129 min; 14A The riveting true story of the Boston Globe investigation. When the team of reporters delve into allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church, they uncover a decades-long cover-up at the highest levels.

JUNE 1 (7:00 & 9:20)

YOUTHDirector: Paolo Sorrentino; Italy/Switzerland, 2015, 124 min; PG Cast: Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Jane Fonda“Youth” asks if our most important and life-changing experiences can come at any time – even late in life.

JUNE 2 (7:00 & 9:00)

MUSTANGDeniz Gamze Ergüven, Turkey/France, 2015, 98 min; Turkish w/ subtitles; PG Mustang” refers to the untamed spirits of its five teenage sisters living under the watchful eyes of their grandmother and uncle who clamp down on the girls’ freedom, locking them up at home.

june 3 & 4 (7:00 & 9:20)

WHISKEY TANGO FOXTROTDirector: Glenn Ficarra & John Requa; USA, 2016, 112 min; 14ACast: Tina Fey, Margot Robbie, Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman.In this savvy comedy, a news producer (Tina Fey) leaves behind a cushy job for the madness of war-torn Afghanistan, becoming something of an adrenaline junkie in the process. The dialogue is fast and darkly funny and while our heroine falls for a fellow reporter (Martin Freeman), “WTF” refuses to bog down in a love story. Covering the Taliban as a woman, of course, presents a unique set of challenges….  –The Wrap

250.356.5013

9 BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! 0

“A TYPICALLY SLY, OFF-CENTER COMEDY.” – The New York Times

“A JOYOUS AND RIVETING FILM. WILL HAVE AUDIENCES GRINNING FROM EAR TO EAR!” – The Wrap

“A RICH AND SUBSTANTIAL COMEDY.” – The Playlist

“ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY.” – Toronto Sun

“THE MOVIE REALLY COULD BE CALLED THE LEGEND OF EMMA THOMPSON.” – Georgia Straight

“IS THERE ANYTHING WRONG WITH BEING A EUPHORIC VISIONARY ARTIST? THAT QUESTION CUTS TO THE ESSENCE OF PAUL DALIO’S EXTRAORDINARILY SENSITIVE, NONJUDG-MENTAL EXPLORATION.” – The New York Times

“THE JOY OF THE FILM COMES IN WATCHING SMITH WORK HER MAGIC.” – Toronto Star

“A SOULFUL, STRANGE AND STUNNING DISCOVERY….SIMPLY A WORK OF ART.” – IndieWIRE

“AN ENTERTAINING, HOT-BLOODED LOOK AT PERSONAL AND ARTISTIC

INDEPENDENCE.” –NOW Toronto

Winner! BEST FEATURE

FILM-VFF

“A WELL-PACED AND COGENT SEMINAR.” – The New York Times

Special Event!

Julia Szucs, co-director and

producer, will be here for a Q&A!

BIG SCREENClassic

yyyy “MOORE’S FRIENDLIEST FILM TO DATE.” – Georgia Straight

“A RATHER GRACEFUL, WITTY, AND STYLISH FILM.” – Philadelphia Inquirer

BIG SCREENClassic

“SMART, SEXY AND OUTRAGEOUS!” – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

“DEADPOOL’S BRATTY ENERGY FEELS LIBERATING!” – Screen International

“A COMIC FABLE THAT’S BOTH DEFTLY CLEVER AND IRREPRESSIBLY GOOFY.” – RogerEbert.com

Special Event!

There will be a Q&A after the screening!

KIDS MATINEE APR. 24 1PM THE LITTLE PRINCE

KIDS MATINEE MAY. 1 1PM KUNG FU PANDA 3

KIDS MATINEE APR. 10 1PM KAHLIL GIBRAN’S THE PROPHETKIDS MATINEE APR. 16 NOON STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS

KIDS MATINEE APR. 23 1PM THE LITTLE PRINCE KIDS MATINEE APR. 17 NOON STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS

KIDS MATINEE APRIL. 30 1PM KUNG FU PANDA 3

CanadianFilm Day

S AT U R D AY & S U N D AY M AT I N E E S A L L S E AT S $ 4 . 7 5

APR 16 & 17 *SHOWTIME: 12:00 NOON!*STAR WARS: EPISODE VII - THE FORCE AWAKENSUSA, 2015, 136 min; PG - violenceAPR 23 & 24 1pmTHE LITTLE PRINCEFrance/Canada, 2015, 107 min; rated GAPR 30 & MAY 1 1pmKUNG FU PANDA 3USA, 2015, 95 min; rated G

Cast: Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac.The Force Awakens is the best movie of 2015, full stop. –Toronto Star

A beautifully animated new adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s beloved book, with voices by Rachel McAdams, Jeff Bridges, Paul Rudd, Marion Cotillard.

When Po’s long-lost panda father suddenly reappears, the reunited duo travels to a secret panda paradise to meet scores of hilarious new panda characters.

M AT I N E E S w i l l ret u r n i n S E P T E M B E R

fOrkidSmatinees

E M B R A C E O F T H E S E R P E N T

MOUN

TAIN

S MA

Y DE

PART

SONG OF L AHORE

45 YEARS

APR-MAY 2016 CINECENTA.COM

Big Screen Classics

BLADE RUNNERCASABLANCA

DON’T LOOK BACK

SPOTLIGHT ON INTERNATIONAL

CINEMA

EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT

SONG OF LAHORE

MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART

SPOTLIGHT ON INTERNATIONAL

CINEMA

EMBRACE OF THE SERPENTMAY 3, 4, 5

MAY 17, 18, 19

MAY 25, 26

SONG OF LAHORE

MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART

APR 25

MAY 2

APR 18

“NO DIRECTOR HAS DONE MORE TO CHRONICLE CONTEMPORARY CHINA” – Village Voice

“THIS RIVETING DRONE THRILLER IS CONTEMPORARY EDGE-OF-YOUR-SEAT STUFF” – Toronto Star

UVIC UNDERGRADS: $4.75