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Is This Thing On?

Is This Thing On? (15)

Monday 23 Feb 20262:00pm4:45pm
Tuesday 24 Feb 20262:15pm7:30pm
Wednesday 25 Feb 20264:30pm

Will Arnett and Laura Dern lead a star-studded ensemble in this richly drawn and charming comedy-drama about navigating the endless possibilities of mid-life.

Bradley Cooper once again proves himself to be an expert at crafting smart, adult-orientated dramas that mine the human heart to deliver big screen magic. After decades together, Alex and Tess decide it’s time to split. With their lives deeply entwined, they embark on a new normal while unearthing the complexities and opportunities that lie ahead.

Nouvelle Vague

Nouvelle Vague (12A)

Monday 23 Feb 20267:30pm
Tuesday 24 Feb 20265:00pm
Wednesday 25 Feb 20262:00pm

Richard Linklater recreates the making of Jean-Luc Godard’s seminal feature debut, Au Bout de Souffle (screening on Wednesday 25th February at 7:30pm), penning a nostalgic love letter to the rebellious spirit of the French New Wave.


Cinephilia exudes from every frame of this delightful black-and-white homage, regaling how Au Bout de Souffle came to be. From Godard’s collaboration with Truffaut and Chabrol on the script to the chaotic shoot that drew exasperation from Jean Seberg and producer Georges de Beauregard, an impeccable cast and Linklater’s mastery over the medium capture the revolutionary alchemy that forever changed cinema.

Breathless

Breathless (12A)

Wednesday 25 Feb 20267:30pm

There was before Breathless, and there was after Breathless.


Jean-Luc Godard burst onto the film scene in 1960 with this jazzy, free-form, and sexy homage to the American film genres that inspired him as a writer for Cahiers du cinéma. With its lack of polish, surplus of attitude, anything-goes crime narrative, and effervescent young stars Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg, he helped change the face of cinema.


Jean-Luc Godard, died on the 13th September at the age of 91, he was the filmmaker who changed everything. He directed “Breathless,” the 1960 landmark that helped to launch the French New Wave, employing a new, fast, leaping-ahead technique and style — the jump cut — that altered the DNA of how movies were made. In the ’60s, he took his camera out into the streets and into cafés, stores, offices, and apartments, so that a Godard film often seemed like a documentary about fictional characters. He drew many of those characters from Old Hollywood, a world he’d grown up on and remained obsessed with, but one that he always made seem a million miles away, like some black-and-white Garden of Eden the world had fallen from.


"In the wake of 'Breathless,' New Waves that sprang up across the planet, from Brazil to Czechoslovakia to Japan, owed a major debt to him, as did generations of American directors, including Scorsese, De Palma and Tarantino."