February 2008 - Repertory Cinema
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Monday 4th February 9pm FACES Directed by John Cassavetes 1968 | USA | 130 mins Venue: Café 1001 | Ticket Price: £3/£2 members |
| The disintegration of a marriage is dissected in John Cassavetes‘ searing Faces. Shot in high-contrast 16mm black and white, the film follows the futile attempts of captain of industry Richard (John Marley) and his wife, Maria (Lynn Carlin), to escape the anguish of their empty marriage in the arms of others. Featuring astonishingly powerful, nervy performances from Marley, Carlin, and Cassavetes regulars Gena Rowlands and Seymour Cassel, Faces confronts suburban alienation and the battle of the sexes with a brutal honesty and compassion rarely matched in cinema. |
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Tuesday 5th February 8pm HOTEL DU NORD Directed by Marcel Carne 1938 | France | 95 mins Venue: The Flea-Pit | Ticket Price: FREE |
| In the Carne canon, Hotel Du Nord is usually eclipsed by films such as Le Quai Des Brumes, Le Jour Se Leve and Les Enfants Du Paradis, largely because of Prevert’s absence. Jeanson’s dialogue is indeed broader, the film more comic. In this respect, Hotel Du Nord is ‘theatrical realism’ rather than ‘poetic realism’. But in the interaction of set, camerawork and Maurice Jaubert’s restrained, moody music, Hotel Du Nord is typical of poetic realism. It is in the casting that the film really takes shape, with great actors like Arletty as the prostitute Raymonde and Louis Jouvert’s pimp and gangster Edmond greatly playing up secondary roles that would overshadow the romantic leads of Annabella’s Renee and Jean-Pierre Aumont’s Pierre. |
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Monday 11th February 9pm THE CHESS PLAYERS (Shatranj Ke Khilari) Directed by Satyajit Ray 1977 | India | 129 mins Venue: Café 1001 | Ticket Price: £3/£2 members |
| Set in the kingdom of Oudh during the last days of the Moghul Empire, The Chess Players marked the first time that the legendary filmmaker Satyajit Ray worked outside of his native Bengal. The story follows two Indian noblemen (Saeed Jaffrey and Sanjeev Kumar) whose obsession with the game renders them oblivious to the treacherous and historic events happening around them. One of Ray’s most ambitious and expensive productions, The Chess Players is a masterful and visually stunning historical drama. |
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Monday 18th February 9pm M Directed by Fritz Lang 1931 | Germany | 110 mins Venue: Café 1001 | Ticket Price: £3/£2 members |
| A simple, haunting phrase whistled off-screen tells us that a young girl will be killed. “Who is the murderer?” pleads a nearby placard as serial killer Hans Beckert (Peter Lorre) closes in on little Elsie Beckmann. In his harrowing masterwork M, Fritz Lang merges trenchant social commentary with chilling suspense, creating a panorama of private madness and public hysteria that to this day remains the blueprint for the psychological thriller. |
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Monday 25th February 9pm LE FEU FOLLET Directed by Louis Malle 1963 | France | 108 mins Venue: Café 1001 | Ticket Price: £3/£2 members |
| Probably the finest of Malle’s early films, this is a calmly objective but profoundly compassionate account of the last 24 hours in the life of a suicide. Ronet gives a remarkable, quietly assured performance as the alcoholic who, upon leaving a clinic, visits old friends in the hope that they will provide him with a reason to live. They don’t, and Malle’s achievement lies not only in his subtle but clear delineation of his protagonist’s emotions but in his grasp of life’s compromises. A small gem, polished to perfection by an unassuming professional. |








