Chapter March English
Transcription
Chapter March English
029 2030 4400 @chaptertweets chapter.org 02 Welcome chapter.org chapter.org Highlights 03 Gallery pages 4–7 Eat Drink Hire page 8 Chapter Mix page 9 Theatre Welcome to our guide to all that’s happening during March. Have you ever wondered how artists and writers feed their creativity and make the work we get to enjoy? This month gives us a little insight, as prize-winning authors and artists descend on Chapter for XX Women’s Writing Festival (p14-15). A literary feast, there’ll be opportunities to hear favourite writers read from and talk about their work, as well as workshops on how to be a writer. Elsewhere, we’re pleased to host Samuel Hasler as artist in residence (p4-5). The Gallery will serve as an open studio in the lead up to the launch of his first published work. Over in the cinema, we’re always thrilled to feature homegrown talent. The Machine (p21), a dark thriller about the creation of the ultimate killing machine, features a pounding BAFTA-winning score by our very own Tom Raybould, whist Svengali (p21) follows hapless but loveable music lover Dixie as he moves from Wales to the big smoke to follow his dream of managing a successful rock band. WOW Film Festival returns from Fri 21 to Thu 27 Mar with another intriguing, eclectic selection of world cinema for you to enjoy (p25-29) including an offsite performance by Bollywood Brass Band at the Samaj Community Centre. In other news, our popular regional beer festival is back. Last year we went all Cornish and this time we’re heading up north for a taste of Yorkshire. Find out more about our aptly named Sup ‘n’ Scran festival on page 8. Thanks for reading and see you soon. pages 10–17 CL1C Card Chapter’s own reward card. Collect points when you visit the cinema or theatre and you’ll be surprised at how quickly you can claim a free ticket. Pick up a form next time you’re in or download from www.chapter.org. Watch out for this symbol to double your points! Chapter Friends Cinema pages 18–30 Become one of Chapter’s Friends and enjoy a variety of benefits ranging from discounts on tickets and in our Caffi Bar to invitations to special events such as gallery previews and film premieres. Also doubles as a CL1C card. Bronze Friend: £25/£20 Silver Friend: £35/£30 Gold Friend: £45/£40 For more information see page 8. Keep in touch Join us online www.chapter.org is the best place to go for more info on everything we do. Learning page 31 Cover image: The Book Thief How to book /Info page 32 Free eListings Weekly eListings straight to your inbox. E-mail adam.chard@chapter.org with ‘Join Listings’ in the subject line. Talk to us @chaptertweets facebook.com/chapterarts Get Involved page 33 Calendar Chapter Market Road Cardiff CF5 1QE 029 2030 4400 www.chapter.org enquiry@chapter.org pages 34–35 Gallery 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Gallery 05 INTERFERENCE: Samuel Hasler Tue 18 — Sun 30 Mar As part of our occasional INTERFERENCE programme, we are pleased to host gallery live guide Samuel Hasler, as artist-in-residence during March. In the lead up to the launch of his first published work, O, A Prayer Book, Samuel will be opening up his studio practice to the public. In this temporary studio, Samuel will present the imagery and processes that sit alongside his writing. In this, there is a precarious balance between fact and fiction; the writing and performances manipulate the mythology of the ‘wild bohemian’ artist at work. Book launch and performance Samuel Hasler: O, A Prayer Book Fri 28 Mar 6pm An incantation and repetition of prayers marks the introduction to a young man’s isolated, creatively stifled existence. Deluded by the stagnating mythology of great European modernist artists, he escapes the drudgery of the supermarket nightshift, but not his perverse imagination. He travels to Moscow and Venice on a journey that causes reflection on his romantic ideas: his desire for a wild, bohemian life; his crude libido and his increasing doubts about his faith. The book operates as both a story and as a spine, connecting performances, readings, installations and printing, operating as material context for a body of work. The evening will feature performances and readings by Samuel Hasler and invited artists Katrina Palmer, Francesco Pedraglio and Sarah Tripp, each presenting material from their forthcoming books to be published by Book Works in 2014. No booking required O, A Prayer Book is published by Book Works and funded by the Arts Council of Wales. In conversation Why Do Artists Write? Samuel Hasler, Jane Rolo, Gavin Everall, Francesco Pedraglio and Katrina Palmer Sat 29 Mar 2.30 — 3.30pm Formosa Gargoyle, Venice. Photo: Samuel Hasler 04 Whilst writing and publishing gives form to the exploration of varying discourses, it has remained — despite the historical significance of artists’ writing — a marginal, often misunderstood form of art. Samuel Hasler, Katrina Palmer and Francesco Pedraglio, with Book Works’ publishers and editors Jane Rolo and Gavin Everall, discuss the use of fiction, prose and spoken word and the shift to writing and publishing within the art world. Residency open to the public: Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday & Sunday 12-6pm; Thursday & Friday 12-8pm; closed Monday Book Works Pop-up Shop Sat 29 Mar 10am — 4pm A selection of titles from Book Works’ back catalogue will be available to browse and buy, including publications by Jeremy Deller, Laure Prouvost, Susan Hiller and Liam Gillick. Film screening Berberian Sound Studio Sun 30 Mar 5pm UK/2012/92mins/15. Dir: Peter Strickland. With: Toby Jones, Cosimo Fusco, Antonio Mancino. When a naïve and introverted sound engineer is hired to mix the latest film by horror maestro Santini, he spends his time surrounded by bloodcurdling screams and the sounds of hacked vegetables. He finds himself lost in an otherworldly spiral of sonic and personal mayhem. As much a celebration of predigital filmmaking and the giallo genre as it is a striking and unpredictable psychological horror. + Introduction by Samuel Hasler, connecting Giallo film with his residency and publication. Turn to page 19 for other cult films showing this month. Biography Samuel Hasler lives and works in Cardiff. His approach to making artwork is varied; it includes writing, performance, printmaking and installations. He has recently presented work with Book Works (London), The Whitstable Biennale, Spike Island (Bristol), and The Arnolfini (Bristol). www.samuelhasler.co.uk Book Works is an art commissioning organisation specialising in artists’ books, spoken word and printed matter, dedicated to supporting new work by emerging artists. www.bookworks.org.uk Interference is an occasional programme of residencies that occur between exhibitions in our gallery. 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Andrew Morris, What’s Left Behind? 2013. 6x7" medium format Gallery Andrew Morris, What’s Left Behind? 2013. 6x7" medium format 06 ART IN THE BAR Andrew Morris: What’s Left Behind? Fri 14 Mar — Sun 18 May Biography Andrew Morris lives and works in Swansea and recently graduated from University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Swansea, where he studied Photography in the Arts. Morris is the first recipient of the Wales International Young Artist Award which was presented to him by the British Council Wales for this body of work. About the award The Wales International Young Artist Award was launched in 2013 by the British Council Wales with the aim of both identifying a new pool of young talent across the creative sectors and also nurturing it by offering young artists from Wales, national and international exposure. The winner receives a £500 prize and the opportunity to exhibit in six continents and over 100 countries. Andrew Morris, What’s Left Behind? 2013. 6x7" medium format The interiors depicted in Andrew Morris’ photographs appear calm and contemplative, in a transitory place — somewhere between occupied and vacant. Reading glasses still perched on the windowsill and bedrooms with beds that seem to have been freshly made — you could easily be mistaken in believing the owner has just popped out. But look a little closer and you’ll find something isn’t quite right. Wallpaper peeling from the walls, a single photograph on an otherwise empty bookshelf; these are homes in the process of being cleared out, homes that once belonged to someone who has passed away. Morris sensitively captures these scenes which are about more than the remaining possessions, and leads us to consider and reflect upon the ideas of home, family and ownership. Gallery 07 08 Eat Drink Hire 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Chapter Mix Cardiff Storytelling Circle SWDFAS LECTURE Sun 2 Mar 8pm Share and listen to a lovely collection of stories — all storytellers and listeners welcome! From L to R: Sup ‘n’ Scran, Chapter Friend £4 (on the door) Hire CHAPTER FRIENDS We have a number of spaces and facilities for hire at Chapter, many of which are booked regularly by an eclectic mix of day and evening classes. Check out our website or pick up a leaflet at the box office to see what’s on offer. And if you’re looking for a room for a party, meeting, conference, video shoot, rehearsal or team building extravaganza, then our great facilities, technical know-how and friendly staff will help you to create a comfortable, distinctive and memorable event. We’re also able to supply a variety of catering options for your event. If you have any hires queries or would like more information, give our hires manager Nicky a ring on 029 2031 1058 or email nicky.keeping@chapter.org Become one of Chapter’s Friends and enjoy a variety of benefits ranging from discounts on tickets and in our Caffi Bar, to invitations to special events such as gallery previews and film premieres. Every year our Friends contribute a remarkable £20,000 through subscription income. This all helps us to bring the best international artists to Cardiff, support and nurture our home-grown talent and offer an extensive education programme. Our tiered Friends scheme means you can choose the level that is right for you and enjoy more of what you love at Chapter. To purchase a membership contact Box Office or for more information contact Jennifer — jennifer.kirkham@chapter.org chapter.org/friends Sup ‘n’ Scran Yorkshire Ale Festival Tue 4 — Sun 9 Mar ‘Ey up! Every year we like to host a festival that celebrates the idiosyncratic tastes of different regions of the UK. In 2012, we ran the Hopscotch Festival, with a fine array of Scottish beers and whiskys on offer. Last year it was Cornwall’s turn, and our Perrantide Pint and Pasty Festival went down a storm. For 2014 we have decided to bring you a taste of Yorkshire. Over 30 beers have been specially selected from Yorkshire’s many breweries, bringing in a wide selection not normally found in these southern climes. As for food, Yorkshire is renowned for hearty, rich main courses, coupled with sweet, sticky deserts (hands up if you’ve ever had Parkin cake?) — We’ll be looking to reproduce some of these dishes for our special festival menu. So if you’re feeling parky in March, come on in, and grab some scran or a sup from Up North. P.S — strictly no ferret-legging (look it up). CHAPTER STUDENTS Are you a student? Did you know that you can get free membership and enjoy some great benefits, such as discount in our Caffi Bar and concessionary prices on cinema tickets. For more information contact Jennifer — jennifer.kirkham@chapter.org chapter.org/students ON THE EDGE The Pity of War by Gwynne Edwards Tue 4 Mar 8pm Poems and reflective narrative from the young soldier/poet. A season of script-in-hand performances of plays by great and new Welsh writers and writers living in Wales. £4 First Thursday of the Month: New Poetry and Fiction Thu 6 Mar 7:30pm Open Mic. This special edition of First Thursday acts as an opener for the XX Festival of Women’s Writing, taking place between 6-8th March (see pages 14-15 for details). Come and meet the new editor of Poetry Wales Magazine, Nia Davies, who will read her poetry and discuss plans for the magazine. Tondubased Zillah Bethell will be reading from her Short Story of the Month (Seren) and poet Maureen Jivani will be reading new poems and from her thoughtful collection, ‘Insensible Heart’ (Mulfran). For more information, please join our Facebook page: First Thursday of the Month at Chapter. Sponsored by Seren, Mulfran and Literature Wales £2.50 Institute of Welsh Affairs Coffee Shop Debate Women in Science Tue 11 Mar 6pm Men in the UK are six times more likely than women to work in science. Come along and listen to women who have bucked this trend. Wendy Sadler is listed as one of the UKRC’s Women of Outstanding Achievement. Prof Julie Williams is the Chief Scientific Adviser for Wales, a Professor of Neuropsychological Genetics. Free entry, but please book as availability is limited. To book please visit www.iwa.org.uk or call 029 2048 4387. 09 Troy: Myth, History and Archaeology: Dr Steve Kershaw BA Thu 13 Mar 2pm The Trojan War inspired some of the finest Ancient Greek art and literature, as well as the fascinating tale of the discovery of Hislarlik by Heinrich Schielmann and others. During this lecture we investigate splendid archaeological finds, rub shoulders with Greeks, Trojans and Hittites, and also analyse whether Homer’s Trojan War really happened. Visitors £6 (on the door, space permitting) www.swdfas.org.uk Music Geek Monthly Thu 27 Feb 8pm + Sat 15 Mar 3.30pm Thu 27 Mar 8pm + Sat 12 Apr 3.30pm One classic and one brand new album are chosen and discussed in Media Point on the last Thursday of the month, with the associated listening event taking place in the plush surroundings of Cinema 2 on a Saturday. FREE www.musicgeekmonthly.tumblr.com Sunday Jazz Sun 16 Mar 9pm Our monthly evening of melodic acoustic jazz in the Caffi Bar with the Glen Manby Quartet. FREE Clonc yn y Cwtch Every Monday 6.30 — 8pm Are you learning Cymraeg? Come and join us for a great chance to practice your Welsh with other learners. Croeso i bawb! FREE In partnership with Menter Caerdydd The Drones Comedy Club Fri 7 + Fri 21 Mar, Doors: 8.30 Start: 9pm Clint Edwards brings you the best from up-and coming stand-ups, as seen on Rob Brydon’s ‘Identity Crisis’, every first and third Friday of the month. £3.50 (on the door) Theatre 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Theatre Iain Goosey in partnership with Chapter presents Contractions By Mike Bartlett Directed by Kate Wasserberg Design by Max Jones and Ruth Hall Lighting Design by Nick Beadle Sound Design by Dyfan Jones Wed 5 — Sat 8 + Tue 11 - Sat 15 Mar, 8pm (matinee 2.30pm on Sat 15 only) ‘Come in. Sit down. How are you?’ Emma’s been seeing Darren. She thinks she’s in love. Her boss thinks she’s in breach of contract. Times are hard and good jobs are scarce. How far will Emma go to keep hers? Hilarious and heart-wrenching, Bartlett’s comedy invites you to a meeting at the dark heart of corporate life during times of austerity. Kate Wasserberg (A History of Falling Things, Salt, Root and Roe, Last Christmas) directs BAFTA award winning Sara Lloyd-Gregory (Hinterland, Alys, Belonging, Love and Money) and Catrin Aaron (Aristocrats, Salt, Root and Roe, A Doll’s House, The Indian Doctor) in the Welsh premiere of this ink-black satire from Olivier Award-winning playwright Mike Bartlett. This project is funded by the Arts Council of Wales and the Welsh Government via the National Lottery. £14/£12 Age 14+ Megan Price Marketing Manager “Brutally entertaining… ferociously funny.” The Telegraph Contractions 10 Our Theatre programme is so strong at the moment that it’s difficult to pick out a highlight, but being a big fan of Waking Exploits I can’t wait to see what Iain Goosey has put together in Contractions. There are several young companies and producers currently bringing important contemporary plays to the Cardiff stage and, for me, this is a really encouraging sign about the future of Welsh theatre. My other highlight this month, without doubt, will be the chance for us to welcome A L Kennedy to Chapter as part of the XX Women’s Writing Festival. Such a privilege! 11 Theatre Clwb Ifor Bach presents Charlotte Church 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Theatre 13 Cowbois Rhos Botwnnog 12 Sun 2 Mar 8pm Cowbois Rhos Botwnnog was formed in 2005 by three brothers from the Llŷn Peninsula. At that time they played an eclectic mix of punkish, country-esque songs laced with a splash of traditional Welsh folk. By now, the band have adopted four other musicians and have established a more tender, harmony-filled folk and country sound. They’ve released three studio albums to rave reviews. Last year saw them performing regularly throughout Wales and beyond at The Green Man Festival, No Direction Home and the Dinefwr Literature Festival. Supporting on the night will be Kizzy Crawford, a young singer songwriter from Merthyr Tydfil who came to prominence in 2013. £8 Thu 6 Mar, Doors: 7.30pm Charlotte Church returns with FOUR — the fourth installment in an ambitious series of five selfrecorded, self-released records. Hot on the heels of EPs ONE, TWO and THREE, FOUR will be released on March 10 through her own label, Alligator Wine Records. 2013 was a year that saw Church emerge with critically acclaimed records and a tour of America and the UK. Where THREE dealt in impressionist soundscapes FOUR is a kaleidoscopic experimental pop record that slips confidently between muscular sci-fi psychedelia and low-slung NY party funk, mournful poly-rythms and paranoid soul. FOUR culminates in a paean to love that wrangles looped vocals, dance keyboards and immense euphoric guitars before collapsing into a delicate, Debussy-esque string and vocal outro. £15 “Think you know Charlotte Church? Think again.” Clash Dammed Nations Cowbois Rhos Botwnnog + Kizzy Crawford A Theatr Mwldan, Access All Areas & 30IPS Co-Production Dammed Nations Wed 5 Mar 7.30pm Wales and Nubia. Two lands. One shared legacy. Debuting in Wales in March 2014, Dammed Nations is a music tour featuring singer Siân James and guitarist Gai Toms, alongside traditional Nubian frame drummers Nuba Nour from Egypt. Collaborating for the first time, this promises to be an enchanting and engaging evening of music from Wales and Nubia. Political decisions and divisions from the 1960s continue to shape the current world. In Dammed Nations, voices from two seemingly unconnected communities unite on stage to recall the fates of the village of Capel Celyn in North Wales — lost to the waters of the Tryweryn Reservoir — and the traditional Nubian homelands in Aswan, Egypt, drowned with the construction of President Nasser’s High Dam. The concerts will feature solo sets by each of the artists, along with a special collaboration featuring songs about Tryweryn and the continuing plight of the Nubian people. £14/£12 www.dammednations.com 14 Theatre 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Theatre Sat 8 Mar 4pm 10am Thu 6 — Sat 8 Mar Prize-winning authors and artists, including novelist A.L. Kennedy, journalist Melissa Benn, poets Kathryn Simmonds and Kim Moore and painter Shani Rhys James are among the many wonderful women joining us in this year’s XX Festival. Both debut and established writers, including TV Producer Sue Vertue, Mslexia Editor Debbie Taylor, Virago Press publisher Lennie Goodings, authors Tiffany Murray, Dorothy Al Khafaji, and Wales Book of the Year Winner Rhian Edwards will read from their work, take part in interviews, panel discussions and performances. Book early to avoid disappointment! xxwales.wordpress.com @xxwales xxwales@gmail.com Thu 6 Mar 7:30pm First Thursday of the Month: New Poetry and Fiction (Poetry Wales) XX kicks off with this regular event. Meet the new Editor of Poetry Wales, Nia Davies, who will read from her own poetry and discuss plans for the magazine. Also with novelist Zillah Bethell (Seren) and poet Maureen Jivani (Mulfran). Hosted by Seren Poetry Editor Amy Wack. Tickets £2.50 (on the door, not included in weekend ticket). Fri 7 Mar 2.30pm The Fearless Feminist Spot: Melissa Benn What Should We Tell Our Daughters? The new book by journalist and writer on socio-political topics Melissa Benn raises compelling questions about how we raise our girls. She will be interviewed by Julie Morgan, Assembly Member for Cardiff North. 4pm Florilingua: Shani Rhys James An interview with one of Wales’ foremost modern painters by the writer Francesca Rhydderch. Rhys James has commissioned work by four writers inspired by the colourful canvases of her ‘Florilingua’ exhibition. Readers include Jasmine Donahaye, Amy Wack and actress Helen Griffin. 7pm The ‘Woman Writer’: Lennie Goodings The publisher of Virago Press will give the XX keynote speech on women and publishing, then answer questions from Cardiff author and University of Southampton lecturer Carole Burns. 8:30pm What does it take to write for teenagers? Compered by Firefly Press publisher and Seren Fiction Editor Penny Thomas. Featuring Hayley Long, author of the Lottie Biggs and Jody Barton Books, award-winning novelist Lucy Christopher (Stolen, The Killing Woods) and Kat Ellis, debut author whose thriller, Blackfin Sky, will be published in May. 11:15am 6.30pm Photo: Paul Edwards Script and Screen A panel discussion featuring TV producer Sue Vertue (Sherlock, Mr. Bean), Bafta-winning BBC Script Editor and Producer Ceri Meyrick (EastEnders, Father Brown), Soho Theatre’s Creative Producer Rebecca Gould, and Welsh actress, playwright and screenwriter Helen Griffin (Human Traffic, Twin Town). Led by Susie Wild, author and Parthian Editor. 12:30pm Writing From Life: New Memoir/Fiction Home from Abroad: Where does fact end and fiction begin? Three authors of memoir and fiction from around the world reflect on some fine dividing lines: Dorothy Al Khafaji, Between Two Rivers (Parthian, 2013); Karen Fielding, American Sycamore (Seren, 2014), and Hilary Shepherd, In a Foreign Country (Honno, 2014). Hosted by Penny Thomas, Seren Fiction Editor. 2.30pm New Poetry Forward prize-winning poet Kathryn Simmonds will be reading from her new collection, The Visitations (Seren). Also featuring newcomers: Jemma King, nominated for Dylan Thomas Prize, reading from her Parthian debut, The Shape of A Forest; Cumbrian poet Kim Moore, winner of the Eric Gregory award, reading from her pamphlet If We Could Speak Like Wolves; and Cath Drake, who has won the Mslexia Pamphlet Competition. Presented by Amy Wack, Seren Poetry editor. Men Reading Women Men read extracts from their favourite women writers. Featuring Kevin Brennan MP for Cardiff West; Mark Drakeford AM; T.S. Eliot prize-winning poet Philip Gross; writer and publisher Lewis Davies; and Damian Walford Davies, Professor of English at Cardiff University. Plus Q & A with the audience. Presented by Baroness Eluned Morgan. 8:00pm All The Rage: A.L. Kennedy The renowned Scottish writer and winner of the 2007 Costa Prize reads from her new collection of short stories, All The Rage, and answers questions from author Carole Burns and audience to close the festival. Workshops Sat 8 March 10 — 11am Leona Medlin from Mulfran Press: Preparing your book manuscript for submission. 11.30am — 12.30pm Mab Jones, Poet: Performing Poetry: Tips, Tricks, and How to Get Ahead. 1.30 — 2.30pm Debbie Taylor, Editor, Mslexia Magazine: Getting your work published in literary magazines. 3 — 4pm Jo Verity from Honno Press on the short story: What’s the Point of Short Fiction? The Literary Salon A special all-female edition of Cardiff Literary Salon with readings and discussion from novelist and former Hay Festival International Fellow Tiffany Murray (Sugar Hall, Seren, 2014), rising stars Carly Holmes (The Scrapbook, Parthian, 2014), Georgia Carys Williams (Second-Hand Rain, Parthian, 2014), Rhondda writer Rhian Elizabeth (Six Pounds, Eight Ounces, Seren, 2014) and a special guest lit-loving musician. Hosted by Parthian Books’ editor Susie Wild. Sex in Writing by Women In the wake of Fifty Shades, we look at the role sex plays in fiction by women, in terms of emotions, fulfilment, empowerment, disempowerment, maybe even redemption. Does women’s writing about sex differ from men’s? Does it differ by sexual orientation? By nationality? Writer A.L. Kennedy, Mslexia Magazine editor Debbie Taylor, poet and Wales Book of the Year winner Rhian Edwards discuss. Led by Carole Burns, author and lecturer. Young Adult Fiction XX Women’s Writing Festival 15 Please note workshops must be booked in advance, as numbers are limited Tickets: Weekend ticket: £30/£27 • Friday day ticket: £15/£13 • Saturday day ticket: £25/£22 Single event tickets: £8–£6 • Workshops: £10 each Supported by the Arts Council of Wales, Welsh Government and the National Lottery. Everyman Theatre Company Tue 11 — Sat 15 March 7.30pm (matinee 2.30pm on Saturday) 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Theatre Act One Chris Tally Evans and Company difficult|stage Our Town Mon 31 Mar — Fri 4 Apr 7.30pm Thu 27 — Sat 29 Mar 7.30pm One morning, travelling salesman Gregor Samsa wakes up to find himself transformed into a gigantic insect. After previously spending every waking moment as the sole provider, he and his family are forced into dealing with an impossible disability. Based on the classic novella written by Franz Kafka and adapted for the stage by Steven Berkoff, Act One presents Metamorphosis. A talented ensemble cast stylistically explores the harrowing story of a young man cast aside by everyone he cares for. Is blindness your greatest fear? An adventure in vision. Worlds collide, and so do the actors! 21st Century Dinosaurs is an exciting new piece of multi-media theatre, created by award winning director, Chris Tally Evans, and his talented company of artists. Funny and tragic life stories, a tropical island where 10 percent of the islanders are colourblind, an original view of Muslim women and their place in our society smash together in this thought provoking production. Four performers with visual impairment invite you into their heads as their compelling life stories collide with the meteor of genetic science. With an exciting new score by acclaimed young composer Lloyd Coleman and extracts from Dr Oliver Sacks’ brilliant book, The Island of the Colour-blind*, 21st Century Dinosaurs is an adventure in vision. Think it’s just going to be a bunch of disabled people moaning about the awfulness of their lot? Think again. Dinosaurs combines theatre and storytelling, music and video, light and sound in a show that will make you laugh, pierce your heart, stimulate your brain and finally make you see what it’s really like not to see. *(Copyright © Oliver Sacks 1997, used by permission Tue 18 Mar 8pm (preview) Wed 19 — Sat 22 Mar 8pm Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play, ‘Our Town’ was described by The New York Times in 1938 as “the last word in experimental theatre”. Forerunner of works by Dylan Thomas, Pirandello and Brecht, David Mamet calls it the “Great American Play.” A ‘Stage Manager’ is our guide, as we consider Universal Truths revealed through daily life in ‘Grover’s Corners’, New Hampshire. Wilder claimed “The climax of this play needs only five square feet of boarding and the passion to know what life means to us.” £10/£8 (concessions only on Tue, Thu and Sat matinee performances) (Age 11+) Metamorphosis £8/£6 Show And Tell Present Simon Munnery: Fylm Sat 1 Mar 8pm Multi award-winning comedian Simon Munnery once more stabs at the void between film and live comedy, in his latest fylm-tastic live show — a follow-up to the equally acclaimed ‘Fylm Makker’. ‘Fylm’ is show full of daring and imaginative comedy and live sketches all performed by Simon sat amongst the audience and projected live on screen. As recently seen/heard on BBC2’s Stewart Lee’s Comedy Vehicle, The Culture Show, Comedy Central’s The Alternative Comedy Experience and Radio 4’s News Quiz. Simon is a British Comedy Award nominee, Chortle Award winner, Perrier Award nominee and Sony Radio Award winner. £12/£11/£10 17 From L to R: 21st Century Dinosaurs, The World of Work (Photo: Dan Green) Theatre From L to R: Our Town, Metamorphosis 16 21st Century Dinosaurs of the Wylie Agency (UK) Limited), Supported by Arts Council of Wales, The Big Lottery Fund, Welsh Government, Chapter and Moorfields Eye Hospital. All performances will be audio described and BSL interpreted. £10/£8 The World of Work A black comedy about failure. Cursing, Trying, Failing Shouting, Drinking, Gesticulating Wheezing, Waiting, Pontificating Crying, Dying, Pretending. It’s Katy’s birthday! Please join us for drinks*, nibbles and awkward silences. Blow the horn, Bang the drum, It’s not a party until you come! The World of Work is about being alive and never having done the doing. *This is a party so please feel free to bring drinks into the performance. difficult|stage gratefully acknowledges financial assistance from the Arts Council of Wales & on-going support from Chapter. £12/£10 £8/£6 Preview (Tue 18 Mar) Age Recommendation: 16+ Contains strong language www.difficultstage.com @difficultstage #theworldofwork “Dark, naughty and painfully wellobserved…I laughed harder than I have for years in the theatre…Powerful and arresting in the giggly extreme, I am a huge fan.” Emma Rice, Artistic Director, Kneehigh 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema 19 Berberian Sound Studio Cinema Cult Films From the recently reissued Wake in Fright to latest release, Under the Skin, this month’s Cult Films get to grips with what makes us humans tick — our fears, desires and the countless ways people have conveyed these sensations on the big screen. Rough Cut Under the Skin Sun 2 Mar Fri 28 Mar — Thu 3 April UK/2013/90mins/15. Dir: Jamie Shovlin. UK/2013/108mins/cbta. Dir: Jonathan Glazer. With: Scarlett Johansson. Exploring the remaking of Hiker Meat, a 70s slasher film that never was, featuring a hitchhiking heroine, charismatic commune leader and a group of teens who disappear one by one. This tantalising filmwithin-a-film deconstructs and pays homage to exploitation films and is an impressive, playful debut from Shovlin. “Exploring the gulf between artist and patron, between high art and lowbrow, between fiction and reality.” Zombie Hamster Wake in Fright Fri 7 + Sun 9 Mar Australia/1971/108mins/18. Dir: Ted Kotcheff. With: Donald Pleasence, Gary Bond, Chips Rafferty. John Grant, a teacher, arrives in the rough outback mining town of Bundanyabba, planning to stay overnight before starting his holiday. But one night stretches to several, and with the aid of alcohol he plunges headlong toward his own destruction. A raw, sweaty, brutal, black thriller that many considered Australia’s great lost film, until its recent discovery and restoration. Under the Skin 18 Warning: This film contains scenes of animal slaughter. + Introduction by film-maker and artist Ben Ewart-Dean on Fri 7 Mar. “The best and most terrifying film about Australia in existence.” Nick Cave After landing on Earth and slipping into the skin of a human woman, Scarlett Johansson’s space creature drives around Scotland seducing young men before one of them gives her pause to look at other aspects of human nature. An abstract, fascinating deconstruction of sexual power with a hypnotic musical score, this is a mesmerizing cinematic experience. Berberian Sound Studio Sun 30 Mar UK/2012/92mins/15. Dir: Peter Strickland. With: Toby Jones, Cosimo Fusco, Antonio Mancino. When a naïve and introverted sound engineer is hired to mix the latest film by horror maestro Santini, he spends his time surrounded by bloodcurdling screams and the sounds of hacked vegetables. He finds himself lost in an otherworldly spiral of sonic and personal mayhem. As much a celebration of predigital filmmaking and the giallo genre as it is a striking and unpredictable psychological horror. Artist Samuel Hasler will be in discussion with host Ben Ewart-Dean to discuss his explorations of contemporary Giallo. Turn to pages 4-5 for more information on Samuel Hasler’s INTERFERENCE artist residency. You might also like Jim Jarmush’s Only Lovers Left Alive (p22), homegrown SciFi thriller The Machine (p21) and twisted Argentinian ghost story The Second Death (p26). 20 Cinema 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema Lift to the Scaffold Homegrown: 21 Goldfrapp: Tales of Us NOYS R US Tue 4 Mar Chapter Cinema, in association with The Full Moon, brings you Noys R Us Film Night. Once a month we’ll be pitching up with the best in alt/rock/metal/punk cinema. Drink, relax and watch some of the most incendiary music films ever made. UK/2014/30mins+60mins/12A advised. Dir: Lisa Gunning. Join us for a unique music film inspired by gothic fairytales, exploring themes of love, loss, madness and identity, with a live satellite performance from the captivating electronic duo Goldfrapp, featuring songs from the new album Tales of Us as well as classic songs. £12/£10/£8 Last Days Here Mon 10 Mar Doors 7.00pm, film 8.00pm USA/2011/91min/no cert. Event adv 18. Dir: Don Argott, Demian Fenton. Mark Gubb Artist and Noys R Us head honcho. As a strand of Chapter’s Cine Phonic programme, Noys R Us takes the best in alt/punk/rock/metal cinema and shows it in its natural home — music bars and clubs. As a life-long rock and metal fan it’s a glorious self-indulgence but, thankfully, one that others enjoy too. From dyed-in-the-wool classics, like ‘The Decline of Western Civilisation Part II: The Metal Years’ to more contemporary offerings like ‘American Hardcore’, we’re trying to create the best music-movie night-in that you’ll ever go out for. Cult rock legend Bobby Liebling has been churning out genre-defining hard rock for over 36 years, but various acts of self-destruction, multiple band break-ups and botched record deals have condemned his music to obscurity. Bobby is finally discovered by the heavy metal underground. With the help of Sean ‘Pellet’ Pelletier, his friend and manager,we see Bobby’s struggles to stay sober and focused long enough to play one more reunion concert. Tickets are £5 and can be purchased through www.chapter.org and The Full Moon The Machine Goldfrapp: Tales of Us “The only truth is music” — Jack Kerouac Sun 16 Mar France/1958/88mins/subtitles/PG. Dir: Louis Malle. With: Jeanne Moreau, Maurice Ronet, Georges Poujouly. With a soundtrack by Miles Davis, this murderous thriller is often credited as being one of the earliest examples of the French New Wave. Florence and Julien are desperate lovers who plan to kill a wealthy businessman — who just happens to be Florence’s husband and Julien’s boss. Told in a stark and beautiful black and white, their scheme unintentionally provokes an ill-fated chain of events. Homegrown: Svengali Tue 18 Mar UK/2014/90mins/15. Dir: John Hardwick. With: Martin Freeman, Jonny Owen, Vicky McClure. Hapless but lovable music lover Dixie and his girlfriend Shell have moved from rural Wales to London so that he can follow his dream of becoming the manager of a successful rock band. With demos sent out around London on ‘retro’ style cassettes, and with his enthusiastic approach it’s not long before he has record companies fighting over the band, but will Dixie’s small town charm overcome the cynicism of the big city? A charming debut from Jonny Owen, packed with wonderful performances, including the much missed Brian Hibbard. + Special event. Please see our website and social media for more details. The Machine Fri 21 — Thu 27 Mar Wales/2013/90mins/15tbc. Dir: Caradog Evans. With: Toby Stephens, Caity Lotz. MOD scientist Vincent is developing the ultimate killing machine and his insular life is changed by the arrival of a new assistant. As he creates the first selfaware robot, his respect for this new being and the fight to retain its consciousness plunges him into a battle for his very survival. A dark thriller about the nature of humanity, with a pounding BAFTA awardwinning soundtrack by Tom Raybould. + Special event with Bafta Cymru winning musician Tom Raybould. Please see our website and social media for more details. “An impressively slick and intense British sci-fi film… blending the Frankenstein story with Blade Runner… a beautifully shot futuristic tale brimming with memorable moments.” Screen Daily Check out other titles with amazing soundtracks, such as Under the Skin (p19) and Only Lovers Left Alive (p22) Bad Film Club: Bloody Pom Poms Sun 2 Mar Japan-USA/1988/89mins/18. Dir: John Quinn. Give me a K, give me an I, give me an L and then another L..what does that spell? That’s right, a terrible movie. Bloody Pom Poms sees an unknown killer slashing the members of a small cheerleader group at a remote cheerleader training camp to death. Why? You’ll have to sit through 89 minutes of nudity, bad acting and terrible murder scenes. Note: These movies contain a live running commentary. Dallas Buyers Club Fri 21 Feb — Thu 6 Mar 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema Bastards The Book Thief The Monuments Men Sat 1 — Thu 13 Mar Fri 7 — Thu 20 Mar Fri 7 — Thu 20 Mar USA/2013/117mins/15. Dir: Jean-Marc Vallee. With: Matthew McConaughey, Jared Leto, Jennifer Garner. France/2013/100mins/subtitles/18. Dir: Claire Denis. With: Vincent Lindon, Chiara Mastroianni, Julie Bataille. USA/2013/131mins/12A. Dir: Brian Percival. With: Sophie Nelisse, Emily Watson, Geoffry Rush. USA/2013/118mins/12A. Dir: George Clooney. With: George Clooney, John Goodman, Matt Damon, Cate Blanchet, Bill Murray. Homophobic Texas cowboy Ron Woodruff finds his freewheeling lifestyle overturned when he is diagnosed with HIV and told that he has only thirty days to live. Ostracised by his old friends, he seeks out anything that will keep him alive, striking up an unlikely alliance with troubled drag queen Rayon to sell treatments to people neglected by the medical establishment. Finding dignity and strength in their fight for acceptance, this is an unforgettable true story with fiery performances. Marco returns to Paris after his brother-in-law’s suicide and targets the man his sister believes caused the tragedy. However, he is ill-prepared for her secrets, which quickly muddy the waters. A daringly fragmented film noir inspired by recent sex ring scandals, Denis takes us to the very heart of darkness in this thrilling commentary on capitalism. 1930s Germany, and a film that unusually shows life from the point of view of non-Jewish, non-Nazi Germans. Young Liesel is sent away to live with adoptive parents Rosa and Hans in a small town. Max, a young Jewish man, turns up seeking refuge and is hidden in the cellar. Liesel reads to him and seeing a keen imagination he encourages her to write. Her growing love of literature is at odds with the events in the world around her, as we see the freedoms Rosa and Hans have taken for granted stripped away under Nazi rule. Based on the true story of the greatest treasure hunt in history, an unlikely World War II allied platoon is tasked with going into Germany to rescue artistic masterpieces from Nazi thieves and returning them to their rightful owners. With the artworks trapped behind enemy lines and the German army under orders to destroy everything as the Reich fell, the platoon, made up of museum curators and art historians, found themselves in a race against time to preserve our cultural legacy. Join us after the screening on Tue 25 Feb for Chapter’s LGBT film discussion group. In association with LGBT History Month Only Lovers Left Alive Fri 28 Feb — Thu 13 Mar USA/2013/123mins/15. Dir: Jim Jarmush. With: Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleston, Mia Wasikowska, John Hurt. This vampire romance tells the story of Adam, a centuries old vampire and underground musician who is unable to get accustomed to the modern world and the depressing direction that human society is taking. Seeking out his lover, Eve, they are reunited but their idyll is tested by her wild and uncontrollable little sister. “An addictive mood and tone piece, a nocturnal reverie that incidentally celebrates a marriage that has lasted untold centuries.” The Hollywood Reporter The Invisible Woman Fri 28 Feb — Thu 6 Mar UK/2013/111mins/12A. Dir: Ralph Fiennes. With: Ralph Fiennes, Felicity Jones, Joanna Scanlan, Kristen Scott Thomas. Shy schoolteacher Ellen carries her past like a stone, haunted by memories of her youth when she was known as the actress Nelly Ternan and was involved in a passionate relationship with a much older man, the author Charles Dickens. The romance, which developed at the height of his fame, could never be publically acknowledged due to the repressive society of the time, not to mention Dickens’ wife and ten children, leaving Nelly a secret to be kept hidden. With incredibly measured performances, this is a powerful and subtle second film from director Fiennes. + Audio Descriptions and Soft Subtitles on Thu 6 Mar, 6pm. (Please note this is subject to change. Please call our Box Office to confirm on week of release.) Chapter Moviemaker Mon 3 Mar A regular showcase for short films by independent filmmakers. Occasionally films with adult content will be shown, therefore Chapter Moviemaker is advised 18. FREE 23 From L to R: The Book Thief, The Monuments Men Cinema From L to R: Dallas Buyers Club, Bastards 22 + Audio Descriptions and Soft Subtitles on Wed 12 Mar, 5.45pm. (Please note this is subject to change. Please call our Box Office to confirm on week of release.) The Rocket Fri 14 — Thu 20 Mar Thailand/2013/96min/subtitles/12A. Dir: Kim Mordaunt. With: Sitthiphon Disamoe, Loungnam Kaosainam. Displaced by the government onto barren land, Ahlo, a boy who is believed to bring bad luck to everyone around him, leads his family and friends through Laos to find a new home. After a calamity-filled journey through a land scarred by war, he aims to bring unity to his tribe by entering the dangerous Rocket Festival for its cash-rich prize. A joyous, magnificently shot debut from documentarian Mordaunt, with feisty performances from the young cast. “Mordaunt exhibits a clear-eyed observation and understanding of the country’s cultural milieu that evades any sense of offensive exoticism.” Nick McCarthy, The Slant + Audio Descriptions and Soft Subtitles on Fri 14 Mar, 5.50pm. (Please note this is subject to change. Please call our Box Office to confirm on week of release.) 12 Years A Slave Fri 14 — Thu 20 Mar USA/2013/134mins/15. Dir: Steve McQueen. With: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong’o. Based on the true story, published in 1853, of Solomon Northup, a free born black man living in upstate New York in pre-Civil War United States. Living a gracious life with his wife and children as a violinist, he is abducted through treachery and sold into slavery on a plantation in Louisiana, having to hide his free man mentality from the brutality of the slave owners. “Easily the greatest feature film ever made about American slavery.” New Yorker 24 Cinema 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema From L to R: The Grand Budapest Hotel, Stranger by the Lake WALES ONE WORLD FILM FESTIVAL The Grand Budapest Hotel Stranger by the Lake Fri 21 Mar — Thu 3 Apr Fri 28 — Mon 31 Mar USA/2014/running time tba/12A. Dir: Wes Anderson. With: Ralph Fiennes, Saoirse Ronan, Adrien Brody, Bill Murray. France/2014/100mins/subtitles/18. Dir: Alain Guiraudie. With: Pierre Deladonchamps, Christophe Paou, Patrick d’Assumcao. We follow the adventures of lobby boy Zero Moustafa as he is trained up by legendary concierge Gustave H at a famous European hotel in the 1920s. Juggling eccentric hotel residents and the theft of a priceless painting against the back-drop of a sudden and dramatically changing continent, Zero and Gustave become trusted friends. A sparkling script and dazzling cast bring together Wes Anderson’s latest caper. Frank spends his summer days hopelessly searching for companionship at a popular gay cruising spot on the shores of a lake in rural France. One day he meets the handsome, mysterious Michel and falls blindly in love. When a terrible event takes place the beautiful lake becomes an epicentre of darkness. Frank and Michel choose to ignore the dangers and instead continue to engage in their passionate and potentially lethal relationship. Gay culture is frankly explored in this gripping erotic thriller about fear and desire. Encore screenings: Sun 16, Tue 18, Sun 30 Mar + Sun 13 Apr Dir: Nick Stafford. Based on Michael Morpungo’s novel and adapted for the stage by Nick Stafford, War Horse takes audiences on an extraordinary journey from the fields of rural Devon to the trenches of First World War France. The imaginative drama features phenomenally inventive life-sized puppets by South Africa’s Handspring Puppet Company who seem to bring breathing, galloping and charging horses to life on stage. Tickets to pre-recorded encore screenings are £13/£11/£10. Welsh Premiere A Story of Children and Film Fri 21 Mar UK/2013/106mins/subtitles/PG. Dir: Mark Cousins. In his inimitable, enthusiastic style, Mark Cousins draws on films from around the world to show the affinity between film and childhood. Plundering an eclectic selection of films from popular classics and little known masterpieces, he demonstrates how the inventiveness and imagination of childhood is mirrored by the endless discoveries afforded by cinema. Warning: Includes scenes of strong real sex. Join us after the screening on Sun 30 Mar for Chapter’s LGBT film discussion group. Cuban Fury Fri 28 Mar — Wed 2 Apr Mark Cousins will be present for a Q&A after the screening Wales Premiere UK/2014/98mins/15. Dir: James Griffiths. With: Nick Frost, Rashida Jones, Chris O’Dowd. Insecure, overweight and constantly belittled by his workmate Drew, Bruce lacks confidence. With the arrival of their new, attractive, salsa-loving boss Julia, he finds his boyhood love for Latin dance ignited in this charming comedy, with dazzling performances and a big heart. + Audio Descriptions and Soft Subtitles on Mon 31 Mar, 5.45pm. (Please note this is subject to change. Please call our Box Office to confirm on week of release.) “Mark Cousins’s personal cine-essay about children on film is entirely distinctive, sometimes eccentric, always brilliant.” Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian 7 Boxes NT Live: War Horse Celebrating the very best in world cinema, WOW returns to Chapter and screens across Wales with an unrivalled selection of award-winning and celebrated films and special events. We’ll be welcoming Mark Cousins with his new film A Story of Children and Film and introducing the Bollywood Brass Band at the Samaj Community Centre. Festival passes are available at just £35/£30 to see all films or tickets to individual films and events can be purchased. Pass holders can purchase Bollywood Brass Band event tickets for just £8. The White Balloon Fri 21 + Sun 23 Mar Iran/1995/82mins/subtitles/U. Dir: Jafar Panahi. With: Aida Mohammadkhani, Mohsen Kalifi, Feresh Sadr Orfani. Razieh sets off for her first journey alone into the fierce bustle of the streets of Tehran, encountering a world of snake charmers, irate shopkeepers and a young Afghan boy with a balloon. This extraordinary debut from Panahi, now under house arrest in Iran, absorbs us entirely in his heroine’s delicate, enquiring world. 7 Boxes Fri 21 Mar Paraguay/2011/110mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Juan Carlos Magnelia, Tana Schembori. With: Celso Franco, Lali Gonzalez. Scraping a living, Victor takes a job transporting seven boxes to an undisclosed location. As the night wears on he struggles to keep his dangerous payload one step ahead of rival carriers, gangsters and the police. This tense thriller, full of black humour, makes atmospheric use of the squalid, overcrowded labyrinth of the city streets. 25 Offsite: 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema Bollywood Brass Band play The Best of Bollywood Live! Sat 22 Mar 7pm Samaj Community Centre, Mardy Street The Second Death Nairobi Half Life Winter Nomads Sat 22 Mar Sat 22 + Tue 25 Mar Mon 24 Mar Argentina/2013/91mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Santiago Fernandez Calvete. With: Agustina Lecouna, Mauricio Dayub, Guillermo Arengo. Kenya/2013/96mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Tosh Gitonga. With: Joseph Wairimu, Olwenya Maina, Nancy Wanjiku Karanja. Switzerland/2012/90min/subtitles/PG. Dir: Manuel von Sturler. With: Carole Noblanc, Pascal Egusier. An entertaining comedy drama about Mwas, a country boy who sets off to Nairobi to become an actor but finds himself struggling for survival in the slums of the city. Adopted by charismatic car thief Oti, Mwas is drawn further into the city’s violent underworld. A fun, absorbing cocktail of Kenyan street life stirred by a fine central performance. This delightful documentary follows Pascal and his long-suffering partner Carole as they drive their flock of sheep in the Swiss mountains. Pascale’s skills and unflinching attention to the natural world are revealed alongside moving reunions with families, and the inevitable hostility of rival farmers. Sleeping under the stars, sheltering from the rain, trudging through the snow, their ‘joie de vivre’ transforms this into a magnificent hymn to freedom. WOW Women’s Film Club host a unique pop-up cinema event. Grangetown’s Gujarati community offer a warm welcome at their temple for a joyful celebration of the best of Indian film. Four funky drummers and six hot horns bring to life a selection of the most iconic Bollywood scenes, driven by the beat of the dhol drum. Starting with a delicious Gujarati meal included in the ticket price, come and enjoy a sizzling celebration of the Best of Bollywood! £12/£10/£8 Pass holders can purchase Bollywood Brass Band event tickets for just £8. When a charred corpse is found, lonely Detective Alba gets no help from the locals, so she teams up with ‘The Wizard’, a strange boy who can see the traumatic secrets from people’s past. As more bodies pile up, the town’s dark secrets point to the church itself. A cleverly scripted, atmospherically shot combination of twisted ghost story and paranormal murder mystery. + A specially selected short film from the Abertoir Horror Film Festival. UK Premiere in partnership with Abertoir Horror Festival www.abertoir.co.uk WOW Children’s Film: The Moon Man Sat 22 Mar UK/2013/95mins/U. Dir: Stephen Schesch. With: Katharina Thalbach. A bored Man in the Moon hitches a ride to Earth on the tails of a passing comet and starts to explore the fantastical creatures and sights of a new planet. But all is not well. 27 From L to R: Nairobi Half Life, Winter Nomads Cinema Bollywood Brass Band 26 Wakolda Sun 23 Mar Argentina/2013/93mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Lucia Puenzo. With: Natalia Oreiro, Diego Peretti, Alex Brendemuhl. Gently striking, achingly tense, this subtly explores the shifting relationship between the dimunitive Lilith, a blonde, blue-eyed Argentinian girl and Josef Menegle, the Nazi doctor on the run for his crimes at Auschwitz. The tension that comes from knowing Mengele’s past — of which Lilith and her family are unaware — becomes almost unbearable as his relationship with Lilith grows closer. Beautifully shot against the bleak Patagonian mountains, this is a wonderfully atmospheric film. Fireworks Wednesday Sun 23 Mar Iran/2006/98mins/subtitles/12A. Dir: Asghar Farhadi. With: Hamid Farokhnezhad, Hediyeh Tehrani, Taraneh Alidoosti. Rouhi is excited about her imminent wedding, but glimpses another side of marriage when she comes to clean for a couple in the middle of an explosive domestic conflict. Thanks to a tremendous script, marvellous central performances and subtle shifts of perspective, we are forced to question our assumptions. Papusza 029 2030 4400 chapter.org Cinema When I Saw You The Lunchbox Metro Manila Mon 24 Mar Tue 25 Mar Wed 26 Mar Thu 27 Mar Poland/2013/131mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Joanna Kos-Krauze, Krzysztof Krauze. With: Jowita Budnik, Antoni Pawlicki, Zbigniew Waleryś. Palestine/2012/93mins/subtitles/12A. Dir: Annemarie Jacir. With: Mahmoud Asfa, Ruba Bial, Saleh Bakri. India/2013/104mins/subtitles/PG. Dir: Ritesh Batra. With: Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur, Nawazuddin Siddiqui. UK-Philippines/2013/115mins/subtitles/15. Dir: Sean Elis. With: Althea Vega, Jake Macapagal, John Arcilla. Its 1967, the world is alive with an infectious sense of hope. In Jordan, Tarek and his mother Ghaydaa, refugees from Palestine are separated from his father in the chaos of war. Tarek finds it difficult to adjust to life in Harir camp and searches for a way out in this powerful drama. Lonely young wife Ila prepares lunch for her neglectful husband, delivered by legendary Mumbai Lunchbox wallahs. Solitary widowed accountant Sajaan is dreading his impending retirement, but when Ila’s lunchbox goes astray and arrives at his desk, they build a gentle rapport via notes in the lunchbox. Oscar moves his rural family to Manila but is soon struggling to feed the children and sliding into poverty. Landing a job as a security guard, he falls into bad company and soon finds himself out of his depth in an unpredictable scam. With a stellar turn from the plucky protagonist, this is a vivid, emotionally engrossing crime thriller. This is the story of Polish Roma poet Bronisława Wajs (known as Papusza). Leading us from the freedom of the open road, the Holocaust and forced settlement by the post-war Communist regime, to her discovery as a poet. An inspired, innovative evocation of a Gypsy life that is now lost forever, this is full of music, despair, and the triumph of one woman over all that life throws at her. Something Necessary Tue 25 — Wed 26 Mar Kenya/2013/85mins/subtitles/adv15. Dir: Judy Kibinge. With: Susan Wanjiru, Walter Lagat, Anne Kimani. Anne is trying to get her life back on track after the civil unrest that swept Kenya after the 2007 elections. Determined to rebuild her life, she finds herself struggling with the painful memories, as is Joseph, one of the gang members who attacked her, who is drawn to Anne seemingly in search of redemption. An authentic portrait of contemporary Kenya featuring moving central performances. Join us for music and a discussion led by the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, including a meze platter £4 Plot For Peace Wed 26 Mar South Africa/2013/84mins/subtitles/ctba. Dir: Carlos Agullo, Mandy Jacobson. With: Jean-Yves Ollivier, Winnie Mandela, Thabo Mbeki. A fascinating glimpse into the negotiations between the apartheid regime and neighbouring countries determined to bring about change in South Africa. For the first time, heads of state, generals, diplomats, master spies and anti-apartheid fighters bear vivid testimony to how the shadowy “Monsieur Jacques” became the improbable key to Mandela’s prison cell, helping to bring about regional peace and the end of racial discrimination in South Africa. 29 From L to R: The Lunchbox, Metro Manila Cinema From L to R: Papusza, When I Saw You 28 The Golden Dream Thu 27 Mar Mexico/2013/108mins/subtitles/15. Dir: Diego Quemada-Diez. With: Brandon López, Rodolfo Domínguez, Karen Martínez. The perilous journey of three Guatemalan teenagers across Mexico to the USA, told from the point of view of the desperate, courageous children, who are easy prey for the border police, human traffickers and drug lords. This debut from Ken Loach’s camera assistant, explores the lengths people will go in search of a better life. We hope that Sean Ellis will be present for a Q&A after the screening. 30 Cinema The Harry Hill Movie Walking With Dinosaurs UK/2014/88mins/PG. Dir: Steve Bendalack. With: Harry Hill, Julie Walters, Julian Barrett. USA/2014/87mins/U. Dir: Neil Nightingale, Barry Cook. With: Justin Long, Karl Urban, Angourie Rice. Advised by his vet, Harry takes his pet hamster Abu and his Nan on a trip to Blackpool, but the vet has been hired by Harry’s evil brother Otto who wants to kidnap Abu. Can Harry and his Nan save his little furry friend before it’s too late? This is the story of a herd on the move, struggling to survive. Patchi, the runt of his litter, is migrating with his family, fighting with his brother Scowler and falling for Juniper, but when tragedy strikes can he muster the courage to face his demons? Moshi Monsters: The Movie (2D) WOW children’s film UK/2013/81mins/U. Dir: Wip Vernooij, Morgan Francis. With: Keith Wickahm. Sat 22 Mar Sat 1 Mar Sat 1 + Sun 2 Mar Join Katsuma, Poppet, Mr Snoodle and the other Moshi Monsters in an action-packed, song-filled race against time as they try to stop evil Dr Strangeglove and his incompetent Glump sidekick. Mr Peabody & Sherman (2D) Sat 8 + Sun 9 Mar USA/2014/92mins/U. Dir: Rob Minkoff. With: Stephen Colbert, Ty Burrell, Max Charles. Mr. Peabody and his mischievous boy Sherman use the WABAC time machine to go on the most outrageous adventures. But when Sherman takes the WABAC out for a joyride, wreaking havoc on the most important events in world history, Mr Peabody must come to the rescue in a race to save the future. chapter.org Learning New to Chapter! Learning Revisited 31 Sponsored by Funky Monkey Feet www.funkymonkeyfeet.co.uk 02920 666688 From L to R: Mr Peabody & Sherman (2D), Walking With Dinosaurs A selection of fabulous, family-friendly films every Saturday at 11am and 3pm. Children under 12 years old must be accompanied by an adult. Please contact us for details of our Supportive Environment Screenings for families. 029 2030 4400 Sat 15 + Sun 16 Mar The Moon Man UK/2013/95mins/U. Dir: Stephen Schesch. With: Katharina Thalbach. A bored Man in the Moon hitches a ride to Earth on the tails of a passing comet and starts to explore the fantastical creatures and sights of a new planet. But all is not well. For more information on WOW see pages 27-29. The Lego Movie (2D) Sat 29 + Sun 30 Mar USA/2014/running time tbc/ctba. Dir: Christopher Miller, Phil Lord. With: Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Banks, Will Arnett. After a case of mistaken identity, an ordinary Lego figure joins a group intent on battling an evil tyrant who is intent on gluing the universe together. The Bronze Level Arts Award This year we’re excited to be able to offer the Bronze Level Arts Award for young people aged 11+ What is the Bronze Arts Award? The Bronze Arts Award allows young people to get involved in the arts and share their skills. Bronze — a Level 1 national qualification, requires that young people take part in an arts activity they enjoy, go to an arts event, research their arts hero/heroine and share their skills with others. How does it work? Young people will plan their work with an adviser, and keep a record by creating their own Arts Award portfolio. Their portfolio might be a folder, sketchbook, video diary or a website — it’s up to them. When will it take place? There will be two evening sessions a month beginning Tue 8 Apr from 6 — 7.30pm. For more information about this scheme and how to enrol please contact learning@chapter.org Animation for Young People Tuesdays from 21 Jan — 25 Mar 6 — 7.30pm If you’re aged between 12 and 18 and have an interest in learning or developing basic animation skills using iPads, laptops and video cameras, then register your interest in our regular Tuesday evening animation classes. You can book for one or for all sessions, but places are limited. Supported by Children in Need, these sessions are designed specifically for young people with special educational needs and young people who are on the autistic spectrum. For more information contact learning @chapter.org Noroff College and University of South Wales Takeover Cardiff On the 12th of October last year, Chapter presented a series of short animations as part of the Takeover Cardiff Project. Animation students, lecturers, young people, artists and musicians, as well as representatives from the British Council and the Film Agency of Wales gathered to watch the premiere screening of short films (and works-in progress) created through an online collaboration between animation students at the University of South Wales, Newport and Noroff College, Oslo. Over three weeks, the students from Newport and Oslo used still images of each other’s cities, taken and uploaded by themselves, to begin a creative journey, making short animations along the theme of ‘metamorphosis’ or ‘change’. Newport students also participated in a three-day Masterclass with Baftawinning animator Gerald Conn. The short films utilised a mixture of styles and technology, including detailed hand drawn stop motion animation, sand animation and computer-based digital animation. For many students this was the first opportunity to have their work screened in a major international cultural venue; the whole project giving the participants a taste of international collaboration within the animation industry. The project was made possible by the enthusiasm and guidance of Leonie Sharrock, USW and Adrian Skar, Noroff. Contributors: Tormod Berge, Timothy Johnson, Andrew James, Matthew Wiseman, David Lloyd Evans, Mia Goddard, David Shellard, Dan McGrath, Owain Richards, Stephen Bowie, Jack Jones-White, Sarah Merridew, Elliot Saul, Caroline Groot Bluemink, Zing Magama, Martyn Ellis Ward, Ynyr Emlyn, Amy Oughton, Arwyn Hughes, Christian Bergesen, Henrk Johan Oserud, OliverGetz Rodhal, Richard Stradling, Sarah Hessam, Thomas Gudgeon, Daniel Wannehag Hagene, Jonas Nordby, Annemarie Otten 32 Booking / Info 029 2030 4400 How to Book/ Info chapter.org Get Involved 33 Get Involved How to Book Info CL1C Card Keep in touch By phone call us on 029 2030 4400. We accept all major credit cards. In person our Box Office is open Mon-Sat 10.00am — 8.30pm; Sun 3.00 — 8.30pm. Online: 24/7 booking at www.chapter.org Concessions: The concessionary rate applies to students, over 60s, children, unemployed, disabled people, MAX card, Chapter Friends and Card holders. Proof of concession will be required. Group bookings: Buy 8 tickets and get the 9th free. Please Note • only one discount will be given at any one time • we are happy to take advance bookings but cannot reserve tickets • latecomers may be refused entry Some of our titles are available with Audio Description and Soft Subtitling but the information is not always available when we go to print. Please see our website for details or call our Box Office on the week of release. We ask all our audience members to refrain from eating and drinking in the cinema auditoria, except for bottles of water. Associated Companies and Artists Chapter is home to theatre companies, dance companies, animation studios, printmakers, potters, graphic designers, motion designers, composers, filmmakers, magazine publishers, many individual, independent artists and more. Head to www.chapter.org for more details. Chapter’s own reward card. Collect points when you visit the cinema or theatre and you’ll be surprised at how quickly you can claim a free ticket. Pick up a form next time you’re in or download from www.chapter.org. Watch out for this symbol to double your points! Join us online www.chapter.org is the best place to go for more info on everything we do. Cinema Before 5pm From 5pm Full £4.50 (£4.00) £7.90 (£7.20) Concs £3.50 (£3.00) £5.80 (£5.10) Card + Conc £3.00 (£2.50) £5.00 (£4.50) Bargain Tuesday! All main screening tickets £4.40 aff nd Lla d Roa ket Mar Roa Springfield Pl. h kwit Church Rd. t Le c Penllyn Rd. Harve ad cen res mC ha St. ay A l be rt S t. Road — bus stop ad r Ro Majo nd Wy Road ane Earle Pl. P — free car parks Canton To Cardiff City Centre ton ling Wel — cycle rack Become one of Chapter’s Friends and enjoy a variety of benefits ranging from discounts on tickets and in our caffi bar to invitations to special events such as gallery previews and film premieres. Also doubles as a CL1C card. Bronze Friend: £25/£20 Silver Friend: £35/£30 Gold Friend: £45/£40 Chapter gratefully acknowledges the support it receives from the following: By Bike There are plenty of bike racks at the front of the building. Access for all Chapter welcomes disabled visitors. If you have any specific t S Ha m i l t o n access requirements or questions please contact our box office on 029 2030 4400, minicom 029 2031 3430. rn Seve L Gray . Library St d Eas t Chapter Friends Weekly eListings straight to your inbox. E-mail adam.chard@chapter.org with ‘Join Listings’ in the subject line. By Bus Bus numbers 17, 18 and 33 stop close by and leave every five minutes from the city centre. St Talbot Orc h a r d P l. Gr Cowbrid ge Ro a You’ll find us in Canton to the west of the city centre. Market Road, Canton, Cardiff CF5 1QE By Foot We’re just a 20 minute slowish walk from the city centre. King’s Ro d M a rk e t P l . treet yS e St. Glynn St. Gray How to get to Chapter Parking We have a car park to the rear of the building and local car parks are marked on the map above. Please respect our neighbours and avoid parking on nearby streets. Advanced/online prices in brackets. NB: Advanced = any time before the day of the screening. from 6pm Workshops and Classes We host a wide variety of daily workshops and classes run by independent practitioners including ballet, zumba, yoga, martial arts, baby massage, children’s music, pilates, tango, flamenco, creative writing, music lessons and more. Head to www.chapter.org for more details. Free eListings et Stre Landfill Community Fund Esmée Fairbairn Foundation EU Culture Programme The Baring Foundation Garfield Weston Foundation Foyle Foundation Biffa Award Colwinston Charitable Trust Admiral Group plc Moondance Foundation Foundation for Sport and the Arts Trusthouse Charitable Foundation Community Foundation in Wales BBC Children in Need The Waterloo Foundation ScottishPower Green Energy Trust The Welsh Broadcasting Trust SEWTA Richer Sounds The Clothworkers’ Foundation Momentum The Henry Moore Foundation Google Jane Hodge Foundation Simon Gibson Charitable Trust People’s Postcode Trust Dunhill Medical Trust Legal & General Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen e.V Millennium Stadium Charitable Trust The Ernest Cook Trust Lloyds TSB Morgan Signs Garrick Charitable Trust Barclays Arts & Business Cymru Penderyn The Austin & Hope Pilkington Trust Singapore International Foundation Puma Hotels Collection: Cardiff Angel Hotel Cardiff Airport Wales Arts International Gibbs Charitable Trust Ceredigion Community Scheme The Steel Charitable Trust The Boshier-Hinton Foundation 1st Office Oakdale Trust Dipec Plastics Nelmes Design The Coutts Charitable Trust Bruce Wake Charity Funky Monkey Feet Finnis Scott Foundation Unity Trust Bank Hugh James Contemporary Art Society for Wales The Dot Foundry JVH Gidden & Rees Western Power Distribution Follett Trust Arts & Kids Cymru Canton High School Girl’s Reunion Co-operative Group Renault Cardiff Embassy of Belgium Queensland Government Events Digwyddiadau Sat 1 The Harry Hill Movie (PG) p30 11.00 Bastards (18) p22 2.45 Simon Munnery p16 8.00 Sad Moshi Monsters: The Movie (2D) (U) p30 3.00Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 5.00 Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 5.45 The Wolf of Wall Street (18) 7.30 The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 8.20 Sun 2 Moshi Monsters: The Movie (2D) (U) p30 3.00Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 2.30 Cowbois Rhos Botwnnog p12 8.00 Cardiff Storytelling p9 8.00 Sul The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 5.15 Rough Cut (15) p19 5.00 Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 7.45 Bad Film Club: Bloody Pom Poms (18) p21 8.00 Mon 3Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 5.45 Chapter Moviemaker (18) p22 6.00 Clonc yn y Cwtch p9 6.30-8.00 Llun The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 8.20Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 8.30 Tue 4Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 2.30Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 6.00Animation for Young People p31 6.00–7.30 Maw The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 5.00 Bastards (18) p22 8.30On the Edge: The Pity of War p9 8.00 Goldfrapp: Tales of Us (12A) p20 7.30 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 Wed 5Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 2.30+5.45 Bastards (18) p22 6.00Dammed Nations p13 7.30Pop Up Produce p8 4.00-7.00 Mer The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 8.20Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 8.30 Contractions p11 8.00 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 Thu 6 The Invisible Woman (12A) p22 2.30+6.05Dallas Buyers Club (15) p22 6.00 XX Women’s Writing Festival 7.30 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 IauOnly Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 8.25 Bastards (18) p22 8.30 (First Thursday) p9 Charlotte Church p12 7.30 Contractions p11 8.00 Fri 7 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 6.00 Carry on Screaming: The Book Thief (12A) p23 11.00 XX Women’s Writing Festival 2.30-8.30 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 Gwe The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.30 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 2.30 p14-15 The Drones Comedy Club p9 8.30 Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 5.45 Contractions p11 8.00 Wake in Fright (+intro) (18) p19 8.20 Sat 8 Mr Peabody & Sherman (2D) (U) p30 11.00+3.00 Bastards (18) p22 6.00 XX Women’s Writing Festival 10.00–8.00 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 Sad The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 8.30 p14-15 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 8.25 Contractions p11 8.00 Sun 9 Mr Peabody & Sherman (2D) (U) p30 2.30 Wake in Fright (18) p19 5.00 Sup ‘n’ Scran Ale Festival p8 Sul The Monuments Men (12A) p23 5.15Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 7.30 The Book Thief (12A) p23 7.45 Mon 10 The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 5.50 Clonc yn y Cwtch p9 6.30-8.00 Llun The Monuments Men (12A) p23 8.30 Bastards (18) p22 8.25Offsite: Noys R Us: 7.00 Last Days Here (adv18) p20 Tue 11 The Book Thief (12A) p23 2.30+8.30 Bastards (18) p22 6.05Our Town p16 7.30Animation for Young People p31 6.00–7.30 Maw The Monuments Men (12A) p23 6.00Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 8.15 Contractions p11 8.00 IWA Coffee Shop Debate p9 6.00 Wed 12 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 2.30+8.25 Bastards (18) p22 8.30Our Town p16 7.30Pop Up Produce p8 4.00-7.00 Mer The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45 Contractions p11 8.00 Thu 13 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 5.45Only Lovers Left Alive (15) p22 2.30+8.30Our Town p16 7.30 SWDFAS p9 2.00 Iau The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.20 Bastards (18) p22 6.00 Contractions p11 8.00 Fri 14 Carry on Screaming: The Monuments Men (12A) p23 11.00 The Rocket (12A) p23 5.45Our Town p16 7.30 Gwe 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 2.30 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 8.00 Contractions p11 8.00 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 5.50 The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.25 Sat 15 Walking With Dinosaurs (2D) (U) p30 11.00+3.00 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 5.40Our Town p16 2.30+7.30 Music Geek Monthly p9 3.30 Sad The Monuments Men (12A) p23 5.40 The Rocket (12A) p23 8.25 Contractions p11 2.30+8.00 The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.10 Sun 16 NT Encore: War Horse p24 2.15 Walking With Dinosaurs (2D) (U) p30 2.30 Sunday Jazz p9 9.00 Sul The Monuments Men (12A) p23 5.40Lift to the Scaffold (PG) p21 5.00 The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.10 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 7.15 Mon 17 The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45 The Rocket (12A) p23 6.00 Clonc yn y Cwtch p9 6.30-8.00 Llun The Monuments Men (12A) p23 8.30 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 8.15 Cinema 1 Sinema 1 Cinema 2 Sinema 2 Theatre Theatr Gallery Oriel Gallery: INTERFERENCE: Samuel Hasler p4-5 18 — 30 Mar Art in the Bar: Andrew Morris, What’s Left Behind p6-7 14 Mar — 18 May Before 5pm From 5pm Cyn 5pmO 5pm ymlaen £4.50 (£4.00) £7.90 (£7.20) £3.50 (£3.00) £5.80 (£5.10) £3.00 (£2.50) £5.00 (£4.50) We ask all our audience members to refrain from eating and drinking in the cinema auditoria, except for bottles of water. Advanced/online prices in brackets. AUDIO DESCRIPTION Prisiau ymlaen llaw/ar-lein mewn cromfachau. Soft NB: Advanced = any time before the day of the screening. SubtitleS DS: Ymlaen llaw = unrhyw bryd cyn diwrnod y dangosiad. Bargain Tuesday! All main screening tickets £4.40 DISGOWNT DYDD MAWRTH Tocynnau’r holl brif ddangosiadau — £4.40 Cinema Sinema Full Llawn Concs Cons Card + Conc/ Cerdyn + Cons Art in the Bar: Andrew Morris, What’s Left Behind p6-7 14 Mar — 18 May Sut i archebu tocynnau Dros y ffôn — ffoniwch ni ar 029 2030 4400. Rydym yn derbyn pob un o’r prif gardiau credyd. Galwch heibio — mae ein Swyddfa Docynnau ar agor o ddydd Llun i ddydd Sadwrn o 11am-8.30pm, ac ar y Sul o 3pm — 8.30pm. Ar-lein: Gallwch archebu ar www.chapter.org bob awr o’r dydd a’r nos Consesiynau: Mae cyfraddau disgownt ar gael i fyfyrwyr, pobl dros 60 oed, plant, y di-waith, pobl anabl, deiliaid cerdyn MAX ac i Gyfeillion a deiliaid Cerdyn Chapter. Bydd angen i chi gyflwyno prawf o’ch cymhwyster i dderbyn cyfradd ostyngol. Archebion grŵp: Prynwch 8 tocyn ac fe gewch chi’r 9fed yn RHAD AC AM DDIM. Noder os gwelwch yn dda • dim ond un disgownt y gellir ei ddefnyddio ar unrhyw un adeg • rydym yn hapus i dderbyn archebion ymlaen llaw ond ni allwn gadw tocynnau i’r naill ochr • os cyrhaeddwch chi’n hwyr mae hi’n bosib y cewch chi’ch atal rhag mynychu eich digwyddiad. Gallery: INTERFERENCE: Samuel Hasler p4-5 18 — 30 Mar How to Book By phone call us on 029 2030 4400. We accept all major credit cards. In person our Box Office is open Mon-Sat 11.00am — 8.30pm; Sun 3.00 — 8.30pm. Online: 24/7 booking at www.chapter.org Concessions: The concessionary rate applies to students, over 60s, children, unemployed, disabled people, MAX card, Chapter Friends and Card holders. Proof of concession will be required. Group bookings: Buy 8 tickets and get the 9th free. Please Note • only one discount will be given at any one time • we are happy to take advance bookings but cannot reserve tickets • latecomers may be refused entry Tue 18 NT Encore: War Horse p24 1.30 The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45 The World of Work p17 8.00Animation for Young People p31 6.00–7.30 Maw Svengali (15) (+event) p21 6.00 The Rocket (12A) p23 8.25 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 8.30 Wed 19 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 6.00 The Rocket (12A) p23 2.30 + 6.15 The World of Work p17 8.00Pop Up Produce p8 4.00-7.00 Mer The Book Thief (12A) p23 8.30 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 8.20 Thu 20 The Monuments Men (12A) p23 2.30+8.30 12 Years a Slave (15) p23 5.40 The World of Work p17 8.00 Iau The Book Thief (12A) p23 5.45 The Rocket (12A) p23 8.25 Fri 21 WOW: Carry on Screaming: The White Balloon (U) p2511.00 The Machine (15tbc) p21 6.00 The World of Work p17 8.00 The Drones Comedy Club p9 8.30 Gwe WOW: The White Balloon (U) p25 2.30 WOW: 7 Boxes (adv15) p25 8.30 WOW: A Story of Children and Film 6.00 (+ Mark Cousins Q&A) (PG) p25 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 8.35 Sat 22 WOW: The Moon Man (U) p30 11.00+3.00 WOW: The Second Death + short (adv15) p26 6.00 The World of Work p17 8.00 WOW offsite: Bollywood Brass Band, 7.00 Sad The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 5.45 WOW: Nairobi Half Life (adv15) p27 8.30 Samaj Community Centre p26 The Machine (15tbc) p21 8.30 Sun 23 WOW: The White Balloon (U) p25 3.00 WOW Fireworks Wednesday (12A) p27 6.00 Sul The Machine (15tbc) p21 5.15 WOW: Wakolda (adv15) p27 8.15 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 7.30 Mon 24 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 5.45 WOW: Winter Nomads (PG) p27 6.00 Clonc yn y Cwtch p9 6.30-8.00 Llun The Machine (15tbc) p21 8.30 WOW: Papusza (adv15) p28 8.00 Tue 25 The Machine (15tbc) p21 6.10 WOW: Nairobi Half Life (adv15) p27 2.30Animation for Young People p31 6.00–7.30 Maw The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 8.20 WOW: Something Necessary (+intro) (adv15) p28 6.00 WOW: When I Saw You (12)p28 8.30 Wed 26 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 5.45 WOW: Something Necessary (+intro) (adv15) p28 2.30Pop Up Produce p8 4.00-7.00 Mer The Machine (15tbc) p21 8.30 WOW: Plot For Peace (ctba) p28 6.00 WOW: The Lunchbox (PG) p29 8.00 Thu 27 The Machine (15tbc) p21 2.30+6.10 WOW: The Golden Dream (15tba) p29 6.00 21st Century Dinosaurs p17 7.30 Music Geek Monthly p9 8.00 Iau The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 8.20 WOW: Metro Manila (15) p29 8.30 Fri 28 Carry on Screaming: The Rocket (12A) p23 11.00Under the Skin (ctba) p19 6.00 21st Century Dinosaurs p17 7.30 Samuel Hasler: Book Launch 6.00 Gwe The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 2.30+5.45 Stranger by the Lake (18) p24 8.20 + performance p5 Cuban Fury (15) p24 8.30 Sat 29 The Lego Movie (2D) (ctba) p30 11.00+3.00 Stranger by the Lake (18) p24 6.00 21st Century Dinosaurs p17 7.30 Why Do Artists Write? 2.30-3.30 Sad Cuban Fury (15) p24 5.45Under the Skin (ctba) p19 8.15Artists in Conversation p5 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 8.00 Book Works Pop Up Shop p5 10.00-4.00 Sun 30 NT Encore: War Horse p24 2.15 The Lego Movie (2D) (ctba) p30 2.30 Sul The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 5.45 Berberian Sound Studio (+intro) p5+19 5.00 Under the Skin (ctba) p19 8.25 Stranger by the Lake + Lavender Screen (18) p24 7.30 Mon 31 Cuban Fury (15) p24 5.45 Stranger by the Lake (18) p24 6.00 Metamorphosis p16 7.30 Clonc yn y Cwtch p9 6.30-8.00 Llun The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) p24 8.00Under the Skin (ctba) p19 8.15 March / Mawrth
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