#19
Post
by prettyxcool » Tue Oct 16, 2012 7:28 pm
Thanks to Beate, I went to the Studio Canal UK's special screening at Hackney City Farm last night. The setting was perfect and a great idea. We were invited to see all the farm animals first... I loved the lambs best then off we toddle in the dark to the field to have some yummy BBQ, salad and drinks. On everyone's seat was a piece of carrot cake, yum! and a Hackney Picturehouse canvas goody bag (everyone got a badge, sticker and postcards with profound quotes from the film, a Hackney Picturehouse programme - and then alternate bags got either a Lost in London magazine from LWL's or a booklet to do with the environment, apparently, so every couple would get either one but not both). A few people left their goody bags, so I collected a couple for Beate (for the bags, great for shopping, rather than the stuff inside!) I think they overbooked as the place was packed and there were not enough seats to go round that people sat on the floor in front of the screen!
The film was introduced by elevenfiftyfive who organised screening events. We were told the people in the film were not actors, just locals from the area, and the little girl could not even read when they cast her. He told us they tried to get someone famous who had liked the film to introduce the film. He said Obama was otherwise engaged, so we saw a video message from Oprah. We were also treated to a message from the Director, outside the LFF, who hoped we are having fun down on the farm.
I was enthralled at the start, but it did drag a bit towards the end. The 6 year old girl is very endearing. Her relationship with her father, is very touchingly explored and realistically portrayed by both, unable to show their love for each other, but obviously doting on each other. "I hope you die" she shouts at one point,"and after you die I'll go to your grave and eat birthday cake all by myself,” you feel both her childlike pain and her not-so-childlike anger. It is her perceptions of the world we see, the surreal images of wild beasts and melting ice cap is interwoven with learning to survive. Felt slightly like a choreographed documentary, as it feels very vivid and very real, a story of a community living in ramshackle poverty, cut off from civilisation, fishing for food, torn by nature and how they dealt with its aftermath. It is quite bleak, yet beautiful, and well put together I kept thinking, not dissimilar to Bombay Beach, about the daily lives of a very poor community. It was different, but watchable and thoughtful. 7/10
Member No. 17 of the "100 free films in 2019" club. 50 seen so far
My Movie Scores
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2018 - 100 seen (9 premieres/Press) Also 2 Opera, 1 Netfix, 15 theatres, 2 concerts, 1 ballet)
2017 - 106 seen
2016 - 116 seen
2015 - 120 seen (16 premieres, 2 Gala Screenings). Also 3 theatres/shows, 2 concerts
2014 - 132 seen (26 premieres and 7 Gala Screenings). Also 18 misc. free events/concerts
2013 - 115 Seen (12 premieres). Also 6 theatres/shows, 5 concerts
2012 - 118 seen (23 premieres). Also 12 theatres/shows.
2011 - 133 seen
2010 - 105 seen