4
WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY THE CINESKINNY 1 FREE THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY THE OFFICAL GFF DAILY GUIDE WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY WHAT’S INSIDE? GFF BOX OFFICE Order tickets from the box office at www.glasgowfilm.org/festival or call 0141 332 6535 or visit Glasgow Film Theatre 12 Rose Street, Glasgow, G3 6RB [email protected] 2 — FEATURE Who is George Kuchar? No really, I’ve never heard of him 2 — ALASDAIR GRAY A man so talented the entire CineSkinny team now feel inadequate 3 — REVIEWS The Thieves Shell Big Star 4 — WHAT’S NEW ONLINE Still no positive reviews of Songs for Amy 4 — TODAY’S PICKS Now on the back page just to mess with your head 4 — PIC OF THE DAY No pictures of Alex Salmond were printable 4 — WHAT DID YOU THINK? Summary: Ghosts of Mars is baws Produced by The Skinny magazine in association with the Glasgow Film Festival Editors Lewis Porteous Jamie Dunn Designer Marianne Wilson Digital Nathanael Smith Deputy Editor Josh Slater-Williams SHOOTING STAR Sheffield electronica duo ANIMAT furnish cult sci-fi Dark Star with a fresh soundtrack. We revisit the film’s creaky corridors and find its lustre undimmed WORDS: CHRIS BUCKLE A LONG time ago on a university campus far, far away, John Carpen- ter and Dan O’Bannon started work on a small-scale student flick by the name of Dark Star. Their budget was shoestring and their progress slow, piecing together the initial cut over the course of three years. But with wit, invention and a vital wellspring of filmmaking chutzpah, the duo worked alchemy. Beach balls became aliens, baking trays were repurposed as space suits, and an hour-long student film became a full-length feature with lasting cult appeal. A sharp satire with a goofy sensibility, Dark Star combines slapstick humour with Cartesian philosophy; the destruction of plan- ets with the monotony of long-term isolation; existentialism with gags about toilet paper. It roughed up the pristine visions of a then freshly popular genre (thanks to Kubrick’s 2001), and launched its creators’ careers in the process. Carpenter and O’Bannon met while enrolled in the University of Southern California’s School of Cinema-Television – by then already boasting at least one poster-boy alumnus in the form of George Lucas (whose feature debut THX 1138 was based on an earlier USC short). Both Carpenter and O’Bannon donned multiple creative hats to make Dark Star a reality: as well as directing and producing, Carpenter provided its iconic score and co-wrote with O’Bannon; in addition to scripting, O’Bannon’s credits include produc- tion design and editing, plus a role in front of the camera playing Sgt. Pinback. And, as comprehensive making-of doc Let There Be Light makes clear, the list of unofficial roles extended further still. With zero ventilation in the astronauts’ helmets (made, as they were, of toys and tape), breathing was tricky. There- fore, the scene in which Doolittle (Brian Narelle) teaches phenomenol- ogy to a bomb was filmed one line of dialogue at a time, with O’Bannon on hand to help recuperate wilting actor Brian Narelle the moment Carpenter called ‘cut’. This can-do DIY approach is a big part of the end result’s abundant charm: while you can see the frayed edges and corner-cutting, it’s all the richer for it. The aforementioned inflatable extra- terrestrial is a case in point: flagrantly cheap, but endearingly memorable. Viewed forty years on, Dark Star seems very much a product of its origins (both in terms of its 70s counter-culture tropes and its microbudget aesthetic) but it has dated gracefully. Even if it hadn’t, it would retain a prominent place in the chronicles of cinematic sci-fi by virtue of its progeny alone. Carpenter’s subsequent successes need little elaboration, with the likes of Escape from New York and The Thing establishing him as a genre titan (even if the crown has since slipped). The late O’Bannon enjoyed a comparatively less feted career, but one nonetheless studded with gold: Dark Star’s beach-ball chase became the basis for Alien’s stalking xenomorph; further script work included the original Total Recall and Tobe Hooper’s Invaders from Mars remake; and in 1985 he received his first director’s credit, for seminal shocker Return of the Living Dead. Meanwhile, Dark Star’s DNA cropped up again and again – from the Millennium Falcon’s hyperspace blur to the galactic misadventures aboard Red Dwarf’s eponymous min- ing ship – establishing an enduring legacy for this most unorthodox of space odysseys. 21 FEB – CCA THEATRE @ 21.30 GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4679_ DARK_STAR_WITH_LIVE_ANIMAT_SOUNDRACK DARK STAR

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SHOOTING STAR: Sheffield electronica duo ANIMAT furnish cult sci-fi Dark Star with a fresh soundtrack. We revisit the film’s creaky corridors and find its lustre undimmed. THE KING OF KITSCH: Following Glasgow Short Film Festival’s mini retrospective, Glasgow Film Festival welcomes the sweaty palmed chaos of GEORGE KUCHAR’s feature length work to its heaving bosom. GRAY’S ANATOMY: A Life in Progress, a portrait of Scottish institution ALASDAIR GRAY, is set to offer fresh insight into the iconic artist’s work. REVIEW: Shell, Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me, The Thieves

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Page 1: CineSkinny – 21 Feb 2013

WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY THE CINESKINNY 1

FREE THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY THE OFFICAL GFF DAILY GUIDE WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY

WHAT’S INSIDE?

GFF BOX OFFICEOrder tickets from the box office atwww.glasgowfilm.org/festival

or call0141 332 6535or visitGlasgow Film Theatre12 Rose Street, Glasgow, G3 6RB

[email protected]

2 — FEATURE Who is George Kuchar? No

really, I’ve never heard of him

2 — ALASDAIR GRAY A man so talented the entire CineSkinny team now feel inadequate

3 — REVIEWSThe Thieves Shell Big Star

4 — WHAT’S NEW ONLINE Still no positive reviews of Songs for Amy

4 — TODAY’S PICKS Now on the back page just to mess with your head

4 — PIC OF THE DAY No pictures of Alex Salmond

were printable

4 — WHAT DID YOU THINK? Summary: Ghosts of Mars is baws

Produced by The Skinny magazine in association with the Glasgow Film Festival

Editors Lewis Porteous Jamie DunnDesigner Marianne Wilson Digital Nathanael SmithDeputy Editor Josh Slater-Williams

S HO O T IN G S TA RSheffield electronica duo ANIMAT furnish cult sci-fi Dark Star with a fresh soundtrack. We revisit the film’s creaky corridors and find its lustre undimmedWORDS: CHRIS BUCKLE

A LONG time ago on a university campus far, far away, John Carpen-ter and Dan O’Bannon started work on a small-scale student flick by the name of Dark Star. Their budget was shoestring and their progress slow, piecing together the initial cut over the course of three years. But with wit, invention and a vital wellspring of filmmaking chutzpah, the duo worked alchemy. Beach balls became aliens, baking trays were repurposed as space suits, and an hour-long student film became a full-length feature with lasting cult appeal. A sharp satire with a goofy sensibility, Dark Star combines slapstick humour with Cartesian philosophy; the destruction of plan-ets with the monotony of long-term isolation; existentialism with gags about toilet paper. It roughed up the pristine visions of a then freshly popular genre (thanks to Kubrick’s 2001), and launched its creators’ careers in the process.

Carpenter and O’Bannon met while enrolled in the University of Southern California’s School of Cinema-Television – by then already boasting at least one poster-boy alumnus in the form of George Lucas (whose feature debut THX 1138 was based on an earlier USC short). Both

Carpenter and O’Bannon donned multiple creative hats to make Dark Star a reality: as well as directing and producing, Carpenter provided its iconic score and co-wrote with O’Bannon; in addition to scripting, O’Bannon’s credits include produc-tion design and editing, plus a role in front of the camera playing Sgt. Pinback. And, as comprehensive making-of doc Let There Be Light makes clear, the list of unofficial roles extended further still. With zero ventilation in the astronauts’ helmets (made, as they were, of toys and tape), breathing was tricky. There-fore, the scene in which Doolittle (Brian Narelle) teaches phenomenol-ogy to a bomb was filmed one line of dialogue at a time, with O’Bannon on hand to help recuperate wilting actor Brian Narelle the moment Carpenter called ‘cut’. This can-do DIY approach is a big part of the end result’s abundant charm: while you can see the frayed edges and corner-cutting, it’s all the richer for it. The aforementioned inflatable extra-terrestrial is a case in point: flagrantly cheap, but endearingly memorable.

Viewed forty years on, Dark Star seems very much a product of its origins (both in terms of its 70s counter-culture tropes and its

microbudget aesthetic) but it has dated gracefully. Even if it hadn’t, it would retain a prominent place in the chronicles of cinematic sci-fi by virtue of its progeny alone. Carpenter’s subsequent successes need little elaboration, with the likes of Escape from New York and The Thing establishing him as a genre titan (even if the crown has since slipped). The late O’Bannon enjoyed a comparatively less feted career, but one nonetheless studded with gold: Dark Star’s beach-ball chase became the basis for Alien’s stalking xenomorph; further script work included the original Total Recall and Tobe Hooper’s Invaders from Mars remake; and in 1985 he received his first director’s credit, for seminal shocker Return of the Living Dead. Meanwhile, Dark Star’s DNA cropped up again and again – from the Millennium Falcon’s hyperspace blur to the galactic misadventures aboard Red Dwarf’s eponymous min-ing ship – establishing an enduring legacy for this most unorthodox of space odysseys.

21 FEB – CCA THEATRE @ 21.30

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4679_DARK_STAR_WITH_LIVE_ANIMAT_SOUNDRACK

DARK STAR

Page 2: CineSkinny – 21 Feb 2013

2 THE CINESKINNY THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY

GLASGOW’S ‘LITTLE grey deity’, as Will Self once called him, Alasdair Gray is a figure whose work looms over Scottish art and literature and is perhaps the city’s most significant cultural export. In recent years, direc-tor Kevin Cameron has documented the life of the artist and author, afforded the opportunity to film Gray as he worked on some of his most famous murals, including that which covers the ceiling of Glasgow’s Òran Mór. This footage has now been collated to form the feature length documentary Alasdair Gray - A Life in Progress which, though it covers the man’s early years and the road to his most acclaimed novel Lanark, also focuses on his continuing activity and may be viewed as a portrait of the artist as a septuagenarian.

Gray’s artwork and novels are famed for blending invention and reality, for creating fantasy from the mundane. Cameron’s portrait calls upon Gray’s friends, among them Liz Lochhead and the late Edwin Morgan, and sister Mora Rolley for insight into where these inspirations arose from and to what end they have influenced Gray’s life.

“I began making pictures and inventing stories as a way of escaping from the dull life of being a schoolboy and living in Riddrie, Glasgow, a way of escaping into a more adventurous and colourful world, the kind of worlds that I saw

in the early Walt Disney movies – Snow White, Dumbo, Pinocchio,” the author says in Cameron’s previous film Alasdair Gray 0-70. “But as I entered my teens I began to realise that the people I knew, the Glasgow where I lived, was not a dull ordinary place really. It was as full of the materials of Heaven and Hell, of the possibilities of delight and horror, as anywhere else in the world or even places you could invent.”

Seldom have figures of Gray’s stature granted such ease of access into their lives and work. The films of Kevin Cameron are a rare opportunity to view the artist not as the monumental figure of university tutorials or a name on the walls of famous buildings, but as a living and working artist. Cameron’s film places Gray within the context of a world in which he is renowned, but also explores the reality of his life in the city that provides his greatest inspiration.

“You might say that while my pictures and stories and novels have often had a wildly fantastic element in them,” says Gray, “I’ve always had the realistic bit as well.”

21 FEB - GFT 1 @ 13.30

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4635_ALASDAIR_GRAY_-_A_LIFE_IN_PROGRESS

THE KING OF KITSCHFollowing Glasgow Short Film Festival’s mini retrospective, Glasgow Film Festival welcomes the sweaty palmed chaos of GEORGE KUCHAR’s feature length work to its heaving bosomWORDS: HELEN WRIGHT

“THE HEAD, heart, and hairy area below the stomach is what should be stimulated at the cinema.” George Kuchar’s simple aphorism aptly sums up his filmmaking style. Lo-fi, perverse, bitterly humorous, his 200 plus movies have a unique everyday-camp sensibility.

Kuchar started making films as a teenager with his twin brother Mike in the late 1950s, mini-melodramas in which they cast their friends and Bronx neighbours. These early efforts were an attempt to replicate the heroes, explosions, and maraud-ing monsters of Hollywood genre and exploitation flicks. Later, the Kuchars became part of America’s thriving underground scene and were welcomed into the fold by Andy Warhol, Jack Smith, and Stan Brakhage. The brothers went their separate ways in 1965 and George made his most famous title, Hold Me While I’m Naked, starring himself as a film director seeking sexual satisfaction. Its mock serious tone is encapsulated by a scene in which George shoots a couple behind a window. At the end, he tells one of them to remove her bra, saying “the mysticism of the stain glass window, and the profanity of that brassiere do not go well together.” Inspired by the weighty camp of Douglas Sirk and Howard Hawks among others, Kuchar’s legacy is his skill in undermining ‘serious’ art through self-parody whilst managing to retain

a sort of compassionate intellectual dignity.

In the 80s, the prolific artist switched to video, claiming to be attracted to the medium because it was despised as inferior by everyone else. The technical alteration evolved his aesthetic. Kuchar began making video diaries. Still investing in corny special effects and ostentatious commentaries, this next phase in his career led to an even more personal, quotidian approach. GFF is screening Kuchar’s Weather Diaries, a series created over two decades during the loner’s trips to the El Reno motel in Oklahoma with a view to recording thunderstorms. Along the way, he meets other oddballs and films them going about their daily business, eating, using the toilet, and other intimate essentials.

Kuchar died a couple of years ago, sparking a fresh burst of interest in his work. Hopefully, his name won’t become ossified through overeager cinephilic reverence. Aspiring film-makers could do worse than copy his casual path to low-budget greatness. Shortly before he passed, an inter-viewer asked Kuchar why he makes movies. “I make them for me so I can remember the friends, the places the times I had. Good times.”

21 FEB – TRAMWAY @ 19.30

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4859_GEORGE_KUCHAR_WEATHER_DIARIES

Be the star in your own movie

Let Stow College play a supporting role T: 0844 249 8585

WWW.STOW.AC.UK

CREATIVE INDUSTRIESSCIENCE, HEALTH & CAREENGINEERING & TECHNOLOGYBUSINESS & CONTINUING EDUCATION

GRAY’S ANATOMYA Life in Progress, a portrait of Scottish institution ALASDAIR GRAY, is set to offer fresh insight into the iconic artist’s workWORDS: DAVID MCGINTY

ALASDAIR GRAY

GEORGE KUCHAR

Page 3: CineSkinny – 21 Feb 2013

WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY THE CINESKINNY 3

REVIEWSSHELLDIRECTOR: SCOTT GRAHAMSTARRING: CHLOE PIRRIE, JOSEPH MAWLE, IAIN DE CAESTECKER, MICHAEL SMILEY, KATE DICKIE

BIG STAR: NOTHING CAN HURT MEDIRECTOR: DREW DENICOLA, OLIVIA MORISTARRING: ANDY HUMMELL, JODY STEPHENS, MIKE MILLS, ALEXIS TAYLOR

THE THIEVES DIRECTOR: CHOI DONG-HOONSTARRING: LEE JUNG-JAE, KIM HYE-SOO, KIM YOON-SEOK, SIMON YAM, JEON JI-HYUN, KIM HAE-SOOK, ANGELICA LEE, OH DAL-SOO, KIM SOO-HYUN, DEREK TSANG

In an emotionally frozen recess of the Highlands lives a father and daughter alongside the gaping void left by her mother. The child is named Shell and, like flowers growing towards the sun, lonely visitors are drawn to the rare vitality she exudes. Her sparkling smile and siren’s song tempt even her father toward the rocks.

Scott Graham’s excellent debut feature is a triumph, a film that troubles the mind for days after viewing. This is a work defined more by its gaps than by what exists on screen, as characters expand unhealthily into the vacuums that surround them, replicating the roles absent from their lives. Although stunningly filmed, it shows nature as a

redundant beauty, providing walls in which these pawns are enclosed. It is an intelligent and sympathetic study of loneliness and loss, the disparity between rural and urban environments, the harsh simplicity of a struggle against the elements where emotional warmth is secondary to pure survival. Chloe Pirrie’s complex central performance surely guarantees that we’ll hear of her for years to come. [Alan Bett]

21 FEB - GFT 1 @ 20.45

24 FEB - GFT 1 @ 11.00

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4839_SHELL

This South Korean blockbuster incor-porates stars and locations from across Asia, though is most strongly influenced by the American Ocean’s and Mission: Impossible franchises. A team of bicker-ing Korean thieves team up with a Hong Kong group to rob a heavily-secured Macau casino of a precious diamond, a theft masterminded by a former partner. Everyone involved has a separate agenda and things – of course – don’t quite go according to plan.

As one might expect from its simple title, The Thieves isn’t high on originality, but execution is what matters and the film boasts an effective blend of breezy caper qualities, witty exchanges and dark turns that don’t feel ill-fitting. Sadly, plot padding sees the film, lengthy for a heist thriller at 136 minutes, eventually wear out its welcome. The film’s greatest asset is its ensemble rapport, but there’s far less of this in the final act, which de-volves into rote gun-play and elaborate

stunt-heavy action sequences mostly centred on one character. Though impressively realised on a technical level, this stretch is a lot less charming and thrilling than the heist material. [Josh Slater-Williams]

21 FEB - CINEWORLD 16 @ 19.00

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/WHATS_ON/4729_THE_THIEVES

Nothing Can Hurt Me tells the story of Memphis power pop icons Big Star in a very conventional music-doc manner, complete with all the expected genre hallmarks: musician fans pop up to sing the band’s praises (with talking heads including REM’s Mike Mills and Hot Chip’s Alexis Taylor); archive footage strives to give a sense of why so many still care so deeply; and those party to events (including members Jody Ste-phens and the late Andy Hummel) offer first-hand testimonials that together build a portrait of the band’s successes and failures.

But while the format is routine, the ex-ecution is first-rate, skirting hagiography and comprehensively essaying not only Big Star’s all-too-brief existence, but also the band’s extended family tree – from frontman Alex Chilton’s time in the Box Tops through to his perplexing solo ventures; from co-writer Chris Bell’s early steerage to posthumous masterpiece I am the Cosmos. The results should satisfy both long-term acolytes and those newly curious of Big Star’s time-less artistry. [Chris Buckle]

21 FEB - CCA @ 17.00

24 FEB - GFT 2 @ 20.00

GLASGOWFILM.ORG/FESTIVAL/INFORMATION/FESTIVALS_WITHIN_THE_FESTIVALS/GMFF/4649_BIG_STAR_NOTHING_CAN_HURT_ME

THE THIEVES

SHELL

Page 4: CineSkinny – 21 Feb 2013

4 THE CINESKINNY THURSDAY 21 FEBRUARY WWW.THESKINNY.CO.UK/CINESKINNY

ALEX SALMONDHis geek film was the, er, unusual choice of Ghosts of Mars, a film which is not especially beloved. What did impress was the First Minister’s geek knowledge. STV covered the event.

tinyurl.com/STVSalmond

TV BOMBReviews and recommendations from TV Bomb’s Callum Madge, who gave four stars for Turkish drama Kuma and Flemish end of the world movie The Fifth Season. 

tinyurl.com/TVBombGFF

BEST FOR FILMPatrick Harley is trying to cram as many films into his festival as possible because he feels bad about missing Populaire. Initial coverage of what he has seen can be found at Best For Film.

tinyurl.com/BestFilmGFF

JAMES COSMOThe Journal reports from the conversa-tion with the great actor and uses his insights to take a wider look at the Scot-tish film industry and consider whether Braveheart has any place in it.

tinyurl.com/JournalCosmo

HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE13.15 @ CINEWORLD 16Up for Best Documentary Feature at Sunday’s Oscars, this tells the inspiring story of AIDS awareness activists in 80s New York. Dental documentary How to Survive a Plaque has not made the GFF line-up.

WOMEN’S DAY 18:00 @ GFT 2Upon being promoted, single mother Halina is shocked by the corruption and cruelty she observes in her workplace and takes the supermarket to court. See this if you like legal dramas, women or films.

VINYL20.30 @ GFT 2This romp, concerning an ageing rocker who fakes an entire band, may seem wholly unbelievable, but it’s actually based on a true story with its real life inspiration present at today’s screening. Like Henry Rollins’ neck, this has to be seen to be believed.

A HIJACKING16.00 @ CINEWORLD 18A Danish freighter is hijacked by Somalian pirates in what could be the most tense and thrilling film of the year. None of the pirates are played by Johnny Depp.

XINGU21.15 @ CINEWORLD 17This 1940s-set exploration of ‘unoc-cupied’ Brazil is directed by a man named Cao Hamburger who, like his edible namesake, is a sandwich made of cooked ground or chopped beef and usually served in a roll or bun.

WHAT’S NEW ONLINE?

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

PIC OF THE DAY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

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@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen better too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@SOMEONEONTWITTERI thought this film was quite good. I’ve seen worse, but also seen bet-ter too as well! #GFF #CINESKINNY

@DEVASMITH Alex Salmond. A funny, knowledgable geek who weirdly sounds like Sean Connery. His bad film choice went down a treat #GFF #CINESKINNY

@ELAB49 1/2 way through @glasgowfilmfest and I may never need to step into a cinema again this year! Well, apart from Rashomon next month. #GFF #CINESKINNY

@GRAEMEVIRTUE I admit I was skepti-cal about Ghosts of Mars at #gff13, but Alex Salmond won the (partisan?) crowd over by admitting it was basically baws. #GFF #CINESKINNY

@MISSCORINNEOHNevada - a beauti-ful emotive film soundtracked by the fantastic band Lau, yet another great night out @glasgowfilmfest#GFF #CINESKINNY

@CWMADGEJust came out of the utterly charming #Break-fastWithCurtis. High-light of the fest for me. #GFF #CINESKINNY

@FILMSTALKER The Gatekeepers is a superb documen-tary. Very powerful and plenty to make you think about other world issues. Go see. #GFF #CINESKINNY

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