Belfast, 7 Oscar Nominations Including Best Picture... Opens Wednesday!

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Written and directed by Kenneth Branagh, Belfast has earned 7 Oscar Nominations including Best Picture. This stunning film opens on the 9th, with advance tickets on-sale now. Catch it through the weekend as well. 

"The Toronto Film Festival’s annual audience award has always been a terrific gauge of both a film’s Oscar and Bafta prospects and potential as a true crowd-pleaser. 2021’s winner is no exception.

"Dedicated to “those who stayed”, “those who left” and “all those who were lost”, as well as his good mate, the late John Sessions, Kenneth Branagh’s love letter to his hometown and the power of cinema is a sumptuous, heartfelt joy from start to finish.

"It’s August, 1969 and 9-year-old Buddy (newcomer Jude Hill) is a prince of Mountcollyer Street. Everybody in the neighbourhood knows him, likes him and looks after him, as he spends every spare moment in the outdoors dreaming of slaying dragons and being Danny Blanchflower.

"But Belfast is a city divided along religious lines and when “the troubles” turn up virtually on Buddy’s protestant family’s doorstep at No. 96, the usually ebullient mood changes.

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"The one bright spot is that it brings Buddy’s Pa (Jamie Dornan) hurriedly home from his job in England. Forced to seek employment on the other side of the Irish Sea due to ongoing troubles with the tax man (not helped by a fondness for the bookies’), Pa promises Buddy, his older brother Will (Lewis McAskie) and Buddy’s Ma (Caitriona Balfe) that everything will be okay, while explaining that all the disagreements are to do with “bloody religion”.

“Then why do we have to go to church,” Buddy asks. “Because if you didn’t, your Granny would kill me,” comes the instant reply.

"But while Buddy tries to concentrate on catching the eye of classmate Catherine (Olive Tennant), pressure builds on his Pa, as some local protestant agitators give him an ultimatum to contribute either with cash, or verbal support, towards ousting Catholics from the area. He has no plans to do either.

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"However, as the conflict intensifies, Vancouver or Sydney look more and more attractive as an “escape option”.

“You can’t be with them 24 hours a day, and we can’t take away their childhood either,” Pa tries to reason with Ma. She though, believes leaving would be too much of a wrench for all of them, especially with Granny (Judi Dench) and Pop (Ciaran Hinds) now well into their dotage.

"Shot in gorgeously crisp black-and-white, peppered with Schindler’s List-esque fanciful smatterings of colour emanating from educational family trips to “filums” like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and One Million Years B.C. (“Raquel Welch is a hell of an education,” Ma notes of the latter), Belfast offers an emotive and evocative experience that few films have in recent years. You can almost smell the Ulster Fry and taste the dusty streets, as we see the world through Buddy’s eyes. It reminds one of John Boorman’s Hope and Glory or Spielberg’s Empire of the Sun in its juxtaposition of innocence against a backdrop of conflict.

"But neither of those films had quite the heart or grand humour that coarses through Branagh’s delightful script. Pithy and memorable one-liners abound, with Hinds’ charming patriarch and Josie Walker’s Aunt Violet getting the lion’s share of the best of them. “All the Irish need to survive is a phone, a Guinness and the sheet music to Danny Boy,” she notes, while he informs Buddy that “there’s nothing wrong with an outside toilet – unless it’s on a plane”.

"His young charge too offers some hilarious insights, opining that his maths homework takes him ages, so “no wonder it’s called long division”

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"But while fans of Derry Girls or Moone Boy will find plenty to their liking, albeit in a story set a generation before, it’s the more poignant moments that really stay with you. Both The Tourist’s Dornan and Outlander’s Balfe deliver terrific performances, highlighted in scenes where they comfort their worried boys, or offer them hope for the future.

"When Buddy reveals that the girl he fancies is a Catholic, Pa gives him an assurance that will most definitely leave you with “the feels”.

“She can be a vegetarian atheist, but if she’s kind, and she’s fair, and you respect each other, then she and her people are welcome in our home anytime.”

"In a time of increasing intolerance, opposing world views and stressors, Belfast is a pitch perfect, resonant and, at times, joyous celebration of childhood and community spirit."

- James Croot, NZ News

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Watch the trailer for Belfast here! 

NR

Written and directed by Kenneth Branagh, BELFAST is a poignant story of love, laughter and loss in one boy's childhood, amid the music and social tumult of the late 1960s.

Nominated for 7 Oscars! Including: Best Picture, Best Director, and Original Screenplay 

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

Winner of the 2021 Golden Globe for Best International Feature. "A masterpiece." - Wall Street Journal

Nominated for 4 Oscars (Best Picture, Director, International Feature, Adapted Screenplay.)

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Depicting the refugee experience through vivid animation, Flee pushes the boundaries of documentary filmmaking to present a moving memoir of self-discovery.

Nominated for 3 Oscars (Best Animated Feature, International Feature, Documentry Feature)

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Our Valentine: A rare chance to see the dazzling 1951 Best Picture-winning musical on the big screen! Music by George Gershwin.

Jerry Mulligan (Gene Kelly) is an American ex-GI who stays in post-war Paris to become a painter, and falls for the gamine charms of Lise Bouvier (Leslie Caron). However, his paintings come to the attention of Milo Roberts, a rich American heiress, who is interested in more than just art.

No screenings currently scheduled.

Hosted by Outdoor Adventures Hamilton

Paddling adventures: flat or rough, single paddle or a double, extreme, serene or just right for you...

It's 2022 you say, not so fast!! Why throw away perfectly good paddling flicks? We're sneaking in the 2021 films just before the new ones premier (There's plenty of time in 2022 for the new ones).

Join us for the PADDLING Film Festival - 2021 films, no bells and whistles at the screening (holding off on the door prizes for now) but there will be the awesome Playhouse Cinema snack bar (beer, wine and real butter!!). Don't worry we're following the COVID rules...

14A

"Note to Oscar: Make sure a best actress nomination happens for the blazing Penelope Cruz in this emotional powerhouse from director Pedro Almodovar about a Madrid photographer coping with an unplanned pregnancy and a tangled political past." - Peter Travers, ABC News

Oscar Nominated for Best Actress and Best Original Score

No screenings currently scheduled.

R

"The kind of movie which reminds you just how beguiling top-tier cinema can be, Joachim Trier's 'The Worst Person in the World' is a triumph." - Awards Watch

Oscar nominated for Best Original Screenplay and International Film

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"To make a movie so bad it's good you need vision, drive, luck and obsessive vanity. Fortuitiously Tommy Wiseau appears to possess all of these qualities, combined with a total lack of acting talent." - The Guardian

“Tommy Wiseau’s The Room may be the first true successor to the Rocky Horror throne.  Wiseau's Johnny is the noblest of boyfriends and most capable of lovers. But none of that satisfies his fiancée Lisa, a wicked Jezebel whose boredom with Johnny manifests in a brazen affair with his best friend.

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

"Featuring breathtaking cinematography of this rarely seen, 60-ton great whale, Last of the Right Whales will resonate with audiences long after the final frame fades to black." - Nadine Pequeneza, Director and Producer

Director in Attendance for Q & A (opening screeening only)!

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Winner of 5 Oscars, including Best Picture. "Sidney Poitier is pure charisma as Virgil Tibbs, the Philadelphia policeman whose between-trains stopover in a small Southern town is indefinitely extended when he’s first implicated in, then asked to assist with a local murder investigation." - Time Out

"It was the slap heard round the world.

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

A classic Princess Cinemas tradition you never want to miss! Don't come alone...

Buy tickets here 

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Sidney Poitier Remembered. "A groundbreaking work that manages to be both specific to the African-American experience and universal in its themes of hope, change, and upward mobility." - Screen Daily

Lorraine Hansberry’s immortal A Raisin in the Sun was the first play by a black woman to be performed on Broadway. Two years later, the production came to the screen, directed by Daniel Petrie.

No screenings currently scheduled.

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