Posts Tagged ‘Urania National Film Theater’

16th Francophone Film Days … 40 screenings coming again adding 23 films @ Budapest Cinemas!

The movie lovers community will be able to see the works of nine female directors and Enyedi-Maraton at the 16th Francophone Film Days. Cinema fans will have plenty to choose from… The thriller Private Case starring Jodie Foster and Daniel Auteuil, Stitches with Angelina Jolie and her work, The Little Girl, which won the Best Actress award and the Queer Palm at the Cannes Film Festival. Among others, a truck road movie from Canada, the story of a mother believed to be dead from Morocco and a film depicting deep poverty from Switzerland will arrive. On the occasion of International Women’s Day, there will be a roundtable discussion entitled Women, Media and Film.

The 16th Francophone Film Days is organized by the French Institute, and will be held between March 4-14 at the Uránia National Film Theater and the French Institute, and the domestic audience will be able to watch 23 contemporary Francophone works in the original language with Hungarian subtitles.

The main patron of the event will therefore be Ildikó Enyedi, who is closely connected to French culture, and three of her films will be on offer. The audience will be able to see the works of nine female directors in total. The thriller Private Case starring Jodie Foster and Daniel Auteuil, Stitches with Angelina Jolie, and her work The Littlest Girl, which won the Best Actress award and the Queer Palm at the Cannes Film Festival. Among others, a truck road movie from Canada, the story of a mother believed to be dead from Morocco, and a film depicting deep poverty from Switzerland will arrive. On Sunday, March, 8 International Women’s Day 2026, there will be a roundtable discussion entitled Women, Media and Film.

On the 4th of March, 3 p.m., the 16th Francophone Film Days will open at the Uránia National Film Theater in Budapest with Amélie Bonnin’s feel-good film, Enjoy the Moment!, which opened last year’s Cannes Film Festival. It is about a reunion with a childhood love. Canadian Joëlle Desjardins Paquette’s Rodeo is a bittersweet, lyrical road movie, a film that explores the depths of a father-daughter relationship, in which a truck driver crosses the whole of Canada. The only problem is that he takes his nine-year-old daughter with him on the road, whom he should never see.
In Rebecca Zlotowski’s twisty film Private Matter – starring Jodie Foster, Daniel Auteuil and Virginie Efira – the renowned psychiatrist launches a private investigation into the death of one of her patients, who she believes was murdered. Jodie Foster’s acting is not only perfect, her French is also perfect.
In Moroccan Layla Triqui’s moving film Gone with the Wind, Sophia, who lives in Tangier, learns one day that her mother, who she thought was dead, is very much alive, having just moved back to France. So the woman travels to Europe to confront her family past.
In Swiss Jasmin Gordon’s drama Through Fire and Water, a not-so-smooth, single mother struggles on a daily basis to raise her three children in dignified circumstances – and at least to preserve her honor in front of them. A touching film about poverty, determination and inner human reserves.
Hafsia Herzi will also be in the lineup for her work, The Littlest Girl, which won two awards at the Cannes Film Festival – Nadia Melliti, the Best Actress award, and the Queer Palm. Fatima is 17 years old and grew up in a traditional, loving family with her two sisters. After graduating from high school, she moves from the suburbs to Paris, where another world opens up to her. This touching film adaptation of Fatima Daas’s coming-of-age novel is an ode to acceptance.
In Pauline Loquès’ deeply moving debut, Nino, the protagonist is given three days by doctors to prepare for the greatest ordeal of her life. And for those three days, she is given two tasks that could bring her closer not only to others but also to herself. So Nino takes on Paris. The fear of death often reminds us that there is still work to be done.
In Alice Winocour’s Stitches – starring Angelina Jolie and Louis Garrel – three women stumble upon each other in the hustle and bustle of Paris Fashion Week. The only thing the American filmmaker, the South Sudanese model and the French make-up artist have in common is that they all have their own problems. But solidarity is a strong bond, and it leads them to realize that it is time to set boundaries and take the thread of their own destiny into their own hands.

On Saturday, March 7th from 2 p.m till 11 p.m. there will be an Ildikó Enyedi Marathon at the French Institute. First, Simon the Magus, set in Paris, will be screened, then at 4 p.m. My Wife’s Story will be shown with Léa Seydoux in the lead role, and finally at 8 p.m.

Finally, the Silent Friend will be screened on Sunday, 9th of March at 3.30 p.m. at the French Institute within hosting a roundtable discussion.

Tickets are already on sale:
Uránia National Film Theater – HUF2800
(Concessional ticket: HUF2300). Discounted tickets are available for students, pensioners, teachers, people under 26 and people over 65 with ID.

French Institute – HUF2500.Ticket prices:
(Concessional ticket: HUF2300). Discounted tickets are available for students, pensioners, teachers, people under age 26 and people over 65 with ID.

Time goes by quickly so get your tickets in dvance before they will be sold-out.

Update by Aggie Reiter

The 14th Francophone Film Days Just Around The Corner.

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24 films – 2 Oscar nominations – 32 Cesar nominations – 17 cities, many additional programs to be present. 

Screening dates: February, 28. – March, 10. 2024.

24 films and the biggest French stars such as: Catherine Deneuve, Léa Seydoux, Virginie Efira, Romain Duris, Vincent Cassel, Guillaume Canet – will be shown at the 14th Francophone Film Days organized by the French Institute Budapest. The Oscar-nominated Robot Dreams and the Oscar- and César-nominated Four Sisters are also coming. The audience can personally meet the director of Salem, which debuted at Cannes, and Liv S.’s Love, nominated for 9 César Awards, and there will be a discussion about restorative justice in connection with the social drama Their Faces Are Always in Front of Me. Between March 1st and 31st, a limited selection from the program of the 14th Francophone Film Days will be presented in 16 other cities and towns throughout Hungary.

On March, 6. – 8 p.m., the film Salem, which debuted in Cannes last year, will be screened at Urania – National Film Theater. The hypnotic, lyrical work depicts the love of a black boy and a Roma girl. But in the wildest neighborhood of Marseille, the war between the two rival gangs breaks out not because the girl becomes pregnant, but because of a murder that the boy witnesses. Interview opportunity with the film’s director, Jean-Bernard Marlin.

On March, 8. - 7.30 p.m., the Swiss romantic film Liv S.’s Loves will be shown at Urania – National Film Theater. Liv, 38, recalls her old relationships in which something always went wrong. It’s time for our lovely, dreamy heroine to face her demons and accept that life is a huge emotional roller coaster. Interview opportunity with the director, Anna Luif.

All films are in the original language with Hungarian subtitles.

To know indepth … go to the a/m film festival website.

Update by Aggie Reiter

Anne Frank … Diary … Parallel Lives … Hungary’s Cinema.

New 90-minute documentary in original language with Hungarian subtitles

Anne Frank’s tragic story unfolds on a new screen from a new perspective Anne Frank: Parallel Lives, premieres in Hungary.
(If Anne had survived she would now be 90).

Anne Frank – Parallel Stories is an extraordinary documentary that evokes the darkest period in human history and the tragic fate of children abducted in an emergency.

The Oscar-winning actress Helen Mirren is the narrator, adding a powerful presence, traces Anne Frank’s life through the pages of her diary by telling a story that has made the tragedy of the Holocaust known to readers all over the world.
The viewers are taken through the confines of Anne Frank House in Amsterdam and reads extracts from The Diary of Anne Frank. (Anneliese Marie “Anne” Frank a German girl of Jewish descent who was born in 1929 and died tragically at a young age, transported to an internal concentration camp. She died of typhoid there at the age of 15.)

The documentary holds intertwining stories with Holocaust survivors who were also sent to concentration camps at a young age of five and share their memories of the emergency. These are those five women who were also deported as children or adolescents to ghettos and then concentration camps and miraculously escaped. The intimate conversations reveal Arianna Szörenyi, an Italian writer of Hungarian descent, Sarah Lichtsztejn-Montard of Polish descent living in France, Helga Weiss, who was deported from Prague to the Terezin ghetto and then to Auschwitz. The personal story of Andra and Tatiana Bucci, who were deported as young children between the ages of 4 and 6. In addition to the survivors, the film features several renowned experts, including Michael Berenbaum, an American university professor, rabbi, writer and filmmaker who specializes in studying the Holocaust. („The Holocaust was the systematic, state-sponsored, persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945 across Europe and North Africa. The height of the persecution and murder occurred during World War II. By the end of the war in 1945, the Germans and their collaborators had killed nearly two out of every three European Jews.”)

Italian film-makers Sabina Fedeli and Anna Migotto have taken the known facts of Anne’s life and set them against the stories of five other Jewish women, all in their 90s now, all of whom survived the Holocaust. One of them even met Anne. Their stories are a moving reminder of a generation that was all but destroyed by hatred.

Anne Frank: Parallel Stories needs to be revisited more than we might care to admit!

Nationwide will be shown in the Hungarian cinemas from January, 27. 2022., on the International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Premieres at Cinemas: MOM, Toldi, Pushkin, Tabán, Art + Cinema and the Urania National Film Theater can be seen in Budapest, as well as in many other locations across the country, including cities as: Szeged, Pécs, Szolnok, Szombathely, Miskolc, Kecskemét, Eger, Zalaegerszeg and Mosonmagyaróvár.

(The Diary of Anne Frank, first published by her father Otto in 1947, is one of the best-known books in the world, while the secret annex in Amsterdam where Anne, her parents, sister and four friends hid from the Nazis for two years is now a museum and one of Holland’s most visited tourist attractions. Over the years there have been books, exhibitions, films and even stage productions centered around Anne Frank’s diary, which she started writing soon after her 13th birthday in June 12, 1942. Anne wrote her thoughts and dreams in her diary, which was discovered by one of Otto’s friends, Miep Gies, soon after Anne was arrested and deported by the Nazis in August 1994. Gies kept it in the hope that one day she would be able to return it to Anne.)

Distributor – Pannonia Entertainment Ltd.

Update Aggie Reiter

“Idiot Prayer” – Nick Cave’s New Concert Film Screening Across the Country.

Due till this date, taking into account the rules and measures to fight the coronavirus, the projections will be held … information about the changes can be found on the cinema’s website. Until then … from November 5, at the same time as the world premiere, Nick Cave’s new concert film “Idiot Prayer” will hit pictures across the country, in which the Australian songwriter-singer will perform his songs solo, accompanied by a piano.

The intimate, two-hour concert film features songs from different eras, both rarely heard songs and popular hits, s alone new songs he performed at his livestream show. Sceening in English language with Hungarian subtitles. From the earliest Bad Seeds and Grinderman records to the latest Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds album, Ghosteen. up to the record material, including Into My Arms, The Mercy Seat, Higgs Boson Blues or Girl In Amber.

The film was in June 2020, originally recorded as a concert film that could only be watched online once during quarantine, and can now be seen on a big screen in an expanded cinema version worldwide, along with four brand new songs, now heard for the first time. The unique atmosphere of “Idiot Prayer”, which is more personal than any Nick Cave concert film to date, reflects months of quarantine with isolation and uncertainty on the one hand, and hopeful anticipation on the other.

The “Idiot Prayer” – Nick Cave Alone @ Alexandra Palace London – concert film will be distributed by Pannonia Entertainment LTd. within 30 cinemas nationwide from November 5, including the entire Cinema City network, Corvin, Toldi and Pólus Cinemas in Budapest and the Urania National Film Theater, limited screenings or only one evening at a time.

The performance was filmed by multiple award-winning cinematographer Robbie Ryan (My Favorite, Marriage Story) in the ornate auditorium of iconic Alexandra Palace in London. The film’s music recording director was renowned producer and sound engineer Dom Monks, who had previously worked with Peter Gabriel, Robert Plant, Katie Melua, Tom Jones and Coldplay.

© Aggie Reiter