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Events articles and reviews
Surreal Film House au Barbican
From 11/06/2010 to 22/07/2010 at 23:59
To Book Tickets online
Box Office: 0845 120 7527
Throughout June and July, complementing The Surreal House exhibition in the Barbican Art Gallery (1), Barbican Film explores the many facets of surrealist cinema with an in-depth programme that includes a Terry Gilliam Directorspective and The Surreal Film House, a season of 13 films including works by Luis Buñuel & Salvador Dalí, Jean Cocteau, Maya Deren, Hans Richter and Roger Corman, David Lynch, Guillermo del Toro and Tim Burton. Also showing is a weekend of Silent Film and Live Music events, including works by Man Ray, Pierre Chenal, René Clair, Germaine Dulac and Jean Epstein. Film also has a pivotal role within the Barbican Art Gallery’s The Surreal House exhibition, with works by Buster Keaton, Andrei Tarkovsky, Jan Švankmajer, Jean Cocteau and Maya Deren among others.
The Full Programme
THE DIRECTORSPECTIVE: TERRY GILLIAM – Friday 11 to Monday 14 June
Terry Gilliam, one of the great maverick directors of both British and American cinema is famous from his strikingly idiosyncratic style.
Friday 11 June
6.00pm – Brazil (15) (UK 1985 Dir. Terry Gilliam 132 min)
Brazil is a surrealistic nightmare vision of a ‘perfect’ future where technology reigns supreme. Co-written by Gilliam with Tom Stoppard and Charles McKeown, and starring Jonathan Pryce and Robert De Niro.
Sunday 13 June
6.00pm – The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (PG) (UK 1988 Dir. Terry Gilliam 126 min)
With lavish design and cinematography, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen was critically praised and nominated for four Oscars. Gilliam’s astounding visual imagination runs riot as Baron Munchausen and a young girl travel to the moon, fall into the belching Mt. Etna and are swallowed by a monster fish.
Monday 14 June
6.00pm – Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (18) (US 1998 Dir. Terry Gilliam 119 min)
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Gilliam’s adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson’s 1971 cult book emerges as a brilliant, funny satire about the death of the ‘60s and the very soul of American dementia.
8.45pm – The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus (12A) (France/Canada/UK 2009 Dir. Terry Gilliam 122 min)
Starring Heath Ledger in his last role, The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus has all the incomparable quirkiness, dry humour and attention to visual detail of the very finest Gilliam fare.
THE SURREAL FILM HOUSE – Friday 11 June to Thursday 22 July
The Surreal Film House explores the myriad trails of surrealist thought by visionary filmmakers that both preceded and followed the two Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí collaborations of the late 20s/early 30s, Un Chien Andalou and L'âge d'or.
Friday 11 June
8.45pm – L’âge d’or (15) (France/Spain 1930 Dir. Luis Buñuel 63 min)
Scabrous, sinister and strangely poignant, Buñuel and Dali’s second collaboration L’Age d’or remains perhaps the cinema’s greatest ode to surrealism.
Un Chien Andalou (15) (France 1928 Dir. Luis Buñuel, Salvador Dalí 17 min) Introduced by author and surreal film specialist Elza Adamowicz (2)
Famously opening with a close-up of a girl’s eye with a razor slicing slowly across it, Un Chien Andalou’s dreamlike cine-poem on sex, death and decay has prompted countless readings of its mysteries.
Saturday 12 June
6.00pm – Blood of a Poet (Le Sang d’un Poète) (PG) (France 1930 Dir. Jean Cocteau 55 min)
Cocteau’s enigmatic first feature Blood of a Poet is a fascinatingly surrealist tour-de-force, exploring the ‘inner self’ of the poet within a series of imaginary events.
Meshes of the Afternoon (PG) (US 1943 Dir. Maya Deren 18 min)
In Maya Deren’s landmark film Meshes of the Afternoon, a woman is caught in a web of dream events.
8.45pm – Dreams that Money Can Buy (12A) (US 1947 Dir. Hans Richter 99 min)
Dadaist Hans Richter’s experimental film Dreams that Money Can Buy focuses on a man who sees his mind unfolding when looking at himself in a mirror. Each of the seven dream sequences are envisioned by a leading avant-garde artist, including Max Ernst and Marcel Duchamp.
Sunday 13 June
8.45pm – Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bête) (PG) (France 1946 Dir. Jean Cocteau 93 min)
Jean Cocteau’s magical, achingly beautiful fantasy Beauty and the Beast is an enchanting fable and one of the masterpieces of world cinema, enriched by Georges Auric’s gorgeous score. With Jean Marais.
In French with English subtitles
Wednesday 16 June
6.00pm – Belle de Jour (18) (France/Italy 1967 Dir. Luis Buñuel 100 min)
Buñuel’s winner of the 1968 Venice Film Festival stars Catherine Deneuve as the eponymous Belle de Jour.
In French with English subtitles
8.45pm – The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (15) (France 1972 Dir. Luis Buñuel 105 min)
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie is a hilarious satire on ‘bourgeois’ codes and manners. A group of wealthy middle class friends gather at a country house, but their host is strangely absent, and all their attempts to dine together are mysteriously frustrated.
In French and Spanish with English subtitles
Thursday 17 June
6.00pm – The Masque of the Red Death (15) (UK 1963 Dir. Roger Corman 84 min)
The Masque of the Red Death is Roger Corman’s stylish adaptation of Poe’s tale about evil Prince Prospero, who plots terror and mayhem as the Plague ravages the countryside. Beautifully photographed by Nicolas Roeg and featuring Vincent Price.
Sunday 18 July
6.15pm – Blue Velvet (18) (US 1986 Dir. David Lynch 120 min)
Earning a second Best Director Academy Award nomination for visionary filmmaker David Lynch, Blue Velvet represents a seminal contribution to the genre of surrealist film. When a man finds a severed ear in a field, his investigations reveal a sinister underworld lurking beneath the respectable surface of his home town. Featuring Isabella Rossellini, Dennis Hopper, Laura Dern and Kyle Machlachlan.
8.30pm – Eraserhead (15) (US 1976 Dir. David Lynch 90 min)
David Lynch's entrancing first feature Eraserhead is a grainy surrealist fantasy that mixes horror and science fiction in the bizarre story of a social misfit (John Nance) who finds himself the father of a half-human monster. Lynch’s visually arresting work has continued to simultaneously seduce and repel audiences since its release.
Monday 19 July
8.45pm – Pan’s Labyrinth (El Laberinto del Fauno) (15) (Mexico/Spain/US 2006 Dir. Guillermo del Toro 119 min)
Weaving together a fantastical labyrinthine world and the harsh reality of Franco’s regime, Pan’s Labyrinth is a potent Spanish myth depicting the horror of fascism. Having moved to a remote hamlet, Ofelia discovers a dark labyrinth in her new garden. Starring Mirabel Verdú (Y tu mamá también), Sergi Lopez (Dirty Pretty Things) and Ivana Baquero (Fragile).
In Spanish with English subtitles
Thursday 22 July
6pm – Alice in Wonderland 3D (PG) (US 2010 Dir. Tim Burton 108 min)
In Alice in Wonderland, Tim Burton works his own brand of surrealist magic on Lewis Carroll’s classic books - this time it’s a 19-year-old Alice who follows the white rabbit into Wonderland again. Burton’s new trip into the world of the Red Queen, Tweedledee and Tweedledum and the Cheshire Cat is an imaginative, visionary adventure. With Helena Bonham Carter, Johnny Depp, Alan Rickman, Christopher Lee and Ann Hathaway.
THE SURREAL SILENT FILM HOUSE – Saturday 12 to Sunday 13 June
Saturday 12 June
11.00am – Playing House with Buster Keaton (U) (US 1920-21 Dirs. Edward F. Cline & Buster Keaton, 60 min.) with live piano accompaniment by John Sweeney
Surreal House for kids includes Keaton classics One Week, The Scarecrow and The Haunted House.
Part of Family Film Club, no unaccompanied adults or children. Movie Trolley activities from 10:30am
2.00pm – The Mysteries of the Chateaux of Dice (12A) (France 1929 Dir. Man Ray 29 min) with live piano accompaniment by Stephen Horne
The Mysteries of the Chateaux of Dice, the most well known of surrealist artist Man Ray’s film works, is an evocative poem exploring the meaning of chance.
Architectures d’Aujourd’hui (France 1930 Dir. Pierre Chenal / Le Corbusier
11 min)
Architectures d’Aujourd’hui explores the themes that emerged in New French architecture.
Entr’acte (France 1924 Dir. René Clair 16 min)
Clair’s celebration of motion Entr’acte is a who’s who of the Dada movement in Paris at the time.
4.00pm – The Smiling Madame Beudet (La Souriante Madame Beudet) (PG) (France 1922 Dir. Germaine Dulac 35 min) with live piano accompaniment by Lola Perrin
The Smiling Madame Beudet is the first explicitly feminist film, about a woman, crushed by an oppressive marriage, finding momentary freedom in fantasy.
The Seashell and the Clergyman (La Coquille et le Clergyman) (France 1928 Dir. Germaine Dulac 41 min)
The story of a clergyman who struggles against his lustful visions, The Seashell and the Clergyman is Germaine Dulac’s most renowned work, and it is regarded as the first surrealist film.
Sunday 13 June
4.00pm – The Fall of the House of Usher (La Chute de la Maison Usher) (PG) (France 1928 Dir. Jean Epstein 63 min) with live piano accompaniment by the Southwell Collective
The Fall of the House of Usher is Jean Epstein’s mesmerising adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s famous story. Assisted by a young Luis Buñuel, Epstein used a variety of techniques to create a dreamy, chilling, surreal masterpiece.
Ghosts Before Breakfast (Vormittagsspuk) (Germany 1928 Dir. Hans Richter 6 min)
Painter and avant-garde filmmaker Hans Richter uses household objects to tell a funny story of rebellion against the daily routine. The cast includes composers Paul Hindemith and Darius Milhaud, and Richter himself.
FREUD’S FILM HOUSE: FREUD MUSEUM – Tuesday 6 & Wednesday 7 July
7.00pm – Rebecca (UK 1940 Dir. Alfred Hitchcock 132 min) introduced by psychoanalyst and author Dr Andrea Sabbadini (Tuesday) and Justine Picardie, fashion editor and author of Daphne (Wednesday)
Barbican Film presents a special off-site screening at Freud's House as part of Surreal House. A dark secret lurks down the road to Manderley for troubled lovers Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine, in Hitchcock's Oscar-winning adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's classic thriller.
Ticket prices:
Book online and save up to £2 off every ticket!
Standard: £7.50 online (£9.50 full price)
Barbican Members: £6.50 online (£7.50 full price)
Concessions: £7.50
Under 15: £4.50
Monday Madness: all tickets £5.50
To Book Tickets online
Box Office: 0845 120 7527
Event's details
- Where: Barbican Centre
Zone Tag
Jobs, 5.55, Bathing suits, Health, 1973, June recipes, Tom McCarthy, film, chanteroy, Jewish Book Week, exceptional, Music Day 2007, drinking, Matthieu Kassovitz, music, Paysan Breton, french, french bookshop, London Fashion Week, London, boules tournament, Kitchen ustensils, e-changeons, wine tasting,

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