This is the last set of the films available. This will help you choose the subjects that may interest you.
there are also shorts (4-5 films )shown at one ticket time. They are supposed to be good this year. You may want to pick at least one.
1. 1,000 Times Goodnight
Her work, or her family? The choice seems obvious.
A Thousand Times Goodnight tells the story of Rebecca (Juliette Binoche), a wartime
photojournalist who is torn between a passion for her dangerous job and her loving but
worried family. When her husband and daughters can no longer bear the stress of her
career, she is given an ultimatum.
2. Alive Inside
This inspirational and emotional story left audiences humming, clapping, and cheering at the 2014
Sundance Film Festival.
Alive Inside is a joyous, cinematic exploration of music’s capacity to reawaken our souls and uncover
the deepest parts of our humanity. Filmmaker Michael Rossato-Bennet chronicles the astonishing
experiences of individuals around the country who have been revitalized through the simple
experience of listening to music. His camera reveals the uniquely human connection we find in music
and how its healing power can triumph where prescription medication falls short.
3. Cannibal
A struggle between the two primordial instincts: to love and to kill
Carlos is the most prestigious tailor in Granada, but he’s also a murderer in the shadows. He feels
no remorse, no guilt, until Nina comes into his life and love awakens.
4. Finding Vivian Maier
Maier’s strange and riveting life are revealed through never before seen photographs.
Finding Vivian Maier is the critically acclaimed documentary about a mysterious nanny who secretly took over
100,000 photographs that were hidden in storage lockers, only to be discovered decades later, purely by accident.
Maier is now considered one of the 20th century’s greatest photographers.
5. Human Capital
An exploration of the unhappiness of rich and poor alike in a society that measures a person’s value in
terms of euros.
Based on Stephen Amidon’s novel set in moneyed Connecticut, Human Capital smoothly relocates to
Italy’s wealthy north in an engrossing, if anxiety-provoking, tale about two families whose destinies are
tied together by a road accident. Though director Paolo Virzii is best known for intelligent comedies,
there is very little to laugh about in this anguishing thriller set in a downward-spiraling economy.
6. Living Is Easy with Eyes Closed
A quirky, cross-country quest, based on a true story.
In 1960’s Spain, a high-school English/Latin teacher Antonio, drives to Almeria in hopes of meeting his
hero, John Lennon. Along the way, Antonio picks up two runaways. The movie’s title, Living is Easy
With Eyes Closed, comes from a line in Lennon’s song “Strawberry Fields Forever,” which he wrote
while filming How I Won the War in Almeria.
7. Mood Indigo
The love story you’ve never heard.
Set in a charmingly surreal Paris, Colin (Romain Duris) is a wealthy bachelor whose hobbies include
developing a cocktail-making piano and devouring otherworldly dishes prepared by his trusty chef
Nicolas. When Colin meets Chloe (Audrey Tatou), he suddenly finds himself plunging headfirst into
romance. After Chloe is plagued by a mysterious illness, Colin finds an unexpected cure.
8. Fight Church
Can you really love your neighbor as yourself and then punch him in the face?
Fight Church is a feature documentary about the confluence of Christianity and Mixed Martial Arts. The
film follows several pastors and fighters in a quest to reconcile their faith with a sport that some
consider violent and barbaric. Faith is tried and questions are raised.
9. No Problem! Six Months with the Barefoot Grandmamas
A film of empowerment
This film looks into the Barefoot College in Tonia, India, where hundreds of older women are being
trained to become solar engineers. Focusing on the class of 2011, the film follows the older students
as they overcome adversity and illiteracy in pursuit of one dream: to become solar engineers. Through
the stories of these women, a fascinating tale of sustainability, demystification, and social inclusion
unfolds.
10. Living Stars
“You gotta dance like there’s nobody watching” -William W. Purkey
Across Argentina, people young and old are dancing to their favorite hits. A dentist sambas around his office to
Lionel Richie’s "All Night Long." A teen performs a carefully constructed series of ballet moves on a playground
to David Guetta’s "Titanium." A young boy does his best Michael Jackson moves to "Beat It" while his dad fixes
their car in the garage. Intoxicating and infectious, Living Stars might just be the most fun you have in a movie
theatre this year.