Friday June 24 to Thursday June 30, 2016

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FILMS SHOWING Friday June 24 to Thursday June 30
G

"Whit Stillman and Jane Austen are a match made in comedy rapture." - Peter Howell, Toronto Star

"I can’t choose whether “Love & Friendship” is the best Jane Austen film I have ever seen, or the best I could ever hope to see. Which is better, the cast’s elegant character work or the charm and wit of writer/director Whit Stillman’s overall control? Is it more dangerous to laugh yourself silly or applaud to the point of bruised palms?

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Game Of Thrones’ Emilia Clarke and Hunger Games’ Sam Claflin have great chemistry in adaptation of bestselling weeper

"This adaptation of Jojo Moyes’s best-seller (scripted by the novelist herself) might have the structure of a comfort-food weepie, but it’s a rom-com with brains. The movie manages to shift sensitively from laugh-out-loud moments to tear-jerking scenes, discussing euthanasia on the way. In this adaptation, the book’s millions of readers have nothing to worry about.

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

Dev Patel (Slumdog Millionaire) and Academy Award winner Jeremy Irons star in this inspirational biopic about Srinivasa Ramanujan, the early-20th century Indian mathematician whose groundbreaking theories revolutionized the field.

Special Co-presentation by Perimeter Institute and Princess Cinemas

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"Something between Shakespeare, Woody Allen and Noah Baumbach, a cautionary tale filled with Manhattanite wit and small moments that have the ring of truth." - Newsday

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"'The Nice Guys' is basically 'Chinatown' remade by Quentin Tarantino and starring foulmouthed, updated versions of Abbott and Costello, as played by two of the most recognizable male stars of our time." - Salon.com

"Russell Crowe is Healy, a genial strong-arm guy for hire, who works for himself. Ryan Gosling is Holland, an inept private investigator. One is smart and silent, the other talkative and not too bright. Their paths cross violently — but soon they realize that they share a common interest. They each need the other to solve a case that threatens them both.

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"A wickedly funny, unexpectedly moving satire of couple-fixated society." - Variety

“Greek writer-director Yorgos Lanthimos, whose first three films, including Oscar-nominee Dogtooth, have raised a cult following around the world, makes a practically effortless transition to the big leagues with his latest, the hilarious and haunting surreal parable The Lobster.

No screenings currently scheduled.

PG

"It's a fun and funny movie that delivers an honest portrayal of a mother-daughter relationship and the heartache that comes not just from losing someone but from moving on after they're gone." - L.A. Weekly

"Susan Sarandon is a star shining on her highest beams. Only a fool would want to miss those fireworks. So check out 'The Meddler,' in which Sarandon dives into her juiciest role in years as Marnie Minervini, a New Jersey widow who travels to Los Angeles to be near her screenwriter daughter Lori (the ever-amazing Rose Byrne). Why?

No screenings currently scheduled.

NR

I Am the Blues takes the audience on a musical journey through the swamps of the Louisiana Bayou and the juke joints of the Mississippi Delta. Visiting the last original blues devils, many in their 80s, still living in the American deep south and touring the Chitlin' Circuit

“The song I Am the Blues, recorded by Muddy Waters, concerns hard times and their heavy musical articulation. It is about the wounds and the mistreatment and the burden of the players who express the suffering.

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"A rich drama that is a mix of a cross-cultural gem, a funny fish-out-of-water comedy, and an appealing love story." - Frederic & Mary Ann Brussat, Spirituality and Practice

"'A Hologram for the King' has great energy, and also a languorous, lived-in quality. Adapted by Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run) from the Dave Eggers novel, the movie locates us in a place — Saudi Arabia — and makes us want to stay. It finds a rhythm and engages us in the struggle of the central character. It becomes a kind of world, and we’re glad to be in it.

No screenings currently scheduled.

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