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New Films

Here We Are

Dir.: Nir Bergman
| 94 minutes

Aharon has devoted his life to raising his autistic son, Uri. But now, it might be time for Uri to live in a specialized home. Knowing that Uri is not ready for this separation, Aharon decides to run away with him. 

Tel Aviv

Dir.: Marat Parkhomovsky
| 81 minutes

Michael and Dana are a married couple that lives an inert life, typical for young people in the big city. An unexpected crisis shakes their world and forces them to make a reckoning of their relationship and life choices. 

Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn

Dir.: Radu Jude
| 106 minutes

Radu Jude’s new film, winner of the 2021 Berlinale Golden Bear, follows Emi, a schoolteacher whose reputation is threatened after a personal sex tape is uploaded onto the internet. Forced to meet the parents demanding her dismissal, Emi refuses to surrender.  For Adults 18+ only

The Duke

Dir.: Roger Michell
| 96 minutes

1961. 60-year-old Kempton steals a Goya painting from the National Gallery and asks for its return that the elderly will get free television. What happened next became the stuff of legend. Based on a true story, The Duke is the perfect British comedy – funny, heartfelt, witty.  

Flee

Dir.: Jonas Poher Rasmussen
| 90 minutes

Amin Nawabi, a 36-year-old high-achieving academic, grapples with a painful secret he has kept hidden for 20 years, one that threatens to derail the life he has built for himself. Retold through animation, Nawabi tells the story of his extraordinary journey as a child refugee from Afghanistan. 

One Second

Dir.: Zhang Yimou
| 104 minutes

An inmate who escapes from a labor camp in China during the Cultural Revolution is trying to get his hands on an old propaganda film for the most personal reasons. Zhang Yimou serves a love letter to cinema, operating as a human and moving drama.

Paris, 13th District

Dir.: Jacques Audiard
| 104 minutes

Palme D'Or winner Jacques Audiard (RUST AND BONE, DHEEPAN) returns with an adaptation of KILLING AND DYING, the graphic novel by Adrian Tomine, a modern tale of love and friendship, co-written with Léa Mysius and Céline Sciamma and filmed in a sumptuous black and white.

Unclenching the Fists

Dir.: Kira Kovalenko
| 97 minutes

In a former mining town in northern Ossetia, a place with no future, a young woman anxiously awaits the visit of her older brother – hoping he will help her escape the stifling hold of the family she loves as much as she rejects. Winner of the Cannes Film Festival Un Certain Regard Prize.

Let It Be Morning

Dir.: Eran Kolirin
| 101 minutes

Sami lives in Jerusalem. An invitation to his brother’s wedding forces him to return to the Arabic village where he grew up. When the village is put under lock-down by Israeli soldiers, chaos rises. Trapped in an unexpected situation, Sami watches as everything falls apart.