Play Poland goes fourth

Festival highlights include Ida and Life Feels Good.

by Amber Wilkinson

Agata Trzebuchowska and Agata Kulesza in Ida
Agata Trzebuchowska and Agata Kulesza in Ida Photo: Music Box Films
The fourth edition of the Play Poland touring festival kicks off on Thursday, October 9.

The festival - which will visit Edinburgh, Glasgow, Belfast, Birmingham, Sunderland, Belfast and Aberfeldy - will celebrate the best of recent Polish cinema as well as hosting art exhibitions and short film showcases. Internationally, the festival also has a presence in Ottawa, New York and Oslo.

Among this year's feature films are Pawel Pawlikowski's multi-award winning Ida, about an orphaned novice nun who discovers a living relative and travels into her family's past. Other highlights include Life Feels Good (Chce sie zyc), Maciej Pieprzyca's retelling of the remarkable true story of a boy's struggle to communicate with others after being born with cerebral palsy. Featuring a standout performance from Dawid Ogrodnik as the central character Mateusz, Pieprzyca brings a clear-eyed intelligence to a story built on resilience and humour rather than schmaltz. Pieprzyca will be in attendance at the festival.

Other films in the line-up include Tomasz Woszczynski's Floating Skyscrapers (Plynace wiezowce) - about the flowering of gay identity in Catholic Poland - and psychological Hardkor Disko, directed by Krzysztof Skonieczny.

There will be short film showcases from the Krakow Film Foundation, Munk Studio, Lodz Film School and animation studio Se-Ma-For among others and exhibitions of Polish film posters and Through The Director's Eye - a photography show comprising photos from student directors.

The feature film line-up is as follows:

For further details of the festival and screening times, visit the official site.

Share this with others on...
News

About a bear Iain Gardner on immigration, community and A Bear Named Wojtek

Tests of love Dennis Iliadis and his star Konstantina Messini on twisty meet-the-parents thriller Buzzheart

You must remember this Loïc Espuche on childhood revulsion, shyness, shame, kissing and Yuck!

Lights and shadows Dustin Pittman with Ed Bahlman on Alan J Pakula, James Ivory, Brian De Palma and Jerry Schatzberg

Innocence lost Sebastián Parra R on growing up too fast and world building in Seed Of The Desert

UK hopes ride high as Oscar International Film shortlist announced Ireland also makes the grade

More news and features

Interact

More competitions coming soon.


DJDT

Versions

Time

Settings from settings.local

Headers

Request

SQL queries from 1 connection

Templates (11 rendered)

Cache calls from 2 backends

Signals