Welcome to the 2008/09 season of the Keynsham Film Works.

Now in our fourth year we have a programme of ten films for the 2008/09 season. Running from September '08 to May '09 (with the additional music festival film in July '09), we hope you will enjoy the screenings and invite your friends to come along too.

Anyone who has joined and is waiting for membership cards - please just come along on the first night and we'll have everything ready for you - we don't post them out (saving costs) and any cheques as yet un-banked will be banked in the week following the first night.

?Our aim is to bring films to Keynsham that have either been overlooked by the mainstream cinemas completely, or had very short runs and could have easily been missed.

The films are held at the Fry Club on the Cadbury factory grounds. We will possibly be moving in the 09/10 season due to changes at Cadbury’s, so if anyone has any ideas for a new venue please come forward!
Keynsham Film Works is a non-profit making society funded by membership subscriptions. The films are shown on the first Thursday of each month at 7.45pm, doors open at 7.15pm.

As a member you can come to any of the films in the season with no pre-booking necessary. There is free parking, wheelchair access and a bar. The bar will remain open after the screening, please stay for as long as you like to discuss the films - and don’t be put off by the film equipment being put away! Membership is available to anyone of 16 and above and there is seating for 120 people.

A change in film fees and the terms under which they are hired, along with other price rises, have put our running costs up again this season. To meet the price increase we have had to increase our membership to £27, which then gives you free admittance to all the season’s films. Part membership of £20 is for those not sure if they can make it to all the films, and carries an extra charge of £1.50 per film viewed. Non-members pay £4.50 on the night. Full members are guaranteed a seat up to ten minutes prior to the start of the film, thereafter it’s first come first served. Due to circumstances beyond our control films may change without notice.
For more information please contact the Town Council on 0117 986 8683.

Due to circumstances beyond our control films may change without notice.

Detailed below are the films for the 07 - 08 season. Click on any film title for more information, or scroll down the page to read all the reviews.

September 4th 2008 Atonement Fry Club
October 2nd 2008 The Diving Bell and Butterfly Fry Club
November 6th 2008 No Country for Old Men Fry Club
December 4th 2008 Pather Panchali Fry Club
January 8th 2009 Juno Fry Club
February 5th 2009 The Counterfeiters Fry Club
March 5th 2009 Son of Rambow Fry Club
April 2nd 2009 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days Fry Club
May 7th 2009 Happy Go Lucky Fry Club
July 2nd 2009 Hairspray in partnership with Keynsham Music Festival
Fry Club & Conference Centre, in the grounds of Cadbury's chocolate factory, Somerdale, Keynsham, Bristol BS31 2AU

September 4
Atonement
7.45 - 9.48
Joe Wright / UK / 2007 / 15
with Keira Knightley & James McAvoy

A tragic love story. The England of 1935 is evoked in detail at the start of this stylish adaptation of a complex Ian McEwan novel, when a developing love affair between a couple from different social groups is thwarted.

The settings include a 1930's country house
and World War 2 Dunkirk in 1940. The lasting consequences of a single lie on a family are depicted.

Themes include the value of imagination and a child's perceptions of adult behaviour.

October 2
THE DIVING BELL & BUTTERFLY ( Sub-titled)
7.45 - 9.37
Dir: Julian Schnabel / France / 2007 / 12A
with Mathieu Amalric & Emmanuelle Seigner

A brilliant, uncomfortable and unrelenting portrayal of the fate of 43 year old Dominique Bauby, editor of Elle magazine, who suffered a catastrophic stroke which left him paralysed.
He ‘wrote’ the memoir on which the film is based by blinking to convey each letter. We see not only what Bauby can see, but what he thinks, as we learn of his stirring, profound reflection on his own life before his stroke. The film conveys sadness but has a spiritual charge running through it which is exhilarating viewing. Arguably one of the great films of this decade, so far.

November 6
NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN
7.45 - 9.47
Dir: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen / USA / 2007 / 15
with Tommy Lee Jones & Javier Bardem

In rural Texas, welder and hunter Llewelyn Moss discovers the remains of several drug runners who have all killed each other in an exchange gone violently wrong. Rather than report the discovery to the police, Moss decides to simply take the two million dollars present for himself.

This puts the psychopathic killer, Anton Chigurh, on his trail as he dispassionately murders nearly every rival, bystander and even employer in his pursuit of his quarry and the money. As Moss desperately attempts to keep one step ahead, the blood from this hunt begins to flow behind him with relentlessly growing intensity as Chigurh closes in.

Meanwhile, the laconic Sherrif Ed Tom Bell blithely oversees the investigation even as he struggles to face the sheer enormity of the crimes he is attempting to thwart.

December 4
PATHER PANCHALI ( Sub-titled)
7.45 - 9.38
Dir: Satyajit Ray / India / 1955
with Kanu Bannerjee & Subir Bannerjee

One of World cinemas all time classic films and for decades in critics all time top ten film lists. Ray’s first film, made on a limited budget and mostly using local people with no previous acting experience, tells the story of Apu, a little boy growing up in a poor rural family in Bengal, India.

It is austere, but worth the effort, and beautiful, as it portrays the hardships of life. It does this through Apu’s eyes and includes some of the most memorable images in cinema. The atmosphere is greatly assisted by Ravi Shankar’s music score. Via its specific setting Ray depicts universal truths.

A film to see again and again.

January 8
JUNO
7.45 - 9.21
Dir: Jason Reitman / USA / 2007 / 15
with Ellen Page, Michael Cera & Jennifer Garner

One of the brightest, funniest comedies of the year. Ellen Page stars as Juno, a witty teenage girl whose boredom doesn’t lead her to the mall. Instead, she makes a one-time trip into the arms of her best friend Paulie. When Juno discovers that she’s pregnant she’s forced to grow up fast as she tries to find adoptive parents for her quickly growing child. JUNO has many qualities - Page’s award-worthy performance, a pitch-perfect soundtrack, excellent direction from Jason Reitman - but it’s the screenwriting debut of writer Cody Diablo that makes this such a winning film.

February 5
THE COUNTERFEITERS ( Sub-titled)
7.45 - 9.23
Dir: Stefan Ruzowitzky / Austria / 2007 / 15
with Karl Markovics, August Diehl & Devid Striesow

Best Foreign Language Film at the ‘08 Oscars, the ‘Counterfeiters’ is the true story of the largest counterfeiting operation in history. In 1936, the Nazis intention is to flood the British and American economies with fake currency. Enlisted to assist were any concentration camp inmates with the right skills - among them master forger, gambler and playboy Salomon "Sally" Sorowitsch.

He is at first energized by his task and by the treatment that his status affords him. However, as the war grinds on, he is faced with a moral dilemma, and must decide whether his actions, which could prolong the war and risk the lives of fellow prisoners, are ultimately the right ones. What is his solution?

March 5
SON OF RAMBOW
7.45 - 9.20
Dir: Garth Jennings / UK / 2007 / 12A
with Will Poulter & Bill Milner

This film tells the story of two young boys in 1980's Britain who are both excluded from school for different reasons. They are brought together by the idea of remaking the first Rambo film, 'First Blood', using a VHS camcorder of the time. Both boys have no father in their lives. One has left home and the other has tragically died young. Rambo is their surrogate father as they play in the scrubland and disused factories near their homes. It is a wonderful and moving recreation of the age when children had more freedom and nature took the place of today's video games. This film was well received at its screening at the National Film Theatre and has received the highest audience ratings at other screenings.?

April 7
4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS & 2 DAYS ( Sub-titled)
7.45 - 9.38
Dir: Cristian Mungiu / Romania / 2007 / 15
with Anamaria Marinca & Vlad Ivanov

4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days firmly establishes Romania as a major force in early 21st century world cinema. This intense drama is set in Bucharest in the mid-1980's during Ceaucescu's dictatorship. In a country where abortion is outlawed, a young college student Gabita, finds herself pregnant. She enlists the help of her roommate Otilia and the pair connect with a black market doctor, Bebe, to solve the problem - but of course, it's not that simple. The resulting 24 hours reveals a harrowing descent into a world in which the possibility of tragedy lurks around every corner. The decision to film every scene in a hyper-documentary style, with long, unbroken takes, raises the tension to nearly unbearable proportions.

May 7
HAPPY-GO-LUCKY
7.45 - 9.43
Dir: Mike Leigh / UK / 2008 / 15A
with Sally Hawkins & Alexis Zegerman

The latest film from Director Mike Leigh. He has again used his usual techniques for improvisation by the actors, but the atmosphere of this film is completely different from the gloomy Vera Drake which was shown in our 2007/8 season. Sally Hawkins gives a wonderful performance as Poppy, a teacher who is upbeat and full of life. She received a Silver Bear award for the film at the Berlin film festival. One critic has suggested that it is a welcome change from so many recent gloomy films. Instead you will leave feeling transformed and happy!

July 2 - in partnership with Keynsham Music Festival
HAIRSPRAY
7.45 - 9.32
Dir: Adam Shankman / USA / 2007 / PG
with Nikki Blonsky, John Travolta & Michelle Pfeiffer

Originally written and directed by filmmaker John Waters in 1988, this newest adaptation proves to be yet another enjoyable incarnation. Set in 1960’s Baltimore, the story follows a plump young girl, Tracy Turnblad, on an amazing journey as her dream of dancing on the popular Corny Collins Show becomes a reality. However producer Velma Von Tussle and her daughter Amber are unhappy with Tracy and the talented black dancers that make up “Negro Day” and are determined to rid them from the show. Thus begins a war of talent and a battle for justice, with those in favour of integration meeting many obstacles along the way. The film contains quirky humour, flashy costumes, over-the-top performances and wacky hairstyles!


If you would like more information about Keynsham Filmworks please telephone 0117 986 8683 or email filmworks@keynsham-at-art.co.uk.

For more information about Bath Film Festival visit www.bathfilmfestival.org or telephone 01225 401149.