Following the summer break, the O.V. Great cinema in original language showcase is starting again, with the screening of Things to come by Mia Hansen-Løve.

Cinema Massimo – From Thursday 7 to Thursday 28 September 2017, Screen Three

Following the summer break, the showcase with films in original version subtitled in Italian is back again on Screen Three at the Cinema Massimo, with the screening of recently theatrically released films.

Admission: full price 7.50 €; Aiace, military, under18s and university students, over60s concessions 5.00 €.

Season-ticket for 10 admissions 30.00 €. Info: (+39) 011/8138574, programmazione@museocinema.it.

It is possible to organise matinee screenings for schools.

For information: 011/8138516-517, e-mail: didattica@museocinema.it.

 

PROGRAMME

 

Thu 7, at 4.00/6.30/8.45 p.m.

 

Mia Hansen-Løve

L’avenir (Things to come)

(France/Germany 2016, 100’, DCP, col., o.v. it. s/t.)

Nathalie and Heinz, both philosophy teachers, have been married for a long time and have two already adult children. One day, Heinz informs his wife he has fallen in love with someone else and this will be the beginning of a new life for Nathalie, coinciding with the first days of a long summer.

 

Thu 14, at 4.00/6.30/8.45 p.m.

 

Eleanor Coppola

Bonjour Anne (Paris can wait)

(Usa 2016, 92’, DCP, col., o.v. it. s/t.)

The wife of a successful Hollywood producer, albeit a little uncaring in his affections, Anne is at a crossroads in her life when she finds herself having to journey by car from Cannes to Paris with Jacques, her husband’s business partner. With Diane Lane and Alec Baldwin.

 

Thu 21, at 4.00/6.30/8.45 p.m.

 

William Oldroyd

Lady Macbeth

(Great Britain 2016, 88’, DCP, col., o.v. it. s/t)

No reference to Shakespeare’s opus, but to the novel Lady Macbeth of Mtensk by Nikolai Leskov. This first film by English filmmaker William Oldroyd is set in the 19th century English countryside, where Katherine, forced into a loveless marriage, begins a clandestine affair with a young labourer, which soon becomes an obsession.

 

Thu 28, at 4.00/6.30/8.45 p.m.

 

Stéphane Brizé

Une vie (A woman’s life)

(France/Belgium 2016, 119’, DCP, col., o.v. it. s/t.)

Normandy, 1819. Jeanne Le Perthuis des Vauds, a young overly-protected woman full of still childish dreams, emerges from the convent in which she has been educated and weds Julien de Lamare. The man will soon turn out to be brutal, stingy, unpredictable and a libertine. And Jeanne’s illusions will soon be crushed.