It's a particularly great time for film-lovers in Singapore
So many exciting screenings and film festivals to look forward to!
Hot on the heels of Sundays with French Cinema, Cinewa is The Projector’s new Sunday film segment and a prelude to this year's Japanese Film Festival Singapore 2016. They’ll be featuring titles like Guilty of Romance, a film about a murder in a love hotel district, Kamome Diner about an establishment that only seems to attract customers with problems, Lesson of the Evil about a model teacher at a private high school with a menacing secret beneath his appearance. Jul 17-Aug 28
Udta Punjab is a new Bollywood crime-thriller film about a rockstar, doctor, policeman and migrant labourer who are all connected through the rampant drug trafficking and abuse in the rural Indian stage of Punjab. The film faced censors back in India for depicting wayward youth and social degradation, and involved the Supreme Court stepping in to tell the censor board to back off (what a novel idea!). Check out Golden Village for screenings.
In case you missed it, the National Gallery's Southeast Asian film series Painting with Light is still going strong, with a line-up of the region's "best cinematic stories told over the past 100 years" screened the first weekend of every month. The series pairs an old film with a recent one on Saturday and Sunday respectively. On August 6 & 7, you can catch 1967 Malaysian film Sesudah Suboh by the legendary P Ramlee and 2003 mockumentary The Big Durian by Amir Muhammed, dealing with racial tensions in KL. It's only $10 per film. Full line-up and details here.
Sure, spending $30 to see an old movie without air-conditioning seems a bit much, but that's not going to stop you (and us) from catching a movie or two when Films at the Fort, returns to Fort Canning. Along with a nice reclining cushion (not included in cost of ticket), you can buy gourmet fare lobster rolls, pizzas, burgers and ice cream sandwiches from their food stations. You can't bring your own refreshments in, but there will be wines, beers and ciders on sale, too. The line-up has some nostalgic classics like Forrest Gump and Ferris Bueller's Day Off, along with more recent harmless dramas like The Many Who Knew Infinity and Brooklyn, more serious stuff like Amy and Mon Roi, along with comedies like Anchorman. See the full list of movies here. Aug 11-21
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