Film
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Centre of Beechwood Park (off Dunville Avenue)
Sat 30th Sept
Note: Cinemobile schedule may be subject to alteration. Please check with Festival Office on 085 742 7212 or at www.ranelagharts.org.
A mobile cinema showing films for all ages.
Cinemobile is a large truck which transforms into a 100 seater state of the art cinema, fully heated, air conditioned and with Dolby Surround Sound.
Film Schedule Cinemobile schedule may be subject to alteration. Please check in advance with festival office on 085 743 7212 or on www.ranelagharts.org
10am | €5
This is one of the most-loved and celebrated film musicals of all time from MGM, before a mass exodus to filmed adaptations of Broadway plays emerged as a standard pattern. It was made directly for film, and was not a Broadway adaptation.
12pm | €5
Lightning McQueen is a cocky, rookie race car. Speeding on his way to a big race, he crashes into Radiator Springs, destroying lots of the inhabitant’s belongings. In order to make up for what he did, the cocky roadster is sentenced to community service. Though he will do anything to get away from the work, McQueen must learn to respect and bond with the Radiator Springs inhabitants in order to get out of the town and back on the racetracks.
Come early for special 'Cars' face-painting session!
2.30pm | €5
Films that are 7 minutes or less in duration. A panel of well-known judges from the world of film-making, including Michael Dwyer, Redmond Morris, Philip King, Jane Doolan and Daniel O'Hara, has decided on the prize-winners and prizes will be awarded after the screenings. This is an exciting opportunity for the public to see the work of the film-makers of the future!
5.30pm | €8/€5 (students, unwaged and OAPs)
With full support programme and introduced by a special guest
This film is one of the most significant films made in Ireland in the silent period. Produced by Dr Isaac Eppel in 1926, its release coincided with the 10th anniversary of the Easter Rising. It is a love story played against the backdrop of the War of Independence which ingeniously incorporates newsreel footage of the Black and Tans and the burning of Cork within the dramatised narrative. For decades believed lost, the Irish Film Archive has now restored Irish Destiny – including the painstakingly hand-tinted sequences - to its original glory.
8pm | €8/€5 (students, unwaged and OAPs)
With full support programme
This film is a landmark in modern cinema, launching the French New Wave and turning François Truffaut from a critic into one of the world's most distinguished film makers.
12-year-old Antoine Doinel (Jean-Pierre Léaud ) lives in a tiny flat with his mother and stepfather, who are poor and generally inattentive. A ruthlessly domineering teacher makes life at school more unbearable than at home. His only escape from the shackles of everyday life is to bunk off school with his one friend, go to the fairground, or visit the cinema. His problems deepen as frustration, desperation, and loneliness lead to his expulsion from school and subsequent running away from home.
Come at 7.40 for a cheese and wine reception!
Further Info
2006 Programme
Please contact us for additional information
on events listed in this programme. We can be reached via email
info@ranelagharts.org
or by phone on 085 743 7212

