This week's new film events
onedotzero , London Projection mapping? Granimator? Holotronica? Dogboarding? The digital moving image festival presents yet another lineup of next-level music videos, graphics, animation and artwork, augmented by dauntingly up-to-date terminology. Some of it is awesomely futuristic, but much is actually fluffy and friendly – especially the new family oriented Sprites strand, and the fantastically silly Dogboarding. Specialities include Adam Buxton on Björk's music video career, a new documentary on Nasa (the all-star music project, not the space agency), bracing audio-visual installations, and a workshop on projection mapping (using buildings as cinematic backdrops, but you knew that, didn't you?). onedotzero_adventures in motion 2011 preview from onedotzero on Vimeo . BFI Southbank, SE1, Wed to 27 Nov The All Night Bad Movie Experience , Nottingham Ever come out of a movie and thought, "That's two hours of my life I'll never get back"? Well, why not make it a whole night you'll never get back, with a quadruple bill of utter crud? These aren't just any bad movies, of course: only the most spectacularly, transcendently awful car-crash cinema has made the grade. There's monosyllabic mulleted mayhem in 1980s sub-actioner Samurai Cop; Patrick Swayze trowels on the cheese in the nonsensical Road House; while Tommy Wiseau's amateurish vanity project The Room is the shape of crap to come. These three films and trailers of even worse movies play along with Pieces in Nottingham, before getting screened alongside Hospital Massacre at the Edinburgh Cameo (3 Dec). You've never had it so bad! Broadway, Sat London Latin American Film Festival Away from the big hitters of Brazil and Argentina, there's a continent's worth of cinema to be discovered here, possibly the only place in the country where you can hope to see a film from Guatemala (Holy Cow, which really is about a cow) or the Dominican Republic (Hermaphrodite, which really is about a hermaphrodite). The biggest draws are probably political thriller Death In High Contrast – the first film by Venezuela's César Bolívar in 10 years – and metropolitan Argentinian comedy Strawberry Lips, while documentaries on Cuban cigars, Inca life and biofuels should open your eyes. Various venues, to 27 Nov Premiere Japan & London Iranian Film Festival , London These two Asian film festivals could hardly be more different. Japan's offers urban ennui in the latest from Shinji Aoyama (Tokyo Park) and Yazaki Hitoshi (Sweet Little Lies), plus epic anime and the first documentary on the post-tsunami landscape (Sketches Of Mujo). Iran's is coloured by political oppression, particularly in This Is Not A Film, Jafar Panahi's account of his own persecution and impending prison sentence (smuggled out of Iran in a cake). A talk and a live performance accompany two musical documentaries from Panahi's co-director Mojtaba Mirtahmasb, exploring the country's restrictions on female singers and rock music. Premiere Japan, Barbican Screen, EC2, Fri to 27 Nov; LIFF, Apollo Cinema, SW1, Ciné Lumière, SW7, to 26 Nov
Market Reactions
Price reaction data not yet calculated.
Available after full seed + reaction pipeline runs.
Similar Historical Events(9 found)
MarketReplay Insight
9 similar events found. Price reaction data will appear here after the reaction pipeline runs.