This gripping story opens with the steps that genius computer programmer David takes to isolate himself from other people, while building a super-computer off grid.
Stylists at a Dublin hair salon become accidental vigilantes and community heroes when they take on the gang members and gentrifiers threatening their community in writer-director Rachel Carey's black comedy.
Drive My Car steers its way back to QFT for an encore with four Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, in the passenger seat. Inspired by Haruki Murakami’s short story, Ryusuke Hamaguchi takes us on an unpredictable and self-revelatory journey in this serene yet riveting drama.
Winner of the Un Certain Regard Jury Prize at this year’s Cannes, Sebastian Meise’s searing prison drama is a captivating chronicle of queer history.
A woman takes it upon herself to care for her twin brother while he fights cancer, putting her marriage at risk, in Stéphanie Chuat and Véronique Reymond's German language Swiss drama starring Nina Hoss (Barbara, Phoenix).
The Alpinist is an intimate documentary of a visionary climber who follows the path of his own passion, despite the heaviest of possible consequences.
Wes Anderson’s delightful, star-studded homage to journalism and literary magazines is a feast for the eyes and a whip-smart comic delight.
QFT presents the debut Irish exhibition of TOKYO JAZZ JOINTS, an ongoing photographic project, created by photographer Philip Arneill and broadcaster James Catchpole, which since 2015 has documented a hidden, rapidly vanishing musical subculture.