Winner of the Grand Prix at last year's Cannes Film Festival, Finnish director Juho Kuosmanen’s Compartment No. 6 is a warming and unexpected tale of adventure, self-discovery and human connection.
Ingmar Bergman's Cries and Whispers reaches its 50th anniversary as QFT welcomes it back to our screens. It is one of Bergman’s most resonant studies of familial bonds, solitude, suffering and the female psyche.
A masterwork of German Expressionism (and an unauthorised adaptation of Bram Stoker’s seminal novel Dracula), Nosferatu is the original vampire movie, and has lost none of its impact 100 years on.
QFT has partnered with the Sonorities Festival Belfast to present a free double-bill lunchtime screening of audiovisual work each day of the festival.
On 15 May 1959, the announcement of the major prizes at Cannes heralded the start of a new era when The 400 Blows, the directorial debut of 27-year-old François Truffaut, carried off the award for Best Director.
Based on the acclaimed story, "Foster" by Claire Keegan, The Quiet Girl is a complex and delicate coming-of-age drama that explores questions of family, neglect and loss.
Joachim Trier (Oslo, August 31st, Louder Than Bombs) returns with the Oscar-nominated The Worst Person in the World, a wistful and subversive romantic drama about the quest for love and meaning in contemporary Oslo.
From 6-27 April, we'll be partnering with the School of Natural and Built Environment to showcase CineArch Studio Exhibition: From Film Analysis to Architectural Design, part of Walled Cities 4.