Tower. A Bright Day.

This is a past event

BBFC Ratingf-rated FilmTower. A Bright Day.

CertificateNot Rated
Year2017
GenreDrama, Horror, Mystery, Thriller
Director(s)Jagoda Szelc
LanguagePolish
CountryPoland, Czech Republic
Running Time1HR 46MINS
Extra InfoSubtitled / Age: 15+
SeasonQFT50 Programme

NASZ EXPRESS, POLISH CULTURAL WEEK AND QFT50 PRESENT:

An idyllic countryside family reunion takes a turn for the sinister in this remarkable directorial debut.

In the glorious Polish summer, Mula is preparing for her daughter’s First Communion. But the arrival of Mula’s long-lost sister Kaja sends the entire family into a tailspin. Has Kaja returned to claim Mula’s daughter as her own? Or does she hide an even more sinister motive? As strange supernatural events sweep the community, Mula becomes increasingly suspicious about Kaja’s true nature.

The first feature from writer/director Jagoda Szelc has seen her hailed as the next Yorgos Lanthimos. Her debut genre-bending thriller earned the Best Screenplay and Best Debut Director awards at the Polish Film Festival in Gdynia. It’s a bold arrival for Szelc with a film that, we’re enigmatically warned, is "based on future events".

"Of all the Polish movies of the last decade, this one most successfully blends realistic, observational technique (astonishingly assured in a first-time director), with a natural feeling for the horror genre that makes Szelc an immediate peer to filmmakers such as Jennifer Kent (The Babadook), David Robert Mitchell (It Follows) and Julia Ducournau (Raw)." – ROGEREBERT.COM

This screening is presented in partnership with Nasz Express and Polish Cultural Week.

Special thanks to Media Move.



YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Midnight Movie All-Nighter

To celebrate QFT's 50th Birthday and our 18 year working relationship, Belfast Film Festival and QFT present an all-night 'midnight movie' event, from dusk ‘til dawn. This is your chance to stay up all night, eat badly and have your head fried…

More Info

QFT50 Talk: The European Film Industry in the New Millennium

While Europe has witnessed new records of film produced per year and a consistent development of policies and initiatives dedicated to cross-border collaborations, European films still struggle to travel past their national limits, and their “European-ness” seems obfuscated by the persistence of a national cinema framework.

More Info

An error occurred while loading this page