All of Us Strangers and Poor Things will screen alongside premieres of Irish features and fresh documentaries
All of Us Strangers: Paul Mescal and Andrew Scott in Andrew Haigh’s film. Photograph: Chris Harris/Searchlight Pictures/20th Century Studios, which overlap next month, have announced equally strong programmes. November is now confirmed as one of the juiciest months for cineastes at either end of the island.’s Poor Things, recent winner of the Golden Lion at Venice, opens Cork on November 9th and then closes Belfast two days later.
Cork pulls something of a coup with the Irish premiere of Jeff Nichols’s The Bikeriders. Launched at Telluride, the period flick from the director of Take Shelter and Loving stars Austin Butler, Jodie Comer and Tom Hardy – cool cast – in a drama set around bikers in the United States in the 1960s. Also coming to Cork from Telluride is Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers. Paul Giamatti has received much praise as a schoolteacher stuck minding oddball posh kids during the Christmas break.
The folk at Belfast also have the films that finished in first and second place at Cannes. Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall, winner of the Palme d’Or, brings notable tension to a fantastically nuanced courtroom yarn. Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest, winner of the Grand Prix, achieves icy distance in its focus on the domestic life of the Nazis who ran Auschwitz. Sandra Hüller, on an extraordinary roll, appears in both pictures.
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