Glasgow Film Festival (GFF) announces the full programme for its 2022 festival, which will run from 2 – 13 March at GFT and Cineworld Renfrew Street, as well as at partner cinemas across the UK and online. The 18th edition of the annual celebration of film will host 10 World premieres, 4 European premieres, 65 UK premieres and 13 Scottish premieres, encouraging audiences to return to the cinema and the film festival experience. GFF will also host a very exclusive preview screening of the first episode of Season 6 of STARZPLAY’s worldwide smash-hit Outlander and welcome Glasgow-born creative force Armando Iannucci with a very special live ‘In Conversation’ event, looking back over his wide-ranging, multi-media career distinguished by his brilliant feel for character, unforgettable dialogue and razor-sharp wit.
For the first time ever, GFF will partner with cinemas across the UK to simultaneously screen some of its biggest premieres. The opening gala UK premiere of The Outfit, the closing gala UK premiere of Murina, plus a special International Women’s Day gala UK premiere of Happening on 8 March, will show on big screens throughout the country, from Stornoway to Bristol via Edinburgh, Manchester, Dundee, Sheffield and London. A selection of festival highlights, including Scottish director Ruth Paxton’s feature debut A Banquet and will screen both in GFT and online via the Glasgow Film At Home platform.
World, UK and Scottish Premieres
GFF is your first chance to catch a host of highly anticipated new releases on the big screen. Direct from Sundance, GFF will host the European premiere of Jono McLeod’s My Old School. Starring Alan Cumming, the docudrama uncovers the real-life story of Bearsden Academy school pupil, 17-year-old Brandon Lee, who in 1995 was unmasked as 30-something former pupil, Brian MacKinnon, who returned to his old school under a new identity to retake his exams after failing medical school. MacLeod, who went to school with MacKinnon in the 1990s, uses interviews and archive footage to retrace the steps of the boy he knew as Brandon. Other European premieres include McCurry: The Pursuit of Colour, an exploration of the unforgettable, haunting images captured by renowned photojournalist Stephen McCurry; Stefan Forbes’ Hold Your Fire, a riveting true crime story of a botched robbery, a murdered policeman, a media scrum and a hostage situation in 1970s Brooklyn and Shin Su-won’s love letter to South Korean female film directors Hommage.
UK premieres include Audrey Diwan’s timely and urgent Golden Lion Award-winning Happening; Thomas Robsahm’s synth-pop-doc a-ha The Movie, charting the meteoric rise of Norway’s first music superstars; Benedetta star Virginie Efira giving a magnetic performance in the Hitchcock-esque Madeleine Collins; Oscar-nominated directors Julie Cohen and Betsy West (RBG, My Name Is Pauli Murray) celebrating another extraordinary woman in Julia, a deliciously entertaining portrait of the legendary chef and television celebrity Julia Child; First time directors Maia Kenworthy and Elena Sánchez Bellot looking behind the scenes at the human dramas that fuel Extinction Rebellion’s fight for the planet’s survival in Rebellion and Indiwe Matshikiza’s debut, One Take Grace, following the enigmatic Mothiba Grace Bapela, an actor and domestic worker as she retells the stories of her life, complete with startling visuals.
GFF will see the first ever big screen outing of Skint, a series of powerful, heartfelt monologues commissioned for the BBC and now showing as a feature-length compendium. Skint brings together a wealth of talent on both sides of the camera, with a creative team including Peter Mullan, Jenni Fagan, Cora Bissett and Derry Girls creator Lisa McGee, to tell vivid, heartrending personal stories of living with poverty, homelessness and how it is used to define who you are. Other GFF World premieres include the freewheeling documentary Wake Up Punk from Joe Corré – the son of Malcolm McLaren and Vivienne Westwood who in 2016 burnt millions of pounds worth of punk era memorabilia in protest – who questions whether the counterculture legacy has been commodified and distorted and Doug Aubrey’s hybrid feature, Legacy of an Invisible Bullet, which uses direct storytelling, technology and observational filmmaking to delve into the collapsed time universe of a cancer patient and war correspondent as he faces his demons, his archive and tries to survive.
GFF is thrilled to welcome back the double act of writer-actor-producer Jonas Chernick and writer-director-producer Jeremy LaLonde, whose James Vs. His Future Self was one of the sleeper hits of GFF20, with the World premiere of Ashgrove, a mesmerising new feature following a scientist played by Amanda Brugel (The Handmaid’s Tale) as she desperately searches for a cure for the pandemic that is threatening both the world’s water supply and the survival of the human race.
Some of the most talked-about films on the festival circuit will also be getting their first Scottish big screen outing at GFF22, including Benedetta, Paul Verhoeven’s outrageous saga of a 17th century nun’s forbidden affair with another woman, and Joachim Trier’s freewheeling anti-romcom, The Worst Person In The World, starring a dazzling Renate Reinsve as woman trying to figure out her place in an unpredictable world.
Scottish Talent
Alongside My Old School, by Scottish director Jono McLeod, GFF22 is thrilled to showcase a range of Scottish talent both behind and in front of the camera. GFF favourite Robbie Fraser (Final Ascent, Pictures From Afghanistan) reunites with legendary Scottish war photographer David Pratt in the World premiere of Pictures From Iraq, a fascinating, highly personal journey into the recent history of a war-torn land.
Young Glasgow-based filmmaker Paul Morris presents the World premiere of his micro-budget Hamilton-filmed debut feature, Angry Young Men, a riotous comedy following local young gang, ‘The Bramble Boys’, defending their home turf against rivals. There’s the first big screen outing for Lizzie MacKenzie’s documentary, The Hermit of Treig, a warm and heartfelt portrait of her friend, Ken Smith, who has spent the last four decades living off-grid in a log cabin near Loch Treig, ‘the lonely loch’. Scottish director Ruth Paxton makes her long-anticipated feature debut with A Banquet, combining family psychodrama with an apocalyptic nightmare as a new widow tries to raise her teenage daughters alone. Martyn Robertson’s thrillingly shot documentary Ride the Wave chronicles the 14-year-old Scottish surfing champion, Ben Larg, as he prepares to surf the one of the biggest and coldest waves on Earth, around County Sligo. Filmed in Scotland and starring a Scottish cast, Nobody Has to Know, directed by Bouli Lanners, is a touching romance that follows a stroke patient (Lanners) as he exiles himself to a remote Scottish island with amnesia. Can his ex, played by Michelle Fairley (Game of Thrones), help him piece together his memory and the secret relationship they had together?
Female Filmmakers
GFF22 celebrates female filmmaking talent from around the world, from brand new UK premieres to a rare retrospective of Norway’s first woman director, Edith Carlmar. Erin Vassilopoulos’ stylish noir thriller, Superior, makes its UK premiere at GFF22 and follows a woman on the run who hides out in her childhood home with her polar opposite, her estranged sister. Edinburgh-based filmmaker, Iciar Bollain (Yuli, Rosa’s Wedding) returns to GFF with her latest film, Maixabal, which explores the idea of restorative justice when a widow comes face-to-face with the men who murdered her husband 10 years previously. Mia Hansen-Love’s relationship drama, Bergman Island, will have its Scottish premiere at GFF. Filmed on Ingmar Bergman’s island home, Faro, and starring Tim Roth and Vicky Krieps as filmmakers, the legendary director’s presence soon makes itself known as they work on their next projects. The previously announced Edith Carlmar Retrospective celebrates the life and work of Norway’s first female feature film director, who also directed the very first Norwegian film noir: her debut, Death is a Caress (1949). The programme is comprised of four films: the madcap comedy caper Fools in the Mountains (1957), which is still one of the most popular Norwegian films of all time; the illuminating portrait of addiction within a marriage, The Disappearance of a Young Wife (1953); and her candid final feature, the romantic drama, The Wayward Girl (1959) which starred Liv Ullmann in her first film role as a young woman who runs away to a remote cabin with her boyfriend, to his parents’ disapproval.
Audience Award, Sponsored by Caledonian MacBrayne
Continuing with the theme of women filmmakers, the prestigious Audience Award – the only award given out at GFF and voted for by our most important guests, the festival audience – returns with seven outstanding films, six of which are directed by women. The shortlist includes Charline Bourgeois-Taquet’s debut feature, the witty romantic tale, Anaïs In Love. Cecile Ducrocq’s first film, Her Way, stars Laure Calamy (Call My Agent) as a sex worker doing all she can to create a better life for her son. Bertha Basholli’s Hive was an award-winner at Sundance and follows the inhabitants of a village that was the site of the Krusha Massacres during the Kosovo War, and their attempts to move on without their loved ones. Set in Mexico and inspired by a true story, Teodora Mihai’s gripping thriller, La Civil, explores what a parent can do to save their child after they’ve been kidnapped. Elie Grappe’s Olga, follows up-and-coming teenage gymnast, Olga (Anastasia Budiashkina) as she leaves to train for the Olympics in Switzerland shortly before her home country begins to experience political upheaval. Exploring themes of exile and the strain put on young athletes, the film brings the personal and the political together in this tense, yet subtle drama. Mob mentality meets the supernatural in Arsalan Amiri’s eerie, yet funny, Zalava, which sees townsfolk suspect a demon is nearby and find themselves caught between a local shamen, who claims to be able to exorcise the demon, and the local sergeant, who prefers a different approach. Lizzie MacKenzie’s The Hermit of Treig is also nominated for the Audience Award, which is sponsored by Caledonian MacBrayne.
Arrow Video FrightFest
We’re delighted to welcome back FrightFest for another weekend of thrills, chills and spills! This year’s 12-strong programme features the world premiere of FrightFest veteran Chris Sivertson’s (The Lost, I Know Who Killed Me) supernatural thriller, Monstrous, starring Christina Ricci as a traumatised mother fleeing with her seven-year-old son from her abusive ex-husband. However, their escape is short-lived when they realise that something else has found them. Other premieres include Sebastian Godwin’s debut, the atmospheric chiller, Homebound, about an estranged father’s attempt to reconnect with his children that goes dark when he realises their mother is missing and the children are acting very, very strangely; Connor McMahon’s (Dead Meat, Stitches) latest, the wonderfully silly Let the Wrong One In, starring Anthony Head, combines rude humour, a Dublin vampire gang and two brothers, one human, one vampire, trying to survive it all without killing each other; Harold J. Ford’s (Never Let Me Go) The Ledge, which sees a lone woman climber (Brittany Ashworth) fight to survive on a notorious mountain face as she is watched and goaded by a group of four men who killed her friend and are intent on killing her too.
African Stories
GFF22 will focus on an entire continent this year with African Stories – a collection of nine contemporary films celebrating the people, history and culture in some of the 54 countries in Africa. Robert Coe and Warwick Ross’ feel-good documentary Blind Ambition follows the first Zimbabwean sommeliers to compete at the World Blind Tasting Championships in France. Nabil Ayouch’s Casablanca Beats is a joyous salute to the power of music to transform lives in Morocco, while the feature documentary, Once Upon A Time in Uganda, directed by Cathryne Czubek and Hugo Perez, charts Isaac Nabwana’s very impressive mission to create an action movie industry in Uganda. Pete Murimi’s I Am Samuel follows young gay Kenyan couple Samuel and Alex as they commit to each other despite the danger and hardship they face. Elsewhere, Sabizanga, Sarah Maldoror’s film adaptation of José Laundino Vieira’s formerly banned anti-colonialist novel, gives a glimpse into life in Angola before the revolution in the 1970s. Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s multi award-winning Djibouti-set The Gravedigger’s Wife is a touching portrait of a man trying to raise money for his wife’s life-saving surgery.
Winds of Change: Cinema in ‘62
Another previously announced strand is our ever-popular free morning screenings of cinema’s best cult classics and modern masterpieces, and this year, we’re focussing on films released in 1962. An incredible year for cinema, some of the films on the programme include Cape Fear, Dr. No, Lonely Are the Brave, The Manchurian Candidate, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance and To Kill a Mockingbird.
By embracing innovations around digital access to film through a hybrid format, GFF is ensuring their loyal audiences, across the UK, will be able to be part of the action and enjoy a diverse programme of films no matter where they are.’