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on February 24, 2020 at 10:17:17 pm
 
                                                   

 

Chorlton Film Institute is a version of a Guerilla Cinema group aimed at making arthouse film accessible in and around Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester.

 

Next Film

 

Mrs Lowry and Son (cert PG)

 

Thursday 19th March 2020

Doors open 8.10pm  

Film Starts 8.30pm

 

Entrance £5 - no membership required

 

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR EMAIL LIST http://eepurl.com/cr1Z8T

 

Vanessa Redgrave gives a shrewd and amusingly bleak performance here as Elizabeth Lowry, the cantankerous and bedridden mother of the artist LS Lowry – played by Timothy Spall. It’s a small-scale theatrical chamber piece, directed by Adrian Noble and written for the screen by Martyn Hesford, depicting Lowry’s life in the Lancashire town of Pendlebury in the 1930s, when he lived at home, caring for his widowed mother, devoted, lonely.

He is exasperated by her imperious mood swings, her refusal to take his art seriously and then by her capricious decision to like some of his work – a sudden spasm of approval that is no less disconcerting than her contempt. Through it all is Elizabeth’s deadpan gloom: Lowry patiently asks her to be cheerful and she replies acidly: “I haven’t been cheerful since 1898.” Lowry himself is shown living a musingly melancholy and apparently asexual existence that comes alive with this verbal sparring with his grumpy old mum, and with hints that the impossibly exotic London art world might just be starting to appreciate him.

It’s a movie that reminded me of Samuel Beckett – Happy Days or Endgame, perhaps – or maybe Alan Bennett, though if Bennett had been writing this, I suspect he would have given greater weight to Lowry’s wryly fatalistic sense of humour. Hesford makes him a serious, stoic figure (certainly more subdued than Spall’s other great artist, JMW Turner in Mike Leigh’s Mr Turner). But it’s a sympathetic portrayal, and not without funny moments. Lowry threatens one night to pile up all his paintings in the back garden and burn them; the next morning, Mrs Lowry asks him if he has done so and her son sheepishly replies: “No, I didn’t want to ruin Mrs Stanhope’s washing.” (It calls to mind the moment when David Hockney brought his mother to visit California and she is said to have commented: “All this lovely weather and no one’s got any washing out!”) An entertaining showcase for two first-class performers.

 

 

Peter Bradshaw, Guardian

 

COMING SOON

 

Thursday 16th April -tbc

Thursday 21st May -tbc

Thursday 18th June -tbc

 

 

The CFI has no membership criteria - just turn up and pay on the night. This is not a profit-making venture. We are aiming simply to cover the cost of the film hire (via Film Distributors FILMBANK, Momentum Pictures or BFI ), the hire of the Audio & Visual equipment (from Chorlton-based company Hollowsphere), the rental of the Church & the cost of the flyers, designed and printed by Holden and Sons (http://www.holdenandsons.com/).

 

 

Contact us - The CFI collective

 

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