Forums

Site map
Search
0The virtual community for English-speaking expats and Russians
  Main page   Make it home    Expat list   Our partners     About the site   FAQ
Please log in:
login:
password:
To register  Forgotten your password?   
  Survival Guide   Calendars
  Phone Directory   Dining Out
  Employment   Going Out
  Real Estate   Children
   Friday
   March 29
Culture Picks
Culture Reviews
TV Listings
 Concerts
 Exhibitions
 Festival
 Film
Arts Calendar / July 17 / Film
Killers Anonymous
17:00. Action, thriller, crime. UK 2019, 95 min. Directed by Martin Owen. Starring: Gary Oldman, Jessica Alba, Suki Waterhouse, Michael Socha, Tommy Flanagan, Sadie Frost. In English with Russian subtitles. “Killers Anonymous” is a secret support group for the best professionals in the assassination world. At one of their meetings, a newbie appears, unknown to everyone there. Tensions rise when the group’s members try to figure out which of them tried to kill a high-ranking American senator, resulting in all of the police in town going on high alert. When the truth comes out, the group of like-minded murderers is torn apart by new alliances, people are betrayed, and the therapy session is interrupted by violence and chaos. Now, each of them must make a choice: kill or be killed.
Pioner Cinema on Kutuzovsky 
Out Stealing Horses (Ut og stjæle hester)
19:00. Drama. Denmark, Norway, Sweden 2019, 123 min. Directed by Hans Petter Moland. Starring: Tobias Santelmann, Danica Curcic, Stellan Skarsgard, Bjorn Floberg. In Norwegian with Russian subtitles. On the eve of the new millennium, Trond Sander leaves Oslo for the countryside. The year comes to the end, and the loneliness is unbearable. Only the demons of the past are catching up Trond more and more insistently. But one day, Sander meets an old acquaintance who makes him return to his youth in his memories — a place where the bright colors of summer and glorious wild horses served as the scenery for his first terrifying experience with another person’s death. A place where joy is intertwined with betrayal and disappointment, and where personal tragedies and the happiest moments in life all began.
Multimedia Art Museum 
Princess Mononoke
12:00. Anime. Japan 1997, 134 min. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki. In Japanese with Russian subtitles. Medieval Japan is going through a mystical battery between people and forest gods. On the side of the Forest is San (Princess Mononoke), a human girl raised by the Wolf Goddess. The people are represented by Lady Eboshi, who is developing the Iron City by cutting down a preserved forest. In the heat of the fight for survival, the young Prince Ashitaka tries with all his might to find a way to permit the peaceful cohabitation of both sides. But the battle becomes bloodier and bloodier, and it seems that hope is lost forever…
Pioner Cinema on Kutuzovsky 
Theatre HD Live in Cinema: All My Sons
19:30. Arthur Miller’s blistering drama. 151 min. In two acts with one intermission. Directed by Jeremy Herrin. Starring: Sally Field, Bill Pullman, Colin Morgan, Jenna Coleman. In English with Russian subtitles. America, 1947. Despite hard choices and even harder knocks, Joe and Kate Keller are a success story. They have built a home, raised two sons and established a thriving business. But nothing lasts forever and their contented lives, already shadowed by the loss of their eldest boy to war, are about to shatter. With the return of a figure from the past, long buried truths are forced to the surface and the price of their American dream is laid bare. "Bill Pullman and Sally Field... creep up and grab the audience by the jugular in Jeremy Herrin’s excellent production of Arthur Miller’s first masterpiece." The Telegraph. "It has an intellectual and emotional power that speaks as loudly today as in the immediate post-war period." WhatsOnStage.
Formula Kino Europa 
Theatre HD Live in Cinema: Electra / Orestes
19:30. Theatre HD Live in Cinema. Director: Ivo van Hove. Starring: Suliane Brahim, Christophe Montenez, Benjamin Lavernhe. 177 min. In French with Russian subtitles. The Belgian director Ivo van Hove has combined the two plays - Euripides’ “Electra” and “Orestes” - into one uninterrupted staging. Euripides’ “Orestes” picks up five days after the conclusion of “Electra,” but it’s as if no time has passed. After Electra and Orestes conspire to kill their mother, Clytemnestra, and her lover in the first play, the siblings face justice and spiral into further violence in the second. None of the elements that make up Mr. van Hove’s production are especially original on their own. A quartet of percussionists is in the background throughout and creates an ominous soundscape for the action, in a manner reminiscent of classical Japanese theater. The action is interspersed with ritualistic dance scenes led by Electra and the Chorus, who beat their chests and fall repeatedly into the mud. While the choreography was created by Wim Vandekeybus, it is indebted to the raw, primal spasms that drove Ms. Bausch’s dancers to exhaustion.
Karo 7 Atrium 
March
29 30
31
April
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Copyright © The Moscow Expat Site, 1999-2024Editor  Sales  Webmaster +7 (903) 722-38-02