The Scotsman

Homecoming premieres and new movies from pioneers on show

- Comment Alistair Harkness

Opening with Alice Winocour’s Eva Greenstarr­ing astronaut drama Proxima and closing with the Coky Giedroyc-directed adaptation of Caitlin Moran’s How to Build a Girl, this year’s Glasgow Film Festival is putting its money where its mouth is in terms of improving the gender balance of film festivals.

New work from women filmmakers and films focused on female stories feature prominentl­y across the various strands.

There are homecoming premieres for Our Ladies and Scottish director Eva Riley’s debut feature The Perfect 10, and intriguing-sounding horror films from awardwinni­ng debut filmmaker Rose Glass (St Maud) and acclaimed Polish director Malgorzata Szumowska (The Other Lamb).

There are also new movies from the pioneering likes of Persepolis director Marjane Satrapi (Marie Curie biopic Radioactiv­e) and Wadjda director Haifaa al-mansour (The Perfect Candidate) and new documentar­ies on Billie Holliday (Billie) and Toni Morrison (The Pieces I Am), as well as Rubika Shah’s London Film Festivalwi­nning Rock Against Racism documentar­y White Riot.

There are films featuring prominent leading roles for Kelly Macdonald (Australian drama Dirt Music), Sally Hawkins (Eternal Beauty), and Juliet Binoche and Catherine Deneuve (Japanese master Hirokazo Kore-eda’s The Truth), as well as Mark Cousins’ 14-hour documentar­y Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema, which is screening in five parts and comes with an accompanyi­ng mini retrospect­ive designed to help rethink the maledomina­ted film canon.

Elsewhere the festival features much-anticipate­d offerings from home territory and beyond, including new work from Scottish directors Scott Graham (Run) and Peter Mackie Burns (Rialto).

There is also the Canneswinn­ing Brazilian freak-out Bacurau, Macbeth director Justin Kurzel’s The True History of the Kelly Gang, cult mavericks Justin Benon and Aaron Moorhead’s Synchronic and the sure-tobe divisive The Painted Bird, the brutality of which caused mass walk-outs at its Venice Film Festival premiere.

You’ve been warned.

“New work from women filmmakers and films focused on female stories feature prominentl­y across the various strands”

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