The Scotsman

Why Scotland talent is a standout at Glasgow Film Festival

- Analysis Alistair Harkness

Like the movie industry in general, film festivals have had to adapt to a constantly shifting landscape in the last year and Glasgow Film Festival (GFF) is no different.

Having scraped through last year by the the skin of its teeth – the 2020 festival ended ten days before cinemas shuttered – this year’s festival was all set to launch an ambitious hybrid event incorporat­ing online and Uk-wide socially-distanced physical screenings until the recently intensifie­d Covid restrictio­ns forced organisers to change it to an exclusivel­y online event.

While a blow for a festival that has always thrived by bringing people together to celebrate film in a convivial atmosphere, in a digital envi--ronment where it’s easy to become paralysed by choice, a properly curated offering of brand new cinema offers a welcome respite from the sometimes overwhelmi­ng algorithmi­c randomness of streaming services.

Among this year’s highlights, Creation Stories looks set to be the big talking point film. Co-written by Irvine Welsh, it’s a biopic of Creation Records supremo Alan Mcgee and stars Ewen Bremner as the fiercely independen­t Glaswegian music industry upstart who discovered the Jesus and Mary Chain, Primal Scream and then properly hit the big time after signing Oasis.

The festival will also host the UK premiere of The Last King of Scotland director Kevin Macdonald’s The Mauritania­n, a true-life Guantanamo Bay legal drama starring Jodie Foster and Benedict Cumberbatc­h.

And sticking with Scottishle­d talent there’s Limbo, Ben Sharrock’s wonderful comedy/ drama about Syrian asylum seekers awaiting their fates on Uist.

Documentar­y maker Anthony Baxter (You’ve Been Trumped) also returns, shifting his gaze away from Donald Trump with Eye of the Storm, a film about the late Scottish painter James Morrison.

But GFF has always been internatio­nal in scope and, in addition to opening with acclaimed Korean-american family drama Minari, there’s a timely post-parasite country focus on South Korea.

There are also new films from establishe­d world cinema auteurs such as Anders Thomas Jensen (Riders of Justice) and Frederick Wiseman (City Hall).

 ??  ?? 0 Ben Sharrock’s Limbo, Syrian asylum seekers await their fates
0 Ben Sharrock’s Limbo, Syrian asylum seekers await their fates

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