Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 232: Thu Aug 20

In The Soup (Rockwell, 1982): Prince Charles Cinema, 3.30pm

This film also has its London premiere at the Prince Charles on August 4th. Details here.

Time Out review:
New Yorker Adolpho Rollo (Steve Buscemi) is your classic head-movie auteur. In his mind he's creating deathless classics of the screen. Back in the real world, he can't pay the rent on the downtown grothole he calls home. He knows he must be getting really desperate when he puts a script 'Unconditional Surrender' - 500 pages of angst-drenched gobbledygook - up for sale and attracts the attentions of one 'Joe' (Seymour Cassel), a warm-hearted minor gangland figure. Director Rockwell's affectionate screenplay pits innocence against experience, artist against philistine, but unexpectedly weighs sympathies towards Cassel's force-of-nature mob mentor, who's soon giving his po-faced protégé a life-lesson masterclass in generosity of spirit, wooing the girl-next-door (Beals), and seat-of-the-pants petty crime. Rockwell's wonderfully unassuming movie throws a big hug around youthful ambition, b/w filmstock, and the glowing screen charisma of Cassel. An unheralded gem.
Trevor Johnston

Here (and above) is the trailer. 

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 231: Wed Aug 19

The Girl with the Pistol (Monicelli, 1968): BFI Southbank, NFT1, 6.10pm

This screening 
also shows on August 29th and is part of the Monica Vitti season at BFI Southbank.

BFI introduction:
A young Sicilian woman flees her repressive family for London, finding liberation amid a more permissive environment. Vitti effortlessly blends humour and dramatics as Assunta, who attempts to track down and murder the boyfriend who abandoned and dishonoured her. The film follows her as she travels around the country, gradually discovering the joys of women’s liberation and self-fulfilment.

Here (and above) is the trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 230: Tue Aug 18

Bay of Angels (Demy, 1963): Prince Charles Cinema, 6.20pm

Peter Mandelson’s grandfather Herbert Morrison, deputy Prime Minister in Clement Attlee’s landmark post-War Labour government, famously carried his Desert Island Discs choices in his wallet, expecting the call to appear on the programme. It was an invitation that sadly was never extended to him and I thought of that tale when I was actually asked to contribute to the most famous of all movie polls, run by Sight & Sound magazine, the latest of which was in 2022. All those years of trawling the previous decades choices with rapt fascination, reading the articles on the canon and the time keeping that running list of my ten all-time favourites that were inevitable mixed up with the greatest in my head was not wasted. Now, though, I was going to be forced to think about it and make a definitive list. Others were doing the same, prompting responses varying widely from it’s a bit of fun” to “it’s agony”. 

The more I thought about it the more I wanted my contribution to be just that, a genuine heartfelt one, made up of the films I desperately wanted people to see but had not been considered in the previous voting, and modestly hoping for a re-evalution of the choices. I made two rules. All of the films in my list (reproduced below) would deserve to be part of the Sight & Sound Greatest poll conversation and all the choices would not have received a single vote in the previous 2012 poll.

Some in this list are simply neglected favourites but in other cases there are very good reasons some of these films have been overlooked. Jean Grémillon, for instance, faded from view after an ill-fated directorial career, and has only resurfaced in the last decade with devoted retrospectives and DVD releases. The heartbreaking Remorques is one of his masterpieces. The Alfred Hitchcock melodrama Under Capricorn, which quickly disappeared after bombing at the box office and the subsequent dissolving of the director’s production company, deserves high rank in the Master’s work but languishes in limbo, only seen at major retrospectives. The Exiles and Spring Night, Summer Night are both once lost American independent classics only just receiving their due after recent rediscovery. White Dog, after a desultory release overshadowed by misguided accusations of racism, was not in circulation for many years. Warhol's Vinly, based on Anthony Burgess’s A Clockwork Orange, was shown in 2013 from (fortuitously I later discovered) 16mm in an ICA gallery and felt thrillingly authentic, the sound of the whirring projector and the artist’s singular framing combining to create a mesmeric experience. Here is the full list:

Remorques/Stormy Waters (Jean Grémillon, 1941)

Under Capricorn (Alfred Hitchcock, 1949)

The Exiles (Kent Mackenzie, 1961)

La Baie des anges/Bay of Angels (Jacques Demy, 1963)

Vinyl (Andy Warhol, 1965)

Spring Night, Summer Night (Jospeh L. Anderson, 1967)

Heroic Purgatory (Yosgishige Yoshida, 1970)

Straw Dogs (Sam Peckinpah, 1971)

White Dog (Sam Fuller, 1982)

Three Times (Hou Hsiao-Hsien, 2005)

Seven from the list have been shown in a London cinema since the poll appeared and now the Jacques Demy film gets anothert screenings at the Prince Charles Cinema. 

Time Out review:
Jacques Demy's second feature has a ravishing Jeanne Moreau, ash-blonde for the occasion and dressed all in white, as a compulsive gambler who doesn't care what happens to her so long as she has a chip to start her on the roulette tables. Ostensibly the subject is gambling, but the real theme is seduction - with Moreau casting a spell on Claude Mann that turns him every which way - and this is above all a visually seductive film. Shot mainly inside the casinos and on the sunstruck promenades of Nice and Monte Carlo, it is conceived as a dazzling symphony in black and white. Moreau's performance is magnificent, but it's really Jean Rabier's camera which turns the whole film into an expression of sheer joy - not only in life and love, but things. Iron bedsteads make arabesques against white walls; a little jeweller's shop becomes a paradise of strange ornamental clocks; a series of angled mirrors echo the heroine as she runs down a corridor into her lover's arms; roulette wheels spin to a triumphant musical accompaniment; and over it all hangs an aura of brilliant sunshine.
Tom Milne

Here (and above) are the evocative opening credits.

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 229: Mon Aug 17

The War Game (Watkins, 1965): BFI Southbank, NFT3, 6.20pm

This film, which also screens on August 2nd, is part of the Peter Watkins season at BFI Southbank. Full details here. Tonight's presentation features an introduction by season co-curator William Fowler.

Time Out review:
An amateur film-maker headhunted by the BBC’s Huw Weldon in 1963, Peter Watkins presented his new boss with a list of ‘films which ought to be made’. Top of that list was a documentary on the effects of thermo-nuclear war – about which, Watkins believed, there was a conspiracy of silence. As it turned out, he was right. Weldon persuaded him to tackle Culloden first – the English rout of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s Highland uprising, 1746. If there was some safety in history, no-one told Watkins. He treated it as a piece of live reportage, recreating the battle and interviewing the participants, from the generals down to the cannonfodder. Charles Stuart emerges as an arrogant fool, a disaster for his followers, but the English Duke of Cumberland is indicted of something we might now call ‘ethnic cleansing’, genocide. Shot for just £3,000, ‘Culloden’ (1964) was a triumph, a trailblazer which still exerts considerable influence – and it enabled Watkins to make ‘The War Game’ (1965), which applied a similar ‘you-are-there’ approach, this time to a projected nuclear war. A subtitle might have been: ‘Learn to Start Worrying and Loathe the Bomb’. Exposing the gross inadequacy of civil defense strategies and  near-universal ignorance about the power of the H-bomb, the film proved far too frightening for the BBC, who declined to broadcast it after consulting with the Home Office and Number 10. Watkins resigned in protest, and embarked on an itinerant independent career. ‘The War Game’ was screened in cinemas, and latterly in schools, but it wasn’t until 1985 that the BBC transmitted it on TV for the first time anywhere in the world. Released on DVD with critical commentaries, and an earlier Watkins short apiece, these remain dynamic, disturbing, committed films from a revolutionary film-maker.
Tom Charity

Here (and above) is an extract.

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 228: Sun Aug 16

Le Maison de Bois (Pialat, 1971): BFI Southbank, 12pm

This screening is presented by A Nos Amours, with am introduction by David Thompson. A Nos Amours is a collective founded by Joanna Hogg and Adam Roberts dedicated to programming, promoting, understanding and enjoying over-looked, under-exposed or especially potent cinema.

BFI introduction: 
This restoration finally allows modern audiences to see Maurice Pialat’s landmark series, which he regarded as his finest work, in all its glory. Set during the tumult of the First World War, Pialat’s film focuses on the lives of three boys who were sent for safety to the countryside by their respective parents. Opening in 1917, the drama finds Hervé, Michel, and Albert having mostly forgotten their real parents, after spending years with Albert Picard, his wife and two children. As they grow up, they witness the impact of war and the subtle changes of life in the village. Working mostly with non-professional actors, Pialat’s film is striking for its naturalism, creating an immersive portrait of life in and around the country village. A key location in the drama is the school, with its stern yet understanding teacher played by the filmmaker. Unseen for years, La maison des bois should now sit alongside Ken Loach’s equally bold Days of Hope (1975) as one of the finest achievements of 1970s television.
Ian Haydn Smith, writer and curator
 

Chicago Reader review:
Maurice Pialat’s 1971 TV miniseries, set in a rural French community toward the end of World War I, is bracingly devoid of sentimentality, building emotion through accretion of details and an unvarnished yet ultimately generous view of humanity. A gamekeeper (Pierre Doris), his wife (Jacqueline Dufranne), and their two grown children welcome three displaced Parisian boys into their secluded home in the forest. One of the youngsters (Herve Levy), troubled by his parents’ mysterious absence, begins acting out, but his warmth and spontaneity disarm many of the locals—including the gamekeeper’s boss, an aloof marquis with some dark secrets of his own.
Andrea Gronvall

Here (and above) is the trailer. 

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 227: Sat Aug 15

Graduate First (Pialat, 1978): BFI Southbank, NFT2, 8.45pm

This is part of a mini-season of Maurice Pialat films at BFI Southbank. Details here. The film also screens on August 18th and 21st.

Harvard Film Archive introduction: 
After two false starts and a large part of the budget spent, Pialat reworked the concept and the script for the third time, assembling a few professional teenage actors and filling in the rest of the cast with amateurs culled from Lens, the same province of Naked Childhood. While much of the wandering narrative was scripted as they shot—often from the teenagers’ actual conversations of the day before—at other times the actors would just be hanging out and not realize they were being filmed. Pass Your Exams First follows no single character or primary focus, as if, like its confused subjects teetering on the edge of maturity and responsibility, it is experimenting with various paths without knowing quite where any of them will lead. The most comic entry in Pialat’s oeuvre, the film follows the group’s antics in school, at home and on holiday, and at the only hot spot, the town’s actual café. With limited options at a time of shifting traditions and economies, they engage in fleeting couplings, contradictory opinions, vague dreams and their own false starts. Presciently inscribed by the hand of Pialat, their lives remain a series of question marks … awkwardly, ambivalently, precisely rendered question marks. 

Here (and above) is the trailer.

Capital Celluloid 2026 — Day 226: Fri Aug 14

A Nos Amours (Pialat, 1983): BFI Southbank, NFT1, 6pm 

This screening is presented by A Nos Amours, with an introduction by David Thompson. A Nos Amours is a collective founded by Joanna Hogg and Adam Roberts dedicated to programming, promoting, understanding and enjoying over-looked, under-exposed or especially potent cinema.

This film is also being shown on August 17th and 20th. Details here. 

Once you've seen this film you might want to read critic Nick Pinkerton's take on this troubling movie here from the Reverse Shot website here.

Chicago Reader review:
A 15-year-old French girl (Sandrine Bonnaire, extraordinary) finds refuge from her troubled family in a series of casual sexual encounters. The subject invites a certain social-worker condescension (it's the stuff of TV movies), yet Maurice Pialat's mise-en-scene allows us no comforting distance from the characters. His ragged long takes plunge us straight into the action and hold us there, as if we, too, were combatants in this family war. His unorthodox dramatic construction rejects the symmetry of classical plotting, and the narrative has a quirky, self-propelling quality that allows for some astonishing things to happen. Pialat himself plays the father, whose disappearance sets the action in motion and whose reappearance makes it explode.
Dave Kehr

Here (and above) is the trailer.