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A joyous animation, stuffed with wit, jokes and glorious details.

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Salmon Fishing in the Yemen (12A)

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8pm 18 May / 8pm 20 May / 8pm 25 May

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Scribbles On A Napkin

Scribbles On A Napkin

5.30pm Sun 20 May All ages & experience welcome

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The Kid With A Bike (12A)

The Kid With A Bike (12A)

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Saffron Walden Film Festival 2012

Saffron Walden Film Festival 2012

11-28 May

Join our three week celebration of film!

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Young Adult

Young_Adult15-40px
8pm Friday 2 March BUY TICKETS
8pm Sunday 4 March BUY TICKETS

DIRECTOR Jason Reitman

CAST Charlize Theron, Patrick Wilson, Patton Oswalt, Elizabeth Reaser

Mavis is a divorced, alcoholic author on a path of self-destruction, who returns home to reclaim an ex-boyfriend, now a married family man. Theron ignites the screen with a terrific performance as the high-school mean girl who never grew up in this hilarious dark comedy from the team behind Juno. (2011 USA 94 minutes)

AUDIO DESCRIPTION AVAILABLE - Please contact the cinema in advance This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Messed-up Mavis Gary (Charlize Theron), divorced, alcoholic author of adolescent fiction, heads for her home town hellbent on reclaiming ex-boyfriend Buddy (Patrick Wilson) from his inconvenient wife and newborn baby. Mavis' reputation as the beautiful mean girl at high school endures as she follows her self-absorbed path of destruction. From the director of Juno, Thank You For Smoking and Up In The Air, and the writer of Juno, this is a scabrously funny, tragi-comic portrait of a pathological queen bitch who won’t grow up.

BBFC advice: Contains strong language

What a piece of work is Mavis Gary. Mavis is the eternal, unrepentant mean girl and one of those people incapable of self-editing. She just opens her mouth and says whatever she’s thinking, like great boors of today who erroneously confuse being obnoxiously rude with being honest and genuine. Mavis is not that stupid, but she is heedless. Our better angels are gasping in horror or wincing in embarrassment while she says the most awful things, but our inner meanies are savouring remarks some of us might think but few of us would ever dare to utter. Charlize Theron, in possibly her best performance yet, does a remarkable job with this potentially odious, decidedly delusional woman... Inside she’s in a depressed, slobbish decline she can’t acknowledge, even as we see her unconscious hair-twiddling tic is making scabby bald patches in her scalp. We first see Mavis sprawled prostrate on the morning after the night before, flat out where she obviously fell down drunk. She’s hopelessly late with what is to be the last in a past-it series of girlie novels, and she’s indifferent to the needs of her itsy dog Dolce, who is required only fitfully as an accessory. And then her email delivers a new-baby announcement that energises her with purpose. She will rescue the old love of her life (an endearingly innocent, easygoing Patrick Wilson) from the domesticity into which he has contentedly settled.

The entire ensemble is spot-on, from the women who knew Mavis in her horrid high-school heyday to her uneasy parents. Comedian Patton Oswalt delivers a breakout turn as the classmate Mavis never noticed, a sardonic, scarred soul beaten and left permanently disabled by the kind of boys Mavis hung out with and the only one to whom she can turn now (for his garage-brewed bourbon more than his pointed insights). Some of the choicest moments are Mavis’ solo but hardly soul-searching scenes, like her solitary road trip as she zooms from Minneapolis to the burg of Mercury, rather like the Wicked Witch Of The West in her grim determination but caterwauling along to the ’90s mix tape erstwhile beau Buddy once made her. Theron’s face is an encyclopaedia of trapped-in-dolescence reactions, from giddy rapture to the “who just passed gas?” grimace of distaste. Then there are the moments she spares to work on her trashy teen opus, nonchalantly eavesdropping on gabbing girls in fast food joints for on-point titbits. What parallels there are between Mavis and Diablo Cody, also a Minnesota girl, is anybody’s guess, but Cody’s facility with real-sounding dialogue suggests she’s all ears to other people’s conversations herself. It’s a performance that easily could have been pathetic, bathetic or simply annoying, but Theron is so unbridled and yet so perfectly nuanced — and Reitman’s direction so direct and so tightly calibrated between the blackly comic and the seriously sad — you can’t have enough of her. At a safe remove.

Verdict - Smart, honest, sickeningly funny and supremely well judged in the writing, direction and acting.”   read more
Angie Errigo, Empire

UK RELEASE 3 February 2012

RUNNING TIME 94 minutes

COUNTRY USA

official film website and trailer
IMDb film information

 

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