Category: FILM

  • Discovering the long lost cinemas of Hackney

    Discovering the long lost cinemas of Hackney

    The Rio Cinema in 1985
    The Rio Cinema in 1985

    More films are probably watched in the current era than at any other time in movie history – the majority on TV screens, computers, tablets and even mobile phones.

    But to experience the splendour of cinema on the big screen there are only two places in Hackney: the Rio on Kingsland High Street and Hackney Picturehouse on Mare Street.

    This wasn’t always the case. Over 60 cinemas have existed at one time or another within Hackney, and although all 60 were never in operation at the same time, there were around 30 cinemas operating in the golden years between 1920 and 1950. It is difficult to imagine stepping out onto Kingsland Road or Mare Street on a Saturday night and having 30 cinemas from which to choose!

    Many of the Hackney cinemas opened during a flurry of entrepreneurial activity just before the First World War. There were extraordinary profits to be made; it was like a gold rush and numerous speculators and opportunists were all trying to get in on the cinema act. Film historian Luke McKernan called it “a phase of greedy speculation in cinema building”, with 52 cinemas established in Hackney in seven years, between 1907 and 1914.

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    Above: Hackney Picture Palace, around 1940. The cinema first opened in 1914. Below: the site of the former cinema on Mare Street today

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    Above: Hackney Pavilion on Mare Street circa 1960. The cinema opened in 1914. Below: The site of the former cinema. which is now a bank, today

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    Some were converted shops, chapels, churches and skating rinks, whilst others were struggling theatres and music halls eager to boost audiences cash in on the phenomenon of moving pictures by installing screens and projectors. Still more were new, purpose-built cinemas. Although some closed down after a few years (their owners seemingly took the money and run), there was another flurry of cinema activity in the 1930s, when six luxurious ‘super’ cinemas were opened, with elegant art deco architecture and lavish interiors.

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    The Odeon on 211 Hackney Road, which later became a Mecca Bingo. Below: the same site, which is set to become flats, in 2016

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    regal-abc-mare-st-_1970-620
    Above: The ABC (formerly Regal) on Mare Street in 1970. Below: site of the former cinema today

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    These were the Regent (later renamed the Odeon) in Stamford Hill, the Regal (later the ABC) on Mare Street, the Savoy on Stoke Newington Road (later also an ABC), the Odeon on Hackney Road, the Ritz (again renamed the ABC) in Stamford Hill and finally the Odeon Dalston, along Kingsland Road, close to Dalston Junction. With gigantic interiors and massive screens, Hackney cinemagoers could wallow in the dark in warmth and comfort as the films unspooled.

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    Above: The Regent in Stamford Hill, which opened in 1929. Below: Sainsbury’s, which occupies the same site today

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    It is generally thought that the decline in cinema attendance in the 1950s was the result of the boom in television (the birth in fact of electronic home entertainment), but this is only part of the story.

    Bombing during the Second World War had destroyed over a million buildings in London, and left 1.2 million Londoners homeless. As families moved to new towns such as Stevenage, Harlow, Hatfield and Basildon, communities broke up and traditional work and leisure patterns eroded. Cinema-going and many other pursuits were abandoned or displaced. By 1970 there were just nine cinemas in Hackney and by 1980 only three remained. When I left the Rio in 1989, it was down to one: the Rio was the only cinema still operating in the borough. But again leisure patterns have changed, and that number has now doubled.

    Today there are campaigns and plans to restore both the Clapton Cinematograph Theatre (the Kenning Hall cinema) and the Castle in Brooksbys Walk. If successful, an additional two cinema venues in the borough will mean that the opportunities for Hackney residents to see films on the big screen will have doubled yet again!

    The accompanying pictures show some of Hackney’s glorious cinemas; how they once looked, and how the sites look now. If you have any memories of cinemas and cinema-going in Hackney, leave a message in the comments below.

    This article is based on a talk given to the Friends of Hackney Archives on 7 September 2016.

    Photo credits: Hackney Archives, Cinema Theatres Association, Cinema Treasures

    For further information about the Clapton Cinematograph Theatre campaign, visit saveourcinema.org/ and for the Castle Cinema see kickstarter.com/projects/pillowcinema/revive-the-castle-cinema

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    ABC cinema (formerly Savoy) on Stoke Newington Road in 1963. Below: Efes snooker club, which operates on the same site today

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    Above: Coliseum cinema at 31-33 Stoke Newington Road in 1970. Below: the same site 15 years on in 1985

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    Odeon Dalston on Stamford Road in 1948. Below: the site today

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    Above: The 1928 film Why Sailors Go Wrong plays at Stamford Hill Cinema. Below: Asda, on the site of the cinema today

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  • Fringe! Queer Film and Arts Fest: this year’s programme announced

    Fringe! Queer Film and Arts Fest: this year’s programme announced

    Check It, a documentary about the a queer gang in Washington D.C screens at Fringe!
    Check It, a documentary about a queer street gang in Washington D.C. screens at Fringe! in November

    The travails of the world’s only documented gay street gang, the daily life of a ‘third gender’ family in India and some sexy and shocking short films are set to hit East London’s screens at the Fringe! Film and Arts Fest next month.

    The annual queer arts festival was launched in 2011 and has become a mainstay of East London’s cultural calendar.

    Cinemas, art galleries, pop-up venues and basement clubs are to host a raft of film screenings during November alongside a programme of experimental art, workshops, interactive walks and parties.

    The grand opening of this year’s programme is on 15 November at the Rio with Viva, the story of a hairdresser in Havana who works at a drag cabaret club to make ends meet but has dreams of stardom.

    Check It, at the Institute of Light, is a documentary about the Washington D.C street gang of the same name (apparently the only documented queer gang in the world) and their struggles to claw their way out of gang life through the unlikely avenue of fashion.

    Shorts supply: Natural Instincts is a series of short films designed to shock and arouse in equal measure
    Shorts supply: Natural Instincts is a series of short films designed to shock and arouse in equal measure

    Other film highlights include Guru: A Hijra Family, a moving portrait of the daily life of a family of transgender women in India known as hijras, commonly referred to as ‘the third gender’.

    A series of shorts tackling the theme of being young and in love and will, according to the programme “resonate like the first time”. Whilst another, Natural Instincts, veers towards the explicit, featuring depictions of spanking and light bondage.

    Away from the films, spoken word night Queer’Say will see broadcaster and comedian Rose Wilby host performances by three acclaimed LGBT poets and the drag performer and dominatrix Holestar will be hosting a BDSM workshop and fetish party.

    Fringe! Queer Film and Arts Fest
    15–29 November
    various East London venues

    For more information and the full programme, see here.

    Still from Viva, which opens the festival at the Rio Cinema
    Still from Viva, which opens the festival at the Rio Cinema next month
  • The Hard Stop, an interview with filmmaker George Amponsah: Language of the unheard

    The Hard Stop, an interview with filmmaker George Amponsah: Language of the unheard

    Protesters in Tottenham voicing their anger at the police shooting of Mark Duggan.
    Protesters in Tottenham voicing their anger at the police shooting of Mark Duggan.

    Five years after the death of Mark Duggan and the subsequent riots, many Londoners from black and minority ethnic communities still struggle to trust the police. The 2013 inquest into Duggan’s death at the hands of police found the shooting to be a ‘lawful killing’, despite many witnesses testifying Duggan had not been armed. A gun was found at the scene, but it bore none of Duggan’s prints, blood or DNA. An expert witness went as far as to testify it was “very difficult” to imagine the deceased throwing the gun to the spot where it was found, some 20 feet away, after he had been shot twice. Marcus Knox-Hooke and Kurtis Henville, two childhood friends of Duggan, were determined to find justice for him and the resulting documentary, The Hard Stop, explodes historical tensions between law enforcement and London’s black community. The film’s director George Amponsah reveals what East London said about the film, what divides Londoners, and how to protest.

    How have Londoners responded to the film?

    We screened it at the East End Film Festival in June and afterwards had a panel with two police officers. Emotions were high: feelings of sadness, feelings of anger and a sense of injustice. There were a lot of questions asking those officers how they felt the police might change some of the patterns of behaviour reflected in the film – the main pattern being a history of not being accountable when things go wrong.

    Is there a clear dividing line between people open to Duggan’s story and the people who are not?

    I don’t know. To be honest, I’m not trying to be evasive in saying this but I’m a filmmaker. What I know is films and trying to tell a story. Part of the motivation for making The Hard Stop was that I wanted to make a film that was about an important subject and about my home. I was born in London. I’m British. In many senses I’d be satisfied with the film as long as it is something that provokes debate and discussion. Because what’s important to me in some ways is that Martin Luther King quote that appears at the beginning of The Hard Stop: “A riot is the language of the unheard.” It’s just important for a debate and discussion to be had rather than for a significant amount of people to think their voice and opinion is not being heard, and is being discounted – so much so that they find themselves taking to the streets and getting involved in the kind of disturbance that we saw in Britain in 2011.

    What advice would you give to young Londoners who want to carry on the conversation started with this film?

    Try and get involved in things that are constructive and creative. Try to find a way of protesting where you’re getting your voice heard, where it can’t be discounted, and certainly in a way where you know you’re not going to be imprisoned or find yourself on the wrong side of the law.

    thehardstopfilm.com

  • Blue Pen, film preview: Breaking the silence

    Blue Pen, film preview: Breaking the silence

    Dorothy Lawrence as Sapper Dennis Smith.
    Dorothy Lawrence as Sapper Dennis Smith.

    A female journalist who disguised herself as a soldier and travelled to the front on a bicycle during the First World War is the inspiration for a film premiering next month at Hackney Picturehouse.

    Blue Pen focuses on ten women journalists whose voices have been silenced through censorship, confinement in institutions and abuse.

    Although largely set in the present day, the film’s title refers to the wartime government’s practice of censoring letters and reports from the front.

    “I was considering the number of women journalists who are disappeared and executed to this day,” says Julie McNamara, the artistic director of Hackney-based theatre company Vital Xposure.

    “So we began to make an experimental short film looking at censorship and blue pen, and Dorothy Lawrence’s story was the springboard.”

    When the war broke out, Dorothy Lawrence was 19-year-old aspiring journalist brought up in the care of the church by a guardian whom she later claimed had raped her.

    Although very few journalists were allowed to the front Lawrence felt she had every right to report on the war, and – in the era of the suffragettes – believed there was nothing a woman couldn’t do.

    “She got the boat to Calais, bought a bicycle and then cycled to the front line,” says McNamara.

    “Everyone she met along the way thought it was a jolly jape and that she’d never make it.”

    Arrested by French police two miles short of the front line, she was ordered to turn back. Then in Paris she befriended a group of soldiers in a café. She persuaded them to smuggle her a uniform piece by piece and teach her how to march.

    Lawrence arrived at the front in perfect disguise and enlisted under the name Sapper (Private) Dennis Smith. But two weeks later a young soldier wanting to earn his stripes “dobbed her in it”.

    “All hell was let loose. She was investigated and of course they suspected she was a spy. Then they thought she was a ‘camp follower’, the term they used for legalised prostitutes working on the front line.”

    The silencing of Dorothy Lawrence took various forms. Her writings were heavily censored, to the extent that she was never taken seriously. She was also threatened with court martial (even though women couldn’t serve in the armed forces) and placed in a nunnery in France, before being escorted back to Britain.

    By 1925, Lawrence’s dreams of Fleet Street looked increasingly remote. Her heavily censored book Sapper Dorothy Lawrence: The Only English Woman Soldier flopped commercially, and after confiding to a doctor that her church guardian has raped her she was taken into care and later deemed insane.

    She was committed first to the London County Mental Hospital and then institutionalised at the Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum in Friern Barnet. She died at Friern Hospital in 1964 and was buried in a pauper’s grave in New Southgate Cemetery.

    Blue Pen is more an art film than anything else and is not a dramatic film,” says McNamara.

    “It begins with truth of Dorothy Lawrence’s story and creates in the audience’s mind an atmosphere of Dorothy Lawrence’s interrogation and what became of her.

    “It then moves on to give ten names from the last decade who have each been disappeared, the majority executed, and so the final question you’re left with is: what is it with the dangerousness of women telling the truth?”

    Alongside the premiere of Blue Pen, the launch will also include a screening of Emma Humphreys the Legacy, a documentary short about a teenage sex worker who spent ten years behind bars for killing her boyfriend and pimp, whose case eventually changed the law for those in abusive relationships who kill.

    There will also be a panel discussion and live music from Lorraine Jordan, a singer-songwriter who wrote Anna’s Song, a tribute to assassinated Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

    Blue Pen launch event
    6 September
    The Attic, Hackney Picturehouse
    270 Mare Street
    E8 1HE
    picturehouses.com

  • The Childhood of a Leader – 10-year old Hackney actor talks “scary films” and more

    The Childhood of a Leader – 10-year old Hackney actor talks “scary films” and more

    The Cast of Childhood of a Leader.
    The Cast of The Childhood of a Leader. Photograph: Tom Munro

    Last month’s East End Film Festival premiered Brady Corbet’s chilling directorial debut, The Childhood of a Leader.

    There is certainly a lot at play in this film, which is part political thriller, part psychoanalytic drama about how a fascist leader is created.

    Set in 1918 in a quietly beautiful but bleak French village, the film imagines the life of the son of diplomat and aid to President Woodrow Wilson as his father negotiates the Treaty of Versailles.

    While the characters’ interior lives remain mysterious, the tyrannical patriarch’s son Prescott has his lonely, cruel childhood laid bare.

    The film stars the much-adored Twilight idol Robert Pattison, but critics have been left mesmerised by the brilliantly unsettling performance of ten-year-old Hackney-based actor Tom Sweet as the film’s leader in the making.

    One might assume that Sweet had starred in a number of plays from a young age. As it happens, Childhood of a Leader is his first performance.

    Even more surprisingly, the opportunity came about by chance. “I started acting when I was nine, it all happened really quickly – I was walking home from school with my parents one day, and I was just stopped and asked if I’d liked to audition for the film,” he explained.

    Sweet’s role certainly isn’t an easy one. The film progresses through a number of increasingly disturbing ‘tantrums’ by the politician’s son, as he boils over under an austere, rigid home life.

    Prescott doesn’t seem to gain any enjoyment out of antagonising the adults around him. He reacts with indifference to the recipients of his outbursts and his lack of emotional intensity appears far more believable than the usual ‘creepy child’ stock character rolled out in Hollywood.

    Sweet and I were in agreement that Scott Walker’s shrill, orchestral score makes Childhood of A Leader truly fearsome. “I hadn’t watched any scary films before and I don’t like them that much but I’ve watched Childhood of a Leader four times and didn’t find it too bad! I suppose it definitely helps that I know it so well and understand the character. I remember being really frightened of the score when I watched it in Venice though – the music is amazing but so shocking”, he said.

    It is clear that Prescott’s uncaring parents are to blame for his rebellion. Sweet admits that a number of scenes were difficult to film. The first scene he shot involved an especially violent altercation between himself and his onscreen father, but for Sweet, that’s all part of the fun. “Yeah, he’s definitely very mischievous! I think what I love most about acting is that I can be two totally different people, it’s the chance to step away from ordinary life for a bit and become someone else.”

    While much of the critical attention to this film may be on Corbet’s debut as the director, the articulate, gifted Tom Sweet also provides much cause for excitement.

  • Rio Cinema set to host the London Feminist Film Festival in August

    Rio Cinema set to host the London Feminist Film Festival in August

    A still from Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model
    A still from Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model

    The organisers of this year’s London Feminist Film Festival (LFFF) aim to provide a space for discussion, organisation and celebration.

    The fourth edition of the festival is opening with a 25th anniversary screening of Pratibha Parmar’s A Place of Rage. Parmar’s award-winning documentary celebrates African American women within the context of the civil rights, black power and feminist movements, all of which the organisers deem important struggles to recall in a time when women’s rights are still under attack.

    The films aren’t all quite so heavy, with some screenings coming from places of laughter such as feature length “pop-u-mentary” Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model, in which a young girl and her aunt attempt to create an alternative pop star who isn’t hyper-sexualised.

    Other notable screenings include the European premiere of documentary feature No Kids for Me, Thanks!, about childless women, and the Shappi Khorsandi-narrated short One Thousand And One Teardrops, about women’s dress codes in Iran.

    Each screening will be followed by a discussion with the filmmakers, providing opportunity to discuss the themes of their work and talk about the challenges of working in the film industry.

    Throughout the festival there will also be panel discussions addressing topical social issues such as the right to abortion, the experiences of refugee women and the representation of the female body in patriarchal society.

    The festival takes place at the Rio Cinema in Dalston from 18 to 21 August, and the full programme can be found on the festival website. If you’re even slightly interested in female empowerment, there’s definitely something at this year’s LFFF for you.

    London Feminist Film Festival
    18-21 August 2016
    Rio Cinema
    107 Kingsland High Street
    E8 2PB

  • Influx documentary paints poignant portrait of Italians in London

    Influx documentary paints poignant portrait of Italians in London

    Influx
    Luca Vullo, director of Italian immigration documentary, Influx

    At a time when the subject of immigration is at the forefront of the national debate, this new documentary by East London-based director Luca Vullo couldn’t be more vital as an exposé of the individual characters behind the statistics. Moreover, more than an hour spent listening to such a beautiful language as Italian is rarely time wasted.

    Rather than forcing an opinion on the viewer and delving into the ugliness of politics, Influx lets the people do the talking. From pensioners, young people, business executives to those on the street, a broad range of talking heads offer their personal perspectives.

    They relate both the boons and foibles of the Italian people – one of London’s largest demographics – and deliver a wonderfully even-handed end product.

    Many Mediterranean countries are in the stranglehold of economic turmoil and stratospheric youth unemployment. As more and more people leave Italy in search of a better life, Vullo’s documentary focuses chiefly on two poignant issues – the existential anxiety of seeing one’s country fail its young people and lose its best and brightest in an increasingly globalised world; and the tribulations of those who venture from their homeland to a strange new city.

    We are privy to the emotional challenges faced by Italians of all ages and backgrounds, whether it be coping with excessive bureaucracy, surviving the feelings of isolation and anxiety, or learning the mores of a more germanic, punctilious nation than theirs.

    Nearly all interviewees miss their mother country, and deplore the conditions which have lead to their exodus. But as one says, if Italy is the mother country then Britain is the adoptive mother, and the dynamism, tolerance and opportunities to be found in the UK are roundly praised.

    The suggestion is that where Italy’s “Byzantine” bureaucracy and stagnant economy fail the ambitious and the inspired, London succeeds in fostering their talents. And as Italian entrepreneurs, chefs, artists, politicians and charity workers participate in our society, clearly it is only their nation’s loss.

    Most importantly, Vullo’s documentary relates the sense of identity, hopes and fears, and aspirations of people from one of the world’s ancient and rich cultures in the modern world, and displays superbly our shared experience in the global city of London.

    influxlondon.com

  • Alleycats, review: bike courier thriller fails to ignite East End Film Festival

    Alleycats, review: bike courier thriller fails to ignite East End Film Festival

    The cast of Alleycats
    The cast of Alleycats. Photograph: Christina Solomons

    The East End Film Festival got off to a start last month, with the world premiere of Ian Bonhote’s debut feature, Alleycats.

    It begins with trendy bike courier Chris speeding through London, weaving between traffic and capturing the city on a shaky GoPro camera strapped to his helmet.

    When he stumbles upon an ultra-corrupt politician (John Hannah) leaning over the dead body of a young woman, he becomes embroiled in a blackmail plot that unfolds on two wheels in the streets and back alleys of the capital.

    As things take a turn for the worst, Chris’s sister Danni gets behind the handlebars and steers the film on towards catastrophe.

    With a hint of the Dogme 95 spirit about it, plus a decent soundtrack, there’s some promise early on, but a flimsy narrative, reams of clunky dialogue and a precocious but uninteresting approach to style render it ultimately flat.

    Hannah brings something of a demonic-Malcolm-Tucker feel to his role and copes well with what little the script offers, but just about every other member of the cast gets it wrong, in this failed fusion of Guy Ritchie, Skins and the 90s cartoon series Biker Mice From Mars.

    alleycatsfilm.com

  • Iain Sinclair walks ‘ginger line’ in film adaptation of London Overground

    Iain Sinclair walks ‘ginger line’ in film adaptation of London Overground

    Walking the line: Iain Sinclair (left) surveys London
    Walking the line: Iain Sinclair (left) surveys London

    London’s itinerant seer Iain Sinclair, famed for his documented walks around the city, has set out again to trek around the ‘ginger line’ for a filmed adaptation of his latest book, London Overground.

    Directed by John Rogers, the film takes place over the course of the year, rather than a single day. It follows Sinclair as he follows the railway tracks on foot from his home in Haggerston, visiting 33 stations in a 35 mile round trip.

    Film-maker Andrew Kötting, who walked him when he first made the 15 hour journey, joins him in Rotherhithe, and they make their way together through Canada Water, Surrey Quays to Queens Road Peckham.

    At Willesden Junction he is met by film-maker and author Chris Petit, and in Dalston local campaigner Bill Parry-Davies, who composed some of the film’s score, joins him to survey what has changed as the area has been redeveloped.

    Sinclair dubbed the Overground the ‘ginger line’ after he heard the moniker from some costumed art students in New Cross, who make an appearance in the film too.

    He describes it as the “spin-drier of capitalism whirling bank notes around the city – a real moment to look at this city of unreal money” where a new city is emerging.

    The film offers a “snapshot of the city in transition and a unique insight into the most important chronicler of contemporary London.”

    The film will premiere as part of the East End Film Festival. The screening will take place at the Rio Cinema in Dalston on Saturday 2 July and a Q&A with Iain Sinclair and John Rogers will be held afterwards.

  • East End Film Festival gets underway this week

    East End Film Festival gets underway this week

    Running scared: Alex Humes is Paul in Mile End
    Running scared: Alex Humes is Paul in Mile End

    A thriller on bicycles, other worldly visitations and the iconic Two Puddings pub are in the offing at the East End Film Festival, which gets underway this week.

    The 11-day festival starts on 23 June – the day of the EU referendum. But whatever the outcome of that, the festival atmosphere is set to be one of celebration.

    Alongside some of the best independent British films there is a focus on Turkish cinema, as well as a day dedicated to films and debate on the refugee crisis. There are also several new films either inspired by or set in East London.

    Cycling thiller: Alleycats. Photograph: Christina Solomons
    Cycling thiller: Alleycats. Photograph: Christina Solomons

    Alleycats

    London filmmaker Ian Bonhote’s debut feature Alleycats premieres at the festival’s opening gala on Thursday. Featuring a flock of British talent, it is a high-energy thriller that romps through the streets of East London on the seat of a bicycle. When bike courier Chris witnesses what looks like a murder, his first instinct is to flee. But as his curiosity draws him back in, he is soon embroiled in a world of corruption, political power and and illegal bike racing.

    7pm, 23 June, Genesis

    Crisis point: scene from Mile End. Photograph: Jon-Paul Washington
    Crisis point: scene from Mile End. Photograph: Jon-Paul Washington

    Mile End

    Mile End is the debut feature from local director Graham Higgins, which recently won Best Feature at the New York City Independent Film Festival. Set against the backdrop of Canary Wharf during the financial crisis, it centres on two unemployed runners who meet by chance. Paul has just left his job and is experiencing trouble at home, so welcomes the experience and guidance of John. But his new friend’s ubiquitous presence soon becomes unnerving.

    9pm, 28 June, Genesis

    Existential: Native
    Existential: Native

    Native

    Science fiction is not usually a genre associated with East London, but Native, a slick looking feature starring Rupert Graves, may change that. When a signal is received from the other side of the universe, Cane and Eva are sent out to colonise a distant world. Shot predominantly in East London, this feature by Daniel Fitzsimmons raises questions about what it is to be human and whether masters should be obeyed.

    7pm, 1 July, Genesis

    Seeking justice: Marcus and Kurtis seek justice for Mark Duggan in The Hard Stop
    Seeking justice: Marcus and Kurtis seek justice for Mark Duggan in The Hard Stop

    The Hard Stop

    The riots sparked by the shooting of Mark Duggan in 2011 were unlike anything seen in the UK since the early 1980s. But the true circumstances of Duggan’s death remained mysterious. This documentary, directed by George Amponsah, follows friends of Mark Duggan as they seek justice for him, exploding historical tensions between law enforcement and London’s black community in the process.

    7pm, 30 June, Genesis

    Iconic pub: Tales from the Two Puddings
    Iconic pub: Tales from the Two Puddings

    Tales from the Two Puddings

    This documentary by Rob West focuses on the Two Puddings pub on Stratford Broadway. The iconic venue was a cultural touchstone for 1960s East London, so notorious that it was nicknamed The Butcher’s Shop. But it was also known for its great live music and dancing. The pub served as inspiration for the Long Good Friday, and has links to an eclectic cast of characters including David Essex, Harry Redknapp and Matt Johnson of band TheThe.

    6pm, 25 June, Stratford Picturehouse

    Disturbing tale: Gates of Vanity
    Disturbing tale: Gates of Vanity

    The Gates of Vanity

    This Hackney-based horror thriller by Suj Ahmed is about a man fighting to reclaim his life after a disturbing turn of events. Ben is newly unemployed and feeling lonely when his family go away. So he takes in a homeless man whilst he renovates his house. But a simple disagreement triggers a psychotic reaction in his house guest. Ben is held captive and physically abused. He must discover if he can fight back and reclaim his life.

    3pm, 3 July, Genesis Cinema

    East End Film Festival
    23 June – 3 July