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Ae Fond Kiss

Ae Fond Kiss is the third, after Sweet Sixteen and My Name Is Joe, of Ken Loach’s Glasgow trilogy, and, happily, the most hopeful. His fifth collaboration with writer Paul Laverty, it is first and foremost a love story. Roisin is an Irish lapsed Catholic, teaching music in a state-funded Glasgow school which is Catholic in denomination, though many of the students are not. When Tahara, a feisty young Pakistani girl, and her fine-looking older brother Casim shelter from racist yobbos in Roisin’s classroom, a romance is born. DJ Casim dreams of club ownership. Casim’s parents, meanwhile, dream of seeing him married to his Pakistani betrothed. While he’s compelled to chose between the love of his family and the love of the woman they characterise as a fly-by-night whore, Roisin discovers similar attitudes on her own home patch. Loach shows some sympathy for the beleaguered Pakistani parents, but his unforgiving view of the priesthood, rousingly embodied by actor Gerard Kelly, is so forceful that it should, in the best Loach tradition, lead to changes in the law.” – Bill Gosden New Zealand International Film Festival 2004

 

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UK/Italy/Germany/Spain 2004

Director: Ken Loach
Producer: Rebecca O’Brien
Production co: Sixteen Films, Bianca Films, EMC, Tornasol Films
Screenplay: Paul Laverty
Photography: Barry Ackroyd
Editor: Jonathan Morris
Music: George Fenton

With: Atta Yaqub (Casim Kahn), Eva Birthistle (Roisin Hanlon), Ahmad Riaz (Tariq Khan), Shamshad Akhtar (Sadia Khan), Shabana Bakhsh (Tahara Khan), Ghizala Avan (Rukhsana Khan), David McKay (Wee Roddie), Raymond Mearns (Big Roddie)

103 mins, DV (16:9)

M sex scenes, offensive language

Tekapo Film Society
Wednesday 14 March

Queenstown Film Society
Tuesday 12 June, 8.30pm

Nelson Film Society
Thursday 28 June, 6.00pm

West Melton & Districts Film Society
Thursday 5 July, 7.30pm

Waitati Film Society
Tuesday 17 July, 8.00pm