NZ FILM SOCIETY
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A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

Ana Lily Amirpour  •   USA  • ​  2014
100 mins  •  HD, B&W  •   R16 violence, drug use & sexual material
​
 ​In Farsi with English subtitles

An outrageously languid new-school vampire flick about a chador-wearing antiheroine who stalks the night, sinking her teeth into those who deserve to die.

“Strange, wonderful and special” – Guardian

DIRECTOR/SCREENPLAY: Ana Lily Amirpour
PRODUCERS: Justin Begnaud, Sina Sayya, Elijah Wood
PRODUCTION CO: Logan Pictures, SpectreVision

PHOTOGRAPHY: Lyle Vincent
EDITOR: Alex O'Flinn

MUSIC: Bei Ru
WITH: Sheila Vand (The Girl), Arash Marandi (Arash), Marshall Manesh (Hossein), Dominic Rains (Saeed), Mozhan Marnò (Atti), Rome Shadanloo (Shaydah) 
​

FESTIVALS: Sundance

REVIEWS

“If you like female characters on the giving rather than receiving end of vampiric violence, then Ana Lily Amirpour’s debut feature is for you. The title character, mesmerising in her stillness, slides the empty night streets of Bad City, a mythical Iranian ghost town that looks suspiciously like California (where it was shot). Wearing a chador and hipster loafers, the Girl (Sheila Vand) watches politely while a variety of male/female interactions play out – everyone speaking in Farsi. There is a retributive justice in the way the Girl attacks, and we may guess at her back story through the title.

Our hero, the streetwise but harmless Arash (Arash Marandi), who is trying to care for his junkie father, meets the Girl whilst drug-addled on the way home from a costume party. In a totally overdue reversal of the power dynamics between men and women at night, these two outsiders are drawn together through their love of alt-rock and their isolated worlds.

Amirpour’s pointed and humorous gender politic is present throughout this masterpiece of image, story and experiential filmmaking, which visually quotes so widely that you will feel you are watching Lynch, Tarantino, Hitchcock, Buñuel and Maya Deren. Shot stunningly in black and white by Lyle Vincent, this is not to be missed on the big screen, with its glorious soundtrack, outrageously languid scenes, blood, drugs, oil rigs... this movie’s got the lot.”

— NZIFF 2014


FILM SOCIETY SCREENINGS

Timaru   
Tuesday, 21 March, 6.00pm

Dunedin   

Wednesday, 19 April,7.30pm​

​New Plymouth   

Wednesday, 10 May, 6:00pm

Tauranga   

Tuesday, 30 May, 6.00pm

​Whanganui   

Monday, 26 June, 7.00pm

Nelson   

Tuesday, 04 July, 6.00pm

Canterbury   

Monday, 21 August, 7.00pm

Queenstown   

Tuesday, 29 August, 8.15pm

Auckland   
Monday, 11 September, 6.15pm

Wellington   

Monday, 09 October, 6.15pm

​Palmerston North   
Wednesday, 22 November, 6.00pm

Bigger Picture Ōamaru   
Thursday, 30 November, 7.00pm


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New Zealand Federation of Film Societies  |  PO Box 9544, Te Aro, Wellington, NZ  
Phone: +64 4 385 0162  |  Fax: +64 4 801 7304  |  Email: 
michael@nziff.co.nz
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • SOCIETIES
    • AUCKLAND
    • HAMILTON
    • TAURANGA
    • NEW PLYMOUTH
    • WHANGANUI
    • PALMERSTON NORTH
    • CARTERTON
    • WELLINGTON
    • NELSON
    • CANTERBURY
    • TIMARU
    • OAMARU
    • QUEENSTOWN
    • DUNEDIN
    • WESTPORT
  • 2023 SEASON
    • JAPANESE CLASSICS
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    • NEW YORK ON SCREEN
    • WORLD & DOCUMENTARY
    • CULT & CLASSICS
    • NZ FILM
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    • GERMAN CINEMA