Support C Fylm by watching films at home with YourScreen

posted in: C Fylm, Community cinema | 0

C Fylm is partnering with YourScreen to bring a fantastic programme of world cinema into your living room. Get 25% off using the code CFYLMYS

Most of the films are new to the UK and are not available on other streaming platforms, so we’re really excited to be taking part!

By choosing to get your world cinema fix via YourScreen, you will also be supporting C Fylm as we get a share of every ticket sold using our promo code CFYLMYS

As a thank you for supporting us, you will get 25% off each ticket purchase. Just enter CFYLMYS at checkout.

How it works:

  • Head over to YourScreen and browse their current season. New films are being added on a weekly basis, and are generally available for around a month. 
  • Films can be purchased ahead of the ‘Available From’ date listed
  • When you’re ready to buy your ticket(s), click the ‘Watch’ button.
  • You will need to open an account with YourScreen the first time you watch a film, your browser will remember your details after that.
  • Enter the code CFYLMYS and watch the price magically change!
  • Enjoy the film. You can watch on a TV using Chromecast on an Apple TV compatible Smart TV. Alternatively you can connect your laptop to your TV using an HDMI cable for a more comfortable watching experience – that’s what we’ll be doing.
  • Tell your friends, and share our discount code CFYLMYS so they can watch too!

Available to stream on YourScreen this season is:

GOD OF THE PIANO
Itay Tal. 2019. Israel. 1hr 20mins
A mother goes to extraordinary lengths to ensure that her soon-to-be-born child has the musical career – and the approval of her father – that she never had. When Anat’s son is born deaf it seems that the dream is over, but she is not going to let this thwart her vicarious pursuit of musical perfection. Attracting comparisons with Michael Haneke and Lucrecia Martel, this compelling psychological thriller combines a probing script, assured direction and an extraordinary central performance to reveal a character driven by artistic obsession and haunted by a guilty secret that will just not go away.

NOAH LAND
Cenk Ertürk. 2019. Turkey. 1hr 49mins
In order to realise his estranged and terminally-ill father’s wish to be buried under the “Noah Tree” his father swears he planted, Omer, a quick-tempered son in a mid-life crisis, has to face the villagers who believe that the “holy” tree is the first tree planted by prophet Noah after the Great Flood and has the power to immediately answer their prayers. A deeply felt exploration of male ego in the tradition of Nuri Bilge Ceylan, staring Haluk Bilginer from Winter Sleep.

MISTER UNIVERSO
Tizza Covi / Rainer Frimmel. 2016. Italy / Austria. 1hr 30mins. FFF-rated
Young, disenchanted lion-tamer Tairo is out to recover his missing lucky talisman – a bar of iron bent into a horseshoe shape and given to him as a 5-yr-old child by ‘Mister Universo’, without which his life is bereft. This fast-moving neo-realist road movie is an engaging, and unusual, hybrid of documentary and fiction, in which real-life circus folk play themselves. In a story full of colour and rough charm, Tairo’s quest reunites him with old friends and colleagues and fast becomes a whirlwind tour of Italy’s circus culture. Aided by his quiet admirer and contortionist extraordinaire Wendy, the film culminates in a feel-good ending as Tairo finally runs ‘Mr Universo’ to ground.

ROUNDS
Stephan Komandarev. 2019. Bulgaria. 1hr 47mins
As Bulgaria prepares to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the regime change, three police patrol cars roam the streets of the city. Apparently unaware of each other, the patrols overlap and intersect, as incidents pile on, adding up to a kind of ‘state of the nation’ snapshot. With committed performances, convincing dialogue and shot through with droll humour (a body lying beside some railway tracks becomes a running joke), this is a hugely entertaining and illuminating watch.

The film will screen with recorded Q+A with director Stephan Komandarev.

SUPERNOVA
Bartosz Kruhlik. 2019. Poland. 1hr 18mins
Following a fatal hit & run accident, a quite country lane on a sunny day becomes the stage for a searing drama. Unfolding in real time and set entirely in one location, a wandering, enquiring camera watches as bystanders, police, relatives, emergency services and, eventually, the driver of the car arrive on the scene. Tension soars, connections are exposed and the site becomes an allegorical melting pot of society, exploring how prejudice, social differences and communal anger can give rise to lawlessness and mob mentality. An incisive script, ferocious performances, relentless pacing and stabs of black humour, coalesce into an edge-of-your-seat experience that will leave you gasping for breath.

WINTER FLIES
Olmo Omerzu. 2018. Czech Republic. 1hr 25mins
Imbued with the same kind of quirky charm as Hunt for the Wilderpeople and The Peanut Butter Falcon, this charming buddy movie follows two mismatched adolescent boys on a road trip filled with misadventure and self-discovery. Warm and likeable characters in combination with a perceptive script capture the excitement and confusion of adolescence in an entertaining and insightful coming of age story.