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Image of LILO: Waking Life and The Cruise - POSTPONED

Film & Theatre

LILO: Waking Life and The Cruise - POSTPONED

30 June 2012

Due to logistical constraints the two screenings originally advertised for this date have been moved to SATURDAY 30 JUNE. All original tickets are still valid.

1830 The Cruise (1998), a poetic portait of Manhattan tour guide Tim Levitch's philosophical musings

2000Waking Life (2001) , the rotoscoped film-as-philosophy classic from Richard Linklater




Image of LILO: Weekend Day 1

Film & Theatre

LILO: Weekend Day 1

30 June 2012

The second installment of our film and philosophy season and the first of our day-long weekend events.

Main Hall

1130 London Philosophy Club and the Satyajit Ray Foundation present a full screening of emotionally rich and life-affirming The World of Apu (1959), with an introductory talk by Devika Banerjee. 

1345 Dr Lucy Bolton and Sophie Mayer analyse the phenomenological impact of Andrea Arnold’s films, in other words, how the raw and intense interactions her films stage between human and animal, between human, landscape and weather, and between the viewers' and characters' sensory perceptions, turn our experience of cinema inside out. 

1530 Dr Richard Rushton uses the philosophy of Etienne Balibar to unpick the politics of Hollywood's golden era, with clips from Born Yesterday (1950)

1715 Bidisha is joined by film-makers Ishbel Whitaker, Tinge Krishnan and Emma Simmonds to debate the political and social power of film.


1900 Crimes and Misdemeanours (1989)Woody Allen's Oscar-winning meditation on morality and fate

2100 L'Humanite (1999) the Grand Prix-winning detective story by Philosopher-turned-director Bruno Dumont

Brockway Room

1130 Philosophy for All's Anja Steinbauer and Richard Baron ask whether the emotional power of film is as real as it seems, with clips from Annie (1982), E.T. (1982) and The Piano (1993)

1315 A Pebble in the Shoe
Lars von Trier's belief that a film should 'be like a pebble in your shoe' is the starting point for this session which explores cinema as a visual means of exploring uncomfortable ideas, capable of producing philosophical bombs in audiences' minds. A collaboration between writer and filmmaker Daniel Bird and film programmer Kate Taylor.

1500 Philosophy Now discuss rationality in a changing world, with clips from 12 Angry Men (1957) and Dr Strangelove (1964)

1645 Professor John Mullarkey uses Ringu (1998) and Ju-On (2002) to show how Japanese horror illustrates the 'wonder of cinema'

1800Waking Life (2001) , the rotoscoped film-as-philosophy classic from Richard Linklater

Bertrand Russell Room

1130 The Wisdom of Film: Free Will the first of four workhops exploring the potential of film to tackle philosophy's most perennial questions. This session asks whether the choices we make are as autonomous as we like to believe.

With clips from Minority Report (2002); Irreversible (2002); Gattaca (1997); The Manchurian Candidate (1962); A Clockwork Orange (1971); Closely Observed Trains (1966 Czech); Modern Times (1936); The Wages of Fear (1953); Unforgiven (1992); The Boys From Brazil (1978) and others.

1415 The Philosopher Kings (2009) Patrick Shen's documentary finds wisdom in the most unlikely of places.

1600 The Wisdom of Film: Personal Identity - from space travel to memory, cloning, and puppetry, this session will consider the big topic of personal identity: who are we? And who do we think we are?

Films include: Memento (2000); The Prestige (2006); Angel Heart (1987); Never Let Me Go (2010); Moon (2009); Being John Malkovich (1999)

1830 The Cruise (1998), a poetic portait of Manhattan tour guide Tim Levitch's philosophical musings

Food & Refreshments

We are very happy to announce that Pizza, Burgers, Burrito, Beer and Coffee will be available all day from our friends Eat.St and Van Dough !

Doors are at 11am. Tickets from the link below.


Image of LILO: Weekend Day 2

Film & Theatre

LILO: Weekend Day 2

1 July 2012

The fourth day in our film and philosophy season.

Main Hall

1200 The Fountain (2006) - one of Aronofsky's lesser known works, a heart-bursting love story that spans a thousand years examining the nature of death, spirituality and the fragility of existence

1415 A Matter of Life and Death (1946)fate, free will, the afterlife and more in this absolutely timeless classic. 

1600  
Insight Film Festival present a series of short films on faith, and are joined by Johannes Sjoberg and Mark Vernon to discuss the nature of belief.

1800 Wings of Desire (1987) - Wim Wenders’ beautiful and otherworldly paen to love, romance and the city of Berlin

Brockway Room

1130 Liam Young, from thinktank Tomorrow's Thoughts Today, and the Humanist Philosopher's Group reflect on the ethics of nuclear waste via a screening of Into Eternity (2010) 

1345 London School of Philosophyinvestigate what heroes, anti-heroes and superheroes tell us about human nature:

  • Sam Fremantle explores why With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility using Spiderman (2002) and other Marvel films
  • Shahrar Ali examines The Evil Which Men Do usingCrimson Tide (1995), The Siege (1998) and The Believer (2001)
  • Anja Steinbauer explores the ethics of heroism, honour and violence in Ghost Dog (1999)
  • Mark Fielding asks whether Hannibal Lecter is a Hero for Our Time? 
Bertrand Russell Room

1200 The Wisdom of Film - The External World
This session will introduce you to the sceptical argument and looks at why we should take it seriously. The session will explore some ideas brought to us by Christopher Nolan, the Wachowski brothers and Alejandro Amenabar, but before them Nozick, Descartes and Chuang-Tzu.

1415 The Examined Life (2009) 
Astra Taylor's portrait of some of the world's leading thinkers takes philosophy into the streets

1600 The Wisdom of Film - Time
What is time? Is it real or simply a metaphor? Might time travel one day be possible? Do the past and the future actually exist? These are some of the questions that we shall consider whilst looking at the philosophy of time. 

Films include: Donnie Darko (2001); Primer (2004); H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine (1960); Terminator 1 and 2; Back to the Future (1985); Twelve Monkeys (1995)

Food & Refreshments

We are very happy to announce that Pizza, Burgers, Burrito, Beer and Coffee will be available all day from our friends MeantimeEat.St and Van Dough !

Doors are at 11am. Tickets from the link below.



Image of LILO: Mindwalk (1990) and Nigel Floyd on Cronenberg and Existentialism TBC

Film & Theatre

LILO: Mindwalk (1990) and Nigel Floyd on Cronenberg and Existentialism TBC

2 July 2012

Looking In, Looking Out: Day 5 

1830 Mindwalk (1990) Bernt Capra's 'film for passionate thinkers'. Written by Fritjof Capra (The Tao of Physics), Mindwalk is an exploration of Systems Theory and its philosophical implications imagined as a dialogue between a scientist, a politician and a poet as they wander through the ancient village of Mont Saint Michel. With an introduction by Sociologist Emma Uprichard.

2030 Nigel Floyd explores existentialism via David Cronenberg's Crash (1996), the controvertial, unsettling and ultimately nihilistic adapatation of the J.G Ballard novel of the same name.

Doors at 6pm. Tickets from the link below.


Image of LILO: The Women of Old Hollywood and Sunset Boulevard (1950) TBC

Film & Theatre

LILO: The Women of Old Hollywood and Sunset Boulevard (1950) TBC

3 July 2012

Looking In, Looking Out Day 6 

Brockway Room

1800 Suitcase Cinema
An image and light beam installation

The Suitcase Cinema invites Looking In, Looking Out audiences to interrupt the projected light emanating from two 16mm projectors. The projectors will face each other. The projectors’ beams will meet on a thin material, which will partition the room into two areas. One area will contain an image. The other will be simply white light. Members of the public are invited to step across the beams’ path, and observe others on the opposing part of the partition simultaneously forming part of the ‘other’ image, using their silhouette.

Main Hall

1830 Bidisha leads a high-kicking whirl through Hollywood history and a celebration of the brilliant women who co-founded Hollywood, with film experts, critics, Old Hollywood fans and film lovers Jenny HammertonMuriel ZaghaPamela Hutchinson and Kira Cochrane.

2000 Sunset Boulevard (1950) Gloria Swanson's career-defiing performance in Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett's Oscar-winning tragic tale of a star in decline. As much a reflection on the idea of Hollywood itself, as it is on love and loss.

Doors at 6pm. Tickets from the link below.


Image of LILO: Julian Baggini on the Coen Brothers, and London Short Film festival

Film & Theatre

LILO: Julian Baggini on the Coen Brothers, and London Short Film festival

4 July 2012

Brockway Room

1830 London Philosophy Club discuss London film-maker Ken McMullen's experimental feature An Organisation of Dreams (2009)


Main Hall

1830 London Short Film Festival present a diverse programme of short films cherry-picked from the 2012 London Short Film Festival. With a philosophical smorgasbord of ideas from the gently thought provoking to the alarmingly mind-bending. Between each film Rich Pickings will invite a speaker to discuss the issues selected in the films, approaching them from various positions. 

2015 Julian Baggini argues that the films of the Coen Brothers can compete with some of the greatest texts as a form of moral philosophy. His talk will be followed by a full screening of the darkly comedic, Oscar-winning murder-mystery Fargo (1996).

Doors at 6pm. Tickets from the link below.


Image of LILO: They Live and Eraserhead

Film & Theatre

LILO: They Live and Eraserhead

5 July 2012

The closing night double-bill of Looking In, Looking Out might just mean you'll never  view cinema, or the world, in the same way again!

Brockway Room

1800 Suitcase Cinema in The Brockway Room
An image and light beam installation

The Suitcase Cinema invites Looking In, Looking Out audiences to interrupt the projected light emanating from two 16mm projectors. The projectors will face each other. The projectors’ beams will meet on a thin material, which will partition the room into two areas. One area will contain an image. The other will be simply white light. Members of the public are invited to step across the beams’ path, and observe others on the opposing part of the partition simultaneously forming part of the ‘other’ image, using their silhouette.

Main Hall

1830 They Live (1988), John Carpenter's homage to the sci-fi B-movies of an earlier age, in which an all-American construction worker happens across a find that changes his experience of reality forever.

2015 Eraserhead (1977) David Lynch's baffling, surrealist breakthrough film, a mysterious immersion into the mind of another that demonstrates the power of film to reveal the world as much more weird and uncanny than we usually experience it.

Doors at 6pm. Tickets from the link below.


Image of Sunday Lecture - Recovering History in Central America

Talks & Lectures

Sunday Lecture - Recovering History in Central America

8 July 2012

Restorative justice has been widely used around the world as an essential element in peace processes, such as that of South Africa. But before a process of reconciliation can be undertaken, it is first necessary to establish truth about the past. Mike Phipps recounts the history of violence in Central America and reflects on the distinct political, geographical and historical causes of conflict in the region. Looking at the attempts to bring to justice to those responsible for violence - governmental, corporate and external – the talk examines the effects of US policy in the region over several decades and asks whether any fundamental changes might be forthcoming that will help overcome the legacy of violence that haunts the region.

11.00, £3 on the door/free to members


Image of The Young Atheist's Handbook Launch

Community

The Young Atheist's Handbook Launch

10 July 2012

British Humanist Association launch The Young Atheist's Handbook

Join the BHA and their excellent line up of speakers to celebrate the launch of Alom Shaha's new book The Young Atheist's Handbook: Living a Good Life Without God.  

The event will include drinks, entertainment, and a presentation and reading from the author Alom Shaha. Speakers include: Philosopher A.C. Grayling; acclaimed comedian Robin Ince; editor at the science journal Nature and geneticist Adam Rutherford; and journalist, broadcaster, and presenter Samira Ahmed.

There will be a drinks reception too!


Image of Sunday Lecture - Schopenhauer and Character-Determinism

Talks & Lectures

Sunday Lecture - Schopenhauer and Character-Determinism

15 July 2012

After over a century, Schopenhauer is once again coming to be seen as one of the great Western philosophers.

Hence, it is instructive to explore and critique his views about human character, as connected with his deterministic outlook.

Tom Rubens teaches English and Philosophy. He has published sid books on philosophy and a selection of poems. He has given several talks to the Society and is also an archivist in the Conway Hall Library.

11.00, £3 on the door/free to members 


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