We Need to Talk About Kevin

  • February 11, 2018 / 16:00
  • February 17, 2018 / 18:00

Director: Lynne Ramsay
Cast: Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller, Jasper Newell
UK, USA, 2011, 112', color
English with Turkish subtitles
 
A nightmare scenario for a parent: the child doing the unthinkable... Predicted amongst Oscar nominees, Tilda Swinton’s performance as Eva, the desperate mother of a malevolent son is gripping and harrowing. After Kevin does something completely unacceptable just days before his 16th birthday, his mother Eva is forced to question whether she ever loved her son and how much she is to blame for what he did. Acclaimed Scottish director Lynn Ramsay returns with this intense psychological thriller nine years after Morvern Callar. Radiohead’s Johnny Greenwood scored the film.
 
These screenings are free of admissions. Drop in, no reservations.

Asylum

Asylum

Did You Used to be R.D. Laing?

Did You Used to be R.D. Laing?

Reading Film from ‘Knots’ by R.D. Laing

Reading Film from ‘Knots’ by R.D. Laing

Family Life

Family Life

Morvern Callar

Morvern Callar

We Need to Talk About Kevin

We Need to Talk About Kevin

The Neon Demon

The Neon Demon

Beach Rats

Beach Rats

The Killing of a Sacred Deer

The Killing of a Sacred Deer

Trailer

We Need to Talk About Kevin

Good News from the Skies

Good News from the Skies

Inspired by the exhibition And Now the Good News, which focusing on the relationship between mass media and art, we prepared horoscope readings based on the chapters of the exhibition. Using the popular astrological language inspired by the effects of the movements of celestial bodies on people, these readings with references to the works in the exhibition make fictional future predictions inspired by the horoscope columns that we read in the newspapers with the desire to receive good news about our day. 

The Ottoman Way of Serving Coffee

The Ottoman Way of Serving Coffee

Coffee was served with much splendor at the harems of the Ottoman palace and mansions. First, sweets (usually jam) was served on silverware, followed by coffee serving. The coffee jug would be placed in a sitil (brazier), which had three chains on its sides for carrying, had cinders in the middle, and was made of tombac, silver or brass. The sitil had a satin or silk cover embroidered with silver thread, tinsel, sequin or even pearls and diamonds.

Marcel Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel

Marcel Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel

In 1998 Ben Jakober and Yannick Vu collaborated on an obvious remake of Marcel Duchamp’s Roue de Bicyclette, his first “readymade” object. Duchamp combined a bicycle wheel, a fork and a stool to create a machine which served no purpose, subverting accepted norms of art.