Monday 21 Jun To Sunday 27 Jun 2010
21
Meeting: General Meeting
21 Jun 2010, 6 p.m.
22
No Events Scheduled
22 Jun 2010
23
Event: Permaculture Workshop
23 Jun 2010, 9:30 a.m.
Day-long event on Permaculture, Cooperatives and Transition Towns run by the Permaculture Association (Britain) Pre-booking essential through the Permaculture Association: www.permaculture.org.uk/coop2010 email: office@permaculture.org.uk tel: 0113 2307461
23
Gig: Vernon And Burns Meets Lied Music
23 Jun 2010, 8 p.m.
Musique concrete compositional approaches with absurdist improvisation strategies
24
Film: The Discreet Charm Of The Bourgeoisie (1972)
24 Jun 2010, 7:30 p.m.
Winning the Oscar for Best Foreign Film, and chosen as best film of the year by the American National Society of Film Critics, this is Bunuel’s most successful film, also in financial terms. A surrealistic film featuring dreams and irrational happenings, it is Bunuel’s vision of the bourgeoisie, with adultery, drugs and military coups.
25
Film: Until The Light Takes Us (2008)
25 Jun 2010, 7:30 p.m.
Until The Light Takes Us goes behind the highly sensationalized media reports of "Satanists running amok in Europe" to examine the complex and largely misunderstood principles and beliefs that led to this rebellion against both Christianity and modern culture. Watch a trailer here: http://www.blackmetalmovie.com/
26
Film: Until The Light Takes Us (2008)
26 Jun 2010, 7:30 p.m.
Until The Light Takes Us goes behind the highly sensationalized media reports of "Satanists running amok in Europe" to examine the complex and largely misunderstood principles and beliefs that led to this rebellion against both Christianity and modern culture.
27
Film: That Obscure Object Of Desire (1977)
27 Jun 2010, 7:30 p.m.
Bunuel’s last film, about an ageing Frenchman in love with a Spanish flamenco dancer, who wouldn’t have sex with him. “With an effortlessness matched by no other director today, Buñuel creates a vision of a world as logical as a theorem, as mysterious as a dream, and as funny as a vaudeville gag.” NY Times, 1977