CalendarNov 23 Going to Copenhagen for COP 15? Nov 24 Trinity Road Picket - Freedom of Movement for All Nov 24 Going to Copenhagen for COP 15? Nov 24 Freeskilling - Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga Nov 25 Tree Planting in St Agnes Park Nov 25 free event: Hildegard of Bingen: music, poetry, and medieval monastic ... Nov 26 Bad News. What's wrong with Britain's Press? Nov 26 Climate Emergency Public Meeting 26 Nov Nov 28 Freemasons' Hall open day and craft fair more >>![]() indycycle
Blog feed from around BristolHacked Emails Reveal; Nothing Much Kingsdown and cliftonwood RPZ update Biofuel power for Bristol would very seriously detract from 'green cap... Copenhagen Climate Summit and Cumbria... World Cup: the state of our democracy watch Transform debates Nixon Drug Tsar on BBC World Service Prisoner support cafe and film night on 22 November World Cup: today?s smoking doc Climate Emergency: Public Meeting Looking for Green Filmmakers and Films Screening of the Transition Movie Bristol EDO Decommissioner 10 months on remand Transform's 'Blueprint for Regulation' discussed on CNN international Charges dropped against Swedish activists and anti-fascists |
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Stop the Pirate-Finder General! Nov 24 09 Bristol Indymedia Filmnight: What Would Jesus Buy Nov 23 09 Dialect - Strange Deaths: Thomas Chatterton & Dr David Kelly Nov 22 09 Bristol - Event Notice Sunday June 28 2009 Start Time: 06:30 PM The World of Apu, or Apur Sansar bristol |
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event notice
Tuesday June 23, 2009 13:04 by Nick Thomas - The Pierian Centre info at pieriancentre dot com The Pierian Centre, 27 Portland Square, St Pauls, Bristol BS2 8SA 0117 924 4512
![]() The Pierian Centre's Film Night for June is Apur Sansar – the final part of Satyajit Ray’s Apu trilogy, and a self-contained, stand-alone classic. If you’ve followed the spell-binding journey of Apu through boyhood and adolescence, then you’ll certainly want to find out what happens next. If you haven’t, then come and enjoy a film that’s “simple in its means and profound in its impact.” (Time Magazine’s All-Time 100 Movies) The story takes Apu into adulthood and an “accidental” marriage that brings him unexpected happiness. The performance of Sharmila Tagore as his young wife, Aparna, is a revelation. “Magic is a word that's tossed about much too liberally," wrote the San Francisco Chronicle, "but that's precisely what happens when Ray fixes his camera on Tagore's shy, exquisite face.” But his happiness is short-lived – and it is Apu’s relationship with his son that forms the heart of the unfolding narrative. |