Shangri-La Plaza screens contemporary European films in Cine Europa 27

Cine Europa, the longest-running European film festival in the Philippines, returns to Shangri-La Plaza as it continues to bring inspired experiences by giving Filipino cinephiles access to European cinema. Screening at the Shang Red Carpet Cinema from October 18 to 27, the festival features 20 must-see contemporary films from the Old Continent.

Hosted in partnership with the Delegation of the European Union (EU) to the Philippines, the film festival comes as the EU and the Philippines mark 60 years of diplomatic relations, which have been strengthened by cultural events such as Cine Europa.

The festival kicked off on October 18, 6PM with the lighthearted Lang Historie Kort (Long Story Short, Denmark) by May el-Toukhy and Maren Louise Käehne, which delves into a group of friends trying to find true love.

October 21 delivers Mai departe (The World is My Arena, Romania), a biopic by Tedy Necula on a rugby player who adjusts to life in a wheelchair; as well as Mermaids Don’t Cry (Austria) by Franziska Pflaum, which is about a plain supermarket clerk’s dream of having a synthetic mermaid fin. The last film for the day That They May Face the Rising Sun (Ireland), is a Pat Collins adaptation of legendary Irish writer John McGahern’s final novel. 

On October 22, Lucas Delangle’s The Strange Case of Jacky Caillou (France) adds a dash of fantasy to the lineup. Antonio Perez Molero’s documentary La Flota de Indias (The West Indies Fleet, Spain) recounts the storied past of Spain’s legendary naval fleet to the New World. The Man with the Answers (Cyprus) is a film by Stelios Kammitsis following the romance of two young men. October 23 presents Antonio Manetti and Marco Manetti’s Diabolik (2021), which explores another side of crime; Aust ja Urbait ’s Remember to Blink (Lithuania), which is about a French couple adopting Lithuanian children; and an additional screening of Sonne Und Beton. 

October 24 starts off with Ukraine’s Another Franko by Igor Visnevsky, which is about the life of the son of a great writer. It’s followed by a repeat showcase of Niebezpieczni d entelmeni and Icare. The Other Side of Hope, P išla v noci, and Tigrar will have encore screenings on October 25. It also features The Man Without Guilt (Slovenia), about a widow’s personal redemption and revenge by Ivan Gergolet. On October 26, Mancs, Mai departe, Mermaids Don’t Cry, and The Strange Case of Jacky Caillou are going to be back on the big screen. Finally, extra screenings of La Flota de Indias, Diabolik, Souvenir, and That They May Face the Rising Sun wrap up the festival on October 27. 

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