Celtic Film Festival reveals Celtic culture in many guises
Feb. 10, 2004
Ireland and Scotland, of course, but also Britain and even parts of France: The Celts spread their language and culture far afield in Europe. A film festival by the Madison Celtic Cultural Center, sponsored by the Department of History, will display the faces of Celtic culture on Sunday, Feb. 15.
- "When the Whales Came" (Cornwall, 1989), 9 a.m. Starring Helen Mirren and Paul Scofield, this poignant tale reveals the secret that haunts the reclusive Birdman when a pod of narwhales is beached on the island of Bryher.
- "If These Walls Could Speak: Mural Painting in Belfast" (Northern Ireland, 2001), 11 a.m. A documentary about luminous wall-sized murals in Belfast.
- "Hard Road to Klondike" (Ireland, 1999), 11:45 a.m. The autobiographical account of Michael MacGowan's quest for good fortune.
- "Everlasting Piece" (Northern Ireland, 2001), 1:30 p.m. A Protestant and a Catholic barber form a partnership to sell toupees in Belfast, which puts them in proximity to an imprisoned murderer.
- "Sex in a Cold Climate" (Ireland, 1998), 3:30 p.m. A documentary about the residents of Ireland's Magdalene laundries, the last of which closed in the mid-1990s.
- "My Name Is Joe" (Scotland, 1999), 5 p.m. Joe (Peter Mullan), a recovering alcoholic, tries to regain control of his life in working-class Glasgow.
- "Mr. Hulot's Holiday," (Brittany, 1953), 7 p.m. A vacation by the seaside with Jacques Tati's besieged Mr. Hulot.