Celebrating 20 years at our premises on Eustace Street in Temple Bar, join us for a host of special events, screenings, previews, tours (many of them free!) and the IFI Open Weekend in September.
September 1992 marks an important date in the
IFI’s history. It was the month and year that the IFI (or IFC as it was then
known) opened the doors of its newly acquired home after a major conversion of
the old Quaker Meeting House (which dated back to the mid-19th century) on
Eustace Street, Temple Bar. It was the beginning of the latest chapter in the
organisation’s history and has since been the home of one of Dublin’s most
visited and accessible cultural institutions.
In the last two decades the IFI has seen over
3.1 million cinema attendances across 63,000 screenings of over 5,900 different
films. The IFI Café Bar has been kept busy serving over 1.78 million cups of
tea and coffee to audiences that include over 8,000 members. The new landmark
building also provided a home for the IFI Irish Film Archive which is now
preserving 611 different collections with over 26,000 cans of films, the oldest
of which – a Lumière brothers film of Dublin and Belfast – dates back to 1897.
IFI20 Afternoon Talks
The IFI’s home in Temple Bar is all about the
people who come here to engage with our extensive programme, so when we started
to plan our anniversary celebrations, we quickly decided that we wanted the
focus to be on our audience. We want to celebrate the experiences that our
audiences have had here over the last 20 years by reliving some of the big
moments whilst also looking to the future.
So what have we got lined up? A key moment in
the month will be our Open Weekend on September 15th and 16th when we’ll throw
open our doors for two days of free screenings and events for old and new
audiences. The schedule over the two days will reflect the breadth of our
on-going programme and should remind one and all what the IFI has come to represent.
20/20 Landmark Films: Pan's Labirynth
For those who have strong memories of films
that they’ll always associate with the IFI, we’re also presenting 20/20: Landmark Films at the IFI. Instead of picking the big box office hits or a film
from every year, we wanted to select 20 films that have been a part of our
story. Amongst others we’ll be showing Natural Born Killers which caused huge
controversy at the time of its proposed screening at the IFI. As the only
cinema in Ireland with the capability to show films on 70mm, we’ll be re-screening
Hitchcock’s Vertigo (which recently topped Sight & Sound’s critics’ poll to
find the greatest film of all time). Later in the year we’ll be starting a full
retrospective of all of Hitchcock’s 52 films so this should whet your appetite
for more.
What Richard Did
You can read more about all of the celebratory
events online but, to name a few, we’ll have a 1992 Day on
September 1st to kick-start the activities, a series of blogs throughout the
month written by guest contributors, the launch of a major research project on
film education entitled Film Focus, a pub quiz, DJs, a pop-up museum, tours of
the IFI Irish Film Archive, Irish shorts from every year of the last 20,
afternoon talks, discussions, archive and family screenings, and the unveiling
of newly commissioned pieces of artworks. To close the proceedings, on
September 30th we’re delighted to screen the European premiere of What Richard Did, the latest film by leading Irish director Lenny Abrahamson.
And let’s not forget that we’ll still manage
to run our usual programme of new releases throughout the month.
So get ready to celebrate the IFI’s birthday
with us throughout the month of September.
Ross Keane
Director
For more information on our IFI20 celebrations, visit http://www.ifi.ie/ifi20 or follow our updates on Twitter via #IFI20
For more information on our IFI20 celebrations, visit http://www.ifi.ie/ifi20 or follow our updates on Twitter via #IFI20
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