The Arbor
WUTI Presents: Trailblazing Women of British Cinema
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1h 30m
Directed by Clio Barnard | 91 mins | 2010
Andrea Dunbar’s first play, "The Arbor"—a grimly autofictional work about a Yorkshire schoolgirl who falls pregnant, named for the council estate where she lived—premiered in London’s West End when she was just 18. By her untimely death at age 29, she’d produced two further plays, one film adaptation (1987’s "Rita, Sue and Bob Too"), and several children. Clio Barnard’s formally inventive docufiction looks back at the troubled playwright and her legacy.
Up Next in WUTI Presents: Trailblazing Women of British Cinema
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Red Road
Directed by Andrea Arnold | 123 mins | 2006
Arnold took the Jury Prize at Cannes with her marvelously controlled feature debut, a tense, voyeuristic revenge tale set on a Glasgow housing estate, where a CCTV operator, Jackie (Kate Dickie), develops an obsession with a man who appears in her monit... -
The Alcohol Years
Directed by Carol Morley | 50 mins | 2000
The opening of the Haçienda in 1982 begat a pop culture boom in Manchester, and Carol Morley, then just 16 years old, quickly became one of the club’s legendary party people. But Morley herself barely remembers those drink-drenched years: in this unflinch... -
The Other Side of the Underneath
Directed by Jane Arden | 110 mins | 1972
In the chronology of female psychosis on screen, "The Other Side of the Underneath" falls between "Repulsion" (1965) and "Possession" (1981)—but this confronting work of Ken Russell-esque surrealism is hardly concerned with chronological matters. Unseen fo...