
26.10.25, 10:30, KIDScinema: Best of Filem’On
Festival Filem’On as a loyal guest, with a programme that never fails to impress.
Cinema for the youngest cinema-goers! Parents and children aged 4 and above are welcome to attend this screening, where we present a varied and original selection of films.
The Arch (1968), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesKASKcinema and Made in China film festival delve into film history with this long-lost visual poem by Hong Kong's first female filmmaker. Based on a 17th-century Chinese folk tale, The Arch follows the fortunes of the young widow Madam Tung and her daughter, Wei Ling. In honour of her virtue and sense of honour, Tung is rewarded with the construction of a gate in her family's name. However, while awaiting this gift, the stability of her respectable life begins to crumble when, contrary to social conventions, she falls in love with a handsome soldier. Although the storm of her desire proves uncontrollable, Tung decides to keep her love secret for fear of the community's judgement.
Filmmaker Tang Shu Shuen is known as a bridge builder between Hong Kong cinema and the European arthouse tradition. With her focus on female subjectivity and desire, she also broke with the taboos of her time. The Arch is undeniably her masterpiece. Through sensitive editing, playful sound design and nature-allegorical touches, Shuen poetically expresses the inner life of her main character. The experimental cinematography of Satyajit Ray cameraman Subrata Mitra seals the whole in sober beauty.
This screening will be introduced by writer Ans Van Gasse.
i.c.w. Made in China Festival
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Diamantino (2018), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesWorld-famous Portuguese footballer Diamantino is a genius on the pitch, but off it he lacks almost any form of intelligence. What he does have in abundance is empathy. After rescuing a boatload of refugees with his yacht, their tragedy affects him so deeply that he misses the winning shot in the World Cup final. What follows is a feverish odyssey through neo-fascism, the refugee crisis, genetic manipulation and an absurd search for the source of genius. As a solution to his devastating loss, Diamantino adopts a Mozambican teenage boy who turns out to be an adult lesbian woman, undercover for the government. Meanwhile, his evil twin sisters forge financial conspiracies, a deranged scientist tries to clone him, and giant puppies thunder through the story.
Directors Gabriel Abrantes and Daniel Schmidt rightly speak of an anarchy of references ranging from Guy Maddin's lo-fi surrealism to Jeff Koons' sugar-sweet indecency. Bubbling with the madness of the modern world, the film suggests a way out that (surprise!) has something to do with choosing love over apathy or exploitation.
This screening will be preceded by the short film ça ne marche pas (2013) by Simon Lynen and introduced by film expert and cinema referee Dario Rens.
i.c.w. STAM
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
La Mujer de Nadie (1937), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesDirector Adela Sequeyro wrote this bold melodrama and also plays the role of Ana María, who flees her oppressive hacienda for a bohemian life full of romance and intrigue. With wit, style and daring, she reclaims her freedom. La Mujer de Nadie was and remains a groundbreaking story about female autonomy on the silver screen. Set against the backdrop of the 1930s, a period in which the Mexican film industry was still defining itself, Sequeyro's film positioned women not as moral symbols, but as active subjects.
This melodrama is the first sound film directed by a woman in Mexico. Through expressive close-ups, minimal dialogue and camera angles that were provocative at the time, Sequeyro explores a specific female erotic universe in which, as the title proudly declares, a woman can belong to no one. A radical statement in a culture where women always belonged to someone, whether as a mother, daughter, wife or sex worker.
This film will be introduced by Camilla Baier (Invisible Women) and Bart Versteirt (Cinea).
i.c.w. Film-Plateau, Cinea, De Cinema (M HKA), Invisible Women and Acervo Filmoteca UNAM.
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
The Blood Spattered Bride (1972), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesOnce again, we are joining forces with cult film festival Offscreen for a film screening that will leave no stone unturned. This time, we accompany them to the altar of Spanish exploitation cinema with La Novia Ensangrentada, a silken nightmare that sinks its teeth into the patriarchal Spain of the 1970s. Susan has just got married and is already deeply unhappy. Strange visions put a damper on her honeymoon, while her husband displays increasingly strange behaviour. When they encounter a mysterious lady on the beach one day, their relationship becomes even more complex. The woman in question turns out to be a vampire who wants to recruit Susan into her order of eternally living lovers. It doesn't take long before the honeymoon turns bloody.
Partly seventies schlock, partly social criticism, The Blood Spattered Bride remains a scandalous film that packs a punch. Made during the rigor mortis of the Franco regime, the film drives a stake through the fascist ideals and normative gender relations of its time. As is customary in vampire mythology, the monstrous here is not merely a threat, but also the promise of transgressive liberation. More conventional monsters are thus shunned in order to explore the horror of the institution of marriage.
This screening will be preceded by the short film The Masque of the Red Death (2024) by Rune Callewaert.
i.c.w. Offscreen
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Olivia and the Clouds (2024), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesSome loves do not disappear. They hide. Under a bed, for example, where they breathe softly between dust and memory. In this colourful collage film, Olivia gives flowers to the spirit of an old lover in exchange for comforting rain clouds.
Other stories swirl around her. Barbara invents fantastic lies to make rejection bearable. Mauricio literally sinks into guilt. Ramón falls in love with a talking houseplant that looks suspiciously like Olivia. The film skilfully plays with the so-called Rashomon effect: one event has multiple versions, all of which are contradictory and yet equally credible. In this way, the film circles around itself and shifts perspective as if the characters' feelings themselves were speaking.
The images also refuse to remain still. This experimental debut by Tomás Pichardo Espaillant interweaves stop-motion animation, graphic sketches and claymation into a single whole. Various animators contributed to the film, visualising the collision, merging and disappearance of memories. The end result is a dreamlike collage about longing, loss and the stubborn beauty of lost love.
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Ballad of Tara (1979), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesTara is a young widow who returns to her village after the death of her grandfather. With a mysterious sabre as her only inheritance, she travels across the country with her two children. During this journey, she meets a mysterious knight from the distant past, who turns out to be searching for the sabre. However, his quest is complicated by his growing feelings for Tara. A melancholic ghost story derived from Iranian folklore, Ballad of Tara is above all a story about patriarchal village life, in which Tara, played by Susan Taslimi, leads a freer and more exciting life than the colourless men who surround her.
Beyzai, one of the founders of the Iranian New Wave of the 1960s, is best known for his work after the Iranian Revolution, such as Bashu, the Little Stranger (1989). Yet his little-seen work from before 1979 is actually even more remarkable for its outspoken feminism and daring aesthetics, with the anachronistic love story of Ballad of Tara as the finest example.
The film will be introduced by translator-interpreter and film curator Mahdieh Fahimi.
i.c.w. Film-Plateau
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
The Stimming Pool (2024), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesWelkom in The Stimming Pool, een ruimte waar neurodivergentie vrij kan bewegen en je lichaam zachtjes uit zijn vanzelfsprekendheden wordt losgeschud. Het Neurocultures Collective, samengebracht door kunstenaar en filmmaker Steven Eastwood, plaatst neurodivergente makers niet als onderwerp, maar als auteurs centraal. In deze betoverende docufictie worden hun gesprekken en creatieve processen vervlochten tot een quasifictionele structuur waarin ervaring en verbeelding elkaar voortdurend kruisen.
Gefilmd op helder 16mm door Aftersun (2022) cameraman Gregory Oke, ontvouwt zich een wereld die schuurt met neurotypische logica. De kijker wordt ondergedompeld in een desoriënterende ervaring die voelbaar maakt hoe het is om je te bewegen in een omgeving die niet voor jou ontworpen is. De film onderzoekt hoe autisme creativiteit vormt en hoe cinema, net als neurodivergente perceptie, werkt via verhoogde gevoeligheid.
De titel verwijst naar ‘stimming’, het uitvoeren van repetitieve bewegingen die helpen bij zelfregulatie. In de film krijgt dat een fysieke plek: een leeg zwembad waar de makers samenkomen om te bewegen, te dansen en te ontmaskeren. The Stimming Pool wordt zo een uitnodiging om ruimte te maken voor vormen van zijn die te vaak onzichtbaar blijven.
Na de vertoning volgt een Q&A met verschillende leden van het Neurocultures Collective.
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
HappyEnd (2024), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesIn Tokyo in the near future, the threat of a devastating earthquake hangs like a dark cloud over the daily lives of its inhabitants. Two best friends, on the verge of graduating from secondary school, play a prank on their headmaster. What starts innocently enough leads to the installation of an all-seeing surveillance system. Under the pressure of constant surveillance and an increasingly grim political climate, the friends are forced to confront their differences.
After Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus (2023), a film he produced in memory of his father, director Neo Sora makes his fiction debut with this sultry blend of socially critical satire and moving coming-of-age drama. With tender techno beats and observational elegance, he immerses the viewer in a subtly dystopian world that is frighteningly familiar. Torn between conforming or fighting back, the group of friends is forced to question their beliefs, desires and identities.
i.c.w. Japan-Square
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
KIDScinema, KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesMagic potions and spells, something is brewing in the witch's kitchen.
Cinema for the youngest cinema-goers! Parents and children aged 4 and above are welcome to this screening, where we present a varied and original series of films.
Viridiana (1961), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesJust before the Easter holidays, we would like to present you with another controversial Spanish classic from the oeuvre of Luis Buñuel. After a long period of exile in Mexico, the scandalous director returned to Spain to make Viridiana. Viridiana, played by the famous Mexican actress Silvia Pinal, is an unworldly nun who has to go and live with her uncle. While avoiding his advances, she tries to save the souls of the homeless people living nearby. Buñuel, always an opponent of religious self-righteousness, shows the naivety of the sister in her attempts to save the world through Christian morality.
Viridiana was banned by Franco's dictatorial government and by the powerful Vatican, labelled “blasphemous”. In one of the film's most notorious scenes, a drunken banquet freezes into a scene that cynically depicts Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece The Last Supper as a childish food fight. At its premiere, Viridiana was spat upon by petty bourgeois minds, but precisely for that reason it was also greedily savoured and awarded the Palme d'Or in 1961. Have a blissful Easter!
This film will be introduced by film history teacher Daniël Biltereyst.
i.c.w. Film-Plateau
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Around ‘Images du Monde Visionnaire’, KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesIn 1963, Belgian-French poet and abstract painter Henri Michaux (1899-1984) collaborated with French filmmaker Éric Duvivier to create the film Images du Monde Visionnaire, commissioned by the Swiss pharmaceutical company Sandoz. The film attempts to evoke the effects of hallucinogenic substances such as mescaline and hashish through a dizzying succession of images and lighting effects.
To mark the exhibition on this film project at the Vandenhove Centre for Architecture & Art, which runs until 23 May, FilmPlateau is organising a film programme on illness, madness, hallucinations and modern art.
In addition to two short films by Duvivier, who specialised in films on medical and psychiatric subjects, we are showing L'ordre, the lyrical essay film made by Jean-Daniel Pollet about a Greek leper colony, also commissioned by Sandoz. Finally, the programme includes a documentary on Japanese calligraphy by painter Pierre Alechinsky, a friend and source of inspiration for Michaux, who was himself strongly influenced by Eastern calligraphy.
This short film programme will be introduced by art history teacher Steven Jacobs.
Jocelyne Saab Revisited, KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesOnderzoekLebanese journalist and filmmaker Jocelyne Saab is known for her politically engaged films, which she made during a career spanning from the 1970s until her death in 2019. With more than forty titles to her name, Saab brought the untold stories of the Arab world to the screen and gave a voice to marginalised and oppressed communities. During this evening, we revisit her combative yet nuanced oeuvre with two of her most powerful achievements.
In the short film Palestinian Women (1974), Palestinian women resist the Israeli occupation of their land through education and armed resistance. With Letter From Beirut (1978), Saab returns to Lebanon, where she directs herself in a poetic narrative that questions the creeping continuation of the conflict. She then leaves for South Lebanon, which is occupied by Israel. There, for the first time since the start of the civil war, she documents the Palestinian resistance at the border.
This evening takes place in the context of the book Jocelyne Saab: Inventory 1973–1983 (2024), about the rise of left-wing political movements, armed revolutions and public struggle in the Arab world. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with authors Mohanad Yaqubi, Mathilde Rouxel and Elettra Bisogno.
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Traversées (1982), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesOn New Year's Eve 1980, Youssef from Tunisia takes a ferry from Ostend to Dover. However, as he enters the new year in the middle of the English Channel, his visa expires. At the mercy of the administrative inflexibility of nation states, he finds himself in an impossible situation. Without a valid passport, he is refused entry by both British and Belgian border guards and is doomed to remain adrift between the two nations.
This long-lost gem of a film by Tunisian filmmaker Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud is one of the more eccentric treasures of Belgian film history. With Kafkaesque wit and psychological sensitivity, Mahmoud questions the absurdities of national borders. The result is a poetic parable that, 30 years later, also turns out to be a prophetic nightmare. While Youssef plots his escape, the threat of right-wing nationalists looms over the interior and the walls of Fortress Europe are further fortified. Borders seem to slowly multiply to almost metaphysical proportions.
The screening will be followed by a Q&A with director Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud.
i.c.w. Studium Generale
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Lennart Soberon, Studium Generale, KASKcinemalectureAgendaArtistic activitiesTraversées (Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud, 1983, Belgium-France-Tunisia, 91’).
At 18:00 there will be a screening for students, followed by a second screening for the general public at 20:30, without a lecture. Tickets for the first screening can be found here, while tickets for the 20:30 screening will be available online in January.
All hands on deck, KASKcinema and Studium Generale are shipmates for this special screening of Traversées. On New Year's Eve 1980, Tunisian Youssef takes a ferry trip from Ostend to Dover. However, as he enters the new year in the middle of the English Channel, his visa expires. At the mercy of the administrative inflexibility of nation states, he finds himself in an impossible situation. Without a valid passport, he is refused entry by both British and Belgian border guards and is doomed to remain adrift between the two nations.
This long-lost gem of a film by Tunisian filmmaker Mahmoud Ben Mahmoud is one of the more eccentric treasures of Belgian film history. With Kafkaesque wit and psychological sensitivity, Mahmoud questions the absurdities of national borders. The result is a poetic parable that, 30 years later, also turns out to be a prophetic nightmare. While Youssef plots his escape, the threat of right-wing nationalists looms over the interior and the walls of Fortress Europe are further fortified. Borders seem to slowly multiply to almost metaphysical proportions.
Prior to this screening, film scholar Lennart Soberon will give an introduction on the representation of border landscapes. Although we easily recognise classic border iconography such as checkpoints and fences, modern borderscapes are characterised by their opaque nature. In order to identify state violence, we must also be aware of the administrative, digital and emotional barriers through which power reproduces itself.
- Lennart Soberon is a researcher in film studies (VUB) and artistic coordinator at KASKcinema. As part of the Reel Borders project, he works on the cinematic representation of national borders.
This lecture and film screening will take place at KASKcinema. There is ongoing work in the street near KASKcinema, but it is possible to drive up to the entrance at Godshuizenlaan 4. The venue is accessible to wheelchair users and a limited number of spaces are available in the auditorium. The toilet for wheelchair users is located on the first floor and is accessible by lift (90 cm wide, 1 m 35 deep). There is another toilet available further down the corridor past the KASKcafe for those who use a wider wheelchair. A written version of the introduction will be provided. The introduction is in Dutch. The film itself is in several languages and subtitled in English. If you have any further questions about accessibility facilities, please contact the organisation: anais.vanertvelde@hogent.be.
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
L’Atalante (1934), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesA newlywed couple, a deckhand, a seasoned sailor and his cats in heat. Together they cram into the stuffy cabins of a riverboat that glides lazily through the French waterways. As tensions rise and eroticism gently simmers, the outside world beckons seductively from the shore.
But the ship of fools stubbornly sails on through fog and drizzle, past deserted warehouses and banks that whisper rather than speak.
L'Atalante feels like a daydream that you can't quite place and ‘smells like dirty feet,’ according to François Truffaut. In Jean Vigo's only feature film, social criticism, sensual lyricism and playful surrealism flow effortlessly into one another. Vigo, son of a notorious anarchist, left behind a film that defies categorisation and was lovingly picked up by the Nouvelle Vague after his early death. Even today, L'Atalante's influence continues to resonate with superfan Leos Carax, among others. Immerse yourself in this damp cabin allegory and discover why Vigo is called “the embodiment of cinema”.
This screening is linked to the launch of the book Barge Life (2024), a philosophical exposition of L'Atalante, and will be introduced by author Florian Deroo.
i.c.w. Film-Plateau
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
De Lucht in Vogelvlucht, KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesFloating freely through the clouds, a bird has much to realize.
Cinema for the youngest cinema-goers! Parents and children aged 4 and above are welcome to this screening, where we present a varied and original series of short films.
Anima, KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesEveryone's favourite animation festival (Anima!) is back again, this time with a programme bursting with new talent. This selection of short films provides a platform for the next generation of European filmmakers whose imagination knows no bounds. In this programme, they effortlessly combine stories about snowed-in houses, unbreakable eggs, shoes that move to music on their own, and cups of tea that get lost in a magical universe. Using various innovative techniques within the medium of animation, they explore unknown worlds that will inspire dreams for a long time to come. Discover the films of these young pioneers, whom you will undoubtedly hear more about in the future.
i.c.w. Anima Film Festival
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Miami Connection (1988), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesThe Weird Wednesday family continues to expand. This time, we welcome the strange friends from Cinema Obscura: a cult film collective that sees high art in bad taste. With a range of screenings that honour the craftsmanship of low-budget filmmaking, they help us search for gold nuggets in the rubbish heap. The manic Miami Connection is our first collaboration and serves as living proof of the B-movie quip “so bad it's good”.
In the neon-drenched Miami of the 1980s, we follow the band Dragon Sound. These five musicians and taekwondo fighters firmly believe that friendship conquers all, even rival bands, drug dealers and ninjas on motorbikes. When a cocaine deal goes wrong, everything derails into a battle full of clumsily choreographed fight moves, awkward silences and intimate synth-rock anthems about brotherhood. Miami Connection may be a terrible film, but the sincerity behind its making is disarming. Nothing about the film is meant to be ironic, as director and lead actor Y.K. Kim clearly thought he had an unrivalled action epic on his hands.
Unfortunately, those dreams were shattered and the film (understandably) slipped by unnoticed upon its release. Now the world is finally ready for this fiery ode to action cinema and friendship.
i.c.w. Cinema Obscura
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Otto e Mezzo (1963), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesDelve into the mind of Federico Fellini. With seven feature films to his name, including La Strada (1954) and La Dolce Vita (1960), and a handful of short films, the Italian filmmaker embarked on what would aptly be called 8½. Otto e mezzo follows the seemingly chaotic stream of consciousness of film director Guido Anselmi (Marcello Mastroianni), whose creative reservoir has run dry. His wife and mistress each pull at one of his arms, while an impatient producer, cunning critics and desperate actresses cheerfully nibble away at his already scarce time. But remember: when reality becomes too stifling, even a crack in a car window can suddenly feel like salvation.
Anselmi (read: Fellini himself) decides to simply make his lack of inspiration his subject matter and thus conjures up an irresistible “film about film” out of thin air. In this wild, typically Fellinian introspection, dream and reality are constantly intertwined, a gamble that was rewarded with two Oscars in 1964 and is considered one of the maestro's best works. Bravo, Federico!
i.c.w. Film-Plateau
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent
Fréwaka (2024), KASKcinemafilmAgendaArtistic activitiesWith titles such as The Quiet Girl (2022) and Small Things Like These (2024), it is clear that Irish cinema is flourishing. However, amid the arthouse capital of hit films, the undercurrent of smaller genre films is often forgotten. Fréwaka shows that Irish horror cinema is also alive and kicking. After enduring a personal tragedy, caregiver Shoo decides to leave her pregnant partner alone to take care of an old woman in the countryside. However, as folk horror conventions dictate, there is something not quite right with the local community. On top of her paranoia about her neighbours, the old woman is consumed by superstition about the mythical na sídhe, a supernatural people who are said to have once abducted her.
Delving into Irish history and culture, Fréwaka is a surreal atmospheric piece with both feet firmly on the ground. Slowly, Shoo slips into her patient's delusions and the wounds of the past. Elegant scares are interspersed with a tactful approach to the post-colonial traumas that continue to plague the country. The attention to the Irish language further underlines a commitment to ground the film in a political project that seeks to heal the many horrors of reality through magical stories.
This screening will be preceded by the short film Cold Bathroom (2025) by Eleni Aerts.
i.c.w. Razor Reel film festival
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent