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IFFBoston Fall Focus brings trolls, shoplifters, and more to the Brattle

The Favourite

Once again, the good folks at IFFBoston are taking over the Brattle Theatre in Cambridge for their yearly Fall Focus, a weekend filled with some of the best films of the year, well before they hit your local arthouse. This year's line-up is exceptionally strong, and that's saying something, given that films like Moonlight and Lady Bird have screened at prior iterations of the mini-festival.

We've got a Haruki Murakami adaptation that may actually be the single best translation of the master author's work to the screen, we've got a black-and-white drama that uses the metaphorical divide between the East and the West to describe the collapse of a relationship in postwar Poland, and we've got a fairy-tale penned by the author of Let the Right One In about a Border Patrol officer discovering that she may very well be more than human. And those are only three of the absolutely incredible choices you'll find on screen at the Brattle from October 19 through the 21.

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Cold War

Saturday, October 20 @ 2:30 p.m.

Much like his last film, the Oscar-winning Ida, Paweł Pawlikowski’s Cold War is once again a richly photographed black-and-white study of a period in Polish history. The new film finds Pawlikowski moving a bit further in the future — to the ’50s — where he examines the tumultuous relationship between a Jazz singer (Joanna Kulig) and the man (Tomasz Kot) who “discovered her” when recording folk songs in the Polish countryside. It’s loosely based on the director’s own parents, and looks to be as gorgeously realized as his prior work. We can’t wait for this one.

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