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CINEDAYS 2003 Germany

European premieres at Augsburg

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Grand first screenings and a European premiere are on the programme dedicated to European cinema in Augsburg, Germany: the Mephisto, Thalia and Savoy cinemas will show successful films from the most important festivals, some of which still aren’t on general release.

The special event is certainly the European premiere of Dogville [+see also:
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by Lars von Trier but there’s also the chance to see Swimming pool [+see also:
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by François Ozon and The Mother by Roger Mitchell, both of which were presented at Cannes 2003, and My Life Without Me [+see also:
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, a Spanish-Canadian coproduction directed by Isabel Coixet, which was a big hit with the public when it was shown at the Berlin Film festival in February.

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German productions are represented by Rosenstrasse [+see also:
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by Margarethe von Trotta, which won the prize for Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival, Good-bye, Lenin [+see also:
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interview: Wolfgang Becker
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by Wolfgang Becker, the winner of the Best European Film at the 2003 Berlinale and which has been nominated to go forward for the Oscar for Best Foreign Film, the animated cartoon Till Eulenspiegel by Eberhard Junkersdorf, Liegen lernen by Hendrik Handloegten, both of which have just been released in German cinemas, and the documentary Mein kleines Kind by Katjia Baumgarten, presented at the 2002 Berlinale 2002 in the "Perspektiv deutsches Kino" section.
The more recent films being featured include The Honest Thief [+see also:
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(2001) by Neil Jordan, Wilbur wants to kill himself [+see also:
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(2002) by Lone Schefig, Stille liebe (2001) by the Swiss director Christoph Schaub, Hukkle by the Hungarian György Pálfi (in competition at the 2002 Turin Film Festival) and the controversial film from Cannes 2002 Irreversible by Gaspar Noè.

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(Translated from Italian)

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