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Now Showing: European films In Los Angeles theaters

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New in LA: Headhunters from Germany & Norway, directed by: Morten Tyldum and Elles from France, Poland and Germany, directed by Malgoska Szumowska.

Arc Light Cinemas
Arc Light Hollywood
No European Films This Week

 Arc Lights Sherman Oaks
No European Films This Week.

Arc Light Pasadena
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen: (UK - Directed by: Lasse Hallström) Stuffy government fisheries scientist Fred is asked by a fishing-obsessed Arab Sheik to do the seemingly impossible - introduce British salmon to the Wadis of the Yemen. Despite considerable trepidation, Fred is finally won over by the charismatic Arab, who reveals that fishing brings him closer to God, and he hopes it will have the same effect on his countrymen.

Laemmle Theaters
Headhunters: (Germany, Norway - Directed by: Morten Tyldum) Roger is a man who seems to have it all: he is Norway's most successful headhunter, married to the beautiful gallery-owner Diana, owns a magnificent villa - but living larger than he should. To keep up he is stealing art on the side. At a gallery opening, his wife introduces him to Clas Greve.

Goodbye First Love: (Germany, France - Director: Mia Hansen-Løve) is an acutely perceptive portrait of a bright young woman in the wake of her first romance. Fifteen-year-old Camille (Lola Créton) is a serious, intensely focused girl who has fallen in love with easy-going Sullivan (Sebastian Urzendowsky), an older boy who reciprocates her feelings, mostly, but wants to be free to explore the world. When he leaves her to travel through South America, she is devastated. But over the next eight years, she develops into a more fully formed woman, with new interests and a new love—and the possibility that she’ll be less defenseless when Sullivan enters her life again. Rendering scenes that showcase her extraordinary ability to evoke moods and feelings, Hansen-Løve takes the story of a girl’s first romance and makes it into a singular experience, familiar in its broad strokes and yet so specific that it feels uniquely personal.

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen: (UK - Directed by: Lasse Hallström) Stuffy government fisheries scientist Fred is asked by a fishing-obsessed Arab Sheik to do the seemingly impossible - introduce British salmon to the Wadis of the Yemen. Despite considerable trepidation, Fred is finally won over by the charismatic Arab, who reveals that fishing brings him closer to God, and he hopes it will have the same effect on his countrymen.

We Have A Pope:(Italy, France -Directed by: Nanni Moretti) Nanni Moretti (The Son's Room, Caro Diario) joins forces with the great French actor Michel Piccoli (Contempt, Belle de Jour) to tell the story of Melville, a cardinal who suddenly finds himself elected as the next Pope. Never the front runner and completely caught off guard, he panics as he's presented to the faithful in St. Peter's Square.

The Kid With A Bike: (Belgium/France/Italy - directed by: Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne) Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, the deeply moving new film by brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (L'Enfant, Rosetta) delves into the emotional life of troubled 11-year-old Cyril, played with riveting intensity by newcomer Thomas Doret. When his father (Jérémie Renier) abandons him, Cyril at first refuses to admit it, claiming his father just forgot to say where he was going. Eventually forced to face hard reality, Cyril then obsessively tries to get his bicycle back (also missing).

The Deep Blue Sea: (UK -Directed by: Terence Davies) Writer/director Terence Davies (The Long Day Closes, The House of Mirth), master chronicler of post-War England, returns with a timeless romantic drama starring Rachel Weisz as a woman whose overpowering love threatens her well-being and alienates the men in her life.

Landmark Theaters
Headhunters: (Germany, Norway - Directed by: Morten Tyldum) Roger is a man who seems to have it all: he is Norway's most successful headhunter, married to the beautiful gallery-owner Diana, owns a magnificent villa - but living larger than he should. To keep up he is stealing art on the side. At a gallery opening, his wife introduces him to Clas Greve.

Landmark NUART
Elles: (France/Poland/Germany - Directed by Malgoska Szumowska) "Juliette Binoche, surely one of the most inquisitive and daring actors working in cinema today, plays Anne, a wife, mother and—most importantly—a journalist currently researching an article about student prostitution for the French edition of ELLE magazine. Anne finds herself drawn to two young women: a down-on-her-luck Polish student (Joanna Kulig) and a French girl (Anaïs Demoustier) who comes from one of Paris' many anonymous housing projects. Both women have entered the sex trade for different reasons, and as they open up to Anne, we are allowed glimpses of the reality of their work. Meanwhile, Anne is forced to confront the bourgeois reality of her own life, where her husband seems married to his cellphone and her son to his PlayStation.

Regent Theater 
No European Films This Week

Theater directors: To add your European movie show times to European films in Los Angeles Theaters, please contact us at showtimes@cinemawithoutborders.com

Disclaimer: Movie availability and show times are subject to change without notice.Check with your local theatre or DVD/VOD distributor for the most up-to-date information.

 Now Showing: European Films In Los Angeles Theaters for CWB, is sponsored by ELMA

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