The Box Office is open from 14:00 till 20:15 (will open in 07:24).

The Days to Come Els dies que vindran

Carlos Marqués-Marcet / Spain / 2019 / 95 min / Spanish, Catalan

Marques-Marcet used the actual pregnancy of the acting duo to film The Days to Come, an intimate, naturalistic X-ray of the damage that pregnancy can do to a relationship.

festivals, awards Rotterdam 2019, Seattle 2019, Malaga 2019 (Best Spanish Film, Best Director, Best Actress, Youth Jury Prize)

IMDb

Vir and Lluís have just found out they are pregnant, but it was unplanned. They’re not against the idea of being parents, and yet they can’t help but hesitate, wondering if it’s the right time now. They decide on an abortion. The night before the appointment they stay up making a list of pros and cons, and decide to move ahead with the pregnancy. The question is whether they’re rushing into this, and whether their love is strong enough to pull them through. Their rollercoaster experience will show them that they won’t have to wait for the baby to arrive to find out.

“We took the real situation - the pregnancy - and asked, how would these characters respond? We improvised scenes and recorded these as the basis for scripted scenes. /…/ You could say this film is the documentary of a process and the fiction of a relationship. /…/ Any fiction film is a documentary of its actors. Putting a camera in front of someone shows them and the passage of time – shooting anyone is shooting someone dying – or growing up, if you take the more optimistic view.” (Carlos Marqués-Marcet)

Carlos Marqués-Marcet
Born in 1983, in Barcelona, Marqués-Marcet studied audio-visual communications at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona and received an MA in film direction from UCLA School of Theater, Film and TV, in Los Angeles. He rose to fame with his short film The Yellow Ribbon (2012). He made his debut feature, 10,000 Km, in 2014.

Kinodvor. Newsletter.

Join our mailing list and receive details of upcoming films and events!

What's On

Wisdom of Happiness Wisdom of Happiness

Barbara Miller, Philip Delaquis

Tuesday, 14. 10. 2025 / 15:00 / Main Hall

With disarming wit, the Dalai Lama reflects on balancing millennia-old Tibetan Buddhist traditions with the contemporary values of our globalised society that now struggles to overcome violence and war while standing on the brink of environmental collapse.

One Battle After Another One Battle After Another

Paul Thomas Anderson

Tuesday, 14. 10. 2025 / 17:00 / Main Hall

The latest film by Paul Thomas Anderson (The Master, Phantom Thread) follows Bob, a former member of a revolutionary group who cut ties with the world sixteen years ago. He lazes around the house, drinks, smokes weed, and watches old revolutionary films. But when his daughter goes missing, he must quickly pull himself together and do whatever it takes to find her…

Sold Out

Fiume o morte! Fiume o morte!

Igor Bezinović

Tuesday, 14. 10. 2025 / 19:15 / Small Hall

On 12 September 1919, a troop of some three hundred soldiers under the leadership of the flamboyant war-loving Italian poet Gabriele D’Annunzio swooped into the Northern-Adriatic port town of Fiume, now Rijeka, wanting to annex the city to Italy. Over the course of the next 16 months, during what is regarded as one of the most bizarre militant sieges of all time his official photography team captured over 10,000 images. A century later, Igor Bezinović orchestrates a direct-action history lesson focused on the siege and its modern-day implications.