The Box Office is open from 15:10 till 20:30 (open for another 30 minutes, phone: +386 1 239 22 17).
From 4 September 2024

There's Still Tomorrow C'è ancora domani

Paola Cortellesi / Italy / 2023 / 118 min / Italian

Rome, the 1940s. Delia wants to be a good mother and wife. Always busy, she lives with her husband Ivano and their three children. Ivano is the harsh padre padrone, but his bedridden father is even worse. Delia has occasional moments of relief exchanging secrets with her best friend Marisa, and she is happy at the prospect of her oldest daughter getting married to a wealthier young man. She submissively accepts the fate that was assigned to her, until one day a mysterious letter arrives …

cast Paola Cortellesi, Valerio Mastandrea

IMDb

Photos

After winning three awards at the Rome Film Festival, There’s Still Tomorrow became Italy’s highest-grossing film of the year, beating both Barbie and Oppenheimer.
Extra material (in Slovene only)
All Guides / All Booklets

(in Slovene only)

Kinodvor. Online.

You can't come to the cinema? You can watch this film online. Available only in Slovenia.

Kinodvor. Newsletter.

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

What's On

Sex Sex

Dag Johan Haugerud

Thursday, 11. 09. 2025 / 20:30 / Main Hall

Sex, Love and Dreams—not necessarily in that order—are the chapters in a loosely connected trilogy set in contemporary Oslo. In Sex, an intimate conversation between two men sparks a witty and refreshingly honest reflection on sexuality and gender roles in our society.

Wisdom of Happiness Wisdom of Happiness

Barbara Miller, Philip Delaquis

Friday, 12. 09. 2025 / 16:00 / 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.

Yunan Yunan

Ameer Fakher Eldin

Friday, 12. 09. 2025 / 18:00 / Main Hall

The Hamburg-based director of Palestinian-Syrian descent places the second instalment of his Homeland trilogy on a small, flood-prone island in the Wadden Sea. This melancholic, mood-driven film about exile and the scars it leaves behind features a charismatic performance by the legendary Hanna Schygulla.