The Box Office is open from 14:20 till 20:30 (open for another 9 minutes, phone: +386 1 239 22 17).
From 23 May 2023

The Quiet Girl An Cailín Ciúin

Colm Bairéad / Ireland / 2022 / 95 min / Irish Gaelic, English / 13+

A quietly moving and sensitive coming-of-age story exploring issues of family, loneliness and grief through the eyes of its young protagonist. Filmed in the rarely heard Irish language, the film has delighted audiences and critics alike, winning numerous awards, including the Grand Prix in the Generation Kplus section at the Berlinale and an Oscar nomination.

cast Catherine Clinch, Carrie Crowley, Andrew Bennett, Michael Patric, Kate Nic Chonaonaigh

festivals, awards Oscar nominee for Best International Feature Film.

Photos

Rural Ireland, 1981. A quiet, neglected girl is sent away from her overcrowded, dysfunctional family to live with foster parents for the summer. She blossoms in their care, but in this house where there are meant to be no secrets, she senses there is an unspoken grief…

“Could be the best Irish film ever made.” – Irish Independent. “One of the single most moving, heartfelt, and heartbreaking movies from any country in the last decade. That only sounds like hyperbole until you see it. After that, the sentence reads as a huge understatement.”
Rolling Stone 

Kinodvor. Newsletter.

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

What's On

Die My Love Die My Love

Lynne Ramsay

Thursday, 12. 02. 2026 / 20:30 / Main Hall

Hamnet Hamnet

Chloé Zhao

Friday, 13. 02. 2026 / 15:10 / Main Hall

Chloé Zhao (Nomadland) imagines how a tragedy from Shakespeare’s real life might have inspired the creation of his timeless masterpiece Hamlet. Starring the exceptional Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal, the film is a moving story about love, loss, and the healing power of art.

Venom Gift

Knud Leif Thomsen

Friday, 13. 02. 2026 / 17:45 / Main Hall

Thomsen’s Danish-style Teorema (1968) predating Pasolini’s is as double-edged as its title (gift meaning both “poison” and “married”). The director conceived it as a polemical tract against pornography and the moral decay of Danish society. But by filling it with nudity and hardcore snippets, he ironically paved the way for a censorship-free Denmark, which in 1969 became the first country to legalize pornography. The censors covered the explicit scenes with thick white crosses (making them somehow even more obscene). And it is precisely on such a historical 35mm print that we will have the pleasure to see the film!