Blog

The 1970s – Hollywood’s Second Golden Age

The 1970s – Hollywood’s Second Golden Age

They don’t call the 1970s, Hollywood’s “second” Golden Age, for nothing. Looking back upon the decade, it’s an extraordinarily rich period and one of the most interesting films from those golden years is playing in a re-mastered copy at the UPP over the coming months...

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I Am Cuba – An Intro by Ally Pitts

I Am Cuba – An Intro by Ally Pitts

Mikhail Kalatozov is an intriguing figure. He confounds the oversimplification that in the USSR after the brief period in the 1920s when avant garde filmmakers like Eisenstein and Dziga Vertov made masterpieces, you could either be a compliant, unimaginative Socialist...

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The Cook, the Thief….an Acquired Taste

The Cook, the Thief….an Acquired Taste

I was wondering if everything you can think of, is better up on the big screen, in, you know, a movie? Sex, for sure. Sport, definitely. Landscapes? Perhaps. Faces? Maybe. Beauty? Absolutely. Food? Now, there’s an interesting one. The recently released art-house...

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Magic Hour: Days of Heaven Returns

Magic Hour: Days of Heaven Returns

My students are often surprised to hear me say that there are a number of films I have seen well over 10 times at the cinema, in a lifetime devoted to the medium. And that’s not taking into account the numbers of viewings in a classroom, on video or DVD or on...

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Orson Welles Bows Out in Style

Orson Welles Bows Out in Style

1941’s masterful Citizen Kane, unsurprisingly turned out to be a tough act to follow. Orson Welles, a child prodigy and star of theatre and radio was already well known to audiences across the world when he first arrived in Hollywood and was given carte blanche by RKO...

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Elaine May’s A New Leaf

Elaine May’s A New Leaf

Now 91 (and long may she last), Elaine May is a fascinating 1970s Hollywood figure and one of the few (only?) mainstream women directors from the period – 1971’s A New Leaf (which is screening at the UPP in March, as part of the Oxford International Women’s Festival)...

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The Man Who Ate His Shoe

The Man Who Ate His Shoe

Cinema lovers will continue to celebrate 2024 in style when the UPP screens a selection of films directed by the “none more maverick” German film director Werner Herzog in February. The season, which ties in with Radical Dreamer, the new BFI funded documentary about...

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The Rise and Fall of the Coolest of the Cool

The Rise and Fall of the Coolest of the Cool

Few other actors crashed and burned quite as spectacularly as 80s homme du jour Mickey Rourke who, lest we forget, was not only one of the most exciting actors to emerge in that decade but was also, for a while, the coolest (and probably sexiest) guy on the planet....

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UPP Staff and Volunteers Films of 2023

UPP Staff and Volunteers Films of 2023

Every year we poll our team to find out which new releases screened at the UPP that they enjoyed the most. In a year in which we’ve seen symphonic scandals, Alpine mysteries, and the arrival of a tiny walking, talking sea shell – let’s take a look at the top ten films...

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Plan your visit

Our beautiful art deco inspired auditorium can be found just off East Oxford's Cowley Road. We are open 7 days a week. We open the cinema and box office 30 minutes before the scheduled start time of each film, and the Box Office then closes 10 minutes after the film starts. We don’t show adverts, just a couple of trailers, so don't be late as the film itself starts very close to the advertised time!