watch movies to make you move!

ttff’s next Backyard Cinema screening will make you want to move! On 05 December, we’ll screen two engaging ttff/20 films, Best Student Film winner: La Pieza de Casseus, and fan favourite, Jump! (directed by Shari Petti), at our in-person screenings on Jerningham Ave in Belmont.

Tickets cost $35 each and can be purchased in advance or at the gate for one of two showtimes: 6.15pm and 8.00pm. Screenings will take place at 22 Jerningham Ave, Belmont.

Films will be screened in compliance with health and safety guidelines for masks, size of the gathering, and social distancing.

Buy tickets for the 6.15pm screening
Buy tickets for the 8.00pm screening

•We can receive cash, credit card or linx payments, and there will be refreshments for sale.

La Pieza de Casseus
Casseus is a young Haitian man who decides to enroll in a ballet academy in order to accomplish his dream of being a dancer, but his job as a bodega delivery guy in the Dominican Republic gets in the way of his goal.

Jump!
“Jump!” follows the three-month journey of the JumpTT programme which used parkour and physical theatre as an aesthetic to tell the stories of young people transitioning from childhood to adulthood.

don’t miss our first backyard cinema!

We’re delighted be be screening two of this year’s award-winning films at our first backyard cinema! 

Join us Friday 13 November at 22 Jerningham Ave, Belmont, for in-person screenings of “Unbroken” and “I don’t call it Ghetto”. Tickets cost $35 each and must be purchased in advance for one of two showtimes: 5.30pm and 7.30pm.

Films will be screened in compliance with health and safety guidelines for masks, size of the gathering, and social distancing.
 
buy tickets for 5.30 screening
buy tickets for 7.30 screening

Unbroken: Jamaican amputee Laron Williamson takes up rowing with the aim of competing in the Paralympic Games. When he learns that the nature of his amputation means that he doesn’t qualify his choices are to give up rowing or compete against able-bodied rowers. “Unbroken” is the inspiring story of how Williamson defies the odds to qualify for the Jamaican Olympic Rowing Team.

I don’t call it ghetto: Single, divorced, mother-of-three, police officer Onika James-Turner has had a life filled with challenges, obstacles and heartache. In “I Don’t Call it Ghetto”, we see how her difficult past has only made her stronger, impelling her to reach for a different life, one in which she could help her community. 

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#inperson#sociallydistanced#ttfilmfestival#ttff20