Tag Archives: what’s on

The Great City Swap begins today

Scotrail Great City Swap.22/9/16Picture © Andy Buchanan 2016

Scotrail have launched a new campaign today to encourage you to go to Edinburgh. They are also suggesting that those living in Edinburgh will come here for the day. The Great City Swap is supported by the Glasgow City Marketing Bureau and Marketing Edinburgh and it promises ‘memorable experiences and hidden gems’.

Research into the Central Scotland journey found that 90% of those questioned thought that the train trip would make the day out an attractive option, but that only around a third of those actually made the plan a reality. This campaign should help you do just that.

Nesta Gilliland, head of marketing and sales at ScotRail said : “Glasgow and Edinburgh both have great shopping, incredible culture, lively nightlife and family days out.  However, 90% of those we spoke with agreed that both cities are different in their own distinctive ways. That means those who live in either place are in an enviable position. When they travel by train, in less than an hour they can easily be in the other city soaking up amazing experiences.  That’s what our Great City Swap campaign celebrates.

“We want people to travel from East to West, and vice-versa, with ScotRail. It’s not that the cities don’t like each other – they do – it’s just that they need to take the time to get to know each other again. And we’ve got lots of creative ways to encourage people to take the plunge and get swapping.

“Through train travel, we’ll show how easy and enjoyable it can be to discover the real Edinburgh and Glasgow.”

Councillor Frank McAveety, the Leader of Glasgow City Council and Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, said: “Our two great cities share so many common bonds, with outstanding sights and attractions on offer. We know that People Make Glasgow and I would urge everyone, not least our neighbours in Edinburgh, to come and experience our welcome and hospitality. From world-class museums and family attractions, to shopping and great food and entertainment, there really is something for everyone to enjoy.”

As part of The Great City Swap, ScotRail will also be highlighting the affordability of leisure fares between Glasgow and Edinburgh.  Outside peak times, return fares between Glasgow and Edinburgh are £12.60** or less.  Kids go free*** and over 50s receive a discount if they are members of ScotRail’s Club 50.  Passengers can speak with ticket office staff at train stations who are on hand to help people get the best deal.

**Off peak adult day return is £12.60

***Kids go free up to age 16 on off-peak returns

Photos Andy Buchanan

Food bank fundraiser

An organisation which provides food banks in Glasgow for people in crisis is expanding and stepping up its fund-raising activities in order to keep up with demand for its services.

Destiny Angels is one of the Social Action Initiatives led by Destiny Church, a contemporary Christian movement based in Glasgow. Destiny Angels, who are currently distributing over 200 hampers a week, as well as clothing, are seeing and supporting people through their crisis and seeing lives turned around.

Last year, Destiny Angels, which also has ministries in Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Stirling and Inverness, supported more than 2000 families in Glasgow, providing – as well as regular aid – 1200 Christmas hampers and toys for 800 children.

Destiny Angels in Glasgow operates out of the Destiny Centre on 37 South Portland Street in the heart of the Gorbals. It is experiencing seemingly never ending increase in demand for services which include; mentoring, advocacy and coaching as well as supporting some of the most vulnerable and marginalised in our community with food and clothing.

Now the ministry, which is experiencing continually increasing demand for basic food aid in Scotland, is leaving its premises in the old Clydesdale Bank on Cathedral Street and moving to a bigger space on the 11th floor of the Strathclyde University Union.

LG Event Logistics is hosting one of the most major fund-raising events in Destiny Church’s event fundraising calendar at 1120 Pollokshaws Road, Shawlands, Glasgow, on 27 September. The event will include a ceilidh, a team quiz and other entertainments.

Organiser Leah Gillott said: “The need for help is clearly obvious on our streets 24 hours a day. The people we help often have nowhere else to turn. This is not about supporting a charity; it’s about supporting our cities and our communities.

“Our latest fundraiser will bring in money for our food bank in the Gorbals area of the city, and will help us to support people emotionally, spiritually and, as importantly, practically.”

Destiny Angels started as a local church initiative at Destiny Church Glasgow in 2007 and have been active continually since, building relationships with people experiencing the extremes of poverty in the city.

In one of the latest initiatives the organisation will expand its food bank programme to include a specialised storage unit for fresh fruit and vegetables, allowing it to provide needy families with healthy food as well as staples.

Destiny Angels in the Gorbals also provide a community based setting where people can come from all over the city to twice-weekly drop-ins where they get support from a team of trained staff and volunteers.

Who do you think you are? is coming to Scotland

Who Do I think I am ?: Mary Queen of Scots aka actress Helen Cuinn gets ready to trace her ancestry at “Who Do You Think You Are? Live Scotland”, taking place this coming weekend 29 – 30 August 2014 at the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre, Glasgow. This is a first ever event being staged as part of Homecoming Scotland 2014.
Helen was photographed by Colin Hattersley in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow.

GFF 2014 – Nymphomaniac Vols I & II (Lars Von Trier 2014)

chapter_5_photo_by_zentropaLars von Trier is an undeniable master of character study. In Nymphomaniac, when all the provocative material is stripped away, both promotionally and cinematically, what is left is the undeniably profound study of a woman torn between holding onto her problems and embracing them wholeheartedly.

On a snowy night, an old literary enthusiast named Seligman finds a woman badly beaten on the street. Her name is Joe, and as he takes her in for the night, they sit down and discuss with visceral honesty, the women’s lustful and torrid sexual past.

What von Trier has created was mercilessly split into two separate parts (his words, not mine) for its cinematic release. It does in fact, work really well. The two films, while both admirable in their own respects, do feel almost like polar opposites; as if the story has been suddenly turned on its head.

VOLUME I

It takes a lot of tenacity to make a film about obsession with sex. In a way, it could be construed by many as indulgent, but von Trier, with his thoughtful script and his wonderful cast has succeeded in making something that feels entirely natural and soft, rather that exploitative and anatomical.

What initially strikes you in the first volume of this story, is that it feels relaxingly unpretentious. Although von Trier is visionary in his methods, his work is often dismissed as too symbolic for his own good. He smartly tackled that by dissecting his symbols and metaphors on screen. Not only does it make the film much easier to follow, it lays all its cards on the table; never seeming to be shady.

The highlights of the film most definitely come down to its performers. As Seligman and Joe converse through the night, their performances by Stellan Skarsgård and Charlotte Gainsbourg feel primal, despite the dialogue feeling scripted. It’s a technique that works in the film’s favour, as this woman’s infatuated past feels almost fable like, as if read from the pages of a book. Stacy Martin is most impressive in her first film role as Joe’s younger self. She glows a rather youthful beauty, and gives potentially the best lead performance in the film; deserving praise for her inhibition-free attitude. She’s clearly delved into this film just as deep as the protégés lower down the credits. Surprisingly, Shia LaBoeuf, being the new-found pretentious performance artist that he is, is not overtly annoying here. If you get past his questionable accent (he’s channelling his Australian/Irish/East London roots, evidently), he gives a fine performance as the only man to be remembered through her years of sexual exploration.

Of course, the sex must be addressed. Much to everyone’s surprise, sexual gratuitousness is not what inhabits Nymphomaniac. What there is is entirely justified and tasteful, never straying into the exploitative. The most explosive scene comes within the third chapter, ‘Mrs H’. Both comical and heartbreaking, it’s a fantastic testimony to the screenwriting and Uma Thurman, who gives one of the best performances of her career.

What feels so great about the first volume is this unexpected humour that is laced through von Trier’s beautiful script. It’s indulgent in the right areas, surprisingly unpretentious and both lustful and desperately sullen. If the film was to carry on on a different but not too dissimilar tangent, it may have been a masterpiece as a whole body of work. That leads us on to…

VOLUME II

It’s an exceptionally long film, and at some point, desires to veer into something other than this woman’s sexual addiction. It does so, but in a way that after a few effective comical stabs, feels a little bit contrived, something most definitely not associated with von Trier’s work.

It’s hard to discuss this point in the film without spoiling it, so I will try my hardest not to give anything away. Whilst the first half is much of what you already know about Nymphomaniac, the second half is fairly unknown. It should be understood that, despite appearances from Jamie Bell (whose sadomasochistic performance is as impressive as it is disturbing) and Willem Defoe, Volume II is where the ideas may slightly run thin for von Trier.

Saying that, it is an enjoyable thing to watch, still oddly funny but overrun with something that’s ultimately bleak. It’s a hard thing to watch as it develops, as the sexual liberation that makes the first half so enticing to watch disappears into something realistic and consequential.

It needed direction, and the direction that von Trier took it in was sometimes eery; sometimes unexpected, but that doesn’t make it any less beguiling and strangely magical to sit through.

Nymphomaniac appetizer – Chapter 8: The Gun from Zentropa on Vimeo.

SECC Glasgow hosts Les Mills GFX fitness festival

 

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Get ready to roll up your sleeves, shout, sweat, dance and feel the burn as Les Mills, the global fitness brand, and creators of BODYPUMP, BODYATTACK and BODYCOMBAT, brings its world famous GFX fitness festival, powered by Reebok, to the SECC Glasgow on 2 March 2014.

 

The day-long event will feature 13 of most innovative classes the UK has ever seen and aims to inspire people with a passion for the most exciting trends in studio fitness. Participants can take part in the very best in cutting edge and motivating workouts set to chart topping music, from a 1 million watt sound system, that guarantees an electric atmosphere!

 

There will also be the opportunity to enter the Inaugural GRIT SERIES Championship, a high intensity interval training challenge guaranteed to push fitness fanatics to their limits.

 

Delivered and presented by the internationally renowned Les Mills UK national trainer team, this is the first year GFX is open to the public so turn up, step up and see the sweat on your brows like a crown of achievement as you join the Les Mills revolution.

 

To book your space and for more information on costs, please visit the website.

 

Submitted by Chris Brown

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GFF 2014: The Double (Richard Ayoade, 2014)

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If there’s a topic that Richard Ayoade tackles with impeccable skill, it’s infatuation. In his break out hit, the 2010 coming-of-age drama ‘Submarine’, he created a film about two young teenagers hopelessly in love but surrounded by break up and melancholy. In his latest feature, The Double, he once again creates an unrequited infatuation, but never veers into the obsessive.


It tells the story of Simon, a timid man who day by day is ignored and forgotten by his co-workers and mother. As all he yearns for slips from his hands, a man walks into the office. His name is James. Confident and daring, he could not be more different from Simon, apart from the fact that he looks identical to him. As James teaches Simon the ways to entice the woman he loves, James carries out a deceitful act of sabotage that drives Simon to insanity.

The Double presents itself as a ‘comedy’ on paper, and bar the few and far between lines of dark humour, it could not be further from it. Haunting and psychotic, it verges on this fine tightrope of insanity that drags you with it as it teeters off either side. It’s a bizarre turn for Ayoade, whose comic background would suggest he couldn’t make a thriller as fine as this, but to his credit he does it seemingly effortlessly, and with a sensational amount of skill. In fact, it wouldn’t be ridiculous to suggest that Ayoade’s effort here makes him one of Britain’s best modern directors. It lends itself, through its harrowing score and masterful cinematography, to the horror greats of the seventies and eighties. It’s bizarre, at times terrifying but with each and every frame drags you into the pit of your seat.

The performances, particularly Jesse Eisenberg as the both shy and vindictive leads of Simon and James, are scarily good. Eisenberg gives a career defining performance. The dual aspect of it also gives Mia Wasikowska, as the Simon’s love interest, a character that’s both caustic and charming. She’s a fine young actress and gives a performance that’s one of her own personal bests. There are numerous other cast members that crop up over the ninety minute runtime, both Wallace Shawn and Noah Taylor make great appearances as delusional co-workers, and Ayoade has even squeezed in roles for his Submarine alumni Yasmin Paige and Craig Roberts too.

The Double owes just as much to those in post production as it does to those during the filming of it. With an impeccable British direction, great international performances and a script and score to die for, The Double is truly one of the most enticing, interesting and genuinely excellent films of the year so far.

The Double plays at the Glasgow Film Festival on both Saturday 22nd and Sunday 23rd February

Sixth Avenue Traffic Interview

Glasgow based rock band Sixth Avenue Traffic are headlining a big gig on Christmas Eve at King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut in the city.

Chris Thompson (Vocals), Chris Gould (Guitars and Vocals), Kirsten Stevenson (Bass) and Jordon Lang (Drums) are finishing off a huge year for the band, from playing Hard Rock Rising Battle of the Bands in Edinburgh back in March to releasing their debut EP Whisper, Smile and Wave to a packed house at the Classic Grand. Playing a major gig at King Tut’s 2012 rounds off a busy and successful year for this great band.

Here Barry Dickson interviewed them about the past year, Christmas Eve and what 2013 will bring for the band and their ever growing fan base.

Sixth Avenue Traffic Interview by Basher1969 on Mixcloud

To find out more about the band go to:

www.sixthavenuetraffic.com

www.facebook.com/sixthavenuetraffic