Best in Show

  • February 12, 2017 / 14:00
  • February 25, 2017 / 13:00

Director: Christopher Gues
Cast: Jennifer Coolidge, Christopher Guest, John Michael Higgins, Michael Hitchcock, Eugene Levy, Jane Lynch, Michael McKean, Catherine O’Hara, Parker Posey
USA, 2000, 90’, color
English with Turkish subtitles

It is an exciting day for American dog owners… This mockumentary comedy, co-written and directed by the genre’s acclaimed director Christopher Guest, focuses on the participating dog owners of a prestigious dog show organized in Philadelphia. From the moment they leave from different States to the post-show follow-ups, we get to know these weird and crazy people! Best in Show guarantees fun and laughter with its improvised dialogues, talented comedic actors and different breeds of dogs.

Bombón: El Perro

Bombón: El Perro

White God / Fehér isten

White God / Fehér isten

Wendy and Lucy

Wendy and Lucy

Wiener-Dog

Wiener-Dog

Truman

Truman

Best in Show

Best in Show

My Dog Tulip

My Dog Tulip

Family Film

Family Film

Baxter

Baxter

Heart of a Dog

Heart of a Dog

Trailer

Best in Show

Turquerie

Turquerie

Having penetrated the Balkans in the fourteenth century, conquered Constantinople in the fifteenth, and reached the gates of Vienna in the sixteenth, the Ottoman Empire long struck fear into European hearts. 

Giacometti: Early Works

Giacometti: Early Works

Organized in collaboration with the Giacometti Foundation, Paris, the exhibition explores Giacometti’s prolific life, most of which the artist led in his studio in Montparnasse, through the works of his early period as well his late work, including one unfinished piece. Devoted to Giacometti’s early works, the first part of the exhibition demonstrates the influence of Giovanni Giacometti, the father of the artist and a Swiss Post-Impressionist painter himself, on Giacometti’s output during these years and his role in his son’s development. 

Midnight Stories: COGITO <br> Tevfik Uyar

Midnight Stories: COGITO
Tevfik Uyar

He had imagined the court room as a big place. It wasn’t. It was about the size of his living room, with an elevation at one end, with a dais on it. The judges and the attorneys sat there. Below it was an old wooden rail, worn out in some places. That was his place. There was another seat for his lawyer. At the back, about 20 or 30 chairs were stowed out for the non-existent crowd.