IT’S NOT THE TIME OF MY LIFE + ScreenTalk with Szabolcs Hajdu
Hungary 2017 Dir Szabolcs Hajdu 81 min
A young family with their five-year-old son returns to Hungary after a year spent in Scotland where, contrary to their expectations, they weren’t able to settle down, and now in the need for shelter are paying an unexpected visit to their relatives in the middle of the night. It soon becomes clear that the two families had never really been in tune with one another while they share same feeling of unhappiness with their circumstances on its own way.
It’s Not The Time of My Life is an uncompromising intimate and ironic study of two young families where the basic human need for closeness with others and all attempts to express it fails and often creates sad and funny situations that can be found at almost every family.
A young family with their five-year-old son returns to Hungary after a year spent in Scotland where, contrary to their expectations, they weren’t able to settle down, and now in the need for shelter are paying an unexpected visit to their relatives in the middle of the night. It soon becomes clear that the two families had never really been in tune with one another while they share same feeling of unhappiness with their circumstances on its own way.
It’s Not The Time of My Life is an uncompromising intimate and ironic study of two young families where the basic human need for closeness with others and all attempts to express it fails and often creates sad and funny situations that can be found at almost every family.
Initiated as a theatre play and adapted to a film, this story has been filmed in one authentic apartment by 13 of Hajdu’s films school students and they share the credit for its cinematography. Belonging to the same generation of film making talent as Mundruczó, Pálfi and Fliegauf, Szabolcs Hajdu delivers the story of a family whose painful, naked truths and relationships unravel in front of us in a tragic-comic manner that draws faithfully on the work of Cassavetes and Bergman.
27 Jun 2018
18:30, Barbican Cinema 2