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Coming Soon

Baltic Cinema: Kadoyng + The Glitterball

Sat 21 Feb | 11:00-13:00

Forget E.T. and Star Wars — real aliens crash-land into sheds and help stop motorways being built in this special double-bill of two zany, rarely-screened children’s films from the 70s.

 

£6 Full price / £4 Students, under 18s, unwaged and 65+
Both films are included in your ticket price.

Kadoyng

Sat 21 February | 11:00 
Ian Shand UK 1972 60’ (Cert. U) English | 35mm transferred to digital video.

It looks like the quaint village of Byway will be bulldozed to make way for a motorway – until alien outcast Kadoyng arrives from outer space to help.

This gloriously odd, gently subversive comedy from the Children’s Film Foundation sees cosmic hobo Kadoyng – blessed with mysterious powers and a stalk-like appendage on his head - arrive unexpectedly on earth, to befriend local residents, and take on nasty politicians and road developers. Wittily written by Leo Maguire, who stars as Kadoyng, this is 1970s CFF at its weirdest, wackiest best.

Doors open 10:45, Film starts 11:00. Baltic Kitchen is open for drinks, which you are welcome to take up to the cinema. 

There will be a 5 minute interval between screenings. 

The Glitterball

Sat 21 February | 12:00 
Dir. Harley Cokeliss UK 1977 56’ (Cert. U) English | 35mm transferred to digital video.

Somewhere in 1970s England, a UFO crashes in a potting shed. Inside is a strange round visitor from space: the Glitterball. How will it get home?

This ingeniously small-scale sci-fi adventure of a tiny, shiny alien ball-being with strange powers and a taste for electricity, crisps and custard, was released the same year as Star Wars, and foreshadows E.T., but was made for just a fraction of the cost of either. It was produced for The Children’s Film Foundation, makers of intelligent, fun films for British kids, from the 1950s to the 1980s.

The Glitterball boasts outstanding visuals, with striking special effects by Brian Johnson (who worked on 2001: A Space Odyssey and Alien) and Barry Leith (animator of Paddington and The Wombles). Not long afterwards, director Harley Cokeliss was enlisted to shoot the SFX sequences for the second Star Wars film, The Empire Strikes Back.

Eight people sat in the cinema looking at the screen.

Baltic Cinema

Baltic Cinema is a new year-round cinema programme at Baltic, lighting up our Level 1 Cinema with the best new and archive films. Bringing otherwise rarely-screened work to the North East, Baltic Cinema also expands our exhibitions, offering a chance to explore further some of the themes they raise.

Baltic Cinema has five strands:

Currents presents new work from across the world

Sources expands on our exhibitions

Selected shows films selected by our artists and partners

Quayside Kino is a monthly screening for families and children

News From Home offers films on and from the North East, for the people who live here

All regular screenings take place in our Level 1 Cinema. 

Baltic Cinema is supported by Film Hub North with National Lottery funding on behalf of the BFI Film Audience Network.

young people in front of their created lightbox artwork at Baltic

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  • Keep our exhibitions free entry and accessible to everyone
  • Preserve support and opportunities for our communities to thrive
  • Maintain our historical and iconic building
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