Atomic

 Epic live concert and film experience

27-28th August  Edinburgh Playhouse

An epic live concert and film experience from Glasgow band Mogwai and renowned film maker Mark Cousins.

Atomic: Living in Dread and Promise is a fiery portrait of our atomic age, a powerful, visceral investigation of life and death in the nuclear age, combining rare archive footage with a brand new soundtrack of original music performed live by Mogwai.

With images of protest marches, Cold War confrontation, Chernobyl and Fukushima, Cousins’ impressionistic film is a kaleidoscope of the appalling destructive power of the atomic bomb, and also the beauty and benefits of x-rays and MRI scans.

Mogwai’s compelling soundtrack encapsulates the nightmare of the nuclear age, but also its dreamlike beauty. They perform their brooding score live on stage alongside the film screening.

These are the first live shows of Atomic in the UK, and the only performances in Scotland this year.

Buy Tickets http://www.eif.co.uk/2016/atomic#.VwTdF2MzNFL

Bothy Life in the Daily Record

Star of new BBC documentary about bothies won't get to see it.. because she doesn't have a telly

IONA SCOBIE often stays in bothies when moving horses between her parents' farms and features in BBC Two show Bothy Life, even although she doesn't have TV to watch it on.

She said: “Every bothy is different – some have beds but I’ve slept on a cobbled floor in one. I’ve slept on peat stacks and met different people in them. They’re fantastic – you really appreciate them.

“We’re travelling in the snow sometimes and it’s not easy and you really feel the weather and just by having somewhere warm and dry to go for the night is fantastic.”

Sometimes she’s lost horses while asleep in a bothy as they’ve wandered off and she’s had to find them the next morning.

“Some nights I have to pop my head out every couple of hours to check on the horses,” Iona recalled. “I’ve had them disappear for miles when they’ve wandered home and I’m left in the middle of nowhere with a big saddle.

“I’ve had to walk to find them and ride them back bareback to pick up the saddle again.”

But she loves her life and wouldn’t have it any other way.

Read the full article here

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/star-new-bbc-documentary-bothies-6954903

Bothy Life in the Evening Times

Cat McGoldrick:

'Great outdoors saved my life'

THE simple mountain bothy might provide shelter to hillwalkers in remote corners of the country. Cat McGoldrick could never have imagined the transformative effect the refuge would have on her life.

Visiting a remote lodge in Glen Etive with Venture Scotland took the 27-year-old out of Glasgow and into an environment so different from her life in the East End of Glasgow, she vowed to change.

Struggling with alcoholism from her mid teens, for years her life for a string of drinking binges followed by blackouts. In and out of hospital to be treated for pancreatitis and liver problems, Cat has lost her older brother and a number of friends to addiction.

In trouble with the police and eventually on a home curfew, the future couldn’t have looked any bleaker. That’s when Cat says she hit rock bottom and knew she had to do something about it.

In BBC Scotland’s Bothy Life, she talks about how a basic cabin in the Highlands gave her time to take stock and build the confidence to tackle her demons.

Read the full article here

http://www.eveningtimes.co.uk/news/14126179.Cat_McGoldrick___Great_outdoors_saved_my_life_/

Accidental Anarchist and a new democracy - New York Times

Last month Hopscotch Films, with the support of Creative Scotland and the Sundance Documentary Institute, sent Carne Ross, former diplomat and author of the Leaderless Revolution to Syria.

Carne travelled to the defacto autonomous Kurdish region of Rojava where a new form of democracy is blossoming. Read about what Carne found in his New York Times op ed published today.

Click image to continue reading. 

Accidental Anarchist continues filming and is due out in 2016.

Atomic Review - Showing Not Telling

With a critical response size probably disproportionate to its viewing figures, Mark Cousin’s cine-docu-essay-poem Atomic, Living in Dread and Promise aired on Saturday as part of the BBC’s coverage remembering the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings 70 years ago. The manner in which the film was constructed, while typical of Cousin’s singular style, stands out for the most part as unique in field of documentary films, and it could hopefully signal a very promising change for TV documentaries.

Read full review below

http://www.impactnottingham.com/2015/08/showing-not-telling-atomic-living-in-dread-and-promise-and-tv-documentaries/