Australian Competitions Club

Expired => Closed Competitions => Topic started by: Ceramics on Thursday 14 April 2016, 08:32:23 am



Title: 5x DP ‘Nothing In Return’ + Q & A Session, 15 Apr MELB *CLOSES 4pm!
Post by: Ceramics on Thursday 14 April 2016, 08:32:23 am
http://thelowdownunder.com/2016/04/13/ticket-giveaway-daniel-guzmans-nothing-in-return-q-a-session/

Ticket Giveaway – Daniel Guzmán’s ‘Nothing In Return’ + Q & A Session

(http://thelowdownunder.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Nothing-In-Return.jpg)


To celebrate the launch of the 2016 Spanish Film Festival here in Melbourne, we’ve managed to snaffle 5 double passes to see Festival guest Daniel Guzmán’s multi-award winning new film Nothing In Return (A Cambio De Nada) and join the film maker for a special Question & Answer session! It’s all happening 6.30pm Friday April 15, 2016 at the salubrious Palace Cinema Como in South Yarra! Nothing In Return took out Best Director for Guzmán and Best new Actor in breakout star Miguel Herrán at the 2015 Goya Awards and has been winning raves in festivals across the globe ever since!

To Enter: Like & Share!

then email ‘I Want Nothing In Return‘ with you and your guest’s name to info@thelowdownunder.com

Entries Open: Now!


Entries Close: 6pm Thursday April 14, 2016 (Winners will be notified via email and have their names added to the doorlist of the event at the Cinema.)

Synopsis: Actor Daniel Guzmán (who can be seen playing a cop in MY BIG NIGHT) makes an auspicious directing debut with this high-spirited tale of disaffected youth that won the Goya Awards for Best New Director and Best New Actor. Bright, rebellious teenager Dario (Herrán), expelled from school and estranged from his battling parents, runs away from home. He forms a surrogate family on the streets of Madrid with his hefty best friend Luismi, the avuncular auto mechanic Justo, and the nonagenarian junk-dealer Antonia (beautifully played by the director’s own grandmother). When Justo gets into trouble with the law, Dario launches a series of ill-fated schemes to bail him out. Upbeat but not sappy, Guzmán’s film is a love letter to Madrid, and his acting background shines through in the infectious rapport among the performers. – Gene Siskel Film Center