Moving Scottish documentary LOVE & TROUBLE plus Q&A with the director! | Skye Gathering Hall Portree
Arts
Film
Skye Community Cinema is proud to present an exclusive UK preview of
LOVE & TROUBLE
a moving Scottish documentary by award-winning director Amy Hardie, who will join us for an in-person Q&A!
Click here for trailer
Friday, April 25th at Skye Gathering Hall in Portree (doors 6.30pm/ film start 7pm)
- our welcome drink is always here for you! Enjoy a free glass of Prosecco/ Nosecco or juice on this special night!
- if you are 21 years or under you only pay 5 pounds.
About the film:
Kenny and Kerry both come to their wedding with high ideals and hidden pasts. Filmed over the first ten years of their marriage, Love & Trouble explores identity, shame, anger, and love. A rollercoaster of horses, race-cars, therapy, psychiatric drugs, and wild swimming.
Kenny and Kerry marry with secrets that almost blow their young family apart. After their new baby is born, Kenny’s PTSD is triggered by his crying. Kenny no longer knows what is real, calls it ‘the screams’. It seems their marriage is over. But Kerry makes a choice – to return to school, study how the brain works, and discover that suffering isn’t a given – you can “use thoughts to change feelings”. We follow their recovery over ten years as they emerge with new insights and resilience for their life ahead. Taking away one fear at the time.
I've been privileged to know them both for the last sixty years. They have allowed me to join their home life, their wild swimming and trail riding adventures, and especially their ‘talking cure’ sessions, whether IEMT, gestalt, or NLP. Therapy was a concept ridiculed in the environment they come from.
(Amy Hardie, director)
When: Friday, April 25th, doors 6.30pm, film start 7.00pm sharp
Where: Skye Gathering Hall Portree, 1934 Bank St, Portree IV51 9BZ
Tickets: 10 GBP at eventbrite or cash at door on the evening. 5 pounds for 21y and under.
Love and Trouble
is a must-see film for anyone who’s ever experienced anxiety, depression or PTSD, and for those who stood by them
. (British Medical Journal)
I cried and laughed and deeply admired their courage. The film offers a way for so many people to understand that change is possible.
(Shona Cameron MSc/Psychologist)
About our Q&A guest:
Dr
Amy Hardie
is senior lecturer in Film and Television at Edinburgh Futures Institute, and eca, University of Edinburgh, since 2013, and designed five courses for FilmMedicine in 2018.
Hardie’s new feature documentary
Love & Trouble
premiered at Documentale in Berlin in October 2024 and has a cinema release from May this year.
This is her fifth feature since graduating from the National Film and Television School with the BP Expo prize for best student documentary (
Kafi’s Story
). Her film, *Seven Songs for a Long Life*, is the first documentary in the UK to be ‘prescribed’ by doctors for their patients in over 240 GP centres.
Amy is a mentor for BFI and Scottish Doc Institute grantees and is currently an executive producer
The Hermit of Treig
, which which we showed at Skye Community Cinema.
We will also show one of the winning shorts from the "Films of Scotland" competition by the
Scottish Youth Film Foundation
, as we love to put up and coming talent into the spotlight.
Our next event screening will be on May 25th - then a special screening in another location on May 31st and then again at the Gathering Hall at June 22nd. Mark your calendars.
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About Skye Community Cinema:
Skye Community Cinema brings special event screenings monthly to Skye in different locations, including discussions and Q&A’s with talent - presented by Lena Vurma's Skye Films Ltd and writer/director Thor Klein.
Skye Community Cinema
Information Source: Skye Community cinema | eventbrite