
Held on 16, 18 Mar 2023
The Museo Reina Sofía’s ongoing programme of film premieres, Intervals, shows recent works made either during the year in progress or the previous one. This fresh edition is devoted to Charlotte Wells (Scotland, 1987), 2022’s standout film-maker for her debut feature Aftersun (2022), a beautiful and melancholy reflection on family relationships, the real and imaginary dimension of memories and the passing of time.
The film sees a divorced father —played by Paul Mescal, nominated for the Best Actor Award at the 2023 Oscars— and his eleven-year-old daughter —played by Frankie Corio— go on a beach holiday together: a time full of tenderness, mutual understanding and love. Throughout the picture, the film-maker’s strategies enable.
the inner life of each character, particularly the tormented father, to take shape. In the meanwhile, memory bursts through with images recorded from that summery parenthesis of childhood, looked back upon, twenty years later, by the girl as an adult. This unique play with textures —extending across domestic film, nostalgia and subjectivity— reveals the real and imaginary memories of a girl trying to reconcile the memory of the affectionate, fun father who educated her and the laconic man she didn’t know. Aftersun looks at the coming-of-age genre from a different angle: between nostalgia and wound, combining a sophisticated film vocabulary that joins classicism and formal experimentation.
The session gets under way with the screening of Tuesday (2015), the first short film by the director which recounts how a sixteen-year-old girl starts to come to terms with the huge loss of her father and which, along with Aftersun, demonstrates Wells’s skill at working with melodrama.
Thursday, 16 March 2023 – 7pm / Second session: Saturday, 18 March 2023 - 7pm
Charlotte Wells. Tuesday
UK, 2015, colour, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, DA, 11'
Charlotte Wells. Aftersun
UK and USA, 2022, colour, original version in English with Spanish subtitles, DA, 10'
Credits
Tuesday
Director:Charlotte WellsProductor:Charlotte WellsScript:Charlotte WellsCast:Megan McGill, Anita Vertesse, David Leith, Fraser MunroArtistic direction:Samuel GrandchampEditing:Christopher Blue
Aftersun
Director:Charlotte WellsProductor:Charlotte WellsScript:Charlotte WellsCast:Frankie Corio, Paul Mescal and Celia Rowlson-HallPhotographic direction:Gregory OkeEditing:Blair McClendonMusic:Oliver CoatesSound:Vijay Rathinam, Jovan Ajder and Mehmet AksoyAwards:95th Academy Awards, 2023. Nomination for Best Actor, Paul Mescal
76th British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA), 2023. Nomination for Best British Film, Best Debut: British Writer, Director or Producer, and Best Actor
British Independent Film Awards (BIFA), 2022. Awards for Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Sound
75th International Cannes Film Festival, 2022. French Touch Jury Prize. Nomination for the Golden Camera Award and Critics’ Week Grand Prix
18th Bucharest International Film Festival (BIFF), 2022. Best Screenplay Award Atlanta Film Critics Circle (AFCC), 2022. Best First Feature Award
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards, 2022. Best Debut Feature Award
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, 2022. Best Editing Award
Munich Film Festival, 2022. Best Debut Directo
Más actividades
![Céline Sciamma, Naissance des pieuvres [Lirios de agua], 2007, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-3.jpg.webp)
Céline Sciamma. Water Lilies
Friday, 10 July 2026
Céline Sciamma’s directorial debut, Naissance des pieuvres,depicts the emotional and sexual awakening of three teenagers around an indoor swimming pool in a Parisian suburb. Marie, a fifteen-year-old introvert, becomes fascinated by Floriane, the charismatic captain of a local synchronised swimming team. Driven by this attraction, Marie tries to get closer to her while observing the complex dynamics of desire, friendship and power that develops between the young girls. At the same time, Anne, one of Marie’s friends, has her own experience of insecurity and affective search, shaped by the pressure to fit in and belong. As the relationship between the three intensifies, contradictions surface between the image they outwardly project and their real feelings.
Standing away from the common places on adolescence, Céline Sciamma explores first love, burgeoning queer identity and the uncertainty of desire with an intimate, observational gaze, resulting in a sensitive and honest portrait of a time of transformation, in which each gesture leads to the passage from childhood to adulthood.

Sofia Coppola. Somewhere
Saturday, 11 July 2026
Johnny Marco (Stephen Dorff), a famous Hollywood actor, lives a life of pleasure in Hotel Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, drifting aimlessly between vacuous relationships, punctuated by film shoots and commercial duties. Cleo (Elle Fanning), his eleven-year-old daughter, stays with him for a few weeks due to her mother’s absence, forcing him to rethink his life.
Sofia Coppola’s employment of swimming pools is carefully considered in the film — blue water in Somewhere is the only place where Marco can recover the meaning of his existence as the pool acts as a womb in which he finds balance. While living with his daughter Cleo and the reflection of these aquatic moments — diving under water, floating, playing or simply sunbathing with no real purpose — everything happens. Thus, Coppola explores in depth themes such as fame, loneliness and the complexity of human ties, putting forward an intimate and profound portrait full of the subtleties of life.

Jonathan Glazer. Sexy Beast
Friday, 17 July 2026
Gal Dove (Ray Winstone), a criminal for the British mafia, lives happily retired with his wife in an idyllic villa in southern Spain and a dazzling swimming pool. Their peace is shattered with the arrival of Don Logan (Ben Kingsley), a former gangster and criminal associate who wants to convince him to do one last job.
If a swimming pool can be at the heart of suspense, then Sexy Beast is the quintessence. The reflection of blue water in Gal’s idyllic seclusion symbolises the artificial paradise that can be broken at any time. This first feature-length film by British director Jonathan Glazer (also the director of The Zone of Interest, 2023) starts with one of the most striking swimming pool scenes, a symbol for the impending danger about to reach this whitewashed haven of peace. The perfect vision of recreated beauty — luxury pools on the Andalusian coast — which, in the depths of pristine water, conceals an unsettling fear of returning to the past.
![François Ozon, Swimming Pool [La piscina], 2003, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-6.jpg.webp)
François Ozon. Swimming Pool
Saturday, 18 July 2026
Sarah Morton (Charlotte Rampling), a frustrated English writer paralysed by writer’s block, is invited by her editor to spend a few days in her summer house in the south of France. While there she meets Julie (Ludivine Sagnier), the editor’s uninhibited daughter. The young girl’s hypersexuality clashes with Morton’s cold nature, an initial hostility which turns into a fascination with the private life of the young girl, serving the writer as inspiration for her new novel and tugging the story to an ambiguous game between truth and imagination.
Being in crisis is wanting to be another person. Sarah wants to absorb the vitality of her young host, a process of metamorphosis triggered by the swimming pool. The pool is the film’s central character, the place where Julie shows her naked body and amorous acts, sending Sarah into a state of agitation. Through the pool and its water, the writer drinks in Julie’s wild passion. The aquatic enclosure thus acts as catharsis: the place where the subconscious of the writer flourishes, enabling her to unleash her creativity and free her fantasies. At the same time, water distorts the image, blurring fiction and reality; ultimately, the necessary medium to keep art afloat.
![Jean Vigo, Taris, ou la natation [Taris, rey del agua], 1931, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/ciclocine-piscinas-7.jpg.webp)
Leni Riefenstahl. Olympia, Part 2. Festival of Beauty and Jean Vigo. Taris, Swimming Champion
Friday, 24 July 2026
The body in water as an object of ideology. This is one of the major themes of the 1930s and this session, where Nazism and Anarchism dissolve into two different swimming pools. Two great films of counterposed ideologies which have gone down in history as examples of film’s power to represent a vision of the world. In Olympia, Part 2. Festival of Beauty, Leni Riefenstahl films the Olympic Games of Berlin in 1936, organised during the Third Reich. The camera leaves the athletics stadium to show the repertoire of modern sports — fencing, polo, cycling, pentathlon — before culminating in the Olympic pool with Adolf Hitler as the host, where the beautiful, disciplined, classical bodies of the swimmers bring to mind, as Susan Sontag wrote, the visual fascination that characterised fascism. Meanwhile, Jean Vigo, the son of an exiled Spanish anarchist, films French Olympic champion Jean Taris in a funny, playful exercise, where the swimming pool becomes a field of play without rules and where avant-garde film-making elements of the 1930s materialise, such as slow motion, superimposed images and dynamic editing. Two avant-garde films, two films on opposite poles that show, for a time, swimming not as an object of pleasure or desire, but as a space of contest from which to demonstrate the power of the twentieth century’s great ideologies.