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So many replies already!
Keep sending in suggestions and in a couple of days i'll put them all into a poll for everyone to vote on so we can come up with a short list to take back to the Friends group.
What about 'How to train your dragon'? or 'Spirited Away'?
But I do think the 1st Harry Potter one would be great. You could get all the kids (and adults) to dress up too, that would be really cool.
Might help to be more specific - I suppose it depends on what you think the audience is like as to what would work - is it aimed at principally families with young children? Will people be bringing their own seats? I once went to an event where everyone was given their own deckchair, blanket and hot water bottle on entry - enhances the spectacle considerably if you're warm and snug in the cold outsides - could probably enjoy a film about the Arctic even more then...
My first thought is Four Weddings - a real crowd pleaser and something for everyone except the very young.
More or less any of the Bond films. The Italian Job. The King's Speech.
I love every version of the 39 Steps but my kids don't relish B&W so maybe one of the colour versions? I suppose sadly that anti-B&W and scorn for 'old-fashioned' films rules out all of the wonderful Ealing Comedies like Kind Hearts and the Lavender Hill Mob. The Ladykillers is in colour and has glimpses of Kings Cross...
I love Tony Hancock's 'The Rebel' - it's hard to find but I can lend the FoFP a DVD of it if that helps - it's a light comedy and has beautifully subtle things to say about Englishness and our attitudes to art. It's an enjoyable, amusing and entertaining story of an ordinary working bloke who gives it all up to move to Paris to become an artist - lovely!
As It's not an adult audience I guess you can't show the superb V for Vendetta but Brazil might be OK - guess it's a bit too sophisticated to please young minds though.
Man on Wire is breathtaking and audacious - not really a 'mainstream' film experience but well worth everyone seeing if you are at all that way inclined.
Slumdog is well worth a repeat viewing.
Simon Pegg has a sort of local connection (parents still live in Crouch End apparently) and Shaun of the Dead was a hit at the Crouch End Festival (Simon Skyped in a message) but zombies could be a bit frightening for some kids so maybe Hot Fuzz?
BTW you might want to make your own Fairland popcorn and provide free flavoured cordials (elderflower?) - easy and cheap.
If that's the one where someone gets blinded with a hot spoon, it's far too brutal for me
Ghostbusters
Willy Wonka
Babe
Cool Runnings
Happy Feet
Mr Bean
Nativity! (wrong time of year though)
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