Win Tickets to Your Sister’s Sister and Where Do We Go Now?

Concrete Playground are giving six lucky readers the chance to win double passes to the below international films, being released in New Zealand in September.

Karina Abadia
Published on August 27, 2012
Updated on March 25, 2019

Want to go to the movies for free? Yeah, of course you do. Concrete Playground are giving six lucky readers the chance to win double passes to two great comedies being released in New Zealand in September.

Simply email [email protected] with the subject line: YOUR SISTER or WHERE DO WE GO to be in the draw to win one of three double passes to each film. Entrants must be subscribed to Concrete Playground in order to win.

YOUR SISTER'S SISTER

It's a year since the death of Jack's brother Tom and he still feels like he's not coping. His best friend Iris (Emily Blunt), who also happened to be Tom's ex, suggests he goes to stay at her father's island cabin in the hope that some time alone will help the healing process. She's unaware  though that her gay sister Hannah (Rosemarie DeWitt) is also there, nursing a broken heart – and a plentiful supply of tequila – you can probably guess what happens next. Writer / director Lynn Shelton's script delivers quick-witted banter, classic bedroom farce and an authentically played out emotional dilemma. The film is fresh and funny and Mark Duplass (Humpday and Safety Not Guaranteed) is perfectly cast as Jack, the man in the middle.

* This film opens in cinemas on September 13.

WHERE DO WE GO NOW?

The latest film by director Nadine Labaki (Caramel) is an entertaining and unlikely near-musical which turns stereotypes of women in the Middle East upside down and uses humour to explore serious subjects. When the outside world begins to filter into the isolated Lebanese town, first through town-square TV broadcasts and then through "he said, she said" type accusations, the uneasy peace between Muslims and Christians begins to show signs of strain. The women respond by banding together and scheming of ways to prevent their husbands from killing each other in the religious conflict that surrounds the community.

To read a Concrete Playground review of this film, click here.

* This film opens in cinemas on September 27.

Published on August 27, 2012 by Karina Abadia
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