YOU could start 2017 sans booze, sans carbs, sans chocolate, sans everything. Or you could retreat into the warmth of a cinema and feast on the best of cinema present and past at the Glasgow Film Festival, February 15-26. Once again, festival co-ordinators Allan Hunter and Allison Gardner have brought together a Forrest Gumpian box of chocolates: sometimes you may not know exactly what you are going to get, but it will always be fun finding out. Booking opens Monday. Here is my selection:

Curtain up and down

Opening this year’s event is Handsome Devil, a coming of age drama from John Butler, the writer/director of previous GFF hit, The Stag. Fionn O’Shea takes the lead as a rugby-hating teen sent to an all-boys, rugger-crazy Irish boarding school. He would feel desperately alone if not for pal Conor and an inspirational teacher played by Andrew “Moriarty” Scott. European premiere. The closing film is the hotly anticipated Mad to be Normal, starring David Tennant as Scottish psychiatrist RD Laing, whose controversial methods included experimenting with LSD on his patients. The film also stars starring Michael Gambon, Gabriel Byrne and Elisabeth Moss, and Tennant will be present at what will be the film’s world premiere.

Dangerous dames

Dedicated to the ladies of the film noir night, this year’s retrospective stand includes such classics as Chinatown, Body Heat and The Postman Always Rings Twice. Tickets free, but only available on day of screening.

Oh Canada

This year’s country in focus is Canada, the place Ryan Gosling calls home. Find out what else it has to offer cinema, with titles including Celtic Soul, a documentary about actor Jay Baruchel’s passion for Celtic FC, and the coming-of-age drama, The Demons.

The galas

Aka the ones that sell like Greggs' hot bakes. Choose from Berlin Syndrome (Berlin-set, boy meets girl psychological thriller); Catfight (black comedy about female schoolmates unhappily reunited); Free Fire (black comedy actioner, set in Boston 1978, and starring Cillian Murphy and Brie Larson); Goldstone (a follow-up noir from the hugely talented Ivan Sen of Mystery Road fame); Mindhorn, a comedy about an ageing actor making a comeback; The Odyssey (a biopic of Jacques Cousteau); Patriots Day (a thriller based around the Boston marathon bombing and starring Mark Wahlberg, John Goodman and JK Simmons); Rules Don’t Apply (Warren Beatty returns to directing with a romantic comedy set in old Hollywood); and Their Finest (Bill Nighy and Gemma Arterton in a WW2-set comedy drama based on Lissa Evans’ novel). Don’t forget the Surprise Film on February 21.

What’s up docs

Best is a study of the Manchester United football legend Pele called “the single best player in the world”. The award-winning I Am Not Your Negro is a blistering look of racial politics in America, with Samuel L Jackson narrating. The Lost City of Cecil B DeMille finds a filmmaker on an epic quest to find out if one of the sets from The Ten Commandments really was buried in the sands outside LA. The Chocolate Case details a quest of another kind – to find a guaranteed, 100%, politically guilt-free chocolate bar.

Local heroes

A new strand, faithful to what it says on the tin. Picks include Mark Cousins’ blend of drama and documentary, Stockholm, My Love; Hope Dickson Leach’s award-winning family drama The Levelling (starring Ellie Kendrick from Game of Thrones); and Benny, a portrait of the Gorbals boxer who won a world championship title but could not defeat the illness that killed him at a young age. John Byrne will attend a special screening of his pure dead brilliant Slab Boys on February 26, and it wouldn’t be a salute to local heroes without Bill Forsyth, whose adaptation of Marilynne Robinson’s novel Housekeeping, shows on February 19.

The golden globe

Featuring cinema from around the world, highlights include The Teacher, set in communist Czechoslovakia in 1983, a study of power corrupting; and family drama Harmonium, winner of the Un Certain Regard at Cannes. Also worth mentioning here, though it is part of the Cinemasters strand, is Paul Verhoeven’s Elle, which stars Isabelle Huppert as a victim of crime who refuses to suffer twice over. Huppert won best actress at the Golden Globes, with the film awarded best foreign film.

Family favourites

Dogs feature heavily in this strand, and why not? Rock Dog is about a Tibetan mastiff who hears music for the first time and decides to become a musician, while How to Steal a Dog is a hit from South Korea about youngsters who hit on a very naughty get rich quick scheme.

Tickets: Available from Monday, January 23 at 10am online (www. glasgowfilm.org/festival); in person at the Glasgow Film Theatre, 12 Rose Street, Glasgow G3 6RB or the CCA, 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow G2 3JD; by phone, 0141 332 6535 during GFT opening hours.