“Greetings from The Humungus! The Lord Humungus! The Warrior of the Wasteland! The Ayatollah of Rock and Rolla!”
Another terrific lineup of midnight movies for the ‘Reel Late at The Tivoli’ to kick off the 2018 season. It’s a typically good variety of titles that should draw the late night movie buff crowd with a couple of retro surprises. The Midnight Movie experience has always catered to a college-age crowd and that’s the way it should be. ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW with live shadow cast with the Samurai Electricians ends the new schedule on April 6th and 7th . The oldest film this time isDario Argento’s DEEP RED (1976)while the most recent is GET OUT from last year. There’s a Miyazaki (HOWL’S MOVING CASTLE) thrown in there for attendance insurance (theses always pack ‘em in), some standards including THE ROOM and WAYNE’S WORLD. I believe ROAD WARRIOR, DEEP RED, and AMELIE are new to the Tivoli midnight roster, and I suspect they will draw good crowds.
I’m there every Friday night with free swag, movie trivia, and prizes!
Tickets are $8 (except for ROCKY HORROR). Here’s the line-up:
April 6-7ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW with live shadow cast, Samurai Electricians!
All tickets $10
April 13-14GET OUT
April 20-21 WAYNE’S WORLD
April 27-28 ROAD WARRIOR
May 4-5 AMELIE
May 11-12DEEP RED
May 18-19 THE ROOM
May 25-26 HOWL’S MOVING CASTLE
The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO.
STUDIO GHIBLI FEST, a nine film monthly series of anime classics, continues in March with PONYO from the legendary Studio Ghibli and Academy Award-winning director Hayao Miyazaki. This special event will play in movie theaters nationwide for three days only on March 25, 26 and 28.
From the legendary Studio Ghibli, creators of Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro, and Academy Award-winning director Hayao Miyazaki, comes a heartwarming family adventure. When Sosuke, a young boy who lives on a clifftop overlooking the sea, rescues a stranded goldfish named Ponyo, he discovers more than he bargained for. Ponyo is a curious, energetic young creature who yearns to be human, but even as she causes chaos around the house, her father, a powerful sorcerer, schemes to return Ponyo to the sea. Miyazaki’s breathtaking, imaginative world is brought to life with an all-star cast, featuring the voices of Cate Blanchett, Matt Damon, Lily Tomlin, Liam Neeson, and more.
· WHO: Fathom Events and GKIDS
· WHEN: Sunday, March 25at 12:55 p.m. local time (English- dubbed).
Monday, March 26at 7:00 p.m. local time (English-language subtitled).
Wednesday, March 28at 7:00 p.m. local time (English-dubbed).
· WHERE: Tickets for “Ponyo” can be purchased online by visiting www.FathomEvents.com or at participating theater box offices. Moviegoers throughout the U.S. will be able to enjoy these events in nearly 600 select movie theaters. For a complete list of theater locations visit the Fathom Events website (theaters and participants are subject to change).
The Tenth Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival — co-presented by Cinema St. Louis and the Webster University Film Series concludes this weekend. — TheClassic French Film Festival celebrates St. Louis’ Gallic heritage and France’s cinematic legacy. The featured films span the decades from the 1920s through the mid-1990s, offering a revealing overview of French cinema.
There are three more events for the Tenth Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival happening this weekend:
Friday, March 23rd at 7:00pm – LE SAMOURAI
In a career-defining performance, Alain Delon plays Jef Costello, a contract killer with samurai instincts. After carrying out a flawlessly planned hit, Jef finds himself caught between a persistent police investigator and a ruthless employer, and not even his armor of fedora and trenchcoat can protect him. An elegantly stylized masterpiece of cool by maverick director Jean‑Pierre Melville, “Le samouraï” is a razor-sharp cocktail of 1940s American gangster cinema and 1960s French pop culture — with a liberal dose of Japanese lone-warrior mythology. Writing in the New Yorker on the film’s original U.S. release, Penelope Gilliatt called Melville “the poet of the implacable. In France he is thought of as the most American of directors, the man who has taken the B picture and the policier to new heights; to us he is apt to seem one of the most French, able to make something artful and full of art out of little, like a chef concocting an idyllic hors d’oeuvre out of mayonnaise and a few raw vegetables.” She describes “Le Samourai” as “a sort of meditation on solitude, embodied in a lonely, rigorous mercenary who assassinates to order,” and praises the film as “cold, masterly, without pathos, and not even particularly sympathetic; it has the noble structure of accuracy.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Kathy Corley, professor of film in the Electronic and Photographic Media Department at Webster University.
Saturday, March 24th at 6:00pm – LA BELLE NOISEUSE
Winner of Cannes’ Grand Prix in 1991, Jacques Rivette’s “La belle noiseuse” is a free adaptation of Balzac’s “The Unknown Masterpiece” infused with elements drawn from a trio of works by Henry James. In the film, the once-famous painter Édouard Frenhofer (Michel Piccoli) lives quietly with his wife, Liz (Jane Birkin), in a rambling countryside château in the rural Provence region of France. When young artist Nicolas (David Bursztein) visits him with his striking girlfriend, Marianne (Emmanuelle Béart), the aging and increasingly unproductive Frenhofer finds himself inspired to begin painting again in earnest. At the urging of his agent, he commences work on the painting “La belle noiseuse,” a nude portrait that he left unfinished years earlier (and for which Liz had posed). Pressed by Nicolas, Marianne reluctantly agrees to serve as Frenhofer’s new (and nude) model. Critic Jonathan Rosenbaum — a longtime enthusiast of the director’s work — writes in the Chicago Reader: “The complex forces that produce art are the film’s obsessive focus, and rarely has Rivette’s use of duration to look at process been so spellbinding; hardly a moment is wasted. Rivette’s superb sense of rhythm and mise en scene never falters, and the plot has plenty of twists. With exquisite cinematography by William Lubtchansky, beautiful location work in the south of France (mainly at an 18th-century chateau), and drawings and paintings executed by Bernard Dufour. The title translates roughly as ‘the beautiful nutty woman’; it’s also the title of the masterpiece the painter is bent on finishing.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Robert Hunt, film critic for The Riverfront Times.
Sunday, March 25th at 7:00pm – PEPE LE MOKO
The notorious Pépé le moko (Jean Gabin, in a truly iconic performance) is a wanted man: Women long for him, rivals hope to destroy him, and the law is breathing down his neck at every turn. On the lam in the labyrinthine Casbah of Algiers, Pépé is safe from the clutches of the police — until a Parisian playgirl compels him to risk his life and leave its confines once and for all. Julien Duvivier’s “Pépé le moko” is one of the most influential films of the 20th century and a landmark of French poetic realism. The Chicago Tribune’s Michael Wilmington raves: “Pépé le moko’ is a timeless romantic thriller that steeps us in one of those great artificial movie worlds that become more overpowering than reality itself. It’s a film with atmosphere so thick and rich you can almost smell it: full of winding fetid streets that steam with spices and intrigue, packed cabarets latticed with smoke and shadows. Directed and co-written by Julien Duvivier, starring Jean Gabin as Pépé, this splendid entertainment is set in ’30s Algiers. But despite extensive location photography, it’s not a real city we see here but a noir metropolis, as fantastic as anything in the Arabian Nights.” Wilmington concludes: “‘Pépé le moko,’ despite its pop origins, becomes, like its imitator ‘Casablanca,’ a powerful statement on cultural exile and doomed romance.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Robert Garrick, attorney, board member of the French-preservation nonprofit Les Amis, and former contributor to the davekehr.com film blog.
For those of us who ventured out to see GRINGO on Friday night, the first trailer for ADRIFT appeared in cinemas, and to watch it in a theater was something to be experienced.
With the audio loud and deafening, combined with the harrowing and threatening visuals, made for an intense preview and a must-see movie.
The preview came online today from STXFilms.
From the director of Everest and starring Shailene Woodley (Big Little Lies, The Fault in our Stars) and Sam Claflin (Journey’s End, Me Before You, The Hunger Games films), ADRIFT is based on the incredible true story of two young adventurers whose chance encounter leads them first to love, and then to a fight for survival.
Setting off on the journey of a lifetime across the Pacific Ocean, Tami Oldham (Woodley) and Richard Sharp (Claflin) are pushed to their limits as they sail directly into one of the most catastrophic storms in recorded history. In the aftermath, Tami awakens to find Richard badly injured and their boat in ruins. With no hope for rescue, Tami must find the strength and determination to save herself and the only man she has ever loved.
ADRIFT is an unforgettable story about the resilience of the human spirit and the remarkable power of love. ADRIFT is directed by Baltasar Kormákur (Everest, 2 Guns, The Deep).
The Tenth Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival — co-presented by Cinema St. Louis and the Webster University Film Series continues this weekend. — The Classic French Film Festival celebrates St. Louis’ Gallic heritage and France’s cinematic legacy. The featured films span the decades from the 1920s through the mid-1990s, offering a revealing overview of French cinema.
There are two more events for the Tenth Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival happening this weekend:
Friday, March 16th at 7:30pm – ALPHAVILLE
A cockeyed fusion of science fiction, pulp characters, and surrealist poetry, Jean-Luc Godard’s irreverent journey to the mysterious Alphaville remains one of the least conventional films of all time. Eddie Constantine stars as intergalactic hero Lemmy Caution, on a mission to eliminate Professor Von Braun, the creator of the malevolent Alpha 60, a computer that rules the city of Alphaville. Befriended by the scientist’s beautiful daughter Natasha (Godard muse Anna Karina), Lemmy must unravel the mysteries of the strictly logical Alpha 60 and teach Natasha the meaning of the word “love.” Calling the film a “hyper-sci-fi-meta-noir, which skylarks about an absurd dystopian future in the wet streets of 1965 Paris,” the Village Voice’s Michael Atkinson describes “Alphaville” as “all totemic genre gestures all the time”: “Everything is a dislocated signifier of totalitarian confusion — language, institutional sex, assassination attempts, scientific lingo, modernist architecture, bureaucracy, human emotion (officially outlawed, but shruggingly prevalent), Anna Karina’s luminous eyes. But it’s all also a Godardian gag, a riff on artifice and the blithe joy of cinematic bullshit. Iconic in its very grain, the film toggles effortlessly between toast-dry farce and vogueing postwar hipitude, and like the balletic swimmers performing mid-pool state executions, it’s a thing of insensible beauty.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Andrew Wyatt, film critic for Cinema St. Louis’ The Lens and the Gateway Cinephile film blog.
Saturday, March 17th at 7:00pm – THE LOVERS ON THE BRIDGE
Leos Carax’s “The Lovers on the Bridge” is one of the most spectacularly romantic films of the 1990s, an exploration of the intense, convulsive relationship between one-eyed artist Michele (Juliette Binoche) and alcoholic street performer Alex (Carax’s longtime collaborator Denis Lavant). Paris’ oldest bridge, the Pont Neuf, is both their home and their stage as they break up and get back together in increasingly explosive reunions, with the detonations becoming quite literal during a jaw-dropping re-creation of the epic fireworks display that marked the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution. One of the film’s ardent admirers, Stuart Klawans of the Nation, declares: ‘The Lovers on the Bridge’ is one of the most splendidly reckless films ever made — the film that might have torn through the mind of Godard’s Pierrot le Fou, after love made him paint his face blue and tie sticks of dynamite to his hair…. While the fuses sizzle near your head, Carax makes a film about orange flames shooting across a black sky; about a subway passage that turns into an inferno; about the thrumming and skittering of a cello sonata, random gunfire, a snowfall out of an old movie musical…. It’s a mistake, a wreck, an absurd imposture — a priceless gift.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Pier Marton, video artist and unlearning specialist at the School of No Media. Marton has lectured with his work at the Museum of Modern Art, the Carnegie Museum, and the Walker Art Center and has taught at several major U.S. universities.
Sunday, March 18th at 7:00pm – PICKPOCKET
This incomparable story of crime and redemption from the French master Robert Bresson follows Michel, a young pickpocket who spends his days working the streets, subway cars, and train stations of Paris. As his compulsive pursuit of the thrill of stealing grows, however, so does his fear that his luck is about to run out. A cornerstone of the career of this most economical and profoundly spiritual of filmmakers, “Pickpocket” is an elegantly crafted, tautly choreographed study of humanity in all its mischief and grace, the work of a director at the height of his powers. Dave Kehr of the Chicago Reader writes: “Robert Bresson made this short electrifying study in 1959; it’s one of his greatest and purest films, full of hushed transgression and sudden grace. A petty thief (Martin Lasalle) becomes addicted to the art and thrill of picking pockets. He loses his friends and fiancee, and begins to live like a monk, concentrating his entire being on his obsessional, increasingly devotional acts of theft. If the film seems familiar, that’s because Paul Schrader recycled great chunks of it in his scripts for ‘Taxi Driver,’ ‘American Gigolo,’ and ‘Raging Bull.’ But the original retains its awesome, austere power.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Calvin Wilson, film, jazz, art, and dance critic for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Look for more coverage of the CLASSIC FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL here at We Are Movie Geeks.
Here’s the rest of the line-up:
Friday, March 23rd at 7:00pm – LE SAMOURAI
In a career-defining performance, Alain Delon plays Jef Costello, a contract killer with samurai instincts. After carrying out a flawlessly planned hit, Jef finds himself caught between a persistent police investigator and a ruthless employer, and not even his armor of fedora and trenchcoat can protect him. An elegantly stylized masterpiece of cool by maverick director Jean‑Pierre Melville, “Le samouraï” is a razor-sharp cocktail of 1940s American gangster cinema and 1960s French pop culture — with a liberal dose of Japanese lone-warrior mythology. Writing in the New Yorker on the film’s original U.S. release, Penelope Gilliatt called Melville “the poet of the implacable. In France he is thought of as the most American of directors, the man who has taken the B picture and the policier to new heights; to us he is apt to seem one of the most French, able to make something artful and full of art out of little, like a chef concocting an idyllic hors d’oeuvre out of mayonnaise and a few raw vegetables.” She describes “Le Samourai” as “a sort of meditation on solitude, embodied in a lonely, rigorous mercenary who assassinates to order,” and praises the film as “cold, masterly, without pathos, and not even particularly sympathetic; it has the noble structure of accuracy.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Kathy Corley, professor of film in the Electronic and Photographic Media Department at Webster University.
Saturday, March 24th at 6:00pm – LA BELLE NOISEUSE
Winner of Cannes’ Grand Prix in 1991, Jacques Rivette’s “La belle noiseuse” is a free adaptation of Balzac’s “The Unknown Masterpiece” infused with elements drawn from a trio of works by Henry James. In the film, the once-famous painter Édouard Frenhofer (Michel Piccoli) lives quietly with his wife, Liz (Jane Birkin), in a rambling countryside château in the rural Provence region of France. When young artist Nicolas (David Bursztein) visits him with his striking girlfriend, Marianne (Emmanuelle Béart), the aging and increasingly unproductive Frenhofer finds himself inspired to begin painting again in earnest. At the urging of his agent, he commences work on the painting “La belle noiseuse,” a nude portrait that he left unfinished years earlier (and for which Liz had posed). Pressed by Nicolas, Marianne reluctantly agrees to serve as Frenhofer’s new (and nude) model. Critic Jonathan Rosenbaum — a longtime enthusiast of the director’s work — writes in the Chicago Reader: “The complex forces that produce art are the film’s obsessive focus, and rarely has Rivette’s use of duration to look at process been so spellbinding; hardly a moment is wasted. Rivette’s superb sense of rhythm and mise en scene never falters, and the plot has plenty of twists. With exquisite cinematography by William Lubtchansky, beautiful location work in the south of France (mainly at an 18th-century chateau), and drawings and paintings executed by Bernard Dufour. The title translates roughly as ‘the beautiful nutty woman’; it’s also the title of the masterpiece the painter is bent on finishing.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Robert Hunt, film critic for The Riverfront Times.
Sunday, March 25th at 7:00pm – PEPE LE MOKO
The notorious Pépé le moko (Jean Gabin, in a truly iconic performance) is a wanted man: Women long for him, rivals hope to destroy him, and the law is breathing down his neck at every turn. On the lam in the labyrinthine Casbah of Algiers, Pépé is safe from the clutches of the police — until a Parisian playgirl compels him to risk his life and leave its confines once and for all. Julien Duvivier’s “Pépé le moko” is one of the most influential films of the 20th century and a landmark of French poetic realism. The Chicago Tribune’s Michael Wilmington raves: “Pépé le moko’ is a timeless romantic thriller that steeps us in one of those great artificial movie worlds that become more overpowering than reality itself. It’s a film with atmosphere so thick and rich you can almost smell it: full of winding fetid streets that steam with spices and intrigue, packed cabarets latticed with smoke and shadows. Directed and co-written by Julien Duvivier, starring Jean Gabin as Pépé, this splendid entertainment is set in ’30s Algiers. But despite extensive location photography, it’s not a real city we see here but a noir metropolis, as fantastic as anything in the Arabian Nights.” Wilmington concludes: “‘Pépé le moko,’ despite its pop origins, becomes, like its imitator ‘Casablanca,’ a powerful statement on cultural exile and doomed romance.”
With an introduction and post-film discussion by Robert Garrick, attorney, board member of the French-preservation nonprofit Les Amis, and former contributor to the davekehr.com film blog.
Fathom Events, Turner Classic Movies and Universal Pictures team up to screen Alfred Hitchcock’s classic VERTIGO (1958) on the big screen Sunday, March 18th – 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. (local time) and Wednesday, March 21st – 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. (local time). Ticket information and a list of participating theaters can be found HERE
Widely considered one of Alfred Hitchcock’s greatest cinematic achievements, the dreamlike, mesmerizing Vertigo returns to movie theaters across the country in celebration of its 60th anniversary on Sunday, March 18, and Wednesday, March 21, as part of the yearlong TCM Big Screen Classics Longtime fans and moviegoers who have never experienced the film’s dark secrets will be dazzled by the unforgettable sights and sounds of Vertigo.
The San Francisco-set thriller is a unique combination of ghost story, mystery and romance. James Stewart stars as John “Scottie” Ferguson, a detective with a crippling fear of heights who is hired to trail – but falls in love with – the secretive Madeleine Elster (Kim Novak). When he witnesses Madeleine fall to her death, Scottie is despondent … until he crosses paths with a woman who seems eerily familiar. With a haunting score by Bernard Herrmann, Vertigo is a cinematic milestone that has lost none of its ability to captivate audiences six decades after it was made.
To further unravel the enigma of Vertigo, TCM host Eddie Muller will present newly produced commentary both before and after the film.
Lucasfilm is excited to announce that Emmy-nominated producer and actor Jon Favreau has signed on to executive produce and write a live-action Star Wars series for Disney’s new direct-to-consumer platform. Favreau is no stranger to the Star Wars galaxy having played roles in both the Star Wars: The Clone Wars animated series and in the upcoming Solo: A Star Wars Story.
“I couldn’t be more excited about Jon coming on board to produce and write for the new direct-to-consumer platform,” says Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy. “Jon brings the perfect mix of producing and writing talent, combined with a fluency in the Star Wars universe. This series will allow Jon the chance to work with a diverse group of writers and directors and give Lucasfilm the opportunity to build a robust talent base.”
Favreau is thrilled to be returning to the Star Wars galaxy: “If you told me at 11 years old that I would be getting to tell stories in the Star Wars universe, I wouldn’t have believed you. I can’t wait to embark upon this exciting adventure.”
Disney’s collaborations with Favreau extend back a decade, when he helped launch the Marvel Cinematic Universe as director of Iron Man and Iron Man 2 and as an executive producer of the Iron Man and Avengers films for Marvel Studios. For Disney, he directed and produced the massively successful The Jungle Book, which won an Academy Award for its groundbreaking visual effects. He is currently in production on Disney’s highly anticipated reimagining of The Lion King, set for release in 2019.
The 2018QFest St. Louis begins on Wednesday, April 4, and runs through Sunday, April 8. All screenings will be held at .ZACK,. 3224 Locust St. in Grand Center. Advance sales will be available through MetroTix. The schedule of screenings, events, trailers, and full descriptions of the films will appear on the festival website at cinemastlouis.org/qfest. The official QFest St. Louis page on Facebook is facebook.com/QFestSTL.
QFest St. Louis,a presentation of Cinema St. Louis, is sponsored by Jeffrey T. Fort, AARP in St. Louis, Whitaker Foundation, Regional Arts Commission, Missouri Arts Council, Arts & Education Council, Coffee Cartel, Dekkoo, Just John Nightclub, Dennis Gorg Trust, Mark Utterback, and Michael Reiser
Here’s the line-up for the 11th Annual QFest St. Louis:
BECKS Wednesday, Apr. 4th at 7:00pm.
Singer/songwriter Becks (Tony-winning and Grammy-nominated Lena Hall) gives up her Brooklyn apartment and heads across the country to join her long-distance girlfriend (Hayley Kiyoko) in LA. But a surprise early arrival has disastrous consequences, and Becks abruptly heads back across the country to St. Louis, where she moves in with her disapproving mother (Christine Lahti). As Becks navigates her hometown, playing for tip money in an old friend’s bar, an unexpected relationship with Elyse (Mena Suvari), the wife an old nemesis, begins to take shape. Co-directors Elizabeth Rohrbaugh and Daniel Powell — both former St. Louisans — make their narrative-feature debut with “Becks,” which won the New Filmmakers Forum competition at last year’s SLIFF and the U.S. Fiction Award at the LA Film Festival. A quasi-musical, “Becks” features original songs by singer/songwriter Alyssa Robbins and instrumental-score composer Steve Salett. Ticket information can be found HERE
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QUEER SHORTS 1: Eve – Wednesday, Apr. 4 at 9:00pm
Enfin Seule (Josalyn Smith, U.S., 2018, 11 min.): Arriving in the afterlife, Mel wants to get down to the business of eternal solitude, but her case worker at “Le Bureau” has a slightly different plan in mind.
EVOKE (Asia LeMasters, U.S., 2017, 16 min.): Retracing their times together, Hailey and Emma explore their relationship through shared memories.
Hot & Bothered (Leah Byrd, U.S., 2018, 55 min.): This satirical comedy follows the lives of two sarcastic stoner 20-year-olds who get in over their heads when they create a Grindr for lesbians.
The Lady That Dances (Joppe Rogg, U.K., 2018, 4 min.): A portrait that combines Ash Palmisciano’s poetry and transgender ballet dancer Sophie Rebecca’s elegant moves.
Swipe Right (Des Matelske, U.S., 2017, 25 min.): Liv’s mother, who won’t accept her daughter’s sexual identity, strives to find her the perfect man, and Liv’s male best friend is similarly set on finding her the perfect woman. But an unexpected blind date provides the real solution to Liv’s romantic problems. This is a FREE event.
QFest offers a queer classic in “Beautiful Thing,” a widely praised adaptation of screenwriter Jonathan Harvey’s 1993 play. Shy Jamie (Glen Berry) and athletic Ste (Scott Neal) are teen boys who live near each other in the London projects. Both boys think they could be gay, and they finally explore their feelings when Ste is allowed to stay over at Jamie’s place after an incident with his abusive father. There, the boys grow close and open themselves up to the idea of homosexuality, while Jamie’s caring mother (Linda Henry) and quirky teen neighbor (Tameka Empson) offer much needed emotional support. Noting that “Beautiful Thing” was released “while the world was still grappling with the AIDS crisis,” The Atlantic writes: “The film was genuinely subversive for its time and place: Depicting gay kids who don’t succumb to the ‘plague’ or ultimately bow to pressure from their bigoted peers was no small thing at a moment stricken by an especially virulent, anti-LGBT mood. Yet beyond the film’s historical significance, Harvey’s story feels especially relevant today because of the diversity, even intersectionality, of its characters — a quality often still missing from newer portrayals of LGBT life.” Ticket information can be found HERE
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QUEER SHORTS 2: Adam – Wednesday, Apr. 4 at 9:00pm
Bob (John Gross, U.S., 2017, 25 min.): A gay couple moves into their first apartment together and experience paranormal activity.
davy & GOLIATH (Charles Lum & Todd Verow, U.S., 2018, 7 min.): An afternoon visit to a small-city sex shop yields excitement, surprise, and comic relief. With QFest St. Louis alum writer/director Charles Lum.
Expiration Date (Shwenn Shunya Chang, U.S., 2017, 5 min.): A poetic animated story about searching for an unexpired romance.
The Quit (Todd Lillethun, U.S., 2018, 28 min.): Determined to help Roger quit smoking, Sam embraces a dangerous new idea that may save his partner’s life but cost them their relationship.
Saltwater Baptism (Jared Callahan & Russell Sheaffer, U.S., 2017, 17 min.): Santiago Gonzalez IV — who is one week away from graduation — has hidden his sexuality while at his religiously conservative university, but he’s now struggling to reconcile his traditional upbringing with his new life as an openly gay man.
Teddy (Christopher Sweeney, U.K., 2018, 11 min.): When Paul’s best friends are suddenly killed in a car crash, he must decide if he can raise their child, with or without his boyfriend, before the child wakes up.
Welcome to the World (Albert Chan, U.S., 2017, 7 min.): A troubled man journeys from isolation back to humanity by recording a video message for his pregnant sister. This is a FREE event.
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ALASKA IS A DRAG – Friday, Apr. 6 at 7:00pm
Both a literal and figurative fish-out-of-water story, “Alaska Is a Drag” — which debuted at Frameline — focuses on aspiring drag superstar Leo (Martin L. Washington Jr.), tough but diva fabulous, who is stuck working in a fish cannery in Alaska. Along with his twin sister (Maya Washington), Leo is trapped in a monotonous life of fish guts and fist fights. Out of necessity, Leo has learned to fight back, and his pugilistic skills eventually catch the attention of the local boxing coach. But when a new boy moves to town and wants to be his sparring partner, Leo must face the real reason he’s still in Alaska. The supporting cast includes Margaret Cho, Jason Scott Lee, and Nia Peeples. Ticket information can be found HERE
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QUEERCORE: HOW TO PUNK A REVOLUTION – Friday, Apr. 6 at 9:00pm
This lively music documentary explores the various manifestations of Queercore, a cultural and social movement that began as an offshoot of punk and that consistently challenged society’s disapproval of the gay, bisexual, lesbian, and transgender communities. The extensive participant list includes Bruce LaBruce, G.B. Jones, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, John Waters, Justin Vivian Bond, Lynn Breedlove, Silas Howard, Pansy Division, Penny Arcade, Kathleen Hanna, Kim Gordon, Deke Elash, Tom Jennings, and Team Dresch. Those interviewees discuss such topics as homophobia, gender, feminism, AIDS, assimilation, sex, and, of course, art. Ticket information can be found HERE
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BETWEEN THE SHADES – by Jill Salvino, U.S., 2017, 82 min. – Saturday, Apr. 7 at 3:30pm
No film can ever capture the immense diversity of the LGBTQI community, but “Between the Shades” puts faces to the letters, discussing how those letters have evolved and expanded since the Stonewall riots and examining the immense power of labels and the transcendence of love. The filmmakers invited 50 people, each with a connection to the LGBTQI community, to begin a conversation by sharing their stories. The participants represent a large range of age groups, ethnicities, and professions, and the film looks at love from a 360-degree perspective by including the views of parents and children. Among the film’s many interviewees are Beth Malone (of Broadway’s “Fun Home”), actress Kathy Najimy, and Democratic National Committee Treasurer Andrew Tobias. Ticket information can be found HERE
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SATURDAY CHURCH – directed by Damon Cardasis, U.S., 2017, 82 min. – Saturday, Apr. 7 at 5:30pm
Shy and effeminate 14-year-old Ulysses (Luka Kain) finds himself coping with new responsibilities as the man of the house after the death of his father. Living alongside his mother (Margot Bingham), younger brother (Jaylin Fletcher), and conservative religious aunt (Regina Taylor), Ulysses is also struggling with questions about his gender identity and sexuality in an unaccepting environment. Ulysses finds an escape by creating a world of fantasy filled with dance and music, and his journey takes a turn for the better when he finds a vibrant transgender community linked by a supportive inner-city church group. Ulysses manages to keep his two worlds apart — both appeasing his aunt and discovering his passion for the NYC ball scene and voguing — until his double life is revealed. Ulysses must find the courage to be who he truly is at the risk of losing those he cares about most. Ticket information can be found HERE
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SNAPSHOTS – directed by Melanie Mayron, U.S., 2017, 91 min. – Saturday, Apr. 7 at 7:15pm – With director Melanie Mayron, screenwriter/producer Jan Miller Corran, and co-producer LeeAnne Matusek in attendance. Sponsored by Cindy Walker.
When a grandmother’s hidden past collides with her granddaughter’s secret future and her daughter’s angry present, can the love of three generations be enough to surmount decades of deceit? The story “Snapshots” tells is set in motion when a single roll of undeveloped film is found in an old camera. Using extended flashbacks to the early 1960s, the film explores the interconnected lives of matriarch Rose (three-time Oscar nominee Piper Laurie in the present, Shannon Collis in the past), daughter Patty (Brooke Adams), and granddaughter Allison (Emily Baldoni). Based on co-screenwriter Jan Miller Corran’s own family’s story, “Snapshots” is directed by Melanie Mayron. First known as an actor — in projects ranging from the pioneering indie film “Girlfriends” to TV’s iconic “thirtysomething” — Mayron has since established a parallel career as a talented and prolific director of film and television (recent work includes “Jane the Virgin,” “GLOW,” and “Pretty Little Liars”). Ticket information can be found HERE
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THE LAVENDER SCARE – directed by Josh Howard, U.S., 2017, 76 min. – Sunday, Apr. 8 at 1:30pm
With the United States gripped in the panic of the Cold War, President Dwight D. Eisenhower deemed homosexuals to be “security risks” and ordered the immediate firing of any government employee discovered to be gay or lesbian. That decision triggered a vicious witch hunt that ruined tens of thousands of lives and thrust an unlikely hero into the forefront of what would become the modern LGBTQ rights movement. Featuring the voices of Glenn Close, David Hyde Pierce, Zachary Quinto, T.R. Knight, and Cynthia Nixon, the documentary “The Lavender Scare” shines a light on a forgotten episode in American history but also carries a message that seems more relevant with each passing day. This is a FREE event.
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THE REVIVAL: WOMEN AND THE WORD – directed by Sekiya Dorsett, U.S., 2016, 82 min. – Sunday, Apr. 8 at 3:30pm – Sponsored by Pam Merritt
This inspiring documentary chronicles the U.S. tour of a group of black lesbian poets and musicians, who become present-day stewards of a historical movement to build community among queer women of color. Their journey to strengthen their community is enriched by insightful interviews with leading black feminist thinkers and historians, including Dr. Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Nikki Finney, and Alexis Deveaux. As the group tours the country, the film reveals their aspirations and triumphs, and explores the unique identity challenges they face at the intersection of gender, race, and sexuality. The film provides a rare look into a special sisterhood — one where marginalized voices are both heard and respected. Ticket information can be found HERE
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AFTER LOUIE – directed byVincent Gagliostro, U.S., 2017, 100 min. – Sunday, Apr. 8 at 5:30pm – Sponsored byPauly Jail Building Co., Robert Pohrer & Donnie Engle
An artist and activist from ACT UP who lived through the early years of HIV/AIDS, Sam (Alan Cumming of “The Good Wife”) is a man scarred by and still struggling with survivor’s guilt. Cemented into an oppressive past, he is bewildered by a younger generation of carefree gay men, with their uninhibited use of social media, their sexting, and their seeming political indifference. But when he meets the seductive young Braeden (Zachary Booth) at a bar late one night, their pants quickly come down and, eventually, so does Sam’s ossified guard. As the pair becomes increasingly intimate, an intergenerational relationship blossoms between them — one capable of reawakening Sam’s artistic soul and reviving his wilted heart.Ticket information can be found HERE
“Danger, Will Robinson” and “That does not compute” will forever be associated with the 1960’s sci-fi TV show “Lost in Space,” created and produced by Irwin Allen. With their home away from home aboard the Jupiter 2, the Robinson family left Earth on October 16, 1997 on a five-and-a-half-year journey to a planet orbiting the nearest star. In the show, the family was made up of Professor John Robinson, his biochemist wife, Maureen, their children, Judy, Penny, and Will. Also on board was U.S. Space Corps Major and pilot Donald West, who is trained to fly and land the ship. But Dr. Smith, a spy, sabotages the Jupiter 2, reprograms the Robot, but is inadvertently stuck on board and the ship is thrown of course. Thus the premise of the show.
“Lost in Space” ran for three seasons from 1965 to 1968 on CBS, just about the same time “Star Trek” was on the air over on NBC. The catchy theme music was written by John Williams.
Watch the amazing new trailer for Lost in Space, a Netflix Original dramatic and modern reimagining of the classic 1960’s science fiction series.
Set 30 years in the future, colonization in space is now a reality, and the Robinson family is among those tested and selected to make a new life for themselves in a better world. But when the new colonists find themselves abruptly torn off course en route to their new home they must forge new alliances and work together to survive in a dangerous alien environment, light years from their original destination.
Lost in Space stars TOBY STEPHENS (Black Sails, Die Another Day) as John Robinson, and MOLLY PARKER (House of Cards, Deadwood) as Maureen Robinson. As the Robinson kids, TAYLOR RUSSELL (Falling Skies) is the strong-willed and confident Judy, MINA SUNDWALL (Maggie’s Plan, Freeheld) is the quick-witted and definitive middle-child Penny, and MAX JENKINS (Sense8, Betrayal) is the curious and sensitive Will Robinson. Stranded along with the Robinsons are two outsiders who find themselves thrown together by circumstance and a mutual knack for deception, the unsettlingly charismatic Dr. Smith played by PARKER POSEY (Café Society, Mascots, A Mighty Wind) and the inadvertently charming Don West, played by IGNACIO SERRICCHIO (Bones, The Wedding Ringer). The series is produced by Legendary Television and written by Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless (Dracula Untold, The Last Witch Hunter). Zack Estrin (Prison Break) serves as showrunner.
This Saturday, March 10th at 7pm, The Rats and People Motion Picture Orchestra will provide music for a Germaine Dulac Silent Double Bill: The Cigarette (1919) and The Smiling Madame Beudet (1923). Tickets are $15 for this special event which takes place atWebster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 East Lockwood). Tickets can be purchased in advance HERE
There’s nothing better than silent films accompanied by live music! The Rats and People is a treasure and St. Louis is lucky to have them here. I’ve seen them perform with silent films several times, often at The St. Louis International Film Festival, and usually at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium and it’s always a stunning good time at the movies. You’ll have the chance to see them perform their magic this Saturday, March 10th at the Germaine Dulac Double Bill.
A pioneering filmmaker and feminist, Germaine Dulac toggled between commercial and avant-garde modes, with one of her most famous works, “The Seashell and the Clergyman” (1928), prefiguring surrealism. Dulac’s earliest extant title, “The Cigarette” concerns a liberated young woman and her older husband who believes she is having an affair. With its understated acting and location shooting, Dulac fuses realistic tendencies with impressionistic visual association. Considered one of Dulac’s most feminist films, “The Smiling Madame Beudet” is also a crucial step in her continuing de-emphasis of traditional narrative structures in favor of visual association. The film offers a bleak portrait of marriage and its constraining effects on the woman, while vividly externalizing her dreams of liberation.
In her monograph “Germaine Dulac: A Cinema of Sensations,” scholar Tami Williams notes that the filmmaker “played a founding role in the evolution of the cinema both as art and social practice. History has overlooked her importance as a pioneer of the 1920s French avant-garde, and as an innovator of a modern cinema. Over the course of her film career (1915–42), Dulac directed more than thirty fiction films, many marking new cinematic tendencies, from impressionist to abstract. She made an equivalent number of newsreels and several documentaries, whose discreet, unobtrusive approach to filming daily life had an important impact on the evolution of nonfiction filmmaking in France.”
First up is The Cigarette (1919) :A Parisian museum director believes his wife has lost interest in him and so places a poisoned cigarette in the box on his desk – thus allowing chance to decide the moment of his death.
Next is The Smiling Madame Beudet (1923): One of the first feminist movies, The Smiling Madame Beudet is the story of an intelligent woman trapped in a loveless marriage. Her husband is used to playing a stupid practical joke in which he puts an empty revolver to his head and threatens to shoot himself. One day, while the husband is away, she puts bullets in the revolver. However, she is stricken with remorse and tries to retrieve the bullets the next morning. Her husband gets to the revolver first only this time he points the revolver at her.