SLIFF 2016 – Tribute to Kim Tucci November 9th with Screening of HAROLD AND MAUDE

kimtucci-header
“Who sends dead flowers to a funeral? It’s absurd!”

HAROLD AND MAUDE screens after a reception for Kim Tucci Wednesday, November 9th at 6:00pm at Delmar Hall (6133 Delmar Blvd.). Ticket information can be found HERE

6 p.m. – Cocktail Reception
7:30 p.m. – Program: Lifetime Achievement Award Presentation, J. Kim Tucci
Auction to Benefit Cinema St. Louis
8 p.m. – Screening of HAROLD AND MAUDE (Kim’s favorite film)

kimtuccitribute2-1

Cinema St. Louis pays tribute to longtime board chair Kim Tucci as part of SLIFF’s 25th-anniversary celebration. Kim’s service to the St. Louis region includes investing in the community, raising funds to fight disease, and enabling projects of civic pride. And still, somehow, he finds time to enjoy the movies. While many cinephiles would be content with outings to the local multiplex, Kim has put his love of film to greater use by serving on the board of Cinema St. Louis for the past decade, chairing the organization since 2008. He also served for many years as chair of the Missouri Film Commission. His selfless work has both helped build the film industry here in Missouri and allowed Cinema St. Louis to bring some of the world’s best films to St. Louis. The evening — held at the recently opened Delmar Hall — begins with a cocktail reception at 6 p.m. and is followed by a program that includes a Lifetime Achievement Award presentation, a live auction to benefit Cinema St. Louis, and a short conversation about movies between Kim and Y98’s Guy Phillips. The night is capped with a screening of one of Kim’s favorite films, HAROLD AND MAUDE. The tribute portion of the program is a fundraiser for Cinema St. Louis, but the screening of HAROLD AND MAUDE — which starts at 8 p.m. — is free and open to all (though donations are encouraged).

harold-and-maude-001

HAROLD AND MAUDE is a funny and quirky May-December romance from 1971 between  20-something morbid rich kid Harold with a holocaust-survivor Maude who is approaching her 80th. Both are enthusiastic funeral-crashers Harold is a pasty boy obsessed with death; frequently playing suicide pranks at home so much so that his mother (Vivian Pickles) doesn’t take it seriously at all. This happens in the opening scene which sets the black comedy tone of the film directed by Hal Ashby and featuring a famous song score by Cat Stevens.Maude is a loud, aggressive, live-for-the-moment type. Her interests (besides crashing funerals) include stealing cars and she’s never afraid to speak her mind. She makes Harold’s life exciting and he soon finds himself falling in love with her. Needless to say, his mom doesn’t approve of the relationship. Harold is played by the odd-looking but talented Bud Cort and Maude by Ruth Gordon whose every line in the film is memorable and amusing. There are some funny moments in the film involving Maude and the police and although the movie is silly and far-fetched at times, it does encourage you to live life to the fullest. It’s a funny script and well-acted and although not a success upon its first release, it has found a deserved cult following through the years.

har11-pool1

SLIFF 2016 – The St. Louis International Film Festival Schedule Announced

announceheader2

The schedule for the 25th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) has been announced and once again film goers will be offered the best in cutting edge features and shorts from around the globe. The festival takes place November 3-13,  2016.

st-louisbrews

SLIFF kicks off on November 3 with the opening-night selection ST. LOUIS BREWS, the latest home-brewed documentary by local filmmaker Bill Streeter, director of BRICK BY CHANCE AND FORTUNE: A ST. LOUIS STORY (read my interview with Bill HERE)

charlesburnett2

According to SLIFF, the festival will feature more than 125 filmmaking guests, including honorees: Actress Karen Allen (RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, ANIMAL HOUSE), director Charles Burnett (KILLER OF SHEEP, TO SLEEP WITH ANGER), winner of the Cinema St. Louis Lifetime Achievement Award; and director Steve James (HOOP DREAMS).

Full information on SLIFF films, including synopses, dates/time, and links for purchase of advance tickets is available on the Cinema St. Louis website.

Check the site regularly for updates: http://cinemastlouis.org/about-festival

The St. Louis International Film Festival is one of the largest and highest­ profile international film festivals in the Midwest. The majority of the films screened – many of them critically lauded award winners – will receive their only St. Louis exposure at the festival.

Celebrating its 25th anniversary in 2016, SLIFF is presented by the nonprofit Cinema St. Louis, which also annually produces the locally focused St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, the LGBTQ-­focused QFest, and the Classic French Film Festival. In addition, Cinema St. Louis is the local producer of the 48 Hour Film Project and hosts educational programs, competitions, screenings, and special events throughout the year. Attendance has increased steadily during the festival’s 35 years, with over 24,000 filmgoers attending in 2015.

Because SLIFF is one of only three dozen fests that serve as qualifying events for Oscar live­-action and animated narrative shorts, the festival has an especially strong selection of short subjects. In fact, in 2006, the Best Short Film­Live Action winner, “West Bank Story,” received Oscar consideration because it won SLIFF’s “Best of Fest” shorts award in 2005. In 2014, the Academy added SLIFF as a qualifying festival for documentary shorts.

Highlights from this year’s festival include:

jackie_0
JACKIE Sunday, Nov. 13 at 6:00pm
Directed by Pablo Larraín (“No,” the upcoming “Neruda”), “Jackie” is a searing and intimate look at one of the most important and tragic moments in American history, as seen through the eyes of the iconic First Lady, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy (Natalie Portman). The film places the viewer in Jackie’s world during the days immediately following her husband’s assassination, offering a psychological portrait of the First Lady — known for her extraordinary dignity and poise — as she struggles to maintain her husband’s legacy and the “Camelot” that they created together and loved so well. The extraordinary cast includes Peter Sarsgaard (as Bobby Kennedy), Greta Gerwig, Billy Crudup, and John Hurt. Hailing Portman as “altogether astonishing,” Britain’s Guardian describes “Jackie” as “great cinema”: “a singular vision from an uncompromising director that happens to be about one of the most famous women in American history.”

kimtucci2
A TRIBUTE TO KIM TUCCI Wednesday, Nov. 9 at 6:30pm
Cinema St. Louis pays tribute to longtime board chair Kim Tucci as part of SLIFF’s 25th-anniversary celebration. Kim’s service to the St. Louis region includes investing in the community, raising funds to fight disease, and enabling projects of civic pride. And still, somehow, he finds time to enjoy the movies. While many cinephiles would be content with outings to the local multiplex, Kim has put his love of film to greater use by serving on the board of Cinema St. Louis for the past decade, chairing the organization since 2008. He also served for many years as chair of the Missouri Film Commission. His selfless work has both helped build the film industry here in Missouri and allowed Cinema St. Louis to bring some of the world’s best films to St. Louis. The evening — held at the recently opened Delmar Hall — begins with a cocktail reception at 6 p.m. and is followed by a program that includes a Lifetime Achievement Award presentation, a live auction to benefit Cinema St. Louis, and a short conversation about movies between Kim and Y98’s Guy Phillips. The night is capped with a screening of one of Kim’s favorite films, “Harold and Maude” (see listing in Film Features section). The tribute portion of the program is a fundraiser for Cinema St. Louis, but the screening of “Harold and Maude” — which starts at 8 p.m. — is free and open to all (though donations are encouraged).
nocrossover2
NO CROSSOVER: THE TRIAL OF ALLEN IVERSON Sunday, Nov. 6 at 7:00pm
On Valentine’s Day 1993, 17-year-old Bethel High School basketball star Allen Iverson was bowling in Hampton, Va., with five high-school friends. It was supposed to be an ordinary evening, but it became a night that defined Iverson’s young life. A quarrel soon erupted into a brawl pitting Iverson’s young black friends against a group of white patrons. The fallout from the fight and the handling of the subsequent trial landed the teenager — considered by some the nation’s best high-school athlete — in jail and sharply divided the city along racial lines. Oscar nominee Steve James (“Hoop Dreams”) returns to his hometown of Hampton, where he once played basketball, to take a personal look at this still-disputed incident. With director Steve James.
destiny_2
Fritz Lang’s DESTINY (1921) Saturday, Nov. 5 at 8:00pm
This new restoration of Fritz Lang’s “Destiny (Der müde Tod)” is a dizzying blend of German Romanticism, Orientalism, and Expressionism. The film marked a bold step for Lang, away from conventional melodrama and into the kind of high-concept filmmaking that would culminate in such über-stylized works as “Die Nibelungen” and “Metropolis.” In the film, a young woman (Lil Dagover) confronts the personification of Death (Bernhard Goetzke) in an effort to save the life of her fiancé (Walter Janssen). Death weaves three romantic tragedies, offering to unite the girl with her fiancé if she can prevent the death of the lovers in at least one of the episodes. The great surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel once enthused: “When I saw ‘Destiny,’ I suddenly knew that I wanted to make movies. Something about this film spoke to something deep in me; it clarified my life and my vision of the world.” SLIFF’s favorite band, the Rats & People Motion Picture Orchestra, provides an original score and live accompaniment.
get-em-kong32
A TRIBUTE TO KING KONG Sunday, Nov. 6 at 6:00pm
The St. Louis International Film Festival bows down to the King — Kong, that is — with a double bill of LONG LIVE THE KING and the 1933 classic that introduced the giant gorilla to the awestruck world. The documentary LONG LIVE THE KING explores the enduring fascination with one of the biggest stars in Hollywood history: the mighty King Kong. The documentary devotes primary attention to the 1933 classic, celebrating the contributions of filmmakers Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack, stars Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong, and Bruce Cabot, and especially stop-motion innovator Willis O’Brien. But Kong’s legacy is also fully detailed: the sequel SON OF KONG the cinematic kin MIGHTY JOE YOUNG, the Dino DeLaurentis and Peter Jackson remakes, even the Japanese versions by Toho Studios. The double bill concludes — of course! — with KING KONG, allowing viewers to return to the treacherous jungle of Skull Island and thrill again as Kong climbs the Empire State Building with Fay Wray gently cradled in a giant paw.With introduction and discussion by We Are Movie Geeks editor Tom Stockman.
eyesoffire3
EYES OF FIRE Tuesday, Nov. 8 at 7:30pm
A few years back, SLIFF by chance came into possession of a print of “Eyes of Fire,” an unjustly forgotten horror film shot more than three decades ago in the backwoods of Missouri. On our 25th anniversary, SLIFF felt duty-bound to give a respectful nod to our celluloid past — every other work in the fest screens digitally — by cracking open the film cans and offering a rare opportunity to view this criminally underseen gem in glorious 35mm. Set in the Colonial era, “Eyes of Fire” — the film debut of experimental photographer Avery Crounse — recounts the creepy doings that occur when a preacher accused of adultery is banished with his followers to the unsettled wilderness, an isolated forest haunted by the spirits of long-dead Native Americans. LA’s Cinefamily, which held its own screening of “Eyes of Fire” earlier this year, aptly describes the film as a “supernatural battle between good and evil, rife with impressively fantastical set pieces — from trees with faces and a mysterious naked forest-dwelling sect to rains of skulls and bones — all swung on a shoestring budget.”
jerry-lewis2
A JERRY LEWIS DOUBLE FEATURE Saturday, Nov. 12 at 1:00pm
JERRY LEWIS THE MAN BEHIND THE CLOWN. Since his earliest days, SLIFF Lifetime Achievement Award honoree Jerry Lewis had the masses laughing with his visual gags, pantomime sketches, and signature slapstick humor. But Lewis was far more than just a funny performer. After the breakup of his famed partnership with Dean Martin, Lewis moved behind the camera, writing, producing, and directing many of the adored classics in which he starred: “The Bellboy,” “The Ladies Man,” “The Errand Boy,” and “The Nutty Professor.” By becoming a “total filmmaker,” Lewis emerged as a driving force in Hollywood, breaking boundaries with his technical innovations, unique voice, and keen visual eye. Lewis garnered particular respect and praise overseas, especially in France. But if his French admirers regarded Lewis as a true auteur, American critics proved far more skeptical, often dismissing him as nothing more than a clown. Gregory Munro’s brisk, informative documentary offers answers to questions that have perplexed American pop culture for more than 50 years: Why do Europeans love Jerry Lewis? What is the inexplicable aversion many Americans have toward him? Is he just a brash, anything-for-laugh buffoon or is he a creative genius in the tradition of Chaplin and Keaton? Who is the man behind the clown? Plays on a double bill with THE NUTTY PROFESSOR. With video introduction by Jerry Lewis, a SLIFF Lifetime Achievement Award honoree.
drawinghome_02
DRAWING HOME Thursday, Nov. 10 at 6:30pm
In 1920s Boston, East Coast debutante Catharine Robb (newcomer Julie Lynn Mortensen) is dating the most eligible bachelor in the world, John D. Rockefeller III. Her future seems set: a dream life in the upper echelons of society. But Catherine finds her careful plans upended when she meets a young painter, Peter Whyte (Juan Riedinger), from one of the most beautiful places on Earth, the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Although their worlds are polar opposites, a mutual love of art draws them together. They soon face a universal question: Can you find “home” in another person? Inspired by the true story of the central couple, “Drawing Home” features a cast that includes Kate Mulgrew (“Orange Is the New Black”), Emmy winner Peter Strauss (“Rich Man, Poor Man”), Kristin Griffith, Rutger Hauer, and Wallace Shawn. The film was shot on location in Canada’s gorgeous Banff and Yoho National Parks.With lead actors Juan Riedinger and Julie Lynn Mortenson and producers Allan Neuwirth and Margarethe Baillou.
withinourgates_02
WITHIN OUR GATES Saturday, Nov. 12 at 7:30pm
As part of our 25th-anniversary celebration, SLIFF reprises a special event from our 2009 edition by screening “Within Our Gates,” writer-director Oscar Micheaux’s impassioned response to D.W. Griffith’s “Birth of a Nation.” The film shines a revealing light on the racism of U.S. society, provocatively including scenes of lynching and attempted rape. Micheaux was a pioneering African-American filmmaker and novelist whose career stretched from the silent era through the 1940s. “Within Our Gates,” one of the oldest surviving “race” films, was thought lost until a print was discovered in Spain in 1990 and restored by the Library of Congress in 1992. This screening features a new restoration that offers an even more faithful approximation of the film as originally released. SLIFF has again invited Cairo, Ill.’s Stace England & the Salt Kings to play the original score the group created for our 2009 presentation. The band will also offer a few selections from its album “The Amazing Oscar Micheaux,” whose songs were inspired by the filmmaker’s life and work.With live accompaniment by Stace England & the Salt Kings.

And of course there is much much much much more! Check the site for the complete schedule and for updates: http://cinemastlouis.org/about-festival

HAROLD AND MAUDE Screens Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli

haroldheader

“Who sends dead flowers to a funeral? It’s absurd!”

HAROLD_HEAD

HAROLD AND MAUDE screens midnights this weekend (September 11th and 12th) at The Tivoli Theater as part of their Reel Late at The Tivoli midnight series.

harold-and-maude-001

The Tivoli is going old-school this weekend with its Reel Late at The Tivoli midnight series. It’s HAROLD AND MAUDE, which I saw at the Tiv back in the late ‘70s, one of the very first films I ever saw there. HAROLD AND MAUDE was a midnight perennial in my youth, but seems to have fallen off the cult movie radar (KING OF HEARTS, which I saw double-billed with HAROLD AND MAUDE in my youth, has suffered a similar fate).

harold-et-maude-1971-09-g

HAROLD AND MAUDE is a funny and quirky May-December romance from 1971 between  20-something morbid rich kid Harold with a holocaust-survivor Maude who is approaching her 80th. Both are enthusiastic funeral-crashers Harold is a pasty boy obsessed with death; frequently playing suicide pranks at home so much so that his mother (Vivian Pickles) doesn’t take it seriously at all. This happens in the opening scene which sets the black comedy tone of the film directed by Hal Ashby and featuring a famous song score by Cat Stevens.

har11-pool1

Maude is a loud, aggressive, live-for-the-moment type. Her interests (besides crashing funerals) include stealing cars and she’s never afraid to speak her mind. She makes Harold’s life exciting and he soon finds himself falling in love with her. Needless to say, his mom doesn’t approve of the relationship. Harold is played by the odd-looking but talented Bud Cort and Maude by Ruth Gordon whose every line in the film is memorable and amusing. There are some funny moments in the film involving Maude and the police and although the movie is silly and far-fetched at times, it does encourage you to live life to the fullest. It’s a funny script and well-acted and although not a success upon its first release, it has found a deserved cult following through the years. Good for the Tivoli for bring back HAROLD AND MAUDE. I’ll be there Friday night with some custom HAROLD AND MAUDE trivia with prizes.

A facebook invite for this event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1638236853115597/

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next few weeks:

Sept 18-19                                        FLASH GORDON

Sept 25-26                                       PLANET OF THE APES (1968)

Oct 2-3                                              LET THE RIGHT ONE IN

Oct 9-10                                            WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS

Oct 16-17                                         MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL

Oct 23-24 and Oct 31-Nov 1    ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW with live shadow cast with the Samurai Electricians.

The Tivoli Announces the ‘Reel Late’ Midnight Line-Up – JURASSIC PARK, THE ROOM, ZARDOZ

midnghts-header2

“YOU’RE TEARING ME APART, LISA!”

MIDNIGHTSX4

Another great lineup of midnight movies for the ‘Reel Late at The Tivoli’ for late July through early September. It’s a typically good variety of titles that will draw the late night movie buff crowd and a couple of retro surprises are to be found. The Midnight Movie experience has always catered to a college-age crowd and that’s the way it should be. When I was that age, in the early ’80s, midnight standards included A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971), THE GRADUATE (1967), NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968), KING OF HEARTS (1966), and HAROLD AND MAUDE (1971). Those last two haven’t shown in many years. KING OF HEARTS especially seems to have fallen off the cult movie radar , so imagine my surprise when I saw that the Tivoli had HAROLD AND MAUDE as part of their new line-up. That’ll be some old school midnight fun and I hope it gets a good crowd. ZARDOZ, a trippy/cheesy sci-fi mess from 1974 has Sean Connery running around in a red diaper and is also a brilliant, throwback choice.

header2

Of course the big event of the summer will be July 31st and August 1st when there will be thousands of plastic spoons flying through the air and grown men in tuxedos will be throwing footballs three feet away from each other in the Tivoli’s lobby. It’s of course THE ROOM and the return of the one and only Tommy Wiseau, the film’s amazing triple-threat talent writer/director/star. When Tommy was last in town, three years ago, both shows sold out  and Tommy brought a big box of  THE ROOM T-Shirts, DVD’s, posters, ‘Johnny’ bobbleheads  and more to sign for his legion of adoring fans. I’m sure this summer’s event will be just as fun. Tickets are $15 and are already on sale at the Tivoli’s box office or site.

MIDNIGHTSX4-2

HAROLD AND MAUDE isn’t the oldest film on the new midnight schedule. THE WIZARD OF OZ from 1939 will screen midnights August 14th and 15th and there will be a special noon show on Saturday the 15th.

Reel Late at the Tivoli takes place every Friday and Saturday night and We Are Movie Geeks own Tom Stockman (that’s me!) is there with custom trivia questions about the films and always has DVDs, posters, and other cool stuff to give away. I can’t wait to write ZARDOZ trivia! Ticket prices are $8 (except THE ROOM  which is $15). We hope to see everyone late at night in the coming months.

The Tivoli is located at 6350 Delmar in The Loop. Visit Landmark’s The Tivoli’s website HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the newly –announced Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight schedule for the next couple of months:

July 24-25            JURASSIC PARK

 July 31-Aug. 1    THE ROOM – with Tommy Wiseau in person!

Aug. 7-8                 ZARDOZ

 Aug. 14-15           THE WIZARD OF OZ

Aug. 21-22            SPACE JAM

 Aug. 28-29          INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE

 Sept. 4-5              SPIRITED AWAY

 Sept. 11-12           HAROLD AND MAUDE

The Midnight at the Tivoli Fans Facebook page can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/groups/255754067866051/

Peter Bart & Cameron Crowe In Conversation At The Aero Theatre With HAROLD AND MAUDE Screening

Book Signing With Peter Bart & Cameron Crowe

Sunday, June 12, 2011 – HAROLD AND MAUDE

A book signing of Bart’s ‘Infamous Players: A Tale of Movies, the Mob (and Sex)’ will be at 6:30 pm across the street at Every Picture Tells a Story, followed by a screening at 7:30 pm of HAROLD AND MAUDE and discussion with Peter Bart and ALMOST FAMOUS director Cameron Crowe.

A film journalist and Paramount executive who played a key role in the production of numerous touchstones of the 1970s, Peter Bart has been an integral part of the American film industry for decades. Under his vice presidency of production at Paramount Pictures, such classics as ROSEMARY’S BABY, TRUE GRIT, HAROLD AND MAUDE, THE GODFATHER, PAPER MOON and FUN WITH DICK AND JANE (which Bart personally produced) came to be. Bart’s career in film journalism is on par with his studio record, as he had a two-decade tenure (1989-2009) as chief editor of the trade paper Variety.

HAROLD AND MAUDE

1971, Paramount, 91 min, Dir: Hal Ashby

Producer Robert Evans fought hard for non-conformist editor-turned-filmmaker Hal Ashby to be allowed to direct this wildly offbeat romance between suicidal youngster Bud Cort and eccentric, 80-year-old Ruth Gordon. The result is one of the most poignant and subversive films of the New Hollywood era.

If you’re in the area…see this charming film! The songs of Cat Stevens alone are worth the price of admission.

COMING SOON:

  • Egyptian Theatre Historic Tour on June 19. Behind-the-Scenes historic tour at 10:30 AM. Meet in front of Box Office. FOREVER HOLLYWOOD follows at 11:35 AM. Future tours will be held each month in 2010 one Saturday per month.
  • Outfest Wednesdays: (Egyptian on-going occasional screenings)
  • May 26 – June 9: The Films of Alfred Hitchcock (Egyptian)
  • May 2011 – March 2012: New Belgian Cinema (Aero)
  • Monthly: Burning Man Film Series: plus Burning Man art installations and activities in the Courtyard (Egyptian Theatre)
  • June: Films in 70MM including BARAKA, REMAINS OF THE DAY, GLORY with Edward Zwick In Person (Aero & Egyptian)
  • June 2, 4 & 23: The Films of Frederico Fellini (Aero & Egyptian)
  • June 9 – 12: The Films of Raoul Walsh (Egyptian)
  • June 9 & 10: Peter Fonda Tribute. In Person with 40th Anniversary screening of THE HIRED HAND (Aero)
  • June: James Bond (Aero & Egyptian Theatres)
  • June 23 – 30 Centennial Tribute to Composer Bernard Herrman (Aero)

About American Cinematheque

Established in 1981, the American Cinematheque is a 501 C 3 non-profit viewer-supported film exhibition and cultural organization dedicated to the celebration of the Moving Picture in all of its forms. At the Egyptian Theatre, the Cinematheque presents daily film and video programming which ranges from the classics of American and international cinema to new independent films and digital work. Exhibition of rare works, special and rare prints, etc., combined with fascinating post-screening discussions with the filmmakers who created the work, are a Cinematheque tradition that keep audiences coming back for once-in-a-lifetime cinema experiences. The American Cinematheque renovated and reopened (on Dec. 4, 1998) the historic 1922 Hollywood Egyptian Theatre. This includes a state-of-the-art 616-seat theatre housed within Sid Grauman’s first grand movie palace on Hollywood Boulevard. The exotic courtyard is fully restored to its 1922 grandeur. The Egyptian was the home of the very first Hollywood movie premiere in 1922. In January 2005 the American Cinematheque expanded its programming to the 1940 Aero Theatre on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica.

Netflix Nuggets: Heartless Winged Mutants from Heaven

Netflix has revolutionized the home movie experience for fans of film with its instant streaming technology. Netflix Nuggets is my way of spreading the word about independent, classic and foreign films made available by Netflix for instant streaming. Continue reading Netflix Nuggets: Heartless Winged Mutants from Heaven