This French film, which we will show on Friday, September 9th, is about a high-spirited young woman, Baya, who might remind you of sixties ideology, especially “Make love, not war.” Though thoroughly [...] Continue Reading
Terri, an outsider film, is our August 12 offering
Mike Plante, who writes a blog about film festivals, proposes something called the “Cinema of Outsiders.” By this he means not only are most independent (and leading foreign) filmmakers “outsiders” to [...] Continue Reading
Multilayered, Oscar-winning Danish film is our June 10 offering
Our film this month, In a Better World, has enough issues going on for several films. The story—maybe that should be plural—is primarily about a Danish physician, Anton, played by Mikael Persbrandt, [...] Continue Reading
Certified Copy, a metaphysical journey of art and love
Our May film features two masters, one an actor, the other a director. The actor is the French Juliette Binoche, the other the world-renown Iranian film director Abbas Kiorastami. The film is called [...] Continue Reading
Film Festivals: A Time for Loving the Medium
The word festival first appeared in English in 1589, brought over from the Middle French festivus. In the early years and right up to the 20th century, festivals were often religious in [...] Continue Reading
Short Films
Here is a famous poem, called “The Red Wheelbarrow”: so much depends upon the red wheel barrow the red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens. That’s it. Sixteen words. Not [...] Continue Reading
Made in Dagenham—a spirited film about women’s rights, as workers and human beings
On February 11, Filmworks will show a film about a unique kind of strike, one for the benefit of women and led by women. It’s called Made in Dagenham, and it dramatizes events that occurred from 1965 [...] Continue Reading
January’s film Waste Land is a Treasure of Art and Dignity
It used to be there was nothing more disgusting than a garbage dump, especially to Americans. But in other places of the world this view of refuse is changing. Agnés Varda, the French filmmaker, [...] Continue Reading