Cinema Arts Centre
Transcription
Cinema Arts Centre
Cinema Arts Cinema C E N T R E July 2015 LongIsland’s Island’sFilm FilmWindow Window Long theWorld World ononthe Celebrating 42 Independent Cinema Celebrating 41 Years Yearsas asLong LongIsland’s Island’sLeading Leading Independent Cinema Orson Welles’ THE TRIAL VINCENT PRICE WHEN PHYSICS MEETS FASHION: ZOOLANDER LA BOHÈME 10 QUESTIONS FOR THE DALAI LAMA A PIGEON SAT ON A BRANCH REFLECTING ON EXISTENCE Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN INFINITELY POLAR BEAR MAD WOMEN Membership Matters! WE keep ALL funds raised by membership, but HALF of our ticket sales goes to the distributor SUPPORT LONG ISLAND’S LEADING NOT-FOR-PROFIT, INDEPENDENT CINEMA l Individual Membership $55 l Dual Membership $100 - Same benefits as Individual Members, plus: l Young Film Fan $30 - Same benefits as Individual Members: l Senior Membership $40 - Same benefits as Individual Members: l Sponsor Membership $250 - Same benefits as Dual Members, plus: Pay only $7.00 for regular tickets (save $5.00 each time) Pay only $6.00 for Mon-Fri matinees (save $6.00) Two FREE tickets upon joining or renewing Cinema monthly Program Guide mailed to your home Member discounts on all Special Events and Workshops Discounts at restaurants and businesses with membership card Ability to purchase Express Passes (More Savings and No waiting on line!) Special Members-only previews of the hottest new films! Membership cards for two people Four FREE tickets instead of two upon joining or renewing Special invitation to free screening once per month (must provide e-mail address) Must be 25 or younger or be a full-time student, with valid ID Must be 62 with valid ID Reserve tickets by phone! Avoid Sold-Out shows! No Waiting on Line! Name listed in Cinema Lobby Insider’s Newsletter from the Programming Director, mailed annually l Other Membership Levels with additional benefits Call Rene Bouchard, Director of Development, 631.423.7610 x.18 for details on Patron, Director’s Circle and Cinema Friend membership levels as well as additional membership levels. Monthly payment plans available for Sponsor Membership and above; see CinemaArtsCentre.org for details. Sign up Online: cinemaartscentre.org/get-involved/become-a-member/ or use the form below: Join, Renew, or Extend your Cinema Arts Centre Membership Name(s)___________________________________Address_______________________________________ City____________________________________State____ZIP________Phone ___________________________________ E-mail_____________________________________________ (receive our weekly schedule — will be kept confidential) Total amount enclosed: $______________ Payment: Check/Money Order Visa MasterCard Cash Credit Card #_________________________________________ Expiration Date __________/________ (code: Folio) Signature ______________________________________ Birthday: ____________________________________ Mail to: Cinema Arts Centre, P.O. Box 498, Huntington, NY 11743. Or call 631-423-7611. Or sign up on our website: www.cinemaartscentre.org Sponsor $250 Basic $55 Young Film Fan Senior $40 Dual $100 $30 Dual Senior $80 Patron $525 Director’s Circle $1,000 Cinema Friend $2500 Express Pass (Members Only): 5 Passes $35 / 10 Passes $64 / 20 Passes $122 Extra Tax-deductible donation: $_______ If your employer matches donations, please enclose a matching gift form For Office Use Only: rec’d: total amt.: level:__________ comps:______ ent:______ ent:___/__ ty:____ mb#____________________________ exp:__________ 2 expass:____ Cinema Arts Centre Long Island’s Film Window on the World Films listed below are subject to change. Please check online for the latest schedule. 10 Questions for the Dalai Lama (Spirituality). . . . . . . . . . . . 15 10th Summer Camp Cinema (Double Features). . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Amy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 The Audience. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Bagdad Cafe (Sunday Schmooze). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Domestic Life (Young French Cinema) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Everyman (National Theatre Live) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Dreams on Screen: Four Surreal Shorts (Staff Picks). . . . . . 10 Infinitely Polar Bear. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Irrational Man. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Industrial Musicals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Jimmy’s Hall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 La Bohéme (Opera on Screen). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (Anything But Silent).11 The Long Island Sound (Rock Legends Live). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Mad Women. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 INDUSTRIAL MUSICALS, p15 Men’s Hot Shorts (Out at the Movies) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Mr. Holmes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence (Cinema Showcase). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Since 1973 Folio No. 503 A Poem is a Naked Person (Creativity) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 The Trial (Orson Welles Centennial Celebration). . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Have the Weekly Film Schedule emailed to you. Please send your name & email address to Trivia (Movie Trivia Night). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 info@cinemaartscentre.org Vincent Price: He Made Horror Fun (Sky Room Talks). . . . . 13 Website: CinemaArtsCentre.org When Marnie Was There (Cinema For Kids!). . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 24-Hour Information Lines: 631-423-FILM(3456) 631-423-BOXO(2696) Saving the Planet–One Bite at a Time (Gary Null in person) 16 When Physics Meets Fashion – Zoolander (Science on Screen). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Travel and General Information Lines: 631-423-7611 (M–F 10am–11pm, Sat-Sun 2–11pm) Fax: 631-423-5411 Admission Public (All Times). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12.00 Members . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00 Mon–Fri before 5pm (members only). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.00 Seniors(62)/Students(ID) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.00 Children under 12. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.00 Members Must Show Their Card for Member’s Prices We aim to be quick and efficient. Checking member status at the box office is time consuming. Replace lost card: $3.00. CAC is partially funded by the Suffolk County Office of Cultural Affairs. CAC is a member of the Huntington Arts Council. No Refunds for Advance Tickets The Express Pass No Waiting On Line To Buy Tickets! Go to Rear Box Office & Present your Member Card Swipe – and Voila! You’re In! 5 Passes for $35 / 10 Passes for $64 (Save 10%) 20 Passes for $122 (Save 15%) (Not valid for Special Events) The Express Pass is valid only with current membership and can only be used for current members (i.e. 1 Express Pass maximum per show for a Single Membership, 2 for Dual Membership). 3 Special Events Calendar Everyman When Marnie Was There Men’s Hot Shorts 10 Questions for the Dalai Lama JULY Thursday, 7/2, 7:30 pm A Poem is a Naked Person p.7 Creativity Thursday, 7/16, 7 pm Everyman National Theatre Live p.12 Saturdays, 7/4, 7/11, 7/18 & 7/25, 10:30 pm Brett Sherris’ Summer Camp Cinema Film Festival p.9 Thursday, 7/30, 7 pm The Audience p.16 Double Features National Theatre Live Monday, 7/6, 8 pm Movie Trivia Nightp.18 Sunday, 7/19, 11 am When Marnie was There Special Event Cinema for Kids Tuesday, 7/7, 7:30 pm Domestic Life (La vie domestique) Sunday, 7/19, Bagel brunch at 10 am, film at 11 am Bagdad Cafe p.12 Sunday Schmooze p.7 Young French Cinema Wednesday, 7/8, 7:30 pm The Trial p.8 Monday, 7/20, 7:30 pm Vincent Price: He Made Horror Fun Thursday, 7/9, 7:30 pm Men’s Hot Shorts Tuesday, 7/21, 7:30 pm Orson Welles Centennial Celebration p.8 Out at the Movies Sky Room Talks The Long Island Sound Rock Legends Live! p.13 p.13 p.14 Sunday, 7/12, 12 noon La Bohèmep.10 Thursday, 7/23, 7 pm When Physics Meets Fashion – Zoolander p.14 Monday, 7/13, 7:30 pm Dreams on Screen: Four Surreal Shorts p.10 Sunday, 7/26, 12 noon Saving The Planet - One Bite At A Time p.16 p.11 Sunday, 7/26, 7:30 pm Industrial Musicals p.15 Opera on Screen Staff Picks Tuesday, 7/14, 7:30 pm The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog Anything But Silent Wednesday,7/15, 7:30 pm A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence p.11 Cinema Showcase 4 Science on Screen Special Event with Gary Null Special Event Tuesday, 7/28, 7:30 pm 10 Questions for the Dalai Lama Spirituality p.15 Woody Allen’s IRRATIONAL MAN Starring Joaquin Phoenix, Parker Posey & Emma Stone…Starts July 31st Members Only Preview: Wednesday, July 29th : 7 pm Reception, 8 pm Film Woody Allen rewardingly returns to the rich themes of crime, punishment, and fate that animated his classic works Crimes and Misdemeanors and Match Point. Joaquin Phoenix is brilliant as Philosophy professor Abe Lucas, a man at rock bottom emotionally, unable to find any meaning or joy in life. Abe feels that everything he’s done, from political activism to teaching, hasn’t made any difference. Soon after arriving to teach at a small town college, Abe gets involved with two women: Rita Richards (Parker Posey), a lonely professor who wants him to rescue her from her unhappy marriage; and Jill Pollard (Emma Stone), his best student, who becomes his closest friend. While Jill loves her boyfriend Roy (Jamie Blackley), she finds Abe’s tortured, artistic personality and exotic past irresistible. Even as Abe displays signs of mental imbalance, Jill’s fascination with him only grows. Still, when she tries to make their relationship a romantic one, he rebuffs her. Pure chance changes everything when Abe and Jill overhear a stranger’s conversation and become drawn in. Once Abe makes a profound choice, he is able to embrace life to the fullest again. But his decision sets off a chain of events that will affect him, Jill and Rita forever. (USA, 2015, 96 min., Rated R, DCP | Directed and Written by Woody Allen) Woody Allen’s fascinating new mystery digs into the life of a tormented philosophy professor who embraces life and romance when he commits an existential act INFINITELY POLAR BEAR Starring Mark Ruffalo and Zoe Saldana After a struggle with bipolar disorder forces Cameron (Mark Ruffalo) to leave his family and move into a halfway house, he attempts to rebuild a relationship with his two daughters, and win back the trust of his wife Maggie (Zoe Saldana). When Maggie decides to go to business school in New York, Cameron becomes the girls’ primary caretaker. Due to his unpredictable nature, this leads to a series of quirky, funny, and sometimes frightening episodes. Based on a true story, Infinitely Polar Bear is a humorous and heartbreaking portrait of the many unexpected ways in which parents and children save each other. (USA, 2014, 90 min., Rated R, DCP | Written and Directed by Maya Forbes | Sundance Film Festival 2014 | Toronto International Film Festival 2014) Mark Ruffalo stars as a father suffering from bipolar disorder in writer-director Maya Forbes’ gently comic autobiographical tale of two young girls caught up in the chaos of their parents’ divorce JIMMY’S HALL Directed by Ken Loach THE WOMAN IN GOLD In 1921 Jimmy Gralton’s sin was to build a dance hall on a rural crossroads in an Ireland on the brink of Civil War. The Pearse-Connolly Hall was a place where young people could come to learn, to argue, to dream... but above all to dance and have fun. As the hall grew in popularity its socialist and free-spirited reputation brought it to the attention of the church and politicians who forced Jimmy to flee and the hall to close. A decade later, at the height of the Depression, Jimmy returns to Ireland from the US to look after his mother and vows to live the quiet life. The hall stands abandoned and empty, and despite the pleas of the local youngsters, remains shut. However as Jimmy reintegrates into the community and sees the poverty and growing cultural oppression, the leader and activist within him is stirred. He makes the decision to reopen the hall in the face of much opposition. (UK/Ireland, 2014, 109 min., PG-13, DCP | Dir. Ken Loach | Cannes Film Festival 2014 | Tribeca Film Festival 2015) Legendary filmmaker Ken Loach once again turns his eye to the people and politics of Ireland in this insightful drama about a man whose dance hall changes lives in a rural village 5 Island-born Director Jeff Lipsky and actresses Kelsey Lynn MAD WOMEN Long Stokes, Christina Starbuck and Sharon Van Ivan in person on opening weekend! Long Island-born filmmaker Jeff Lipsky (Flannel Pajamas, Molly’s Theory of Relativity, and Twelve Thirty) returns to the Cinema with another of his powerful explorations of social anxiety and emotional turmoil. Young and beautiful, Nevada Smith craves to find a place for herself in a family of overachievers. Her mother is running for political office, her father is a successful dentist and her older sister is working overseas. In addition, the family is still grieving the death of a sister who died at a young age. When her mother discovers she has cancer and her father is suddenly sent to prison, Nevada is overwhelmed with the emotional need to comfort her mother. (USA, 2015, 131 min., DCP | Written & Directed by Jeff Lipsky | Cast: Reed Birney, Eli Percy, Christina Starbuck, Kelsey Lynn Stokes) Long Island’s own Jeff Lipsky returns to the Cinema with a mesmerizing tale about a young woman trying to find a place for herself in a family of overachievers WILD TALES Starring Ian MacKellen and Laura Linney MR. HOLMES The magisterial Sir Ian McKellen reunites with director Bill Condon for this wistful look at the famous sleuth in his sunset years. Though he’s in his 90s, Sherlock Holmes is not going gently into that good night; he’s exasperated with how Dr. Watson has characterized him; generally cantankerous with everyone around him, including housekeeper Mrs. Munro (Laura Linney); and worried about his own advancing senility which he tries to remedy with special herbs. Deciding to set the story—and his mind—straight, he decides to work on his version of a 30-year-old case involving a missing woman, a strange musical instrument and the mistake that leads him to retirement. Using an intricate flashback structure, Mr. Holmes allows McKellen to play the character in two different time frames – the enfeebled, grouchy gumshoe puttering around his Sussex garden in 1947 and the sleek sleuth of 30 years earlier – and the result is one of his finest performances. Loosely adapted from Mitch Cullin’s novel A Slight Trick of the Mind and featuring precise attention to period detail and the visual splendor of the English countryside, Mr. Holmes stands proudly against the other indelible portraits of the unforgettable man who lived at 221B Baker Street. (UK/ USA, 2015, 104 min., PG, DCP | Dir. Bill Condon | Berlin Film Festival 2015) Ian MacKellen stars as an aged, retired Sherlock Holmes looking back on his life, and grappling with an unsolved case in this new twist on the world’s most famous detective AMY A once-in-a-generation talent, Amy Winehouse was a musician that captured the world’s attention. A pure jazz artist in the most authentic sense – she wrote and sung from the heart using her musical gifts to analyze her own problems. The combination of her raw honesty and supreme talent resulted in some of the most unique and adored songs of the modern era. Her huge success, however, resulted in relentless and invasive media attention which coupled with Amy’s troubled relationships and precarious lifestyle saw her life tragically begin to unravel. Amy Winehouse died from alcohol poisoning in July 2011 at the age of 27. (UK, 2015, 128 min., Rated R, DCP | Dir. Asif Kapadia | Cannes Film Festival 2015) From award-winning director Asif Kapadia (Senna), Amy tells the incredible story of six-time Grammywinner Amy Winehouse – in her own words. Featuring extensive unseen archive footage and previously unheard tracks, this strikingly modern, moving and vital film shines a light on this amazing artist. 6 CReatiVitY AN ETERNAL MYSTERY Sponsored by Stuart & Ginger Polisner A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON In Person: HARROD BLANK, Executive Producer & Les Blank’s Son Thursday, July 2 at 7:30 pm • Members $10 | Public $15 • Includes Reception Les Blank made A Poem Is A Naked Person during 1972-74, while living at the Russell/Shelter records recording studio compound on Grand Lake Of The Cherokees in northeast Oklahoma. It offers an amazingly intimate view of the life and work of legendary musician Leon Russell, features appearances by Willie Nelson, George Jones, Eric Anderson and some amazing characters in Oklahoma, where much of it was shot. At least two major critics have declared it the best film ever made on Rock and Roll. This film was never released and shown only with Les Blank in person at nonprofit institutions. After Les Blank’s death in April of 2013, the non-profit Les Blank Films was created and his son Harrod Blank fulfilled his father’s lifelong dream to remaster and release the film. (USA, 1974/ 2015 (release), 89 min. | Dir. Les Blank) Never before released, renowned independent filmmaker Les Blank’s amazing 1974 documentary captures the brilliance of Leon Russell and the artists around him at his Oklahoma recording studio during a three-year period from 1972-1974 YOUNG FRENCH CINEMA Discover a New Generation of Directors DOMESTIC LIFE (La vie domestique) Tuesday, July 7 at 7:30 pm • Regular admission Based on British writer Rachel Cusk’s 2006 novel, Arlington Park, Isabelle Czajka’s third feature is a piercing—but never didactic—examination of insidious sexism and upper-middle-class complacency. The film opens with married couple Juliette (Emmanuelle Devos) and Thomas (Laurent Poitrenaux), who’ve recently moved to a wealthy suburb outside Paris, at a dinner party where the host, a pompous businessman, freely airs his retrograde views about women and work. Though Thomas holds more advanced ideas about gender equality, Juliette still finds herself frustrated by the fact that her career aspirations are secondary to her husband’s professional responsibilities and that she must assume almost all the responsibility for caring for their two young children. While dropping off her kids at school one morning, Juliette bumps into an old classmate, Betty (Julie Ferrier), who leads a more traditional life as a stay-at-home mom. Expanding its focus to the habits of other married couples, Domestic Life lays bare the difficulty of ever achieving full parity in a partnership. (France, 2013, 94 min., DCP | Dir. Isabelle Czajka | Cast: Emmanuelle Devos, Julie Ferrier, Natacha Régnier) A mesmerizing examination of the secrets hiding beneath the pretty surfaces of a wealthy Paris suburb, featuring a brilliant female cast and a fascinating look at contemporary values in a domestic setting 7 ORSON WELLES Centennial Celebration THE TRIAL(1962) Hosted by ROYAL BROWN • Wednesday, July 8 at 7:30 pm Welles stunningly visualizes Franz Kafka’s classic novel about the inexplicable persecution of K. (Anthony Perkins), a man accused of a crime but never told what it is. Subjected to ever more surreal episodes of harassment, enticement and insinuation, K. struggles to maintain his dignity despite the best efforts of temptresses Jeanne Moreau, Romy Schneider and Elsa Martinelli, various interrogations and beatings by strange men in black suits and the unconvincing assurances of Welles’ blustery “Advocate.” Brand New Digital Restoration! (France/ Germany/Italy, 1962, 118 min., in English, DCP) Royal S. Brown is a member of the Ph.D. Program in French at the Graduate Center, CUNY. He received a B.A. from Penn State University and a Ph.D. from Columbia University. He is the author of Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music and Focus on Godard. Anthony Perkins and Jeanne Moreau star in Welles’ brilliant adaptation of Franz Kafka’s classic novel about a man accused of a crime but never told what it is Out at the Movies Co-Presented by L.I. Gay & Lesbian Film Festival MEN’S HOT SHORTS Thursday, July 9 at 7:30 pm • CAC & LIGLFF Members $10 | Public $15 CHERRY POP Dir. Assaad Yacoub, 16 mins. When Headliner Lauren refuses to go on for her final performance at the Cherry Pop drag show, all the Divas vie backstage for her spot, while a newcomer deals with her stage fright. Will the show go on? SAFE WORD Dir. Todd Lillethun, 16 mins. A young gay couple decide to spice up their relationship and find themselves in peril when fantasy and reality start to blur. OPEN RELATIONSHIP Dir. Carlos Ocho, 14 mins. When one half of a partnership requests an Open Relationship, his dreams soon turn into a nightmare. THE FOLLOWERS Tim Marshall, 13 mins. A dark comedy drama about faith and loneliness when a women sees the face of Jesus in one man’s bathing suit. SEX DATE Dir. John Sobrack, 16 mins. A man, pursued by the law, finds more than refuge from the streets, when he is mistaken for another man’s on-line meet up. GOOD MORNING Dir. Stephen Dunn/ Peter Knegt, 10 mins. A comedy that examines ideas of sexual identity and age anxiety via the story of a man who-on the morning after his 30th birthday party-wakes up with both a massive hangover and a 17-year-old boy sleeping on his couch YOU, ME, BATHROOM, SEX Dir. Francisco Lupini, 18 mins. A comedy about a man who tries to forget about love in all the wrong places. (Cast and crew expected to be in attendance) The Long Island Gay & Lesbian Film Festival presents a lively evening highlighting some of the year’s best short movies about gay men 8 9 OPERA ON SCREEN The Royal Opera Presents LA BOHÈME by Giacomo Puccini Sunday, July 12 at 12 noon • Members $10 | Public $15 When Rodolfo, a penniless poet, meets Mimì, a seamstress, they fall passionately in love. But their happiness is threatened when Rodolfo learns that Mimì is gravely ill. Rodolfo, painfully aware that he cannot afford the medicine and care Mimì needs, separates from her. At the end of her life Mimì returns to Rodolfo’s garret. They ecstatically embrace – but, despite the care of Rodolfo and his friends, Mimì dies. Sung in Italian with English subtitles | About 2 hours 55 minutes, Including two intervals | Dir. John Copley The most popular opera of all returns in one of The Royal Opera’s best loved stagings, regularly revived since its opening night in 1974. A lost key and an accidental touch of cold hands in the dark begins one of the great romances of all opera, told in vivid detail in this classic production. STAFF PICKS...come see the CAC staff’s favorite films! DREAMS ON SCREEN: FOUR SURREAL SHORTS Selected by Ted Cavooris, Associate Director of Development Monday, July 13 at 7:30pm Despite eagerly awaiting my chance for a Staff Pick ever since the program’s inception, I have to admit that, when my turn came, I was at a complete loss as to what movie to choose. There are so many great, rarely-screened gems that I just couldn’t decide. Fortunately, I was allowed to embrace that indecision; instead of selecting just one film, I opted for four shorts. These short films represent some of my favorite pieces of avant-garde cinema. While the films each have their own voice, there is a strain of surrealism that unites them, as well as a strong push to expand on what a film can be. The opportunity to sit in the dark and lose ourselves in a dream, so central to the cinema, is something that we take for granted all too often. The chance to have this experience together is something that I’m honored to be able to share with the CAC. UN CHIEN ANDALOU is a collaboration by Salvador Dalí and Luis Buñuel, and is considered a classic of the avant-garde, despite being created with hostile intentions to that school of thought. Inspired by dreams and structured according to their logic, it is nevertheless a film that thrills me more for its dada attitude than for its surrealism. (France, 1929, 16 min) DESTINO is another collaboration of Dalí’s, this time with Walt Disney. Despite the stark difference in their reputations, the two had a lot of sensibilities in common, and were both consummate showmen. Completed by Walt’s nephew, Roy E. Disney, 58 years after its production began, the result is just what you would hope for in a collaboration between these luminaries. (France/USA, 1945/2003, 7 min.) MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON is perhaps my favorite avant-garde film of all time. Maya Deren’s first and best-known film has never been matched in its perfectly haunting atmosphere. Its iconic depiction of everyday objects lends the existential despair a sense of fun and playfulness. I can’t express enough how much I’m looking forward to screening this. (USA, 1943, 14 min.) LA JETÉE is the film here with the most straightforward narrative. A sci-fi story that visually relies more on powerful impressions than explanations, Chris Marker’s 1962 film is composed almost entirely of still images. It has influenced a wide variety of films about time travel since then. (France, 1962, 28 min.) 10 Anything But Silent: Silent Classics with Live Music Alfred Hitchcock’s THE LODGER: A Story of the London Fog Tuesday, July 14 at 7:30 pm • Members $10 | Public $15 Considered by Hitchcock as his first real film, The Lodger is a silent sexual psychodrama set in a foggy, gloomy London terrorized by a killer loosely modelled on Jack the Ripper. As blonde women are murdered around the city, a sinister gentleman takes up lodgings at the house of an elderly couple and is soon showing an interest in their pretty blonde daughter. To thicken the plot, she’s engaged to a policeman hot on the trail of “The Avenger” who thinks her Lodger lover is the serial killer! A real sense of menace pervades the story and the visual inventiveness makes the film a real treat. (UK, 1927, 68 min, Unrated, DCP | Dir. Alfred Hitchcock | Cast: Marie Ault, Arthur Chesney, Ivor Novello, June Tripp and Malcolm Keen) Ben Model is one of the USA’s leading silent film accompanists, and has been playing piano and organ for silents at the Museum of Modern Art in New York for the past 28 years and the CAC for over 7 years. Considered by Alfred Hitchcock as his first real film, this silent sexual psychodrama set in a foggy, gloomy London terrorized by a killer loosely modelled on Jack the Ripper features much of what would become the Master of Suspense’s signature trademarks, including themes of suspense, paranoia, murder and ecstasy Cinema Showcase A PIGEON SAT ON A BRANCH REFLECTING ON EXISTENCE Wednesday, July 15, 7:30 pm Regular Admission • Free for Young Film Fan Members Like his previous features Songs from the Second Floor and You, The Living, master Swedish director Roy Andersson takes up the theme of “being a human being” with this meticulously crafted, dreamlike black comedy. Sam and Jonathan, a pair of hapless novelty salesman, take us on a kaleidoscopic tour of the human condition in reality and fantasy, unfolding in absurdist episodes: a sing-along at a 1940s beer hall, a randy flamenco teacher, a thirsty King Charles XII of Sweden in route to battle, and a diabolical metaphor for the horrors inflicted by European colonialism. It is a journey that unveils the beauty of single moments, the pettiness of others, life’s grandeur, and the humor and tragedy hidden within us all. (Sweden, 2014, 100 min., PG-13, In Swedish and English with English subtitles, DCP | Dir. Roy Andersson | Venice Film Festival 2014 – Best Film | Toronto Film Festival 2014 | NYTimes Critics’ Picks) “Rarely has the contemplation of life’s potential meaninglessness been so delightful. World cinema may have no better builder of delightful scenes than Roy Andersson.” – Alan Scherstuhl, Village Voice Master Swedish director Roy Andersson takes us on a journey that unveils the ultimate frailty of humanity in this surreal black comedy 11 The best of British Theatre Broadcast Live to Cinemas Worldwide CHIWETEL EJIOFOR in EVERYMAN Thursday, July 16 at 7 pm $20 Members | $25 Public Everyman is successful, popular and riding high when Death comes calling. He is forced to abandon the life he has built and embark on a last, frantic search to recruit a friend, anyone, to speak in his defense. But Death is close behind, and time is running out. One of the great primal, spiritual myths, Everyman asks whether it is only in death that we can understand our lives. A cornerstone of English drama since the 15th century, it now explodes onto the stage in a startling production with words by Carol Ann Duffy, Poet Laureate, and movement by Javier De Frutos. (Estimated run time: 90 minutes, with no interval | Director Rufus Norris) BAFTA winner and Academy Award® nominee Chiwetel Ejiofor (12 Years a Slave) takes the title role in this dynamic new production of one of English drama’s oldest plays, in a new adaptation by Carol Ann Duffy and directed by the National Theatre’s new Director Rufus Norris (Broken, London Road). Vic Skolnick SUNDAY SCHMOOZE hosted by Fred Craden Brunch, Film, and Discussion BAGDAD CAFE Sunday, July 19, Bagels at 10 am, Film at 11 am • Members $10 | Public $15 Acclaimed filmmaker Percy Adlon (Sugar Baby, Celeste, and Mahler on the Couch) had a smash hit in 1987 with this magical tale of a staid German housefrau whose life is transformed when she finds herself stranded far, far from home. German tourist Jasmin Munchgstettner (Marianne Sägebrecht) argues with her husband after car trouble strands them along a dusty highway in the American Southwest. Fuming, she storms off and travels by foot to the nearest outpost of civilization -- the Bagdad Café. Upon arriving, she butts heads with the owner (CCH Pounder), but they soon forge an unlikely friendship. What begins as a few days’ respite becomes a prolonged stay as Jasmin finds her niche within this eccentric truck-stop community including an eccentric painter (Jack Palance) who reveals to Jasmin how beautiful she really is. (West Germany/USA, 1987, 95 min., PG, DVD | Dir. Percy Adlon) Join host Fred Craden for this 1980s classic about a lonely German woman who ends up in the most desolate motel on Earth and who transforms numerous lives when she decides to make it a brighter place 12 CINEMA FOR KIDS! Free for Kids 12 and Under! WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE Sunday, July 19 at 11 am • Recommended for Kids age 10 and up When shy, artistic Anna moves to the seaside to live with her aunt and uncle, she stumbles upon an old mansion surrounded by marshes, and the mysterious young girl, Marnie, who lives there. The two girls instantly form a unique connection and friendship that blurs the lines between fantasy and reality. As the days go by, a nearly magnetic pull draws Anna back to the Marsh House again and again, and she begins to piece together the truth surrounding her strange new friend. Based on the young adult novel by Joan G. Robinson and directed by Hiromasa Yonebayashi (The Secret World of Arrietty), When Marnie Was There has been described as “Ghibli Gothic,” with its moonlit seascapes, glowing orchestral score, and powerful dramatic portrayals that build to a stormy climax. (Japan, 2015, 103 min., PG, DCP | Dir. Hiromasa Yonebayashi | English voicecast: Hailee Steinfeld, Kiernan Shipka, Geena Davis, John C. Reilly, and Vanessa Williams) – Recommended for kids age 10 and up. ‘Wondrous! One of the most profoundly moving cinematic experiences to be had this year!” – IndieWire The newest feature from Japan’s famed Studio Ghibli is a sweeping story of friendship, mystery and discovery that delivers stirring emotions and breathtaking animation as only Ghibli can SKY ROOM TALKS VINCENT PRICE – HE MADE HORROR FUN Lecture by Glenn Andreiev Monday, July 20, 7:30 pm • Members $10 | Public $15 • The gothic chillers starring Missouri born Vincent Price still draw a strong, adoring fan base. His fright films entertained, thrilled, they didn’t just “gross out”. Film historian Glenn Andreiev returns to the cinema with an evening class covering the various films, not just horror, of the multi-talented Mr. Price. This talk covers his 1940’s gothic/noir films such as Laura and Leave Her To Heaven, his famous horror gems, such as the Edgar Allan Poe adaptations, and his later outlandish revenge comedy/thrillers of the 1970’s, and more. Glenn Andreiev is a longtime Long Island filmmaker and film historian. His writings on film history can be found in The Village Connection and Films in Review. He has lectured at the Cinema Arts Centre, local libraries and at School of Visual Arts, where he holds a BFA in Film. His work as a filmmaker has appeared on CNN, TruTV, Newsday and The View. Currently, he is preparing a film entitled Bloody History. His website is huntingtonactionfilms.com Join film historian Glenn Andreiev for a thrilling look into the fascinating and frightening career of Vincent Price 13 ROCK LEGENDS LIVE! THE LONG ISLAND SOUND Educational Lecture by Bill Shelley of Shelly Archives Inc. Tuesday, July 21 at 7:30 pm • $10 Members | $15 Public – Includes Reception Long Island is a land of rich musical history dating back to the early 1900’s. Some of the artists were born here, while others came from elsewhere and made their homes here. Long Island continues to be the birth place and catalyst of many performers and artists of newer genres, from rock and pop musicians, singers, and songwriters to hip hop and rap. This program will focus on a few of the people who came from or were influenced by the rock and pop side of The Long Island Sound. This program will showcase those musicians from Nassau and Suffolk counties who were part of the vivacious Baby Boomer Generation. We will celebrate many of Rock’s greatest bands and musicians, including: The Shangri-Las (“Leader of the Pack”), Harry Chapin (“Cat’s in the Cradle”), Billy Joel (“New York State of Mind”), The Young Rascals (“Good Lovin’”), Vanilla Fudge (“You Keep Me Hanging On”), Iron Butterfly (“In-A-Gadda-DaVida”), The Loving Spoonful (“Summer in the City”), Pat Benatar (“Hit Me With Your Best Shot”), Commander Cody (“Hot Rod Lincoln”), Lou Reed (“Walk on the Wild Side”), Blue Oyster Cult (“Don’t Fear the Reaper”), and many more! Approx. 100 minutes Long Islanders have many reasons to be proud of the areas rich musical history and of the variety of its Long Island Sound. Join host Bill Shelley for this special program, and pay tribute to some of Long Island’s biggest stars! WHEN PHYSICS MEETS FASHION A Science on Screen program Presentation by Ágnes Mócsy with screening of ZOOLANDERstarring Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson and Will Ferrell Thursday, July 23 at 7 pm • Members $10|Public $15 • Includes Reception Propelled to the top of the fashion world by a photogenic gaze he calls “Blue Steel,” dimwitted male model Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller) thinks he’s got a fourth consecutive win as Male Model of the Year in the bag. But, when his rival, Hansel (Owen Wilson), unexpectedly takes the crown, Derek is crushed. He becomes easy prey for fashion designer Jacobim Mugatu (Will Ferrell), who signs Derek to star in his “Derelicte” fashion show, then brainwashes him to kill Malaysia’s prime minister. (USA, 2001, 89 min., PG-13 | Dir. Ben Stiller) Dr. Ágnes Mócsy is a theoretical physicist, who studies the theory of strong nuclear interactions, the force holding the atomic nucleus together and making the existence of protons and neutrons possible. In particular, she studies the matter that permeated the entire universe a millionth of a second after the Big Bang. After receiving her PhD from the University of Minnesota, she continued as a postdoc at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, and as a research scientist at the RIKEN Theory Group at Brookhaven National Laboratory, where she holds a visiting scientist appointment. Mócsy is a tenured faculty member in the Department of Mathematics and Science at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, renowned for art, design, and architecture, where she teaches physics and astronomy for non-physics majors. She also develops science-art-design fusion projects that allow students from a broader, non-traditional, non-science background to explore the world of science and develop a richer vision of nature. These include fashion, as well as an animated video “the Sound of the Little Bang”, an Op-Doc “Smashing Matters” and “Glamorous Gluons”, an art exhibit on display in the Brookhaven Physics Department. She is keenly aware of the role science plays in the development of society. This drives her efforts to communicate science to varied public audiences, including public lectures and lobbying congress. You can read more about Mócsy, The Fashionista Physicist, at scienceline.org/2015/02/the-fashonista-physicist Join Dr. Ágnes Mócsy for a thrilling look into the world of fashion through the eyes of a theoretical physicist. Ágnes will explore questions like “Physics, the muse?”, “What science tells us about fashion?” and more, that will lead you to view the 2001 comedic hit Zoolander through an all new perspective 14 INDUSTRIAL MUSICALS Hosted by collector and author Steve Young! Sunday, July 26 at 7:30 pm • Members $10 | Public $12 • Book Signing “The Bathrooms Are Coming”? “Diesel Dazzle”? “Got to Investigate Silicones”? When David Letterman writer Steve Young began finding obscure corporate musicals while gathering albums for the “Dave’s Record Collection” segment, he had no idea of the journey he was beginning. Now, twenty years and one book later, Steve is the world’s authority on the bizarrely entertaining shows created for company conventions and sales meetings from the 1950’s to the 1980’s. He’s been a guest on NPR’s “Fresh Air” and Dave Letterman’s “Late Show,” he does presentations at conventions and festivals, and he loves to screen ultra-rare films from his collection. Thrill to in-house musical propaganda from General Electric, Kellogg’s, Citgo, American-Standard, Purina, and more, with Steve’s informative and hilarious commentary. It’s a secret world of Americana that will astonish, amuse, perplex—and make you want to get out there and sell something! STEVE YOUNG was a writer for The Late Show with David Letterman and has also written for The Simpsons. He is the co-author of Everything’s Coming Up Profits: The Golden Age of Industrial Musicals. He lives in New York City. Join Steve Young (longtime writer for David Letterman and The Simpsons) on a deliriously entertaining journey into a little-known corner of pop culture that will blow your mind! Young has spent years collecting rare films and recordings of the astonishing Broadway-style musicals written and performed for private audiences of corporate executives and salesmen in the 50s, 60s and 70s. This hidden world or Americana gems from GE, Kellogg’s, Purina and many more will leave you humming along to the most unlikely of unforgettable beats. SPIRITUALITY THROUGH CINEMA 10 QUESTIONS FOR THE DALAI LAMA Tuesday, July 28 at 7:30 pm | Hosted by Fred Craden Filmmaker and explorer Rick Ray examines some of the fundamental questions of our time by weaving together observations from his own journeys throughout India and the Middle East, and the wisdom of an extraordinary spiritual leader. Ray filmed during a private visit to the Dalai Lama’s monastery in Dharamsala, India over the course of several months. Also included is rare historical footage as well as footage supplied by individuals who at great personal risk, filmed with hidden cameras within Tibet. Part biography, part philosophy, part adventure and part politics, 10 Questions for The Dalai Lama conveys more than history and more than answers - it opens a window into the heart of an inspiring man. (USA, 2006, 85 min. DVD | Dir. Rick Ray) Against the backdrop of an exotic land, a lone filmmaker is granted one hour to ask ten questions of the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet. 15 The best of British Theatre Broadcast Live to Cinemas Worldwide HELEN MIRREN in THE AUDIENCE Thursday, July 30 at 7 pm $20 Members | $25 Public Helen Mirren reprises her Academy Award winning role as Queen Elizabeth II in the highly-anticipated West End production of The Audience, broadcast as part of National Theatre Live. For sixty years Elizabeth II has met each of her twelve Prime Ministers in a weekly audience at Buckingham Palace – a meeting like no other in British public life – it is private. Both parties have an unspoken agreement never to repeat what is said. Not even to their spouses. The Audience breaks this contract of silence – and imagines a series of pivotal meetings between the Downing Street incumbents and their Queen. From Churchill to Cameron, each Prime Minister has used these private conversations as a sounding board and a confessional – sometimes intimate, sometimes explosive. From young mother to grandmother, these private audiences chart the arc of the second Elizabethan Age. Politicians come and go through the revolving door of electoral politics, while she remains constant, waiting to welcome her next Prime Minister. The Audience reunites writer Peter Morgan and Academy Award-winning actress Helen Mirren following their collaboration on the critically-acclaimed movie sensation The Queen. The Audience is directed by Academy Award-nominated director Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours). Helen Mirren reprises her Academy Award winning role as Queen Elizabeth II in this highlyanticipated play about the private meetings between the Queen and her Prime Ministers Gary Null in person with SAVING THE PLANET–ONE BITE AT A TIME Sunday, July 26 at 12 noon • Members $10 | Public $15 • Includes Reception The Standard American Diet plays a major role in the current epidemics of obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer. Just as the nation’s health crisis reaches disastrous proportions, it is quickly becoming clear that the harmful consequences of our food choices extend far beyond chronic disease. The methods of food production in use today have profound implications on the health of the planet. The rise of unsound agricultural practices such as factory farming and genetic engineering of our crops are pushing us to the brink of environmental calamity. Saving The Planet - One Bite At A Time offers an in-depth analysis of how our (nation’s) eating habits are destroying our health and causing irreversible damage to the environment. Will we continue to turn a blind eye to the dangers of America’s food system or choose to take action and adopt a new paradigm based on sustainability and balance? What is for certain is that time is running out for us to take steps toward a sustainable future. This empowering film provides the knowledge needed for us to begin making a difference, one plate at a time. Alternative health advocate Gary Null returns to the Cinema to present his powerful new documentary exploring how our eating habits are destroying our health and causing irreversible damage to the environment 16 THE 3RD ANNUAL CAC 48 HOUR FILM COMPETITION Competition begins Friday, August 7 at 7 pm - Films are due Sunday, August 9 at 7 pm Registration is $85 per team See all of the films at a special screening on August 27th, 7:30 pm, Admission $10 Simply put, filmmaking teams have just one weekend to make a short film. Filmmakers don’t know what genre they will be shooting until the start of the competition. All creativity: writing, shooting, editing and adding a musical soundtrack, must occur within the 48 hour window beginning Friday evening at 7pm. To add to the mayhem, they must also include some random elements that you find out about at the starting line. The CAC 48-Hour Film Competition is a filmmaking competition that just has to be experienced. Make a short film in 48 hours?! You’d have to be mad. Fortunately, temporary insanity is one thing this competition isn’t lacking. Reasons to compete include: getting to see your creation on the big screen at our culminating event on August 28th, adding a new film to your portfolio, and being in the running for a cash prize! The winning team will receive $500 and the winning film will be shown for one week at the Cinema Arts Centre! Start assembling your team now, and get ready to film! For rules & info visit: cinemaartscentre.org Attention Filmmakers!!!! Get ready for the ultimate filmmaking challenge. Do you have what it takes to make a movie in only 48 hours?! organic produce Support Organic Farming on Long Island Join now! Discount for Cinema Members! Green Thumb Farm Halsey family farming on LI since the 1600s Biodynamic & Certified Organic USDA/NOFA Vegetables • Herbs • Flowers • Fruit Pick-up at Cinema Arts Centre! Green Thumb CSA - Huntington Call 631-421-4864 / email: dskolnick@pb.net www.GreenThumbOrganicFarm.com Screenwriters Discussion Group Networking • Information • Readings • Feedback Next meetings: Monday, July 6 and 20th at 7:30 pm in the Cinema Arts Centre Sky Room Free of charge • Open to all screenwriters 17 Avoid Crowns and Root Canals with Biomimetic Dentistry! After 25 years of dentistry, Dr. Ames studied under world-‐class mentors and undertook a revolutionary technique that preserves enamel, keeps nerves healthy and costs less than a crown. This is dentistry at its best, preserving your tooth! Visit her website www.DrAmes.com to see a short documentary about her practice. Or visit www.youtube.com for the video “Biomimetic Dentistry – An Explanation by Dr. Margaret Ames” Call: 631-‐261-‐4525 Email: DrAmes@DrAmes.com Mention Cinema Arts Centre for a complimentary consultation with Dr. Ames. Monday July 6, 8 pm $5/Person • 6 or less to a team Sky Room Cafe Do you know a lot about movies? Now you can prove it! Cash Prizes! Hosted by Operations Manager John Panicola 18 WE TAKE THE STRESS OUT OF MOVING SIMPLY ORGANIZED MOVE 631-402-3056 We treat our clients like family! Specializing in Senior Transitions including Organizing and Downsizing • Sorting • Organizing • Donating & Selling Items • Packing & Unpacking Visit Us at SimplyOrganizedMove.com CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE 10% OFF Any Service Simply Organized Move With this coupon only. Cannot be combined with any other offer or sale item. Offer expires 6/1/16 19 CINEMA ARTS CENTRE P.O. Box 498, 423 Park Avenue Huntington, NY 11743 NON PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID Cinema Arts Centre ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED. DATED MAIL. PLEASE DO NOT DELAY Thanks to our Members & Donors The Cinema Arts Centre is grateful for all of its members & donors. While lack of space precludes us from acknowledging everyone, we recognize here all current members at the Director Level or above & those whose gifts totaled more than $1,000 since January 1, 2014. Premiere Circle Members and those who have Contributed $50,000 and above Sol & Mimi Berg, Brad & Katherine Borax, Janice & Tom Nepsee, New York State Council on the Arts, Ursula & Bill Niarakis-Marion O. & Maximilian E. Hoffman Foundation, Andrew & Julie Nittoli, Stuart & Ginger Polisner, Rochelle & Steve* Rubin - Alpern Family Foundation, Peter & Dori Tilles Leaders Circle, Cinema Philanthropist Members and those who have Contributed $10,000 - $49,999 F. Towne & Linda Portnoy Allen-Emily T. Allen, Linda P. Allen & F. Towne Allen Charitable Gift Fund, Bottles & Cases, Butera’s Restaurants, John & Amy Lomele – Main Street Nursery, Barton & Jane Shallat, Suffolk County, Town of Huntington, James & Liz Watson, Fredric & Carol Weiss, Theodore & Vicki Wender Cinema Benefactor Members and those who have Contributed $5,000-$9,999 Dr. Glenn D. Arvan, Bethpage Federal Credit Union, Stanley Churgin, CPA, A. Sandra Churgin, Dr. Samara S. Churgin, MDPC, The Coolidge Corner Theatre & The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Amy Hagedorn – Horace & Amy Hagedorn Fund, Kenneth* & Veronica Katz, Dr. & Mrs. Paul & Nancy Krawitz – Huntington Eye Care, Medical Financial Enterprises Corporation, Brett & Peggy Sherris, Stephen Waldner & Linda Kleet Cinema Friend Members and those who have Contributed $2,500-$4,999 Angela Andretta & Pamela Vogt, Dori & John Beckhard, Martin* & Laurie Butera, Barbara Distinti & Andrew Snyder, Farrell Fritz PC, David & Janice Groden, Walter Kissinger – Kissinger Family Foundation, Jeffrey L. & Andrea Lomasky, Barbara Mitchell & J.Z. Sullivan, Dr. Peter Mudge, David & Ellen Reynolds, Rivkin Radler, LLP, Bob & Karen Smullen, Jacqueline Strayer & Robert Carlson, Robert & Christine Sugarman, Erika & Ken Witover Director Level Members and those who have Contributed $1,000-$2,499 Birjis & Sophia Akhund, Elizabeth & Rodney Berens, David & Amy Berg, Adam & Amanda Birnbaum, Joel Blickstein & Bonnie Blackwell, Dr. Joan Penrose Borum, David Boxer, Brettschneider & Brettschneider LLP, Jerome Brownstein, Anthony & Laura Burke, Madeline & Douglas Callahan, Mary & Tom Catalano, Amy & Lee Certilman, Stephan & Marianne Coles, Milton & Shirley Cooper - The Milton Cooper Foundation, Inc., Frederick Craden, Beth & Steve Dannhauser, Christine Eidinoff - Sinequanon, John & Sally Esposito, Stephen & Doris Faber, Betty Fasig & David McDonald, Florence Feinberg & Ben Geizhals, Barbara Fertig, Stephen Fisch*, Larry Foglia & Heather Forest, Robert & Shirley Frankum, Sandy Friedman*, In Memory of Robert Friedman, Meg & Bob Gary, Jordan Glaser & Hazel Weiser, In Memory of Arthur Goldstein, Peter Gollon & Abby Pariser, Aaron & Gail Goodridge, Seymour and Teddi Grauer, Polly Greenberg, David & Janet Greenblatt, Martin* & Judith Haas, Gil & Sheila Henoch, Harvey Hoffman & Rochelle Berner, Robert & Priscilla Hughes, J.W. Hirschfeld Agency, Inc, Liz & Ron Jordan, Marcia Kaplan, Emily Kasof & Brendan Kearns, Jonah & Lynn Kaufman, Richard Klemfuss & Angela Sangirardi, Charlotte Koons, Jack & Harriet Kulka, Todd Kupferman & Jane Baum, Drs. Stephen & Jessica Lastig, Phyllis Lober & James Doumas, Carl and Edith Markel, Marcia Mayer, Peter Milla & Diane Wilenski, Karen Mitchell & Michael & Jenna Bellew, Monique & Douglas Morris, Dr. Jud Newborn, Val & Rod Newman, Shana Nichols & J.P. Grossman, Lou & Brita Okin, Dr. Isabel Pavao-Horvath* & James Horvath, Dr. Davenport Plumer* & Harriet Spitzer, Nathaniel & Lesly Reichek, Frank Rinck & Ruth Case, Stanley & Shirley* Romaine, Robert De Rothschild, Scott & Selma Rothstein, Arnold & Carol Rubin, Vincent Russo*, Jude Schanzer* & Mark Shanholtz, Edward & Francine Schwarz, Roger & Jane Sencer, Burt Shaffer & Abby Link, Marjorie Shukow, Frank Siegel & Joan Isaac, Donna Sinetar & Stephen Weintraub, Myron & Marcia Stein, Jeffrey & Beth Steinberg, Irwin & Judith Tantleff, Jeffrey & Elaine Tulman, Diana & Roger Weaving, Marlene & Jacques Winter, Irwin Young *Board Member To learn more about how you can support the Cinema, please contact René Bouchard, Director of Development at (631) 423-7610, ext. 18 or at rene@cinemaartscentre.org. DIRECTIONS TO THE CINEMA ARTS CENTRE Driving from the west: L.I.E. east to Exit 49N or Northern State east to Exit 40 to Rte. 110 north. Follow 110 to Rte. 25A, Main St. Turn right. The third traffic light will be Park Ave. Turn right. CAC is the first driveway on the right, 100 yards south of 25A. Driving from the east: L.I.E. west to exit 51. Turn right off service road or take Northern State west to Exit 42 North, Huntington, Rte. 35 (Rte. 35 becomes Park Ave. after Jericho Tpke). Proceed to L.I.R.R. crossing, after the three traffic lights, CAC is the first driveway on the left. 20