NO ST AL GH IA - Cleveland Institute of Art
Transcription
NO ST AL GH IA - Cleveland Institute of Art
27 T H ANNIVERSARY! EACH FILM $9 • MEMBERS/CIA $7 • AGE 25 & UNDER $6 • ADDITIONAL FILM ON SAME DAY $6 F R E E L I G H T E D PA R K I N G I N I N S T I T U T E L O T • TEL 2 1 6 . 4 2 1 . 7 4 5 0 • FAX 2 1 6 . 7 5 4 . 3 6 3 2 www.cia.edu/cinematheque TOM JONES The Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque, founded in 1986, presents movies in the CIA’s 616-seat, 35mm and SR stereoequipped Russell B. Aitken Auditorium. It is located within the Institute’s Gund Building at the corner of East Boulevard and Bellflower Road in University Circle. Free, lighted parking is available in the adjacent CIA lot, located on the north and east sides of the building off of East Blvd. (see map at right). Entrance to the building is through the rear door, just off the parking lot and only steps from your car. Admission to most screenings is $9, Cinematheque members and CIA I.D. holders $7, those 25 and under $6. Your second film on the same day costs $6. Call (216) 421-7450 for further information and group rates. Smoking is not permitted in the Institute. Our facilities are fully accessible to the physically challenged. Email: cinema@cia.edu NE MOVING? LET US KNOW. AUGUST 22, 23 & 25 NOSTALGHIA ANDREI TARKOVSKY’S J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 3 NEW 35MM COLOR PRINT! PERMIT NO. 3639 CLEVELAND, OHIO 111 4 1 E A S T B LV D . , C L E V E L A N D , O H 4 4 1 0 6 CC II NN EE MM AA TT HH EE QQ UU EE TT T H E C L E V E L A N D I N S T I T U T E O F A R U . S . P O S TA G E P A I D T N R TD H HE CEL E V E C L A NL D EI N SVT I TEU TLE OA F A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION PREMIERE SHOWCASE July 9 – September 1 (10 films) T he first Cleveland showing of new films by Olivier Assayas, Ben Wheatley, James Marsh, Deepa Mehta, Alain Resnais, Darezhan Omirbayev, and other exciting contemporary filmmakers. You won’t see these movies shown theatrically any place else in Cleveland! TUE 7/9 8:50 PM FRI 7/12 7:20 PM SAT 7/13 9:30 PM MON 7/15 5:45 PM MON 7/15 7:45 PM THU 7/18 8:10 PM FRI 7/19 5:15 PM THU 7/25 5:45 PM THU 7/25 7:45 PM FRI 7/26 9:40 PM SAT 7/27 7:20 PM THU 8/1 5:45 PM THU 8/1 7:45 PM THU 8/8 7:00 PM FRI 8/9 9:10 PM SAT 8/10 7:00 PM SAT 8/31 9:40 PM SUN 9/1 6:30 PM ANTIVIRAL shown at the Capitol Theatre SOMETHING IN THE AIR SOMETHING IN THE AIR SIGHTSEERS shown at CIA’s McCullough Center SIGHTSEERS shown at CIA’s McCullough Center SIMON KILLER SIMON KILLER KISS OF THE DAMNED shown at CIA’s McCullough Center KISS OF THE DAMNED shown at CIA’s McCullough Center AUGUSTINE AUGUSTINE SHADOW DANCER shown at CIA’s McCullough Center SHADOW DANCER shown at CIA’s McCullough Center YOU AIN’T SEEN NOTHIN’ YET shown at the Capitol Theatre MIDNIGHT’S CHILDREN MIDNIGHT’S CHILDREN STUDENT STUDENT JEAN RENOIR IN COLOR! August 9 – September 1 (4 films) T he new art house hit Renoir has sparked renewed interest not only in French Impressionist painter Pierre-August Renoir but also in his son, master filmmaker Jean Renoir. Jean is well known for such 1930s b&w classics as Grand Illusion and Rules of the Game. But in the 1950s he started working in color, and in this short series we present four of his greatest color works, one of which pays explicit tribute to his father and the impressionist era. FRI SAT FRI SAT SAT SUN SAT SUN 8/9 8/10 8/16 8/17 8/24 8/25 8/31 9/1 7:10 PM 5:00 PM 7:30 PM 5:15 PM 5:15 PM 6:30 PM 5:15 PM 4:15 PM THE RIVER THE RIVER THE GOLDEN COACH THE GOLDEN COACH FRENCH CANCAN FRENCH CANCAN ELÉNA AND HER MEN ELÉNA AND HER MEN CLEVELAND CULTURAL GARDENS FILM FEST July 5 – August 30 (10 films) T he Cleveland Cultural Gardens, which flank Martin Luther King Blvd. (and part of East Blvd.) in Rockefeller Park between East 105th St. and I-90, comprise one of the city’s unique attractions. The Cultural Gardens are approximately 30 landscaped public plots of land that commemorate the various ethnic and nationality groups that have settled Cleveland— and America for that matter. Since the Cultural Gardens constitute one of the gateways to University Circle, with many passing them on their way to and from our movies, we thought it would be appropriate (and neighborly) to pay tribute this often overlooked regional asset. So we have assembled a nine-week film series consisting of ten features representing some of the nations and ethnic groups with gardens in the park. Most of the ten movies are recent or older classics, but two are new to Cleveland, including Federico Fellini’s ultra-rare final film The Voice of the Moon starring Roberto Benigni. All of these films speak well for the cultures and individuals that created them; they have enriched cinema history. On Sunday, August 25, the first Cleveland One World Festival will take place in the Cultural Gardens. Founded by James Levin, this all-day outdoor event will feature a smorgasbord of authentic ethnic foods and beverages, music, and performances. Visit ClevelandOneWorldFestival.com for details. FRI SAT SAT THU SAT THU SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT THU FRI THU FRI 7/5 7/6 7/6 7/11 7/13 7/18 7/20 7/26 7/27 8/2 8/3 8/9 8/10 8/16 8/17 8/22 8/23 8/29 8/30 5:15 PM 5:15 PM 7:35 PM 6:00 PM 7:25 PM 5:30 PM 7:05 PM 7:35 PM 5:15 PM 5:30 PM 5:15 PM 5:15 PM 9:45 PM 5:15 PM 9:30 PM 9:10 PM 7:30 PM 6:45 PM 7:30 PM THE PARADE THE VOICE OF THE MOON THE PARADE MY LEFT FOOT MY LEFT FOOT THE LIVES OF OTHERS THE LIVES OF OTHERS KOLYA KOLYA THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL WHICH WAY IS UP? WHICH WAY IS UP? 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS 4 MONTHS 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS ASHES AND DIAMONDS ASHES AND DIAMONDS THE WEEPING MEADOW THE WEEPING MEADOW S July 5 – September 1 (17 different programs) ome of the best movies released in commercial theatres this year— No, Spring Breakers, Upstream Color, Room 237, Ginger & Rosa, and Blancanieves among them—return to Cleveland. So do such classics as Jason and the Argonauts, Clouzot’s The Wages of Fear, and Tarkovsky’s Nostalghia—all in new or excellent 35mm prints! FRI 7/5 7:30 PM FRI 7/5 9:50 PM SAT 7/6 9:50 PM MON 7/8 5:45 PM MON 7/8 7:45 PM TUE 7/9 6:45 PM THU 7/11 8:05 PM FRI 7/12 5:15 PM FRI 7/12 9:40 PM SAT 7/13 5:15 PM FRI 7/19 9:30 PM FRI 7/19 9:30 PM SAT 7/20 5:00 PM SAT 7/20 9:45 PM MON 7/22 7:00 PM FRI 7/26 5:30 PM SAT 7/27 9:25 PM FRI 8/2 7:05 PM FRI 8/2 8:35 PM SAT 8/3 6:50 PM SAT 8/3 9:40 PM FRI 8/16 9:30 PM SAT 8/17 7:15 PM THU 8/22 6:45 PM FRI 8/23 9:35 PM SAT 8/24 7:20 PM SAT 8/24 9:30 PM SUN 8/25 3:45 PM SUN 8/25 8:30 PM SAT 8/31 7:10 PM SUN 9/1 8:20 PM NO SPRING BREAKERS SPRING BREAKERS UPSTREAM COLOR shown at CIA’s McCullough Center UPSTREAM COLOR shown at CIA’s McCullough Center ROOM 237 shown at the Capitol Theatre GINGER & ROSA JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS GINGER & ROSA JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS TO THE WONDER BLANCANIEVES BLANCANIEVES TO THE WONDER THE AMERICAN ASTRONAUT – free admission IN THE HOUSE IN THE HOUSE ISLAND OF LOST SOULS THE WAGES OF FEAR THE WAGES OF FEAR ISLAND OF LOST SOULS DISCONNECT DISCONNECT NOSTALGHIA NOSTALGHIA CHULAS FRONTERAS & GARLIC IS AS GOOD AS TEN MOTHERS LE PONT DU NORD (THE NORTH BRIDGE) NOSTALGHIA LE PONT DU NORD (THE NORTH BRIDGE) TOM JONES TOM JONES BECOME A CINEMATHEQUE MEMBER OR A DONOR OR BOTH! I want (check one or more): ___ to become a Cinematheque member and save at least $2 off regular admission prices for one full year. Memberships cost $35 and are issued to individuals only. They are not transferable. Fill out the form below and mail it, along with a check to the Cinematheque. A membership card good for a full year from the date of purchase, will be mailed to you. $20 student and senior (65 and over) memberships are also available, but only at the boxoffice, after presentation of proper I.D. THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL The George Gund Foundation has endowed the Cinematheque with a $100,000 gift in memory of Cinematheque co-founder George Gund III, who died in January. We are very grateful and look forward to keeping George’s love of film alive through the movies that this money will let us show each year. A SECOND LOOK THE GOLDEN COACH French filmmaker Abdellatif Kechiche, whose new film won the Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, is unknown to most American moviegoers—but not to those who frequent the Cinematheque. His Cannes triumph, entitled Blue Is the Warmest Color, is his fifth feature. Two of the previous four were never distributed in the U.S. But two were, and those two (Games of Love and Chance from 2003 and The Secret of the Grain from 2007) both played exclusively in Cleveland at the Cinematheque. Our amazing streak of introducing major international filmmakers to northeast Ohio continues! T S A BY JOHN EWING, CINEMATHEQUE DIRECTOR ummer has long been a time of experimentation for the Cinematheque—not so much in what we show, but in where we show it. Past summers have found us screening 16mm silent films (by Charlie Chaplin, Stan Brakhage, et al.) in the Cleveland Institute of Art’s outdoor courtyard. One summer we ran a “second screen”—a full Friday-Saturday schedule of 16mm films in the Institute’s 100-seat Ohio Bell Auditorium (while different movies unspooled from 35mm in Aitken Auditorium). In 2004 we converted the Ohio Bell Auditorium into the “DV Den” (DV for Digital Video) and showed movies from DVD to viewers who sat on a motley assortment of second-hand couches and lounge chairs. Other summers have seen us showing movies offsite in Norwalk, Ohio; at the Cedar Lee Theatre; and downtown at the Palace Theatre in Playhouse Square. In 2004 we also organized our first (and only) “CinemaTrek”—chartering a bus to Columbus to see Jacques Tati’s Playtime in 70mm at the Wexner Center. This summer we’re once again doing something we’ve never done before. We’re showing a few movies in the Mandel Screening Room, a year-old space inside CIA’s Joseph McCullough Center at 11610 Euclid Avenue. This is on the northern edge of the new Uptown development, where the Cinematheque will move in two years. (We’re getting a new auditorium in a new CIA building that will adjoin the McCullough Center.) So these Mandel Screening Room showings are in essence our first shows at our future home—a preview of coming attractions. Well, yes and no. Though the Cinematheque will move Uptown in 2015, we probably won’t continue to use the Mandel Screening Room when our new theatre is finished. The Mandel Screening Room was designed as an instructional space, and is heavily booked during the academic year. But in July and August we are able to screen some movies there. We will focus on new movies that exist only in digital formats—movies we currently can’t show in Aitken, which remains a filmonly venue. Though we have screened digital movies in the past at the Capitol Theatre (and continue to do so), there are now so many that we can’t show them all at W. 65th and Detroit Avenue; we would soon wear out our welcome. The Mandel Screening Room is equipped to show films from Bluray, DVD, and computer through a ceiling-mounted HD video projector. There is no projection booth—just a closet with video and sound equipment. The room has carpet, comfortable theatre seats (the kind Cinematheque patrons have been craving for the past 27 years), a large screen, and multi-channel stereo surround sound. The downside is that the space seats only 40 people. So moviegoers should plan on arriving early to the four films we will show there in July and August. If you can catch the 5:45 pm screening instead of the 7:45 pm one, that will be even better. The early show will probably be less crowded than the later one, but if it does sell out, you’ll be first in line for the later screening. No food or drinks will be allowed in the auditorium, and since we will run few if any trailers, we will start on time. Free parking for filmgoers is available in the CIA lot off of E. 117th Street. Enter the McCullough Center through the rear door. Signs and security guards will direct you to the screening room, which is on the third floor. (There is an elevator.) The four films we will show are listed and described inside this brochure. BLANCANIEVES TA L K THE WEEPING MEADOW AUGUSTINE CINEMA ___ to become a Cinematheque donor and support the Cinematheque with a cash gift over and above the cost of my membership—or in lieu of membership in order to receive the Cinematheque calendar in the mail. Fill out the form below and mail it to the Cinematheque along with your check. Those who donate at least $5 will receive the Cinematheque calendar in the mail for one year. Name ________________________________________________________________________ Address ______________________________________________________________________ City______________________________________________ State _______ Zip_____________ Email ________________________________________ Phone __________________________ Membership amount enclosed __________________ Donation Enclosed __________________ Make checks out and mail to: The Cleveland Institute of Art Cinematheque, 11141 East Boulevard, Cleveland, OH, 44106. Thank you for your support! THE CLEVELAND INSTITUTE OF ART CINEMATHEQUE J U LY 5 - 9 Friday, July 5, at 5:15 pm & Saturday, July 6, at 7:35 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest THE PARADE PARADA Serbia/Slovenia/Croatia/Montenegro/ Macedonia, 2011, Srdjan Dragojević In this wry Balkan take on The Seven Samurai, a homophobic Serbian gangster and war vet recruits some former soldiers from enemy exYugoslavian factions—a Croat, a Bosnian, a Kosovan Albanian—to help him provide security for Belgrade’s Gay Pride parade. This daring black comedy, a spoof of Balkan machismo and prejudice, was a huge hit in the former Yugoslavia–heartening since Belgrade’s 2010 Gay Pride parade was marred by violence and the 2011 event was canceled altogether. From the director of Pretty Village, Pretty Flame. “Hilarious, raunchy comedy… Laugh-out-loud funny, brilliantly acted and, towards the very end, also deeply moving.” –The Hollywood Reporter. Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. 35mm. 115 min. This film is co-presented by the Global Film Initiative and is part of the Global Lens 2013 film series. For more information, visit www.global film.org. Print from GFI. Friday, July 5, at 7:30 pm NO Chile, 2012, Pablo Larrain Gael García Bernal stars in this Chilean movie that was one of the five nominees for last year›s Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. (It opened at the Cedar Lee during the run of the Cleveland Int’l Film Festival, so many moviegoers missed it.) Bernal plays a hotshot advertising man who joins the campaign to oust Chilean dictator General Augusto Pinochet, after 15 years in office, during a constitutionally mandated 1988 referendum. His innovative, irreverent approach, which incorporates the latest marketing strategies, provokes scorn from both camps and subterfuge from the right. Director Pablo Larrain shot No on retro 3/4” U-matic videotape to duplicate the look of 1980s Chilean television. Subtitles. 35mm. 118 min. sonyclassics.com/no/ seen before. But once you have seen it, once isn’t going to be enough.” –Arizona Republic. East Side Cleveland premiere. Blu-ray. 96 min. No radio winners. www.upstreamcolor.com Tuesday, July 9, at 6:45 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at the Capitol Theatre ROOM 237 USA, 2012, Rodney Ascher One of the nuttiest, funniest, most jaw-dropping (and most acclaimed) films of the year played too briefly in Cleveland. Room 237 refers to a mysterious room in the Overlook Hotel in Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, and this new movie explores the hidden meanings of that 1980 horror classic. In voiceover narration, five obsessed fans relay five very different (and elaborate) interpretations of the movie. On screen, film clips, maps, diagrams, etc. support these often outlandish theses. “Even more than The Shining itself, [Room 237] places you right inside the logic of how an insane person thinks.” -Entertainment Weekly. “An ode to movie love at its most deliriously unfettered.” –The NY Times. DCP. 102 min. Shown in an upstairs auditorium (accessible only by stairs) at the Capitol Theatre, 1390 W. 65th St. at Detroit Ave. No passes, twofers, or radio winners and no Cleveland Cinemas passes or discounts. Advance tickets at www.clevelandcinemas.com. Special thanks to Jon Forman and Dave Huffman. www.ifcfilms. com/films/room-237 Tuesday, July 9, at 8:50 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at the Capitol Theatre ANTIVIRAL Canada, 2012, Brandon Cronenberg Brandon Cronenberg’s first feature is a futuristic bio-thriller worthy of his famous father, David. Set in a celebrity-smitten society where viruses infecting sick pop stars are sold on the black market so that sick (in the head) fans can “commune” with their idols, the movie tells of one dealer who contracts a virulent disease he’s peddling. He frantically searches for a cure. “A petri dish of high-concept perversity and cultural commentary teeming with lo-fi ickiness.” -The Hollywood Reporter. Cleveland premiere. Adults only! Cleveland premiere. DCP. 108 min. Shown in an upstairs auditorium (accessible only by stairs) at the Capitol Theatre, 1390 W. 65th St. at Detroit Ave. No passes, twofers, or radio winners and no Cleveland Cinemas passes or discounts. Advance tickets at www.clevelandcinemas.com. Special thanks to Jon Forman and Dave Huffman. www.ifcfilms.com/films/antiviral J U LY 11 - 1 5 Friday, July 5, at 9:50 pm & Saturday, July 6, at 9:50 pm SPRING BREAKERS USA, 2012, Harmony Korine Disney Channel teen heartthrobs Selena Gomez and Vanessa Hudgens play “bad girls” who find themselves on a college spring break from hell in Harmony Korine’s stylish, funny, chilling new provocation. James Franco is terrific as Alien, a Florida gangster and rapper with cornrows and gold teeth. Adults only! 35mm. 93 min. www.springbreakersmovie.com Saturday, July 6, at 5:15 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest Imported 35mm Color Print! THE VOICE OF THE MOON LA VOCE DELLA LUNA Italy/France, 1990, Federico Fellini Roberto Benigni stars in Federico Fellini’s final film, the only Fellini movie never released in North America. (We will show a rare 35mm print from Europe that is temporarily in the U.S.) A hit in Italy, where it was nominated for nine David di Donatello Awards (Italy’s Oscar) and won three (including Best Actor), The Voice of the Moon is a surrealistic comedy/drama in which a former mental patient obsessed with the moon (a true lunatic) and an ex-prefect team up to traverse a cultural landscape peppered with pagans, pompous fools, beauty queens, grotesques, and other eccentrics. “A cockeyed lament on a world gone haywire, where traditions are dismissed and sensitive souls—what’s left of them—look to the moon for magic and nourishment.” –San Francisco Chronicle. Adults only! Ohio premiere. Subtitles. 120 min. Special admission $12; members and age 25 & under $10; no passes, twofers, or radio winners. Print courtesy of Istituto Luce – Cinecittà (Rosaria Folcarelli); special thanks to BAMcinématek (Florence Almozini, David Reilly). Thursday, July 11, at 6:00 pm & Saturday, July 13, at 7:25 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest MY LEFT FOOT Ireland/UK, 1989, Jim Sheridan Daniel Day-Lewis won his first of three Academy Awards for his amazing performance as Christy Brown (1932-81), an Irishman with cerebral palsy who was born into a working-class family and became a writer and painter, despite having use only of his left foot. As Brown’s mother, Brenda Fricker also won an Oscar, and the film was nominated for three others, including Best Picture and Director. 35mm. 103 min. Thursday, July 11, at 8:05 pm & Friday, July 12, at 9:40 pm GINGER & ROSA UK/Denmark/Canada/Croatia, 2012, Sally Potter Sally (Orlando) Potter’s affecting new film focuses on two teenage girls in 1962 London— best friends living in the shadow of atomic annihilation during the Cold War. The two take different paths to adulthood. One embraces anti-nuke activism; the other the burgeoning sexual revolution. The great cast features Elle Fanning, Alice Englert (Jane Campion’s daughter), Alessandro Nivola, Christina Hendricks, Oliver Platt, Timothy Spall, and Annette Bening. 35mm color & scope print! 90 min. a24films. com/films/ginger-and-rosa/ Saturday, July 6, at 7:35 pm THE PARADE See 7/5 at 5:15 for description Saturday, July 6, at 9:50 pm SPRING BREAKERS See 7/5 at 9:50 for description NO FILMS SUN., JULY 7 Monday, July 8, at 5:45 pm & 7:45 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at Uptown UPSTREAM COLOR USA, 2013, Shane Carruth Tonight the Cinematheque heads Uptown to show the first of four digital movies in the new, 40-seat Mandel Screening Room inside the Cleveland Institute of Art’s Joseph McCullough Center, 11610 Euclid Ave. (Moviegoers can park free in the CIA lot off of E. 117th St. Enter the building through the rear entrance.) Upstream Color, the fascinating second mindf**k by Shane Carruth (Primer), is one of the most acclaimed and talked about films of 2013. It’s an experimental sci-fi drama about a man and a woman (Carruth and Amy Seimetz) who are unknowing victims of a mysterious parasite that has entered their bodies and ravaged their lives. Director Carruth tells their shared story— and lays out the parasite’s entire cryptic life cycle—through a series of sumptuous, sometimes unsettling images. “It’s all a neat trick. Or exercise. Or brain-teaser. Whatever you want to call it, Upstream Color is like nothing you’ve ever Friday, July 12, at 5:15 pm & Saturday, July 13, at 5:15 pm Ray Harryhausen, 1920-2013 50th Anniversary! JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS UK/USA, 1963, Don Chaffey The great stop-motion animator Ray Harryhausen, who appeared in person at the Cinematheque in 1993 (thanks to the efforts of longtime local fan David Massaro), died in May—but not before inspiring a whole new generation of FX wizards. Most experts (and the master himself) regard this 1963 adventure fantasy as his greatest achievement. The mythic tale of an ancient Greek hero’s voyage to find the Golden Fleece allowed Harryhausen to realize some of his most fantastic creations—from Harpies and a Hydra to an army of skeleton warriors. Music by Bernard Herrmann. 35mm. 104 min. Friday, July 12, at 7:20 pm & Saturday, July 13, at 9:30 pm SOMETHING IN THE AIR APRÈS MAI France, 2012, Olivier Assayas This highly acclaimed, semi-autobiographical new French film from the director of Carlos and Summer Hours is set during the turbulent years following the country’s May 1968 student uprising. A high school senior who is drawn to radical politics tries to find his place in the world, both as a leftist and an artist. Two young women—a free-spirited hippie chick and a more grounded documentary filmmaker—help set him on the right path. A New York Film Festival selection. “A beautifully crafted work and an acute evocation of its period both in look and attitude.” –The Hollywood Reporter. Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. 35mm. 122 min. www.ifc films.com/films/something-in-the-air Friday, July 12, at 9:40 pm GINGER & ROSA See 7/11 at 8:05 for description Saturday, July 13, at 5:15 pm JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS See 7/12 at 5:15 for description ADMISSION PRICES Unless noted, admission to each film is $9, Cinematheque members and CIA I.D. holders $7, those age 25 & under $6. An additional film on the same day costs $6. Saturday, July 20, at 7:05 pm THE LIVES OF OTHERS See 7/18 at 5:30 for description Saturday, July 20, at 9:45 pm TO THE WONDER See 7/19 at 7:15 for description NO FILMS SUN., JULY 21 THE CLEVELAND INSTITUTE OF ART CINEMATHEQUE PROGRAMS SUBJECT TO CHANGE. CALL (216) 421-7450 F O R L AT E S T P R O G R A M I N F O R M AT I O N silent-film star.” –The NY Times. Adults only! Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. 35mm. 102 min. www.musicboxfilms.com Saturday, July 27, at 5:15 pm KOLYA See 7/26 at 7:35 for description Saturday, July 27, at 7:20 pm AUGUSTINE See 7/26 at 9:40 for description Saturday, July 27, at 9:25 pm IN THE HOUSE See 7/26 at 5:30 for description Saturday, July 13, at 7:25 pm MY LEFT FOOT See 7/11 at 6:00 for description AUGUST 1-3 Saturday, July 13, at 9:30 pm SOMETHING IN THE AIR See 7/12 at 7:20 for description NO FILMS SUN., JULY 14 Monday, July 15, at 5:45 pm & 7:45 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at Uptown SIGHTSEERS UK, 2012, Ben Wheatley In the acclaimed new film from rocketing up-andcomer Ben Wheatley (Kill List, Down Terrace), two geeky, thirtysomething British misfits, Tina and Chris, take a relaxing “caravan” holiday in Northern England that soon degenerates into a murderous rampage. Produced by Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead). “A pitch-black and sometimes gorily violent laugh-riot.” –The Hollywood Reporter. “Five stars (highest rating)...A sick gag of a film that’s bound to scar only the irony-challenged.” –Time Out New York. Adults only! Cleveland theatrical premiere. Blu-ray. 88 min. Shown in the Mandel Screening Room at CIA’s Joseph McCullough Center, 11610 Euclid Ave. Park free in the CIA lot off E. 117th St. No radio winners. http://www.ifcfilms.com/films/sightseers J U LY 1 8 - 2 2 Thursday, July 18, at 5:30 pm & Saturday, July 20, at 7:05 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest THE LIVES OF OTHERS DAS LEBEN DER ANDEREN Germany, 2006, Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck Winner of the 2006 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film (as well as the European Film Award for best picture), this gripping romantic thriller tells of a Stasi agent in 1984 East Germany who becomes personally involved in the lives of a playwright and his actress lover on whom he eavesdrops. Subtitles. 35mm. 137 min. Thursday, July 18, at 8:10 pm & Friday, July 19, at 5:15 pm SIMON KILLER USA/France, 2012, Antonio Campos The unflinching, coolly elegant new thriller from the director of Afterschool is a descent into Gaspar Noé territory. Brady Corbet (Martha Marcy May Marlene, Funny Games) plays a heartbroken, unhinged young man who flees to Paris and there begins an ill-fated relationship with a prostitute. “A beautifully made look at ugliness and brutality, the kind of oxymoronic exercise that fascinates some and repels others.” –Arizona Republic. No one under 18 admitted! Cleveland premiere. 35mm. Some subtitles. 101 min. www.ifcfilms.com/films/simon-killer Friday, July 19, at 7:15 pm & Saturday, July 20, at 9:45 TO THE WONDER USA, 2012, Terrence Malick The exquisite new film from the director of Days of Heaven, The Thin Red Line, and Tree of Life employs sublime visuals, snippets of classical music, and snatches of dialogue and voiceover narration to tell a skeletal story of a young French woman (Olga Kurylenko) and an American man (Ben Affleck) who are happy in France but grow apart in America. The actors and camera never stop moving. Like Malick’s other movies, this lyrical work is both a paean and a prayer; he seeks the eternal in the evanescent. With Javier Bardem and Rachel McAdams. 35mm. Some subtitles. 112 min. www. magpictures.com/tothewonder Monday, July 22, at 7:00 pm Special Free Screening! A Tribute to Christina Gaston THE AMERICAN ASTRONAUT USA, 2001, Cory McAbee Tonight we remember musician, arts lover, and Cinematheque volunteer Christina Gaston, who passed away suddenly in April, at age 34. We will present a free screening of one of her favorite films. The American Astronaut is a loony, low-tech sci-fi Western/musical about an interplanetary trader from Earth (writer-directorsinger Cory McAbee) who encounters an old nemesis while traversing the solar system— rendered here as a grubby frontier populated by tough guys and other ne’er-do-wells. Prior to the screening, at 7:00, friends will speak about Christina. 35mm. 94 min. Co-sponsored by Column & Stripe: The New Friends of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Film courtesy of Cory McAbee and Pablo Kjolseth. Thursday, August 1, at 5:45 pm & 7:45 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at Uptown SHADOW DANCER UK/Ireland, 2012, James Marsh Clive Owen and Andrea Riseborough (W.E., Oblivion) star in the new film from the director of Man on Wire and Project Nim. It’s a taut, slow-burn thriller, set in 1993 Belfast, about an Irish woman and I.R.A. member who agrees to become a mole for MI5 rather than go to prison and leave her young son. With Gillian Anderson. “Critics’ Pick…Gripping.” –The NY Times. Cleveland theatrical premiere. Blu-ray. 101 min. Shown in the Mandel Screening Room at CIA’s Joseph McCullough Center, 11610 Euclid Ave. Park free in the CIA lot off E. 117th St. No radio winners. www.magpictures.com/shadowdancer/ J U LY 2 5 - 2 7 Thursday, July 25, at 5:45 pm & 7:45 pm Special Offsite Event! The Cinematheque at Uptown KISS OF THE DAMNED USA, 2012, Xan Cassavetes This “appealingly affectionate homage to ‘70s baroque horror films” (Time Out New York) was directed by John Cassavetes’ daughter. It’s a sexy, full-bodied vampire picture about a smitten screenwriter who willingly submits to a strawberry blonde bloodsucker, until her even more vampish and voracious sister (Roxane Mesquida) disrupts the couple’s bloody bliss. “Saucily thumbing its nose at the insipid teen love of the Twilight franchise, Kiss reimagines its bloodsuckers as horny, supercilious Eurotrash with addiction issues…Rapacious lovers of cult cinema will sink their fangs into this.” –Variety. Adults only! Cleveland theatrical premiere. Blu-ray. 97 min. Shown in the Mandel Screening Room at CIA’s Joseph McCullough Center, 11610 Euclid Ave. Park free in the CIA lot off E. 117th St. No radio winners. www.magnetreleasing.com/kissofthedamned/ Friday, July 26, at 5:30 pm & Saturday, July 27, at 9:25 pm IN THE HOUSE DANS LA MAISON France, 2012, François Ozon The New Yorker calls the clever, playful new film from veteran French helmer François Ozon (Swimming Pool, 8 Women) “one of his best.” And they’re right. A literature teacher at a French high school finds himself seduced by the written compositions of a precocious student who has insinuated himself into a classmate’s “typical” bourgeois home and begun reporting about what he sees there. The instructor becomes hooked by this ongoing voyeuristic narrative, and pretty soon all kinds of boundaries are being crossed—including the big one between truth and fiction. With Kristin Scott Thomas. “Wry humor and mystery…Might be acclaimed filmmaker François Ozon›s most accomplished and unpredictable work to date.” –Film Journal Int’l. Subtitles. 35mm. 105 min. cohenmedia.net/in-the-house Friday, July 26, at 7:35 pm & Saturday, July 27, at 5:15 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest KOLYA Czech Republic/UK/France, 1996, Jan Svĕrák Winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, this funny, charming, and touching drama is set in 1980s Soviet bloc Czechoslovakia, where a blacklisted, middleaged cellist who has lost his philharmonic gig decides to earn some money by marrying a Russian woman seeking Czechoslovak citizenship. But she comes with a five-year-old child who causes considerable complications. Subtitles. 35mm. 105 min. Friday, August 2, at 5:30 pm & Saturday, August 3, at 5:15 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL TULITIKKUTEHTAAN TYTTÖ Finland/Sweden, 1990, Aki Kaurismäki The deadpan proletarian fables of Finland’s master filmmaker Aki Kaurismäki walk a fine line between tragedy and comedy. This is well seen in this droll but affecting blue collar masterpiece, about a shy, lonely factory worker (Kaurismäki’s muse Kati Outinen) who has a dull job, a pathetic home life, and a drab social life. Nevertheless, she prevails. “Just about perfect.” –David Denby. Subtitles. 35mm. 68 min. Preceded at showtime by Kaurismäki’s 6-min. music film Those Were the Days, starring his outlandish rock band, the Leningrad Cowboys. Friday, August 2, at 7:05 pm & Saturday, August 3, at 9:40 pm ISLAND OF LOST SOULS USA, 1932, Erle C. Kenton Charles Laughton and Bela Lugosi star in this notorious film version of H. G. Wells’ The Island of Dr. Moreau, about a mad scientist on a remote island who tries to turn jungle beasts into humans. Dialogue from this creepy movie (which was banned in Britain for over 25 years) has seeped into pop culture, also inspiring rock musicians from Devo (“Are we not men?”) and Oingo Boingo to Van Halen. Cinematography by Karl Struss (Sunrise). 35mm print from the Universal Pictures studio archive! 71 min. home away from home: the Capitol Theatre on Cleveland’s West Side. (There will also be free cookies!) You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet is the highly acclaimed new film by the great Alain Resnais (Last Year at Marienbad; Hiroshima, Mon Amour ), now 91 and still turning out bold, innovative masterpieces that blend reality, artifice, and imagination. Resnais calls his new work “a film for cinephiles,” and it features an all-star French cast (Michel Piccoli, Mathieu Amalric, Lambert Wilson, Resnais regulars Sabine Azéma and Pierre Arditi, et al.). They play themselves—prominent actors summoned to a chateau by a now-deceased playwright to watch a recording of a new production of his famous play Eurydice (actually written by Jean Anouilh). Pretty soon they begin saying lines along with the on-screen actors—and inhabiting a dream space in which time melts away and pain, desire, and loss work together to forge something new. “A playful, intellectual consideration of memory, theatre, and love lost and regained.” –The Hollywood Reporter. Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. DCP. 115 min. www.kinolorberfilms.com Shown at the Capitol Theatre, 1390 W. 65th St. at Detroit Ave. Special admission $10; Cinematheque members $8; age 25 & under $7. No passes, twofers, or radio winners and no Cleveland Cinemas passes or discounts. Advance tickets available at www. clevelandcinemas.com. Special thanks to Jon Forman and Dave Huffman. Saturday, August 3, at 6:50 pm THE WAGES OF FEAR See 8/2 at 8:35 for description Friday, August 9, at 5:15 pm & Saturday, August 10, at 9:45 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest WHICH WAY IS UP? USA, 1977, Michael Schultz Richard Pryor plays three different roles in this raunchy but hilarious American remake of Lina Wertmüller’s The Seduction of Mimi. It tells of a poor California orange picker who has trouble with labor relations and human relations at work, marital relations and sexual relations at home. With Lonette McKee and Margaret Avery. Adults only! 35mm color print from the Universal Pictures studio archive! 94 min. Friday, August 9, at 7:10 pm & Saturday, August 10, at 5:00 pm Jean Renoir in Color! THE RIVER France/India/USA, 1951, Jean Renoir A teenage British girl living with her upper middle class family in colonial India experiences the pangs of first love. Jean Renoir’s exotic, lyrical, and deeply moving drama partially inspired Wes Anderson’s The Darjeeling Limited. Claude Renoir, nephew of the director and grandson of the painter, did the exquisite Technicolor cinematography. A young Satyajit Ray also worked on the film. From a Rumer Godden novel. In English. 35mm. 99 min. Friday, August 9, at 9:10 pm & Saturday, August 10, at 7:00 pm MIDNIGHT’S CHILDREN Canada/UK, 2012, Deepa Mehta Salman Rushdie adapted his own novel for Deepa Mehta’s epic film version. (He also narrates the story.) Two Indian boys—one from a wealthy family, the other the son of a beggar— are born at midnight on August 15, 1947, the day India broke free of British rule. Switched at birth, the two lead very different lives during the next 30 years. Their growing pains reflect those of their young nation. “Big in both ideas and heart.” –Empire. Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. 146 min. www.midnightschildren.com/ Thursday, August 8, at 7:00 pm Special Offsite Event! 27th Anniversary Screening! The Cinematheque at the Capitol Theatre YOU AIN’T SEEN NOTHIN’ YET VOUS N’AVEZ ENCORE RIEN VU France, 2012, Alain Resnais Tonight we mark the 27th anniversary of the Cinematheque’s first film showing at the Cleveland Institute of Art with a special screening at our Thursday, August 22, at 6:45 pm & Friday, August 23, at 9:35 pm & Sunday, August 25, at 3:45 pm New 35mm Color Print! NOSTALGHIA Italy/USSR, 1983, Andrei Tarkovsky Long unavailable on 35mm in the U.S. (we last showed it in 1987!), Andrei Tarkovsky’s penultimate film—and the first movie he made outside the USSR—is a melancholy, poetic tale of alienation, exile, and homesickness. A Russian poet and musicologist (Oleg Yankovsky) experiences a crisis of confidence and faith while visiting Tuscany to research the life of a littleknown 18th-century Russian composer. But the village’s mysterious lunatic (Erland Josephson) claims to have a remedy for the traveler’s despair. Unmissable! “An article of faith.” –Time Out Film Guide. Cleveland revival premiere. Subtitles. 125 min. www.kinolorber.com Thursday, August 22, at 9:10 pm & Friday, August 23, at 7:30 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest ASHES AND DIAMONDS POPIÓL I DIAMENT Poland, 1958, Andrzej Wajda Andrzej Wajda’s fourth feature is one of the greatest Polish films ever made. At the close of WWII, Maciek, a young Polish Resistance fighter, is ordered to kill the new Communist district leader. But a budding love affair makes him realize he has grown weary of violence and bloodshed. Wajda imbues his war movie with baroque imagery and film noir style. Maciek is played by Zbigniew Cybulski, an iconic star of post-WWII Polish cinema who is often called the “Polish James Dean” because of his rebel persona and accidental death at age 39. Subtitles. 35mm. 104 min. Friday, August 23, at 9:35 pm NOSTALGHIA See 8/22 at 6:45 for description Saturday, August 10, at 7:00 pm MIDNIGHT’S CHILDREN See 8/9 at 9:10 for description Friday, August 16, at 5:15 pm & Saturday, August 17, at 9:30 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS 4 LUNI, 3 SAPTAMÂNI SI 2 ZILE Romania, 2007, Cristian Mungiu The winner of the top prize at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival remains perhaps the most acclaimed work of the Romanian New Wave: a gripping, suspenseful drama about a young woman in Ceauşescu’s Romania who tries to help her college roommate get an illegal abortion. The film’s overall metacritic.com score (97 out of 100) was the highest of 2008! Subtitles. 35mm. 113 min. AU G U S T 8 -10 Friday, July 26, at 9:40 pm & Saturday, July 27, at 7:20 pm AUGUSTINE France, 2012, Alice Winocour Female “hysteria” is the subject of this lush period piece, which chronicles the relationship between pioneering real-life 19th-century French neurologist Dr. Jean-Martin Charcot (Vincent Lindon) and a young, partially paralyzed teen patient suffering seizures (French singer Soko). Though he hypnotizes and manhandles her, and parades her in near-pornographic public demonstrations, the learned, married, repressed scientist eventually finds himself attracted to this poor, uninhibited kitchen maid. With Chiara Mastroianni and Grégoire Colin. “A dark romance of sex and power…Vivid and feverish…Soko is as grave and luminous as a Sunday, August 25, at 8:30 pm LE PONT DU NORD See 8/24 at 9:30 for description AUGUST 29 – SEPTEMBER 1 AUGUST 22-25 Saturday, August 10, at 5:00 pm THE RIVER See 8/9 at 7:10 for description Saturday, August 3, at 9:40 pm ISLAND OF LOST SOULS See 8/2 at 7:05 for description Friday, July 19, at 9:30 pm & Saturday, July 20, at 5:00 pm BLANCANIEVES Spain/France, 2012, Pablo Berger The story of Snow White is transposed to the world of 1920s Spanish bullfighting in this new b&w silent feature that was Spain’s submission for last year’s Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. It’s a dazzling, magical movie in which the daughter of a master matador escapes her cruel and conniving stepmother and joins a traveling troupe of tiny toreadors. As the evil stepmother, Maribel Verdú (Y tu mamá también) pulls out all the stops and won the Goya Award (Spain’s Oscar) for Best Actress. The film itself won nine other Goyas, including Best Film and Best Original Score (Alfonso de Villalonga). 35mm. 104 min. cohenmedia.net/blancanieves Sunday, August 25, at 6:30 pm FRENCH CANCAN See 8/24 at 5:15 for description Saturday, August 17, at 9:30 pm 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS See 8/16 at 5:15 for description AU G U S T 16 -17 Saturday, August 3, at 5:15 pm THE MATCH FACTORY GIRL See 8/2 at 5:30 for description Saturday, August 17, at 5:15 pm THE GOLDEN COACH See 8/16 at 7:30 for description Sunday, August 25, at 3:45 pm NOSTALGHIA See 8/22 at 6:45 for description Saturday, August 17, at 7:15 pm DISCONNECT See 8/16 at 9:30 for description Saturday, August 10, at 9:45 pm WHICH WAY IS UP? See 8/9 at 5:15 for description Friday, August 2, at 8:35 pm & Saturday, August 3, at 6:50 pm New 35mm Print! THE WAGES OF FEAR LE SALAIRE DE LA PEUR France, 1953, Henri-Georges Clouzot Yves Montand stars in this classic French thriller, one of the most suspenseful movies ever made! Set in a Central American petroleum republic, the film follows four down-on-their-luck drifters who take on a veritable suicide mission: driving two truckloads of volatile nitroglycerine across 300 miles of perilous mountain roads. From the director of Diabolique. Original, uncut version. Cleveland revival premiere. Subtitles. 147 min. www.janusfilms.com/wagesoffear/ Friday, August 16, at 9:30 pm & Saturday, August 17, at 7:15 pm DISCONNECT USA, 2012, Henry Alex Rubin Jason Bateman, Hope Davis, Paula Patton (Precious), Michael Nyqvist (Sweden’s Millennium trilogy), Alexander Skarsgård, and Andrea Riseborough star in this new Crash-like thriller—a cautionary tale about the perils of modern technology, which drives people apart as much as it brings them together. The film’s multiple strands touch on cyber-bullying, identity theft, internet porn, and more. From the co-director of Murderball. “Fascinating and riveting.” –San Francisco Chronicle. 35mm. 115 min. www.disconnectthe movie.com is a more sinister companion piece to his celebrated trip down the rabbit hole Céline and Julie Go Boating. Like that peripatetic 1974 puzzler, this film focuses on two women, an ex-con and a motorcyclist (Bulle Ogier and her real-life daughter Pascale), who cross paths one day in Paris and, inside a stolen briefcase, uncover evidence of a nefarious conspiracy. Possessing a map that turns the wintry city into an elaborate board game, they embark on a labyrinthine quest to unravel the plot via signs, codes, billboards, and other clues in plain sight. “Playfully profound…There are few artists better than Rivette at uncovering the magical in the everyday.” -Time Out New York (2013). Cleveland revival premiere. Subtitles. 35mm. 129 min. www. thefilmdesk.com Friday, August 16, at 7:30 pm & Saturday, August 17, at 5:15 pm Jean Renoir in Color! THE GOLDEN COACH LE CARROSSE D’OR France/Italy, 1952, Jean Renoir The theatre vies with life in Jean Renoir’s colorful romance set in 18th-century South America, about a touring commedia dell’arte star (Anna Magnani) who is wooed by three different men— a bullfighter, a soldier, and a viceroy. Cinematography by Claude Renoir. François Truffaut loved this film so much that he named his production company after it. In English. 35mm. 100 min. Saturday, August 24, at 5:15 pm & Sunday, August 25, at 6:30 pm Jean Renoir in Color! FRENCH CANCAN France, 1954, Jean Renoir The founding of Paris’ Moulin Rouge cabaret and the training of its famous dancing girls are brought to exuberant life in Jean Renoir’s colorful extravaganza that conjures up the world of the French impressionists. Jean Gabin, Maria Félix, and Edith Piaf star. Subtitles. 35mm. 102 min. Saturday, August 24, at 7:20 pm Les Blank, 1935-2013 CHULAS FRONTERAS USA, 1976, Les Blank GARLIC IS AS GOOD AS TEN MOTHERS USA, 1980, Les Blank Longtime independent filmmaker Les Blank, who died in April at age 77, was a cultural ethnographer who celebrated regional American food and roots music in a series of acclaimed documentaries. He directed over 40 films in a career that spanned five decades. Tonight, as a tribute, we present his two works that are on the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Chulas Fronteras is a spirited snapshot of conjunto or norteño music of the Tex-Mex border and features such performers as Flaco Jiménez and Lydia Mendoza. Garlic… is a flavorful celebration of the “stinking rose,” and features interviews with chefs, fans, and historians. 16mm. Total 109 min. www.lesblank.com Thursday, August 29, at 6:45 pm & Friday, August 30, at 7:30 pm Cleveland Cultural Gardens Film Fest THE WEEPING MEADOW TRILOGIA I: O LIVADI POU DAKIRIZI France/Greece/Italy, 2004, Theodoros Angelopoulos Greece’s Theo Angelopoulos, one of the world’s greatest filmmakers, died unexpectedly in 2012 when he was struck by a motorcycle while shooting a new movie. This 2004 epic, the first part of a projected (and now unfinished) trilogy about 20th-century Greece, is one of his best. Spanning the years 1919-49, the movie focuses on Eleni, a Greek orphan girl taken in by another Greek family. Eleni eventually marries her new father, a widower, though she really loves her adoptive brother Alexis. So when she and Alexis run away together, they set in motion a father-and-son conflict with mythic overtones – an elemental drama of patriarchy and rebellion set against a backdrop of floods, fascism, war, and civil strife. Angelopoulos tells his allegorical tale in his usual grand fashion, with stunning cinematography, stately long takes, monumental set pieces, and haunting music. “There are moments of such breathtaking grace and artistry that you’d be forgiven for thinking you’re watching the most beautiful movie ever made.” –TV Guide.com Subtitles. 35mm. 170 min. Saturday, August 31, at 5:15 pm & Sunday, September 1, at 4:15 pm Jean Renoir in Color! ELÉNA AND HER MEN ELÉNA ET LES HOMMES aka PARIS DOES STRANGE THINGS France/Italy, 1956, Jean Renoir Ingrid Bergman, Jean Marais, and Mel Ferrer star in this colorful bauble set in 1880s Paris, about a radiant but impoverished Polish princess who must choose a husband from her many admirers. Cinematography by Claude Renoir. Subtitles. 35mm. 95 min. Saturday, August 31, at 7:10 pm & Sunday, September 1, at 8:20 pm 50th Anniversary! TOM JONES UK, 1963, Tony Richardson Winner of four Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director (and nominated for six others), this exuberant, innovative, hugely enjoyable adaptation of Henry Fielding’s classic novel stars Albert Finney as a handsome young bastard who has a series of randy misadventures in 18th-century England. The all-star supporting cast includes Susannah York, Hugh Griffith, Edith Evans, and many others. Screenplay by John Osborne. 35mm. 129 min. Saturday, August 31, at 9:40 pm & Sunday, September 1, at 6:30 pm STUDENT Kazakhstan, 2012, Darezhan Omirbayev A college film student in present-day Almaty commits a senseless robbery and murder in this fleet, spare adaptation of Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment. This new movie by master Kazakh filmmaker Dareshan Omirbayev (Killer) is one of his best. “A stark, Bressonian tale…Omirbayev once again offers a quietly scathing portrait of his homeland, which, on the evidence here, is on the verge of losing its soul in the pursuit of Range Rovers, banal soap operas and other ephemeral pleasures.” –Variety. Cleveland premiere. Subtitles. 35mm. 90 min. This film is co-presented by the Global Film Initiative and is part of the Global Lens 2013 film series. For more information, visit www.globalfilm.org. Print from GFI. Sunday, September 1, at 4:15 pm ELÉNA AND HER MEN See 8/31 at 5:15 for description Sunday, September 1, at 6:30 pm STUDENT See 8/31 at 9:40 for description Sunday, September 1, at 8:20 pm TOM JONES See 8/31 at 7:10 for description CINEMATHEQUE STAFF Director: John Ewing Saturday, August 24, at 9:30 pm & Sunday, August 25, at 8:30 pm New 35mm Color Print! LE PONT DU NORD (THE NORTH BRIDGE) France, 1981, Jacques Rivette This never-before-released-in-America film by French New Wave master Jacques Rivette Assistant Director: Tim Harry Projectionists: Mike Glazer, Tom Sedlak, Les Vince Box Office: Amber Albergottie, Jeff Blazek, Brittany Dobish, Steve Fitch, Genevieve Schwartz, Annmarie Suglio