Summer - Roxie
Transcription
Summer - Roxie
Feb • Mar • Apr • 2000 3117 16th St at Valencia, San Francisco, CA ( 4 1 5 ) 8 6 3 - 1 0 8 7 w w w. r o x i e . c o m Ad m i s s i o n : $ 7 ; S e n i o r / C h i l d : $ 3 . 5 Admission Discount Card: $22. Bargain Matinee: $4 first show Wed, Sat, Sun. Thursday, September 7 – Saturday, September 9 Arab Film Festival Cinemayaat, the Arab Film Festival—and the Bay Area’s most successful annual Arab cultural event returns to the Roxie for three great days of film and video. This year’s festival will screen over 25 independently produced feature films, shorts and documentaries that explore the complex social, political and personal issues confronting contemporary Arabs. Friday, August 11 – Wednesday, August 23 Media Alliance Film Festival Join us for the first-ever Media Alliance Film Festival, a cinematic evening of risky films about the movements that fight for our right to be risk-takers. MA (F2) kicks off with a panel discussion featuring video and filmmakers who use the medium as a tool for activism and organizing in their communities. Members of Whispered Media, TILT media, and other video collectives will teach you how to use film and video to increase the impact of your activism.Then stick around to watch daring films that inspire people to act, films that defy the warped messages perpetrated by the corporate media, and films that boldly question the concept of identity in our media-saturated culture. FOR MORE INFO (AND FESTIVAL PROGRAM BY AUGUST 1) VISIT WWW.MEDIA-ALLIANCE.ORG/FILMFEST OR CALL (415) 546-6334 EXT. 315. Friday, August 25 – Thursday, August 31 Shadow Boxers Shadow Boxers is a powerful and inspiring film that follows the exhilarating rise of Dutch boxing sensation Lucia Rijker, widely considered the greatest female fighter in the world, as she pursues the championship crown. Beautiful photography, stylish editing, a hypnotic original soundtrack, and striking personal insight combine in a whirlwind of visual dynamism that reveals the beauty and brutality of the sport through the eyes of this introspective fighter.“This film is as visually stunning as it is politically important. I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a profoundly moving look at women and athleticism, race and bodyconsciousness, as this. It made me long for all the women achievers who have gone unrecorded—not just in sports, but the world at large.”—Hilton Als, The New Yorker. An award-winning selection at Film Festivals round the world, including Toronto and Berlin. Produced and directed by Katya Bankowsky. In Color. 35mm. 72 mins. 1999. USA. WEST COAST PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; SAT, SUN AND WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00. Wives Never Know A married couple tries in many hilarious ways to add spice to their lagging sex life. One merry mix-up after another in this offbeat and seldom seen Hollywood comedy. Starring Charlie Ruggles, Mary Boland, Adolphe Menjou. Directed by Elliott Nugent. B&W. 16mm. 75 mins. 1936. WED AT 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Now in its fourth year, Footage Dance Film Festival once again showcases new and innovative dance shorts from all over the world including Queens For A Day by Pascal Magnin, A Sun Dance by the graphic artist Dikayl, Spectre de la Rose, choreographed by Fokine, danced by Mikhail Baryschnikov and Margot Fonteyn performing in 1979 at the Monte Carlo Opera House. This year’s program will also feature new award-winning films from the Dance Film Association of New York. Approximate running time: 90 mins. COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7:00 AND 9:15. A Tribute To Go Go with The Devilettes This important and potentially incendiary new documentary records the startling events leading up to last November’s showdown at the World Trade Organization confab in Seattle, when the forces of capitalism battled an amazing array of opponents ready to put the breaks on relentless globalization. The attending delegates and politicos may have expected the Seattle meeting to be just another rah-rah rubber-stamp fest for the establishment, but what they got were riots in the streets and a raft of bad press.This hot-potato of a political film will no doubt serve as a media textbook on how to raise a ruckus. At the center of the hubbub is freelance organizer Mike Dolan (often described as “the Schwarzenegger of leftist insurgency”), Tom Hayden, Minnesota senator Paul Wellstone, super-articulate Indian delegate Vandana Shiva, media prankster Michael Moore, and veteran shit disturber Jerry Mander. But most striking are the passion, knowledge and humor of the demonstration participants, who range from incensed college students to Teamster boss Jim Hoffa and reps from farmers’ unions in France and even farther abroad. Produced by Thomas Lee Wright. Directed by Shaya Mercer. Color. 95 mins. 2000.Theatrical Premiere! SUNDAY AT 2:00,4:00,6:00,8:00,10:00; MON AT 6:00,8:00,10:00.NOTE:THE SUNDAY 8:00 SHOW HAS A SPECIAL ADMISSION PRICE TO BENEFIT RALPH NADER’S PUBLIC CITIZEN. ACTIVIST MIKE DOLAN, AS WELL AS THE FILM’S PRODUCER AND DIRECTOR WILL BE ON HAND FOR THAT SCREENING. Tuesday & Wednesday, September 12 & 13 Smoke & Mirrors A History of Denial Using interviews, archival news reels, historical footage, film clips, photographs, PSAs, advertisements, and various television commercials, Smoke and Mirrors tells the story of the birth and rise of the cigarette during its “age of innocence”, and explores how the industry dealt with the realization that their very successful product was also poisonous. When the tobacco merchants set to work marketing cigarettes in the early years of the Twentieth Century, they did not know of their product’s dangers. But by the 1940s, the scientific case against the cigarette was mounting, but only first became widely known to the public in the 1950s, a time when over half of the American population smoked and cigarettes had become part and parcel of daily life.The seeds of the tobacco industry’s denial were planted during this time, and continued to grow and evolve throughout the century. Today, the industry carries along with it fifty years of documented denial which is finally coming back to haunt them. Produced and directed by Torrie Rosenzweig. Color. 16mm. 75 mins. 1999. Presented as a benefit for The American Lung Assn. TUES AT 6:00,8:00,10:00;WED AT 2:00,4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Thursday, September 14 Beach Boys Summer Special! Join us for a special program of rare Beach Boys footage and music. A big night of fun, fun, fun with vintage film of Brian Wilson and his boys singing, playing and cavorting. Many surprises are in store during this one of a kind presentation. Also appearing will be Jon Stebbins, author of the new book Dennis Wilson: The Real Beach Boy. Jon will be signing books and, with his special guests, will conduct an open discussion on the Beach Boys and their timeless music. Be sure to catch this wave! TWO COMPLETE SHOWS: 7:00 AND 9:30. Friday, September 1 – Wednesday, September 6 Blossoms of Fire Friday, September 15 – Sunday, September 17 Cine Latino! 8 Annual Cine Accion Festival ! th Cine Accion, the nation’s oldest Latino media arts organization, presents the Bay Area’s premiere Latino film festival, showcasing films from the U.S. and Latin America. Come check out this 8th annual exhibition of new Latino cinema, featuring cutting edge features, documentaries, and shorts. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT CINE ACCION AT (415)553-8140, OR VISIT THE WEBSITE AT WWW.CINEACCION.COM. Monday & Tuesday, September 18 & 19 pick Axe Sit in a tree and you might be able to save it; block the only road in and you can save a whole forest. PickAxe is a story of forest arson and citizen action in Oregon’s old growth. This documentary takes a side and follows the activists who blockade a logging road for 11 months. Before it’s over they will face ten foot snow drifts, a 75 day hunger strike, an armed federal raid on the camp and a riot in jail. Directed by Tim Ream and Tim Lewis. In Color. _” video. 95 mins. 2000. USA. BAY AREA THEATRICAL PREMIERE! MON AND TUE AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00. FILMMAKERS IN PERSON BOTH EVENINGS! Imagine a place where men and women are partners, political self-determination is regarded as a birthright, and homosexuals are respected members of society. Feminist utopia? Gay dream spot? Some futuristic course of Western civilization? In the unlikely location of southern Oaxaca, Mexico, “one is first a human being and only second, and incidentally, a man or a woman,”to quote writer Beverly Chinas. Blossoms of Fire/ Ramo de Fuego pays tribute to a unique indigenous community that defies stereotypes. The Isthmus region, home to 350,000 Zapotec people, is known as “Mexico’s matriarchy”—where the imposing, flowery-skirted women have a history of kowtowing to no one, be it Spanish invaders, the modern day Mexican government, or their own husbands.The Zapotecs live by values which often have ancient roots, causing us to rethink our own notions of what it means to be “modern.” In a world that’s characterized today by globalization and homogenization, the Zapotecs offer an example of a people who are stronger for nurturing their own culture, language and alternative ways of being. Produced and directed by Maureen Gosling and Ellen Osborne. In Color. 16mm. 72 mins. 2000. USA. U.S.THEATRICAL PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00,8:00,9:45; SAT,SUN AND WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00 Hi Diddle Diddle One of Hollywood’s wackiest screwball comedies; this farce has, pound for pound, more audacious tricks up its sleeve than a dozen better known titles. A pair of honeymooners are continually disrupted by wifey’s nutty mom and hubby’s con-man dad. A laff riot with Adolphe Menjou, Martha Scott, Pola Negri, Dennis O’Keefe, Billie Burke. Directed by Andrew Stone. B&W. 16mm. 72 mins. 1943. WED AT 2:00, 5:00, 8:00 Friday, September 22 Getting To Know You Wednesday, September 27 Noir! Noir! Footage Dance Film Festival 2000 TRADE OFF Thursday, August 24 Madcap Hollywood Thursday, September 21 Sunday & Monday, September 10 & 11 Judith is only 16, but already she has too many secrets. They are always with her, just below awareness, and today, as she waits in another bus depot on another trip from upstate New York, the memories begin to surface.This journey marks a turning point in her life. For her brother Wesley, waiting for a bus to college, books help to keep the memories at bay. For Judith, the images come and go, as transient as the people passing through the station: a woman looking for handouts, an old man buying lottery tickets, a frightened young brunette. But an older boy named Jimmy haunts this depot, observing the passengers huddled in their seats. Soon, he begins to tell Judith their stories—what really happened to that young brunette yearning for romance or to the older woman who wanted a child. Judith can’t stop herself from listening to Jimmy; his words transfix her.Weaving a ritual of their own invention, Judith and Jimmy edge each other perilously closer to truths about their own young lives. Based on short stories from “Heat,”by Joyce Carol Oates. Starring Heather Matarazzo (from Welcome to the Dollhouse), Mark Blum, Zach Braff, Bo Hopkins, Bebe Neuwirth, Chris Noth and Michael Weston. Written by Lisanne Skyler and Tristine Skyler. Directed by Lisanne Skyler. In Color. 35mm. 97 mins. 1999. USA. WEST COAST THEATRICAL PREMIERE. Presented in conjunction with the Sundance Channel. NIGHTLY AT 7:00 AND 9:15; SAT, SUN AND WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:30. DIRECTOR LISANNE SKYLER IN PERSON OPENING NIGHT. Wednesday, September 20 Spend a riotous evening at the Roxie with The Devilettes, the San Francisco Missionbased all-women synchronized dance troupe, who will perform a tribute to Go Go, the undulating dance craze of the 60s LIVE on the Roxie stage! All this to the accompaniment of a program of Scopitones (awesomely cool 60’s music films) and other incredible musical surprises.You won’t want to miss this once in a lifetime event! COMPLETE LIVE SHOWS ON FRI AT 7:30 AND 9:30 Saturday, September 27 Twist-o-Noir The Burglar Johnny O’Clock A professional gambler weaves in and out of the clutches of the law in this highly stylized noir drama. The director would later gain fame with such films as All The King’s Men and The Hustler. This top notch thriller was his first. Starring Dick Powell, Evelyn Keyes, Lee J. Cobb, Ellen Drew. Directed by Robert Rossen. B&W. 35mm. 95 mins. 1947. SAT AT 2:00, 5:40, 9:25 711 Ocean Drive A slick, exciting noir, culled from the annals of the racket squad’s toughest cases. This time out, it’s the bookies and illegal oddsmakers on the hot spot. This one’s rarely shown, and it’s a gem! Starring Edmond O’Brien, Joanne Dru, Otto Kruger. Directed by Joseph M. Newman. B&W. 35mm. 102 mins. 1950.SAT AT 3:45,7:30 Friday, September 29-Thursday October 5 Americanos Latino Life in the United States A vibrant and provocative documentary about the segment of American citizenry most rapidly transforming the face of our nation today. Latinos have become the largest single minority in the United States, and Americanos explores their complex and multifaceted legacy. Combining a vivid blend of media images, personal stories, and artistic expression, the film contests the myth of a monolithic Latino culture and explores the diverse group of people in this country designated Latino. Carlos Santana, Tito Puente, and the first Puerto Rican female presidential cabinet member, Alda Alvarez, present their views alongside Nuyorican Poets Café performance artists, Little Havana doctors, midwestern lowriders, East L.A. Harvard-bound youth, and Chicano borderpatrol officers. A cornucopia of truths emerges, including the highly contested nature of Latino identity, the rising power of Latinos in business, the paradoxes of United States immigration policy, and the important role diasporic communities play in preserving age-old cultural traditions while creating new ones for the future. The galvanizing force of this sweeping documentary fantastic soundtrack, boasting down-home casita bombas, the sensuous Afro-C sounds of Santana, and the brilliantly iconoclastic musical performance of Chicano impersonator El Vez. Exploding racial stereotypes and proudly claiming a multitu contributions to our country, Americanos is nothing less than a celebration of our A ican national identity. Produced by Nick Athas and Edward James Olmos. Directe Susan Todd and Andrew Young. In Color. 35mm. 81 mins. 1999. USA. SAN FRANC PREMIERE! NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00 AND 10:00; SAT, SUN,WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00 Friday, October 6 – Thursday, October 19 LIVE NUDE GIRLS UNITE! The sex industry has long criticized for its exploitatio women. What people rarely cuss, however, is the actual w ing conditions sex workers endure. The ladies at the Lady, right here in San Fran had to face an increasingly tile work environment—th until one woman was fired her co-workers decided to s Filmmaker and fellow Lusty Julia Query, along with Funari, chronicles the strugg which the AFL-CIO is sent in before too long, its time for s good old-fashioned labo management activism, com with negotiations, lockouts arbitration. Query parallels labor struggle with her attempt to come out as a str to her mother, a longtime p tutes-rights advocate. Live Girls shows the wo employed at places like the Lady peep show as intelli articulate women who, de what one may think abou sex biz, are entitled to the protections and rights as other employees. Directed Julia Query and Vicky Funa Color. 16mm. 70 mins. 2000. WEST COAST PREMIERE. NIGH 6:00, 8:00, 9:45; SAT, SUN AND WED NEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00. David Goodis, along with Jim Thompson and Cornell Woolrich, was one of the darkest of the psychologically adrift crime writers of t he 40’s and 50’s. This twisted tale of burglars Jayne Mansfield (!) and Dan Duryea stirs up a bizarre hornet’s nest of strange emotions. A demented little classic. Martha Vickers and Mickey O’Shaughnessy are also in the cast. Directed by Paul Wendkos. B&W. 35mm. 90 mins. 1956. WED AT 3:00, 6:15, 9:35 The Screaming Mimi Ultra-twisted sickie has the curvaceous Anita Ekberg in the grip of an obsessed psychoanalyst. A sleepy eyed reporter (Phil Carey) catches on and tries to help. Gypsy Rose Lee turns up as the lesbian owner of a beatnik club. Then there’s the dog… Don’t miss this one! Directed by Gerd Oswald. B&W. 35mm. 79 mins. 1958. WED AT 1:30, 4:45, 8:00 Sunday, September 24 –Tuesday, September 26 Artists in Exile A Story of Modern Dance in San Francisco This thrilling new documentary details over forty years of dance making in San Francisco. From the Bay Area sprang revolutionary artists like Isadora Duncan, the mother of modern dance, and with the arrival of such artists came the drive to push boundaries in dance to exciting new limits. Here in the Bay Area, dance artists found a stimulating atmosphere, one that, while demanding excellence, simultaneously recognized the value of experimentation. Their willingness to redefine what dance can encompass, where it can take place, and who can participate has dramatically altered both dance and theater throughout America and the world. The directors conducted numerous interviews with dance luminaries, choreographers, dancers, critics, and historians. The film includes dance footage from over fifty concerts, ranging from in-yourface street performances to elegantly staged productions at major venues all over the Bay Area. Featured in the film are Anna Halprin, Mangrove, Tumbleweed, Margaret Jenkins, ODC/San Francisco, Joe Goode and Contraband. Produced and directed by Austin Forbord and Shelley Trott. In Color. 35mm. 84 mins. 2000. USA. World Premiere! SUN AT 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; MON AND TUE AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00. Friday, October 20 – Sunday, October 22 San Francisco Film Society presents Dark Wave 2000 Three Days of Hallowed Horror From Japanese demonic dopplegangers to ancient cults bent on world destruction to the real-life terrors of low-budget filmmaking, no cobwebbed corner of international horror goes unexplored in Dark Wave, the San Francisco Film Society’s annual series of screen screams. Highlights of this year’s Dark Wave include GEMINI, the new film from Tetsuo: The Iron Man director Shinya Tsukamoto, and Demon Lover Diary, Joel DeMott’s phenomenal 1980 documentary on the making of a Z-grade horror movie. The complete schedule will be available at the Roxie and throughout the Bay Area around October 1. FOR MORE INFORMATION,CONTACT THE SAN FRANCISCO FILM SOCIETY AT 415-561-FILM OR VISIT THEM ONLINE AT WWW.SFIFF.ORG. Feb • Mar • Apr • 2000 3117 16th St at Valencia, San Francisco, CA ( 4 1 5 ) 8 6 3 - 1 0 8 7 w w w. r o x i e . c o m Ad m i s s i o n : $ 7 ; S e n i o r / C h i l d : $ 3 . 5 Admission Discount Card: $22. Bargain Matinee: $4 first show Wed, Sat, Sun. Friday, November 24 – Thursday, November 30 Monday& Tuesday, October 23-24 Friday & Saturday, November 9 & 10 42 Up Rare Psychedelia! TWILIGHT: LOS ANGELES Wonder wall In 1964 acclaimed director Michael Apted interviewed 14 children for the film 7 Up. He has returned to those children every seventh year to chart their progress through life, creating the longest running real-life documentary ever made. 42 Up is the latest fascinating installment. Now, halfway through their lives, how close are they to realizing their dreams and ambitions? This enthralling answers those questions and introduces some intriguing surprises and sheds invaluable light on the human condition—and British life asd a whole—at the end of the twentieth century. Produced and directed by Michael Apted. Color. 35mm. 133 mins. 1999. Great Britain. MON & TUES AT 1:30,4:30,7:00,9:40 Wonderwall, the “lost psychedelic classic” from the late sixties, shows us an acid-tinged view of swinging London town as an eccentric professor (Jack MacGowan) desperately tries to win the affections of a beautiful fashion model (Jane Birken). His romantic quest takes him on a voyeuristic journey through…the Wonderwall. The kaleidoscope of images and George Harrison’s astonishing musical score transport the audience to another realm of consciousness; the film resembles a dreamscape where appearance and reality are intermingled in the manner of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear. Wonderwall was made in 1968 and the film has gone through an extensive restoration of the negative and the soundtrack, and with the assistance of Apple Corp., the original stereo recordings by George Harrison were located in the Abbey Road studios. A brand new stereo track has been created expressly for this long overdue revival. Directed by Joe Massot. Color. 35mm. 78 mins. 1968. GREAT BRITAIN. Shown with the short film, Reflections on Love. The film, made in London in1966, depicts the romance between a boy and a girl at a time when all they needed was love. Kula Shaker have recorded a new musical soundtrack for the film. Running time: 13 mins. COMPLETE SHOWS FRI AT 7:00 AND 9:15; SAT AT 2:00, 4:30, 7:00 AND 9:15. Tuesday, November 14 – Thursday, November 16 John Huston — War Stories In its 16th year, the rowdiest film festival of the season spotlights the work of Northern California’s most talented, daring and explosive media artists, filling the air with cutting edge documentaries, innovative feature narratives, and a frenzy of dynamite shorts. Every imaginable genre.of film and video will blast onto the screen in the form of eighteen firey programs. Look for full descriptions of each evening’s programming in festival brochures available Oct. 4th. FOR MORE INFORMATION & ADVANCE TICKETS, CALL FAF @ (415) 552-FILM OR VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WWW.FILMARTS.ORG Friday, November 17 – Thursday, November 23 Spike & Mike’s Sick & Twisted Festival of Animation Monday-Wednesday, November 6-8 Go Moan For Man A film that takes 17 years, 50,000 miles and $150,000 of personal funds to complete can only be classified as a labor of love. The documentary Go Moan For Man is such a film. An exploration of the life and work of beat writer Jack Kerouac, cultural icon and legendary author of On The Road, The Subterraneans, and The Dharma Bums. The film’s title is a paradoxical line about hope and despair and appears in three Kerouac works. “He believed that life is holy and the universe is grand and infinite, but there’s an equal side to Kerouac—the side of despair,” says the film’s director. In addition to documentary footage, black and white reenactments with actors playing Kerouac, Burroughs and Ginsberg are utilized to illustrate key moments from Kerouac’s life. Written, produced and directed by Doug and Judi Sharples. Color/B&W. 16mm. 122 mins. 1999. USA. MON AND TUE AT 7:00 AND 9:30. This fascinating new documentary film is a personal, on-camera, narrative memoir, with director John Huston talking about the outstanding, yet little known documentary films he shot during World War II. His first documentary, Report From the Aleutians, was shot on the island of Adak off the coast of Alaska in 1942. His subsequent war films, The Battle of San Pietro and Let There Be Light were banned by the War Department and declared unfit for Army personnel on the grounds they would be demoralizing. San Pietro is a vivid and complete record of the brutal combat conditions that faced the 143rd Regiment of the 36th Texas Infantry Division in Italy. Let There Be Light was charged with creating a sympathetic documentary of the rehabilitation of soldiers suffering what is now known as post traumatic stress syndrome. The interview footage of John Huston in this film was shot in 1982 by Richard Leacock. Huston’s recollections prove to be profoundly potent and painfully honest. Directed by Midge Mackenzie. B&W. 16mm. 90 mins. 1999. Great Britain. WEST COAST THEATRICAL PREMIERE. WED AND THURS AT 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00. Spike and Mike, the guys who first brought you Beavis and Butthead, South Park, Rugrats and Wallace & Gromit, are back and readly to unleash there 2000 feature length collection of bizarre, shocking and disturbingly grotesque animated short films. Spike and Mike’s Sick & Twisted Festival of Animation is not for those with an overly refined artistic palate. The Sick & Twisted Festival hosts animated shorts which are too rude, crude and totally lewd for their prestigious and tasteful Classic Festival of Animation. This year’s new 2000 Sick & Twisted Festival of Animation will premiere 16 BRAND NEW animated shorts and two returning favorites. Among the not-to-miss titles are: The Hangnail, Wheelchair Rebecca, Rejected (from Don Hertzfeldt), Angry Kid (newest from Aardman Animations), Rick & Steve:The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World, Stinky Monkey, Beat the Brat and Birth of Abomination. NIGHTLY AT 7:00 AND 9:15;SAT,SUN,WED,THURS MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:30. aturday & Sunday, November 11 & 12 Marin Latino Film Festival This radically inventive new feature (already Jamaica’s highest grossing film of all time!) is set in the exotic and gritty streets of modern day Kingston.It’s the story of two friends whose lives have taken them in different directions. Friday, December 29 – Thursday, January 4 Brand New 35mm Print! B R E A T H L E S When the enigmatic and hugely talented young film critic Jean Luc Godard com ed this, his first feature, he dedicated it to Monogram Pictures, the Hollywood “B” m factory notable for cranking out scores of cheap, black and white “potboilers” i 1930’s and 40’s. Godard’s brilliantly innovative film, Breathless, captured the essen the pugnacious “B” gangster film: a smarmy but irresistible hood (Jean-Paul Belmo is on the run from the cops, stealing cars and blasting his way to imaginary imm ty” with his American girl friend (the ravishing Jean Seberg) by his side. But thei tionship is steeped not only in Mongram “B” movie atmosphere, it is also drenched in its own French milieu of boudoir philosophy, blank stares and ple deep cigarette inhalation. Godard took what was ostensibly a story outline by f Cahiers du Cinema critic Francois Truffaut and created one of the benchmarks o burgeoning French New Wave, seemingly reinventing cinema itself as well as rock its romantic leads to world stardom.The films pace is non-stop (as much a reflect its title as anything else) thanks to the startling, then revolutionary use of jump-cu and an apparent disregard for conventionality. Breathless is being presented in a new 35mm print. Also in the cast are Daniel Boulanger, Liliane David and New godfather himself, Jean-Pierre Melville. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Black & W 35mm. 89 mins. 1959. In French, with English subtitles. Nightly at 6:00, 8:00, 10:0 Sun, Mon and Wed matinees at 2:00 and 4:00. Monday & Tuesday, October 23 & 24 Kestral’s Eye Cop This radically inventive new feature (already Jamaica’s highest grossing film of all time!) is set in the exotic and gritty streets of modern day Kingston.It’s the story of two friends whose lives have taken them in different directions.Capone is a crime fighter who’s transferred back to his hometown where he meets up with his old friend Ratty,who operates as the right-hand of the notorious local don.A high energy,high tech,reggae and dancehall soundtrack produced by Sly and Robbie,featuring Jamaica’s most exciting new musical talents.Starring Paul Campbell,Mark Danvers,Carl Bradshaw, Audrey Reid.Directed by Chris Browne.Color.35mm.90 mins. 1999.BAY AREA PREMIERE.Subtitled. MON AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Film Arts Festival of Independent Cinema Panic Third World Sound and Fury Thursday November 2-Sunday November 5 Friday, December 1 – Thursday, December 14 Monday, November 13 Wednesday October 25-Wednesday November 1 Imagine: your child is born deaf, but a new miraculous operation can restore the baby’s hearing. So given the limited risk, you of course decide to undertake the procedure. Right? And therein lies the intriguing premise of this fascinating portrait of deaf families and culture.The battle over cochlear implants, a medical technology welcomed by some as a cure for deafness and reviled by others as a cruel procedure which will result in the end of American Sign Language and deaf culture, threatens to divide the deaf community and define the future of those who are hearing impaired. Two branches of the Artinian family, each headed by a brother, are at the center of a passionate and elucidating debate. The anguish of parents, grandparents, children and many others as they negotiate the often-emotional travails that color these issues and choices is vividly on display. One of the most talked about films at this year’s Sundance and San Francisco International Film Festivals, Sound and Fury is a profoundly moving experience. Produced by Roger Weisberg. Directed by Josh Aronson. Color. 80 mins. 35mm. 1999. USA. WEST COAST THEATRICAL PREMEIRE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; SAT, SUN, WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00. In Twilight: Los Angeles, her searing multivoiced portrait of the violent aftermath of the Rodney King trial, Anna Deveare Smith, in the persona of black activist Twilight Bey, explains that ideas before their time seem stuck in limbo, like the sun at twilight:“I see the darkness as myself and the light as the knowledge and wisdom of the world and the understanding of others. To be a true human being, I can’t forever dwell in darkness and understand only me and mine.” Most of what happened in Los Angeles in April 1992 after the police officers who beat King were acquitted resulted from the failure of individuals to put themselves in others’ shoes. Smith interviewed scores of people to construct her dramatic monologue, ranging from police commissioner Stanley Sheinbaum and former police chief Daryl Gates to Korean store owners whose businesses were looted and burned; from driver Reginald Denny to Henry Watson, one of the men who hauled him from his truck and beat him; from Beverly Hills talent and real estate agents to jurors at King’s two trials; from gun advocate Charlton Heston to Elvira Evers, a pregnant black cashier who was shot and whose baby was born with a bullet in her arm. The fires in Los Angeles may be out, but the antagonisms that caused them are still smoldering. (Barbara Bannon, Sundance Film Festival) Featuring Anna Deveare Smith. Directed by Marc Levin. Produced by Anna Deveare Smith and Ezra Swerdlow. In Color. 95 mins. 1999. USA. U.S. THEATRICAL PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 7:00 AND 9:15; SAT, SUN AND WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:30. Midlife crises are a normal event for many forty-plus American males, and Alex (Bill Macy) seems no different from the average. He is going through a very difficult time. He has a marriage that’s been through the normal ups and downs but is now struggling, a young son who he’s devoted to but worried about, and a particularly stressful job: he works for his father in the family business…and kills people for a living. More than the specific tensions that this particular occupation brings with it, Alex is tired of hiding what he does from his wife and child and wants to leave the profession. Feeling tormented, he seeks the services of a good therapist to unload his burdens but finds unexpected solace in the waiting room, where he meets Sarah (Neve Campbell). She’s manic, confused, and at loose ends; he’s repressed and trapped in career and domestic turmoil, but somehow this odd couple manages to connect, and each one makes the other feel like life’s worth living. With the potential for an affair looming on the horizon but an increasingly problematic professional life, Alex is caught in a difficult family bind whose resolutions will not be easy. Also starring Donald Sutherland, John Ritter, Tracey Ullman. Written and directed by Henry Bromell. In Color. 35mm. 90 mins. 1999. U.S. THEATRICAL PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; SAT, SUN,WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00. Friday, December 15 – Thursday, December 21 Coming To Light Edward S.Curtis and the North American Indians Look at almost any photograph of Native North Americans taken between 1900 and 1930, and you will see a small piece of the remarkable lifework of Edward S. Curtis. Coming to Light interweaves the story of Curtis’s life with the results of his work, and through it, we see the world he sought to preserve. Many of the Hopi, Navajo, Cupig, Blackfoot, Blood, Piegan, Suquamish, and Kwakiutl people who knew Curtis or descended from those who worked with him appear in the film, and through their voices, these old sepia-toned photographs evoke their ancestor’s lives, inspiring them to continue their traditions. Written, produced and directed by Anne Makepeace. Color. 35mm. 86 mins. 1999. USA. WEST COAST THEATRICAL PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; SAT, SUN,WED MATINEES AT 2:00, 4:00. Friday, December 22 – Thursday, December 28 Trouble in Paradise A pair of charming jewel thieves (the stunning Miriam Hopkins and the suave Herbert Marshall) come into conflict with one another when one of their intended victims (the saucy and sophisticated Kay Francis) also falls prey to Mr. Marshall’s ample charm. Out of circulation for many years, this sparkling film is one of Hollywood’s great sophisticated comedies, the one that would come to embody the very meaning of “the Lubitsch touch.”Also in the cast are Charlie Ruggles, Edward Everett Horton and C. Aubrey Smith. Written by Samson Raphaelson and Grover Jones. Directed by Ernst Lubitsch. B&W. 35mm. (Studio Archive Print) 83 mins. 1932. SHOWS DAILY AT 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:00. NOTE: NO EVENING SHOWS ON SUN 12/24. To put it simply, this extraordinary documentary is a spectacle of life and death. This remarkable and beautiful Swedish film views the world through the eyes of two kestrals, or European falcons, that make their home in the upper reaches of a 13th century church. In an age when virtual reality has become commonplace, this film astonishes by capturing reality with a fidelity and intimacy that prompt old fashioned wonder at how the feat was accomplished. Using remote controlled cameras placed at various vantage points, including inside the nest in an aperture high in the church, the viewer is treated to seems to be every aspect of the bird’s life. There is no narration or sounds othe those captured in the moment: the whirr and rustle of wings and feathers, the c of the adult birds and the clamor of their hungry off-spring, a dog barking, the v and laughter and music that drift up from below. Produced, edited, written and d ed by Mikael Kristersson. Color. 35mm. 86 mins. 1999. Sweden. Bay Area Theatrica miere. MON AND TUES AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Friday, January 13 – Thursday, January 19 Premiere Revival! New 35mm Print! Female Convict “Scorpion (Jailhouse 41) Fans of high octane Japanese cinema have good reason to celebrate: a brand new widescreen print of Shunya Ito’s surrealistic masterpiece, Female Convict “Scorpion” has finally been struck and the Roxie will be hosting its premiere revival! Long unseen (at least by Western audiences) the film stars action goddess Meiko Kaji (Lady Snowblood) as the notorious inmate Scorpion, who breaks out of prison with her fellow female convicts.Together they travel a desolate, blasted landscape—a village halfburied in volcanic ash, melancholic autumnal woods and barren mountains of stone—all the while defending themselves against pursuing guards and bestial scavengers. This film, in all of its widescreen splendor is nothing short of a transcendental masterpiece of primo 1970’s violent cinema. If you’ve never seen any of Ito’s astonishing manga epics, then you owe it to yourself to jump full on into the deep end of the pool. Also featuring Fumio Watanable. Directed by Shunya Ito. Color. 35mm. 93 mins. 1972. In Japanese, with English subtitles. NIGHTLY AT 7:00 AND 9:15; SAT, SUN, WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:30 Friday, January 20 – Thursday, January 26 MEGACITIES A revlatory new documentary that probes both the micro and macrocosm of h experience, drawing an archetyal sketch of life in the Big City at the dawn of th century. It is at once a cutting commentary on the socially marginalized and po stricken and a comprehensive vision of “the world city,” the dominant habitat fo majority of the Earth’s population. It is panglobal in its scope, examining the lives o families in four different megacities (Mexico City, Bombay, New York and Moscow mately constructing one “story” that takes on universal appeal. Megacities cove spectrum from exotic to well-known territories (much in the manner of Godfrey gio’s Koyaanisqatsi and never balks at revealing what constitutes urban life for a gering number of people: the cruel realities of prostitution, homelessness, crime drug addiction. Megacities is a testament to the courage and dignity of those who age to survive day after day in our sprawling metropolises. Written and direct Michael Glowogger. Color. 35mm. 90 mins. 1999. In German, with English subtitle THEATRICAL PREMIERE. NIGHTLY AT 6:00, 8:00, 10:00; SAT, SUN,WED MATINEES AT 2:00 AND 4:00