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From January 9-24, 2013, The Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Jewish Museum present the 22nd Annual New York Jewish Film Festival. Held at the Film Society’s Walter Reade Theater, this New York festival will feature 45 full length and short films from around the world.
Special presentations from those involved in the films and thought-provoking discussions will follow most screenings.
The festival will feature such films as Hannah Arendt, which will play at the festival’s closing night. Hannah Arendt chronicles the true life story of the acclaimed writer’s experience from a Nazi detention center to the streets of Jerusalem and then to the heart of New York City and has been called “a remarkably successful attempt” by The Hollywood Reporter.
Another highlight is a panel with the Safdie Brothers of Red Bucket Films fame, who will be hosting a viewing and discussion of five of their short films. Audiences will be privy to a screening of their Offical Cannes Selection film, Daddy Longlegs (AKA Go Get Some Rosemary).
There will also be a number of remastered classics shown such as the films of Franciszka and Stegan Themerson, as well as a host of new documentaries like The Art of Spiegelman, Joe Papp in Five Acts and Neil Barksy’s Koch.
Screenings tickets for a single film cost $13 but are discounted for students and seniors at a rate of $9. For members of the Film Society and Jewish Museum, screening costs are only $8.
If you plan to see the Safdie Brothers double feature, screening on January 13, tickets run $20/$14 (students, seniors, members).
Tickets go on sale December 27th, 2012, online or at the Walter Reade Theater Box Office
For more information contact www.FilmLinc.com, www.TheJewishMuseum.org, or call 212.875.5601.
New York Jewish Film Festival
January 9-24, 2013
The Film Society of Lincoln Center
Walter Reade Theater
No matter how jaded we become, the open road will always have a strange allure, particularly when the open road is juxtaposed with the grit and naiveté of the 1960’s beatnik and counter culture movement. It’s that feeling that all you need is wheels, sex, intoxicants, and idealism and you turn into a leather-clad genius-prophet.
Leading up to the release of Walter Salles' adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, the IFC Center (323 6th Avenue, New York) will be putting on a weeklong retrospective called On the Road Retrospective: Road Movies: Directed and Selected by Walter Salles, along with beatnik related events throughout New York.
Films being shown are:
The Knitting Factory (361 Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn) will do a free advance screening of On the Road along with performances by a live bebop band on Sunday, December 16, 2012.
Compete in an On the Road-themed poetry slam, or just come to listen at the Nuyorican Poets Café (236 East 3rd Street) featuring poets from lit journals and poetry clubs all across the city on Tuesday, December 11.
Check IFC for more Beatnik related events throughout the week.
To learn more, go to: http://bk.knittingfactory.com/
The IFC Center
323 6th Avenue
New York, NY 10014
Knitting Factory – Brooklyn
361 Metropolitan Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Nuyorican Poets Café
236 East 3rd Street
New York, NY 10009
Four years ago, the In French with English Subtitles fest was created to bring together cinéphiles, cinéastes, stars and industry professionals in celebration of cultural diversity through French-language film. But like the Tribeca Film Festival – which began as a booster for downtown Manhattan in the wake of 9/11 – IFWES's bedrock raison d'être was to support a charitable cause.
Along the way, it too became an anticipated cultural event for both kids and adults, whether because or in spite of its philanthropic thrust. At this year's installment (November 30 to December 2, 2012), net proceeds will be donated to Make-A-Wish Foundation of Metro New York and Western New York, l’Entraide Française and the Hurricane Sandy Relief Fund.
The invocation of coveted authors is an effective method of purporting importance.
Director Francis Ford Coppola didn’t just make Dracula, he made Bram Stoker’s Dracula! Even though Henry Selick was the director, his 1993 stop-motion animated classic was called Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas. The same goes for fledgling film festivals.
The inaugural Philip K. Dick Film Festival (December 7 – 9, 2012) at the Williamsburg indieScreen theater (289 Kent Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11211) has the broad mission statement of promoting, “original or adapted material inspired by the works of Philip K. Dick, Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino, Robert Anton Wilson, Franz Kafka and others who have explored the metaphysical, the eerie, in all its manifestations. “