For
Immediate Release Contact: Carol OÕSullivan
June 22, 2009 412-681-5449
Pittsburgh
Filmmakers Announces
July
Programming
(Pittsburgh, PA) – The following are descriptions of Pittsburgh Filmmakers Film Exhibition program for July 2009. The films are screened at Harris Theater, 809 Liberty Avenue (Downtown), the Melwood Screening Room, 477 Melwood Avenue (in North Oakland) and the Regent Square Theater, 1035 S. Braddock Avenue (in Edgewood). For admission prices and current showtimes call 412-682-4111. All titles and dates are subject to change, due to film availability.
The Harris
Theater – 809 Liberty Ave.
Thru July 2 at The Harris, then moves to Regent Square (7/3
– 7/9):
Anvil!
The Story of Anvil
"A hymn to the human spirit,
played loud in power chords." -- Cinematical
This documentary is about a
30-year-old Canadian metal band led by two lifelong friends in their 50s.
Another director would have focused on the potential mockery inherent in this
true tale. Yes, there's a visit to Stonehenge. This hilarious and heartwarming
film shows – in precise detail – the tiny but crucial difference
between obscurity and complete obscurity. The
Story of Anvil isn't about metal; it's about hope. (Sacha
Gervasi; USA; 2009; 90 min)
July
6 - 9: Monty
Python and the Holy Grail
Since weÕre showing great American
comedies all summer at Regent Square, we wanted to give a nod to one of the
funniest British comedies ever made. In Monty PythonÕs irreverent spoof, King Arthur (Graham Chapman) clip-clops along on
his invisible steed and gathers his brave knights (or Eric IdleÕs
Sir Robin, not so brave) to search far and wide for the sacred object. They
encounter such wonders as the imperturbably limbless Black Knight (John Cleese), the bunny version of the Trojan Horse, and
insufferable Frenchmen. Your cheeks will hurt from laughing. (Terry Gilliam
& Terry Jones; UK; 1975; 91 min)
July 10 - 16: OÕHorten
ŅWonderfulÉluminous and
deliciously funny.Ó – LA Times
After 40 long hardworking years, OÕHorten retires from his strict, comfortable routine as a
train engineer. With a new-found freedom and lack of structure the eccentric OÕHorten (the ŅOÓ stands for the commonly used Norwegian
first name ŅOdd'') finds it difficult to adapt to his unruly routine as a
pensioner. Little does he know that his uneventful existence is about to take
an invigoratingly quirky turn, as he discovers life has much more in store for
him. Gently crafted by director Bent Hamer (Kitchen Stories) this deadpan comedy is
both sincere and absurd. Yet the universal story of a man remaking his life
– one stop at a time – is a rare, gratifying cinema experience.
With subtitles. (Bent Hamer; Norway; 2009; 90 min)
July
19 – 23: Objectified
The buzz has already started. ItÕs
the new film from director Gary Hustwit, whose Helvetica became a cult favorite. This
is the equally fascinating and unlikely story behind the objects that
contribute delight or frustration to our lives everyday. ItÕs about industrial
design. The film show us the creative processes of some of the worldÕs most
influential designers, and shows us who we are – and want to be –
from the stuff we surround ourselves with. Do you find yourself oohing and aahing over curvy
office chairs, sleek teapots, or vintage typewriters? Do you appreciate the aerodynamics of badminton shuttlecocks
as well as potato peelers? Then this film is for you. (Gary Hustwit;
USA; 2009; 75 min)
Opens July 24: Silent Light
Finally in distribution, Silent Light has been on a dozen Top Ten criticsÕ lists, and in 2007 it tied with Persepolis as Best Film at Cannes. Set in a Mennonite community in northern Mexico, this drama (using untrained actors) tells the story of a man whose faith in God is put to the test when he falls for another woman. From the opening time-lapse sunrise, each sequence is carefully constructed with breathtaking beauty. Whether itÕs the movement of a harvester plowing through a field, or the lingering shot of a flower after a lyrical sequence of kids in a pond, itÕs a rare cinematic experience. In Plautdietsch (the language of Prussian Mennonites) with subtitles. (Carlos Reygadas; Mexico/France/Netherlands; 2007; 136 min)
Regent
Square Theater – 1035 South Braddock Ave.
July 3 – 9: Anvil! The Story of Anvil
"A hymn to the human spirit,
played loud in power chords." -- Cinematical
July 10 - 23: Moon
ŅIf there's still an audience
for old-school, ideas-driven allegorical science fiction, it will undoubtedly
find much to cheer for [here].Ó – Box
Office Magazine
Set in the near future on a lunar base, Moon is an intimate character study couched in a Twilight Zone mystery. It stars Sam Rockwell in a tour de force performance as astronaut Sam Bell, living on the far side of the moon where he mines helium. ItÕs a lonely job, made harder by a broken satellite that allows no live communication. The closest thing to inter-action is with Gerty the mono-toned computer (played by Kevin Spacey). His contract is almost up and heÕll soon reunite with his wife and young daughter on Earth. But suddenly, Sam begins to have migraines that lead him to crash his lunar rover. When recovering, he meets a younger, angrier version of himself who claims to be fulfilling the same three-year contract. (Duncan Jones; UK; 2009; 97 min)
July
24 - 30: Amarcord – new print!
This
beautiful restoration of FelliniÕs most rambunctious, accessible film is full
of vibrant colors, bawdy humor and bittersweet nostalgia. The Oscar winner is a loose collection of FelliniÕs boyhood memories framed
by the seasons. Set in the small coastal
village of Rimini during fascism, Amarcord – the maestroÕs most personal film –
satirizes his youth and turns daily life into a circus of adolescent
shenanigans, family rituals, male fantasies, and political subterfuge. Also features
a Nina Rota score youÕll be humming for days. With subtitles. (Federico
Fellini; Italy;
1973; 123 min)
Opens July 31: Seraphine
A breath-taking film – and
winner of 7 Cˇsars – Sˇraphine boasts a mesmerizing performance by Yolande
Moreau in the title role. The designation of ŅoutsiderÓ artists includes (among
other things) untrained masters who remained unknown while alive, or those
whose mental illness existed alongside a significant artistic career. In this
astonishing new film about French painter Sˇraphine
Louis, we visit another outsider. In 1914, sheÕs working as a maid and cook by
day, and painting with expressionistic fury by night. Her oracular,
phantasmagoric work is ignored until discovered by a respected art collector
and dealer of Ņprimitivists.Ó Just as SˇraphineÕs paintings are hailed as exceptional, her
precarious mental state (like Munch and Van Gogh) begins to slip. With
subtitles. (Martin Provost; France; 2009; 122 min)
Sunday Night Series: Summer of Fun: Favorite Comedies Continued
The staff at PF/PCA agreed what we
all need is a summer of fun – real laugh-out loud comedies. After much discussion of favorites, the
list was narrowed to all-American comedies made between 1934 and 1999. Each
Sunday night these knee-slappers will be introduced by the employee who lobbied
hardest for their favorite.
July 5: Waiting
for Guffman (Christopher Guest; 1996; 94 min)
Hilarious take on community theater group from This is Spinal Tap creators; intro by Kathy Staresinic,
stained glass artist and finance assistant.
July 12: ItÕs a Gift (Norman Z. McLeod; 1934;
73 min) One of W.C. Fields' most brilliant comedies about trying to escape his
nagging family; intro by Eric Mattimore, film
projectionist/Regent Sq Theater mgr.
July 19: A Shot in the Dark (Blake Edwards;
1964; 101 min) In the second of the Clouseau (Peter
Sellers) series we meet Dreyfus and Cato; intro by Loretta
Stanish, arts advocate and director of development.
July 26: The Great Race (Blake Edwards; 1965;
160 min) This epic slapstick comedy about competitors stars Jack Lemon and Tony
Curtis; intro by John Cantine, filmmaker and
associate professor.
Coming in August: SullivanÕs Travels,
Harold and Maude and the Stooges!
Melwood Screening Room – 477 Melwood Ave.
July
14: Film Kitchen
This monthly series highlights
regional independent film and video work. Featured this month are shorts by
Justin Crimone, Nils Hanczar and Marina Pfenning. Presented on the 2nd Tuesday of every
month, itÕs co-sponsored by City Paper, WYEP-FM, Tandoor
Grill, DH Creative, and Rock Light.
July
17 – 19: Three Monkeys
Director Nuri Bilge Ceylan's extraordinarily film, Three Monkeys, is further evidence that heÕs one of the finest filmmakers working today. (He won Best Director at Cannes last year.) ItÕs the story of a politician whoÕs involved in a car accident and then asks his driver to take the rap and a short jail sentence, in return for a tempting financial reward. It's just the first of many lies; inevitably, the driver's wife and son are also affected, and soon all four are trapped in a tangled web of fear, desire, doubt and guilt. Almost Dostoyevskian, this astute film has a dark sense of moral, psychological and dramatic irony. With subtitles. (Nuri Bilge Ceylan; Turkey; 2008; 109 min)
July
24 – 26: Big Man Japan
Recalling classic Japanese monster
movies populated with lots of baddies and heroes, and reveling in juvenile
humor, Big Man Japan is an
outrageously wacky summer film. Mr. Daisato, employee
at the Department of Baddie Prevention saves the land from the stink clouds of
Smelly Baddie and the dangerous projectile eyeball of Mean Look Baddie (created
with wonderful computer fx). However, locals blame
him for destroying property and getting fat. So when a truly vicious bad guy
hits Japan, itÕs anyoneÕs guess whether or not Daisato
will be up for the job. Director Matsumoto, a superstar comedian in his native
land, showers Big Man Japan with
color and verve, satirizing talking head-style documentaries, sponsor
placements, and the ephemeral nature of popular culture. (Hitoshi Matsumoto;
Japan; 2007; 113 min)
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