Coming Attractions at The Screen Nov. 21-27 Showcasing the best in classical, independent and foreign cinema, The Screen cinematheque at Santa Fe University of Art and Design presents new releases, special cinema events and performances all day every day! See what critics have to say about the latest screenings, watch a trailer, then visit The Screen for a unique movie-going experience. Pelican Dreams From the Director of “The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill” US – 2014 – 1 hour 10 minutes “Like ‘The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill,’ Irving’s study of brown pelicans is affectionate, at times humorous and reveals a sense of wonder and awe at the birds’ simple beauty.” -Carolyn Jones of San Francisco Chronicle http://vimeo.com/102655510 Performance at the Screen: The Pharaoh’s Daughter Sunday Nov. 23 11:15 a.m. – Russia – 2 hours 30 minutes A Bolshoi Ballet “It is hard to imagine a more sumptuous and elegant ballet, delicate and Romantic, moving deftly from one delightful scene to the next.” – Margaret Putnam of TheaterJones Force Majeure Winner of 2014 Cannes Film Festival Jury Prize Sweden – 2014 – 1 hour 58 minutes “Östlund masterfully manages the marital tensions that drive the film’s plot forward while imbuing the scenario with these carefully layered philosophical reflections.”- Slant Magazine “It’s awkward, it’s biting, it’s uncomfortable, and Force Majeure is undoubtedly one of the most enjoyable films of the year.” – Twitch Film Awake: The LIfe of Yogananda US – 2014 – 1 hour 27 minutes The Story of Yoga’s Journey to the West “The film tapped into Yogananda’s humanity in a way that was profoundly moving and inspiring to me.” —Ram Dass “A beautifully crafted film and a powerful story about a spiritual genius.” —Russell Simmons...
Coming Attractions
posted by Charlotte Martinez
Coming Attractions at The Screen Nov. 14-20 Showcasing the best in classical, independent and foreign cinema, The Screen cinematheque at Santa Fe University of Art and Design presents new releases, special cinema events and performances all day every day! See what critics have to say about the latest screenings, watch a trailer, then visit The Screen for a unique movie-going experience. Force Majeure Winner of 2014 Cannes Film Festival Jury Prize Sweden – 2014 – 1 hour 58 minutes “Östlund masterfully manages the marital tensions that drive the film’s plot forward while imbuing the scenario with these carefully layered philosophical reflections.”- Slant Magazine “It’s awkward, it’s biting, it’s uncomfortable, and Force Majeure is undoubtedly one of the most enjoyable films of the year.” – Twitch Film That Man From Rio Part of the Ongoing Series Films to See Before You Die France – 1964 – 1 hour 52 minutes “That Man From Rio is a crazy delight, a stylish, early-’60s pastiche that folds in every adventure-movie cliché you’ve ever seen, and possibly invents a few new ones.”– Village Voice Awake: The LIfe of Yogananda US – 2014 – 1 hour 27 minutes The Story of Yoga’s Journey to the West “The film tapped into Yogananda’s humanity in a way that was profoundly moving and inspiring to me.” —Ram Dass “A beautifully crafted film and a powerful story about a spiritual genius.” —Russell Simmons #000000;”> ...
Coming Attractions
posted by Charlotte Martinez
Coming Attractions at The Screen Nov. 7-13 Showcasing the best in classical, independent and foreign cinema, The Screen cinematheque at Santa Fe University of Art and Design presents new releases, special cinema events and performances all day every day! See what critics have to say about the latest screenings, watch a trailer, then visit The Screen for a unique movie-going experience. Awake: The LIfe of Yogananda US – 2014 – 1 hour 27 minutes The Story of Yoga’s Journey to the West “The film tapped into Yogananda’s humanity in a way that was profoundly moving and inspiring to me.” —Ram Dass “A beautifully crafted film and a powerful story about a spiritual genius.” —Russell Simmons The Blue Room France – 2014 – 1 hour 16 minutes Based on the Novel by Georges Simenon “Every revelation registers in the gifted Amalric’s gaze: infinitesimal physical mutations, emotional detonations.” —Sheri Linden of Los Angeles Times “One of most exciting things about The Blue Room is that it celebrates the radical fragmentation of Alain Resnais’s 1963 film Muriel — a nostalgic blast for modernists, reminding us that, by and large, they don’t cut them like they used to.” —Jonathan Romney of Film Comment Magazine...
Coming Attractions
posted by Charlotte Martinez
Coming Attractions at The Screen Oct. 31 – Nov. 6 Showcasing the best in classical, independent and foreign cinema, The Screen cinematheque at Santa Fe University of Art and Design presents new releases, special cinema events and performances all day every day! See what critics have to say about the latest screenings, watch a trailer, then visit The Screen for a unique movie-going experience. The Blue Room France – 2014 – 1 hour 16 minutes Based on the Novel by Georges Simenon “Every revelation registers in the gifted Amalric’s gaze: infinitesimal physical mutations, emotional detonations.” —Sheri Linden of Los Angeles Times “One of most exciting things about The Blue Room is that it celebrates the radical fragmentation of Alain Resnais’s 1963 film Muriel — a nostalgic blast for modernists, reminding us that, by and large, they don’t cut them like they used to.” —Jonathan Romney of Film Comment Magazine Manuscripts Don’t Burn Iran – 2013 – 2 hours 5 minutes Winner of Cannes Film Festival’s 2013 Best Director “Demands to be seen as widely as possible.” – Jonathan Romney of Screen International “The most important moviegoing experience of the year.” -Eric Cohn of Indiewire New York Film Critics Series Presents Elsa and Fred USA – 2014 – 1 hour 34 minutes Starring Shirley Maclaine and Christopher Plummer One Night Only, Nov. 4, 7 p.m. “Elsa and Fred” is both a movie about love and a love letter to movies.” Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times Awake: The LIfe of Yogananda US – 2014 – 1 hour 27 minutes The Story of Yoga’s Journey to the West “The film tapped into Yogananda’s humanity in a way that was profoundly moving and inspiring to me.” —Ram Dass “A beautifully crafted film and a powerful story about a spiritual genius.” —Russell Simmons...
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