Hosted by | Best Video Film & Cultural Center |
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Details | Best Video Film & Cultural Center is pleased to bring back Mark Schenker for the tenth installment of his popular “How to Read a Film” series, starting on Sun., Oct. 3, at 2 PM. Admission to each lecture is $7. In previous installments of “How to Read A Film,” Schenker has zeroed in on a specific director’s oeuvre or focused on four films in a particular genre, like film noir. For this series, he will “focus more broadly on genre, and how a consideration of three great genres of American film can yield a greater understanding of one of Quentin Tarantino’s masterpieces, “Inglourious Basterds,” which audaciously combines aspects of screwball comedy, film noir, and western.” This will be an indoors event with the following covid protocols in place: • 30 attendees max • proof of vaccination required • masks required (they can be lowered to take drinks or eat popcorn but should be raised back up when done) The schedule for the series: Sun., Oct. 3, 2 PM: “Bringing Up Baby” (1938, screwball comedy, dir. by Howard Hawks) Sun., Oct. 10, 2 PM: “Criss Cross” (1949, film noir, dir. by Robert Siodmak) Sun., Oct. 24, 2 PM: “The Searchers” (1956, western, dir. by John Ford) Sun., Oct. 31, 2 PM: “Inglourious Basterds” (2009, dir. by Quentin Tarantino) Of “Bringing Up Baby,” the inaugural film in this series, Brian Tallerico wrote at RogerEbert.com: Movies don’t get much more delightful and joyous than “Bringing Up Baby,” a film that honestly shaped my youth. Raised on classic musicals, my mother also loved classic comedies, and comedies don’t get more classic than this 1938 screwball masterpiece from Howard Hawks. Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant star in a film that was reportedly so much fun to make that the production had to regularly stop for laugh breaks. Mark Schenker’s lectures are accompanied by screenings of the films to illustrate the points he is making — it’s like a live commentary track! His previous lectures on the films of Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, and Billy Wilder (among others) and the historical context in which the TV series “Downton Abbey” took place were erudite and entertaining. |
Admission | $7 |
Location | Best Video Film & Cultural Center |
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More Info | info link |