Yes! Upon completion of the Screening Registration Form, our team will provide you with customized screening tools and promotional resources to help you spread the word about your screening, the film, and the larger movement.
So many! In addition to registering your school for a screening, you can sign up here to receive a Kiss The Ground Educational DVD which will include the feature film as well as a custom, 45-minute, Educational version specifically designed for use in academic settings.
The Nebraska Film Office in the Nebraska Department of Economic Development announced Thursday that cities can apply for The 48 Hour Film Project. This international competition will include more than 100 cities around the world, and Nebraska is being considered to host a local-level competition in one of its cities.
Every film that is entered into the competition is screened at the local theater, according to a news release. Local judges then score and critique the films and select a winner to move on to the international round.
Stolz, the talent marketing manager and Nebraska film officer in the Nebraska Department of Economic Development, said the office is excited about the potential opportunities The 48 Hour Film Project could bring to creatives in the state.
The event will include multiple film screenings followed by a panel discussion and an art exhibition. Films will begin screening at 2 p.m. and continue until 4:10 p.m. A full listing of the films to be screened can be found here.
Isabella: On October 31st, 2017, on a night much like this, a dark form crawled out of the pitch-black waters of Elliot Bay covered by a thick carpet of fog. This form dragged herself to the Hollow Earth Radio station in the Central District and began hosting a radio show called Nocturnal Emissions. For a year, the creature talked about the latest bits of horror movie news and which monsters she'd like to smooch. Then she was approached by another shape in the dark and began showing horror movies once a month at the Northwest Film Forum.
Horror is ubiquitous, everyone has fears, and if Jungian theory turns you on, we can all tap into the same evolutionary anxieties. The Dark. Masks. Spiders. Old Houses. Spirits. We all have very similar reactions to things that we experience in life that leave us unsettled. Horror is a great way to explore the things in life that make us feel uneasy. For me, I love haunted house movies because the afterlife is such a mystery to me. These feelings are natural, it is natural to have dark, scary thoughts so I encourage people to allow themselves to experience horror films as a way to get in touch with those thoughts and release them. Often in horror journalism, we volley between the perspective of the killer and the victims, not because we want to be killed or because we want to kill someone else, but because there is a need to ask questions of the human experience. If I ask someone to talk to me about Jordan Peele's Get Out, for example, we can talk about feeling alone in a situation that is alien to us, and how it feels to be alone with people we don't know. By the end, we can talk about how it felt to go away to college or meet your in-laws. It's actually very cathartic. Horror can be incredibly cathartic. Once you get past all the open skulls and brains falling out.
The community is invited to attend the festival and discover a new wonder of the natural world. Tickets for the event are $20 for one day or $32 for the weekend. USU students can purchase tickets at a discount, $15 per day. The festival will show different films each night starting at 7 p.m., Friday and Saturday. The films will take audiences on an up-close and personal journey to remote vistas, analyzing topical environmental issues and exploring the mountain world.
Have you ever imagined hosting a private screening of your favorite indie film at Angelika? Well, there's good news: we offer private event hosting at our New York City theater and will be happy to go over the details with you. Here's what you need to know about renting out Angelika for a movie event.
The Angelika is a great place for hosting a wide range of events, including corporate events, parties, baby showers, birthday parties, reunions, or any other special occasion. Even if you want to have a private watch party with friends or family "just because," we are happy to accommodate private groups for a memorable night watching a film on the big screen.
Contact Us To Discuss Your Private Event At the Cinema
The best way to get started is to contact us with a request. Include important information such as how many people will be attending so we can determine which auditorium will best accommodate your guests. Let us know what you are showing, as well as the run time, film format, and any special requests that you may have.
The Paddling Film Festival World Tour brings award-winning films to communities around the globe. Since 2006, it's screened over 1,000 times to more than 300,000 audience members and World Tour hosts have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for local charitable projects.
Meyers says his interest in the cinema really blossomed after taking ENGL 212: Cinema: History and Criticism his freshman year. The film club gave him a forum to collaborate and create with other students interested in movies. In addition to the upcoming Student Film Festival, the organization holds weekly film screenings and discussions; brings in guest speakers from the film industry; and hosts workshops on how to write screenplays and shoot and edit movies.
The Woodstock Film Festival is a not-for-profit, 501c3 organization with a mission to present an annual program and year-round schedule of film, music, and art-related activities that promote artists, culture, inspired learning, and diversity.
The Woodstock Film Festival is made possible in part with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency.
Check-in with your local World Tour organizer for more information about screenings in your community. Live World Tour programs will include unique films not included on Banff on Demand. Past World Tour programs from previous festivals can still be watched online!
For questions about your local screening, including tickets and film programs, please contact the local host organiser. Contact information can be found on the Tour Locations pages.
World Tour FAQ
Are you looking to make a difference in K-12 education? Join College Ready Ohio on April 25 at 6 p.m. for their film screening of the award-winning film Most Likely to Succeed followed by a panel discussion lead by Ohio educators.
SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. -- Malick Coly was only a few days into his first semester as an instructor of modern languages and cultures at Slippery Rock University when he reached out to the local community with an idea of starting a film series. Showing movies is not a novel idea at SRU, as many student organizations and academic departments host film presentations. But Coly wanted to involve the community as well, so he approached the Slippery Rock Community Library.
Together, Coly and Pierce came up the with SRCL Film Series, where once a month a documentary film will be showed to the public, accompanied by a guest speaker and a discussion of the film. Along with the SRCL, support for the series came from several groups at the University, including the Departments of Modern Languages and Cultures, Dance and Theatre; Interdisciplinary Programs; and the Office for Global Engagement.
The first event is 3:30 p.m., Jan. 30, at the SRCL. The 2008 documentary, "Pray the Devil Back to Hell," will be shown. It is about the social unrest in Liberia, a West African country torn apart by civil wars starting in 1989, that have left hundreds of thousands of people dead or displaced. The film, which won the Best Documentary Award at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, follows a coalition of Christian and Muslim women who led a grassroots, nonviolent movement to achieve peace, which ultimately led to a democratic election that elected Liberia's first female president.
Coly helped select the topic for the first film in the series, but future selections will be determined by input from the community through online polls distributed by the SRCL to their patrons. Future dates and times have not been determined but plans call for at least one event per month through April.
What
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) salutes the continued vitality of this small, venerable Bay Area institution with the following five programs. Organized by Cinematheque Director Steve Anker, they highlight some of the notable films and videos screened by Cinematheque in its four decades of activity.