PAINT IT BLACK author Janet Fitch will participate in a Q&A following the 7:30 PM show at the Music Hall on Friday, May 19th. Lindsay Miller of Popsugar.com will moderate.
https://vimeo.com/211421498
by Lamb L.
PAINT IT BLACK author Janet Fitch will participate in a Q&A following the 7:30 PM show at the Music Hall on Friday, May 19th. Lindsay Miller of Popsugar.com will moderate.
https://vimeo.com/211421498
by Lamb L.
WAKEFIELD writer-director Robin Swicord will participate in Q&A’s after the 7:10 PM screenings at the Royal on Friday and Saturday, May 26 and 27.
by Lamb L.
On Friday we’ll open the winning documentary HAROLD AND LILLIAN: A HOLLYWOOD LOVE STORY at the Monica Film Center, Playhouse 7, and Town Center 5. It is a fascinating account of the romantic and creative partnership of storyboard artist Harold Michelson and film researcher Lillian Michelson, two unsung heroes of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Although they worked on hundreds of classic films and were responsible for some of Hollywood’s most iconic examples of visual storytelling, their contributions remain largely uncredited. This film chronicles their remarkable marriage and careers through six decades of movie-making history.
To get a sense of how special this film is, read the April 28, 2017 the New York Times ‘critic’s pick’ review by Monica Castillo: ‘Harold and Lillian’ Introduces a Hollywood Power Couple and then come see the film. Several screenings will feature Q&A’s, including some with Mrs. Michelson.
“Harold and Lillian Michelson’s names may not sound familiar, but you’ve most likely seen their work in “West Side Story,” “Rosemary’s Baby” and “The Birds,” among many other films. Harold, the storyboard artist husband, and Lillian, the film researcher wife, were a prolific team whose careers are being profiled in Daniel Raim’s documentary “Harold and Lillian: A Hollywood Love Story.”
“Through charming animated sketches and interviews with the couple and some of their friends, like Mel Brooks, Francis Ford Coppola and Danny DeVito, the documentary reflects on the couple’s work together — often with Mrs. Michelson’s findings inspiring her husband’s art.
“Mr. Michelson, who died in 2007, climbed the industry ladder as a storyboard artist, eventually becoming an art director and production designer. Not wanting to stay at home, Mrs. Michelson volunteered at a studio library and became a sought-after film researcher.
“Their behind-the-scenes influence on filmmakers was far-reaching. Mr. Michelson’s storyboards show sketched versions of memorable scenes, like the parting of the Red Sea in “The Ten Commandments” and Anne Bancroft’s raised leg overshadowing Dustin Hoffman in “The Graduate.” Mrs. Michelson excitedly recalls interviewing women at Canter’s Deli in Los Angeles about traditional costumes for “Fiddler on the Roof” and questioning a drug kingpin for “Scarface.”
“The stories are told out of order to make room for personal tangents, including the challenges of raising an autistic son in the 1960s. Like flipping through misplaced leaves in a photo book, the documentary maintains a freeflowing tone as it uncovers the work that went into creating some of the indelible scenes in Hollywood history.”
by Lamb L.
Update 5/15: HAROLD AND LILLIAN filmmaker Daniel Raim and subject Lillian Michelson will participate a Q&A at the Town Center/Encino after the 1:30 PM screening on Sunday, May 21. Former Los Angeles Times entertainment writer Susan King will moderate.
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The HAROLD AND LILLIAN filmmakers and subject will participate in several Q&A’s this weekend:
Friday, May 12th, 7:30PM show at the Monica Film Center
Daniel Raim (director) & Lillian Michelson (subject/star)
Saturday, May 13th, 5:00PM show & 7:30PM show at the Monica Film Center
Daniel Raim (director), Patrick Mate (animator), Dave Lebolt (composer) & special guests
Sunday, May 14th, 1:30PM show at the Playhouse 7 (in Pasadena)
Daniel Raim (director) & Lillian Michelson (subject/star)
Sunday, May 14th, 4:20PM show at the Town Center Five (in Encino)
Daniel Raim (director) & Lillian Michelson (subject/star)
by Lamb L.
WRESTLING JERUSALEM post screening conversation schedule at the Laemmle Music Hall 3 in Beverly Hills. All screenings are at 7:30pm. Discussions begin at 9pm and last 40 minutes.
SATURDAY MAY 13 – Official Los Angeles Premiere
“Multiple Perspectives in a Polarized World”
Q & A with Shira Efron, policy researcher and special advisor on Israel with RAND Corporation; WRESTLING JERUSALEM creative team: film director Dylan Kussman, writer/actor Aaron Davidman and stage director Michael John Garcés; plus Special Guest.
SUNDAY MAY 14
“Competing Narratives in the Middle East: An Interfaith Discussion”
Danielle Berrin of the Jewish Journal will moderate an Interfaith Panel with Jewish, Muslim and Christian leaders. Filmmakers Dylan Kussman and Aaron Davidman will join the conversation.
MONDAY MAY 15
“Art, Activism and the Jewish Story”
WRESTLING JERUSALEM Associate Producer Lisa Greer moderates a discussion with Rabbi Ephraim Pelcovits of New Israel Fund, and filmmakers Dylan Kussman and Aaron Davidman.
THURSDAY MAY 18
“From Stage to Cinema: the craft of making WRESTLING JERUSALEM”
Filmmaker Julie Hermelin moderates a discussion with the creative team behind the film: director Dylan Kussman, writer-actor Aaron Davidman, cinematographer Nicole Whitaker and editor Erik Andersen.
by Lamb L.
Oscar winner George Chakiris (Bernardo) will participate in a Q&A at the WEST SIDE STORY screening at the NoHo on Thursday, May 11.
by Lamb L.
The TOMORROW EVER AFTER director and cast — Ela Thier, Nabil Viñas, Memo, and Matthew Murumba — will attend and participate in Q&A’s after the 7:30 PM screenings at the Music Hall on Wednesday and Thursday, May 10 and 11.
by Lamb L.
Laemmle Theatres and Anniversary Classics Abroad present a 55th anniversary screening of Pietro Germi’s Divorce Italian Style on Wednesday, May 17 at 7:00PM at the Royal, Town Center, and Playhouse 7. Click here for tickets.
The acclaimed satiric comedy and Oscar winner (Best Original Screenplay) stars Marcello Mastroianni as an impoverished, bored Sicilian aristocrat who hatches an elaborate scheme to murder his wife after inveigling her into an adulterous affair.
According to Italian custom, he would be justified in killing her, by defending his “honor,” (divorce being forbidden in Italy). Conveniently he would be then free to marry his young, beautiful cousin, who seems to return his affections, right up to the film’s final, wicked shot.
Director Germi, who co-wrote the slyly clever script with Ennio De Concini and Alfredo Gianetti, had a background in neorealist Italian dramas, and that would serve him well in his sendup of the Catholic country’s cultural habits and social mores.
Mastroianni’s voiceover narration offers wry commentary on those traditions, effectively skewered by Germi. Bosley Crowther in the New York Times called it “a dandy, satiric farce” and Time lauded Germi for “something wildly, wickedly, wonderfully funny. He has applied a cunning hotfoot to the world’s biggest boot.”
And director Martin Scorsese, who is of Sicilian ancestry, said, “Every detail in Divorce Italian Style is so truthful and right that all Germi had to do was to heighten everything a bit to make it funny.”
The film was a box office smash, breaking out of the art houses into general release, and garnered three Academy Award nominations: Best Director (Germi), Best Actor (Mastroianni) and Best Original Screenplay. It was the first time in Academy history that a foreign-language film was recognized in those top three categories, and the first-ever Oscar awarded to a foreign-language feature for writing. The film also helped elevate Mastroianni to international stardom, cementing his reputation as one of the era’s finest actors.
This screening is the latest installment of our Anniversary Classics Abroad series, presented the third Wednesday of each month. Our subsequent attraction will be Ingmar Bergman’s Smiles of a Summer Night on June 21.