WALKING OUT lead actor Matt Bomer will participate in a Q&A at the NoHo following the 7:10 PM screening on Friday, October 13. Director Andrew Smith and producer Brunson Green will participate in a Q & A following the 7:10 PM screening on Saturday, October 14.
BOBBI JENE, “A Bold Dance Doc that Pulses with Erotic Energy and Artistic Spirit,” Opens October 6 at the Royal.
Next week we’ll open the stellar documentary Bobbi Jene, winner of multiple awards at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival: Best Documentary Feature, Best Cinematography in a Documentary Feature, and Best Editing in a Documentary Feature. With intimate access, Danish filmmaker Elvira Lind followed the brilliant American dancer Bobbi Jene at a critical juncture in her life and career: after a decade of stardom in Israel, she decided to leave behind her prominent position at the world-famous Batsheva Dance Company, as well as the love of her life, to return to the U.S. to create her own boundary breaking art. Tracking the personal and professional challenges that await her, Ms. Lind’s film lovingly documents the dilemmas and inevitable consequences of ambition. Bobbi Jene delves into what it takes for a woman to gain her own independence in the extremely competitive world of dance and to find self-fulfillment in the process.
Critics’ praise for the film has been effusive:
“A treatise on art, ambition, long-distance relationships and the struggles to find one’s own voice, the film unfolds with uncommon grace.” (Tim Grierson, SCREEN INTERNATIONAL)
“While artistry and those who create lie at the heart of the film and the moments where the camera bares witness to beautifully choreographed creations, it is the tale of Bobbi herself and her brave transition from student to teacher that is the most profound.” (Ally Johnson, THE PLAYLIST)
“Watching Bobbi Jene, one of the year’s best films, could prove to be a profoundly cathartic experience for audiences.” (Matt Fagerholm, ROGEREBERT.COM)
“A bold dance doc that pulses with erotic energy and artistic spirit, it’s so erotic at times it’s more like a movie.” (Patrick Mullen, POV Magazine)
The filmmaker has said her hope was to present a portrait of the artist as a young woman: “There are many films made about established artists, which portray their early career as a time comprised of fun, explorative, defining moments. Perhaps all their endeavors are purely artistic. Perhaps they work from home on webcam to make ends meet whilst they follow their dreams. But this period might seem more romantic in retrospect than when they were in it, not knowing if they would ever make it, and if the consequences of committing to this dream would be worth it.
“With the film Bobbi Jene, I wanted to explore that specific time in an artist’s life and tell a story that captured the fragility and determination. In your thirties, you may have finally found your voice and feel ready to confidently forge a creative path, but for many women, it is also the moment where a powerful, primal urge suddenly screams that it is time to reproduce.
“When I met Bobbi Jene, a woman confronted with this dilemma, I embraced the opportunity to tell the story of an uncompromising female artist who was not afraid to push boundaries. She was never scared to be vulnerable, while simultaneously maintaining strength and independence. I had been longing to see films about someone
like her.

“Bobbi consistently challenged the concept of success. Our current society seems obsessed by the question – when have we finally “made it”? – Performing in front of the largest audience? Making the biggest pay check? For Bobbi neither qualify as the definition of success: in the film she leaves behind a safe dancing career, with endless
applause, to follow her own expression, standing exposed and alone on a small stage, creating something that defines her as a human. To me that becomes the bravest thing that anyone can do despite the consequences. I think people today are generally too focused on making it big and loud rather than making it honest.”
For her part, Ms. Jene offers this: “The film is a dance. A dance between Elvira the director, Adam the editor, and myself. It is a dance of love, the process, the struggle, and the pleasure in those efforts, it’s not at all like a porn film that you see on nu-bay.com but it does push the boundaries a bit.
“With my art, I aim to expose. To push my body and heart to places where no technique or training will be able to hide the real truth. I believe Elvira is trying do the same. We would meet there. We would push each other to those places. I told Elvira in the beginning…’Lets go all in; we will only be here once.'”
My body is a container. A time capsule. It holds all of my love, hope, fatigue, sadness, pleasure, scars, and falls. I feel that this film is like a body. It contains, and how it contains and holds becomes a dance.
“We can only be as strong as we can be weak.”
THIRST STREET Lead Actress Lindsay Burdge in Person at the NoHo Opening Night.
THIRST STREET lead actress Lindsay Burdge will participate in a Q&A after the 7:50 PM screening at the NoHo on Friday, September 29. Brett Gelman will moderate.

SPETTACOLO Filmmaker Q&A’s this Weekend at the Playhouse.
SPETTACOLO filmmakers Chris Shellen and Jeff Malmberg will participate in a Q&A after the 11 AM screening at the Playhouse on Saturday, October 7.
Be Afraid…of Subtitles: A Scary Foreign Film Every Throwback Thursday in October at the NoHo 7
At Laemmle we say, “Not Afraid of Subtitles.” But this October, subtitles get downright horrifying! Join us along with Eat|See|Hear at the NoHo 7 for a full month of scary foreign films just in time for Halloween. We’ll provide the subtitles, you’ll provide the screams.
Our “Scary Subtitles” Throwback Thursday series begins on Thursday, October 5th with Nacho Vigalondo’s TIMECRIMES! Doors open at 7pm, trivia starts at 7:30, and movies begin at 7:40pm. Check out the full schedule below!
October 5: Timecrimes [Los Cronocrimenes]
Lauded short film director Vigalondo makes his feature debut with this tense, unstoppable vision of science and natural law gone awry. A man who accidentally travels back into the past and meets himself. A naked girl in the middle of the forest. A mysterious stranger with his face wrapped in a pink bandage. A disquieting mansion on the top of a hill. All of them pieces of an unpredictable jigsaw puzzle where terror, drama and suspense will lead to an unthinkable crime. Who’s the murderer? Who’s the victim? TIMECRIMES takes a bold premise and brings the rarely-tread time travel framework to pulse-pounding, brilliant new heights. In Spanish with English subtitles. TICKETS.
October 12: The Host [Gwoemul]
THE HOST was the talk of the 2006 Cannes International Film Festival. The film from critically acclaimed visionary director Bong Joon-ho had already garnered a substantial amount of international buzz— in 2006 it became the highest grossing Korean film of all time (over $90 million). Utilizing state-of-the-art special effects, courtesy of a creative partnership between Weta Workshop (King Kong, The Lord of the Rings) and The Orphanage (Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Sin City), THE HOST is both a creature-feature thrill ride and a poignant human drama. In Korean with English subtitles. TICKETS.
October 19: Trollhunter [Trolljegeren]
Shot in a vérité style, TROLLHUNTER is the story of a group of Norwegian film students that sets out to capture real-life trolls on camera after learning their existence has been covered up for years by a government conspiracy. A thrilling and wildly entertaining film, TROLLHUNTER delivers truly fantastic images of giant trolls wreaking havoc on the countryside, with darkly funny adherence to the original Norwegian folklore. In Norwegian with English subtitles. TICKETS.
October 26: Let the Right One In [Låt den Rätte Komma In]
A fragile, anxious boy, 12-year-old Oskar is regularly bullied by his stronger classmates but never strikes back. The lonely boy’s wish for a friend seems to come true when he meets Eli, also 12, who moves in next door to him with her father. A pale, serious young girl, she only comes out at night and doesn’t seem affected by the freezing temperatures. Coinciding with Eli’s arrival is a series of inexplicable disappearances and murders … It doesn’t take long before Oscar figures out that Eli is a vampire. But by now a subtle romance has blossomed between Oskar and Eli, and she gives him the strength to fight back against his aggressors. Frozen forever in a twelve-year-old’s body, with all the burgeoning feelings and confused emotions of a young adolescent, Eli knows that she can only continue to live if she keeps on moving. But when Oskar faces his darkest hour, Eli returns to defend him the only way she can. In Swedish with English subtitles. TICKETS.
Details about November #TBT screenings are coming soon. Remember to check www.laemmle.com/tbt for updates!
TWO TRAINS RUNNIN’ Filmmakers in Person at the Monica Film Center for an Opening Night Q&A.
TWO TRAINS RUNNIN’ writer Benjamin Hedin & producers John Beug and Dava Whisenant will participate in a Q&A after the 7:20 PM screening at the Monica Film Center on Friday, September 29.
SUPER DARK TIMES Filmmaker Q&A Saturday at the NoHo.
SUPER DARK TIMES filmmaker Kevin Phillips will participate in a Q&A after the 5:20 PM screening at the NoHo on Saturday, September 30.
IN SEARCH OF FELLINI Q&A Today at the Monica Film Center.
IN SEARCH OF FELLINI director Taron Lexton will be joined by screenwriters Nancy Cartwright and Peter Kjenaas, and actress Mary Lynn Rajskub for a Q&A at the Monica Film Center after the 4:40 PM screening today, September 24 for a Q&A.
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