I AM ELEVEN filmmaker Genevieve Bailey will participate in Q&A’s at the Royal after the 7:50 PM screenings Friday-Sunday, September 19-21 and after the 1 PM screenings on Saturday and Sunday. If the Playhouse 7 is your theater, Ms. Bailey will be there for Q&A’s after the 4:20 PM screenings on Saturday and Sunday.
“Charming,” “Stunning” Doc I AM ELEVEN Opens to Strong Reviews in New York; Starts at Laemmle September 19
The documentary we’re opening next week at the Royal and Playhouse, I AM ELEVEN, is getting some very strong advance notice in New York. Australian filmmaker Genevieve Bailey traveled the world for six years talking with 11-year-olds to compose this insightful, funny and moving portrait of childhood. I AM ELEVEN explores the lives and thoughts of children from all around the world. It weaves together deeply personal and at times hilarious portraits of what it means to stand on the cusp between childhood and adolescence, that fleeting moment when childish naiveté has faded, yet teenaged self-consciousness has not yet taken hold. In the New York Daily News, film critic Graham Fuller called the film “stunning” and “an echo of Michael Apted’s 7-Up series.” In the New York Times, writer Neil Genzlinger began his review with “Sometimes the simplest of ideas can prove surprisingly engaging, and not so simple after all. A case in point is “I Am Eleven,” a charming documentary by Genevieve Bailey built of interviews with 11-year-olds in 15 countries.” Plus here’s a good feature article/interview with the filmmaker from today.com, in which Bailey describes how the challenges of making a first film were lessened by working with children: “’It stuck with me,’ she said. ‘I had no grants, no rich family members to pay for it. I saved my money to risk making this film. It was the kids’ optimism and belief in all things possible that rubbed off on me.’”
A PICTURE OF YOU Filmmaker Q&A’s this Weekend at the Playhouse
A PICTURE OF YOU filmmaker J.P. Chan will participate in Q&A’s after the 7:20 PM screenings Friday and Saturday, September 12 and 13, and after the 1:20 PM screenings on Saturday and Sunday, September 13 and 14.
Laemmle’s Culture Vulture Mondays… and Tuesdays…Starts Monday!
A reminder that Laemmle’s Culture Vulture Mondays starts this Monday! We pick the best from the world of ballet, opera, stage, and fine art to feature on the big screen every Monday* at 7:30PM at every Laemmle location! Can’t make it Monday at 7:30PM? No problem! Catch discounted encore presentations Tuesdays at 1PM.
Future presentations include LA TRAVIATA from the Opera National de Paris, the ballet LA BAYADERE from Russia’s Mariinsky Theatre, and a guided tour through the works of MATISSE from London’s Tate Modern museum.
Visit our oft-updated Culture Vulture page (http://laemmle.com/CultureVulture) for the latest information on upcoming selections.
Laemmle’s Culture Vulture Mondays kicks off September 22 with the Globe’s stage production of TWELFTH NIGHT. The all-male Original Practices production, exploring clothing, music, dance and settings possible in the Globe around 1601, stars award-winning Mark Rylance and Stephen Fry. Purchase your tickets now!
Filled with a cast of unforgettable characters, TWELFTH NIGHT is a moving comedy of loss and misplaced love and includes some of the most exquisite songs Shakespeare ever wrote.
General admission tickets for all Monday screenings are $15. Tickets for seniors 62 and over and students with valid ID are $12. General admission tickets for Tuesday encore presentations are $11. Senior and student tickets are $8. Premiere card holders receive an additional $2 off each ticket!
*Okay, almost every Monday. The program may be precluded for certain Holidays and special events. Visit http://laemmle.com/CultureVulture for a detailed schedule.
Deux Nouveaux Films this Weekend: Breillat & Huppert’s ABUSE OF WEAKNESS + Garrel & Garrel’s JEALOUSY
Attention, Francophiles and French expats: this weekend we are bringing two new films to our screens just for you: ABUSE OF WEAKNESS [Abus de faiblesse] Catherine Breillat’s autobiographical film about her experience with a notorious swindler — the intense Isabelle Huppert stars — and Philippe Garrel’s JEALOUSY [La jalousie], which stars his son Louis as part of a group of young people aging out of their bohemianism, some more smoothly than others. in Time Out New York Keith Uhlich wrote that JEALOUSY “cuts straight to the bone” and in the Village Voice Alan Scherstuhl called the film “vital and vigorous.” About ABUSE Peter Sobczynski of RogerEbert.com posted “this examination of power, greed, emotional manipulation and simple need is gripping and powerful to behold.” In Film Comment, Kristin Jones wrote “it’s hard to imagine an actress other than Huppert so artfully layering frailty and toughness, self-delusion and self-awareness, and her complex portrayal is an irresistible foil to Kool Shen’s [the swindler] blank expressions and wounded swagger.” See one or see both and bon film!
L.A. Times’ Kenneth Turan on Laemmle ZULU Screenings
In the coming days we will be screening Rialto Pictures’ big, gorgeous 50th anniversary restoration of ZULU at our Claremont, Pasadena, Encino and West L.A. venues. Today the L.A. Times’ chief film critic Kenneth Turan posted this review:
Looking as fresh and shiny as the bright red uniforms of the British soldiers who are its protagonists, the 50th-anniversary digital restoration of the venerable “Zulu” takes us back in time twice over.
In the most obvious sense, this British film goes back to 1879 and South Africa’s Battle of Rorke’s Drift, in which some 400 of Queen Victoria’s finest held off 10 times their number in attacking Zulu warriors.
Playing a limited schedule at several Laemmle theaters, this old-school effort also takes us back to the filmmaking styles and mores of 1964, when epics extolling the glory of empire and the romance of heroic combat in exotic climes were being made and films could boast of being shot in the wide-screen process called Super Technirama 70.
It would be a mistake to pretend that parts of this childhood guilty pleasure, more popular on original release in Britain than in the U.S., don’t creak. Some of the characters and situations are thumping clichés, and the film’s half-naked native women are perhaps due to financier Joseph E. Levine’s commercial instincts.
But as directed by Cy Endfield, a casualty of the Hollywood blacklist who made a career in Britain, “Zulu” does have virtues as well, including strong acting from star and co-producer Stanley Baker playing Lt. John Chard, a can-do engineer who takes over the defense of the Rorke’s Drift missionary station in Natal.
And of course there is the young and impossibly handsome Michael Caine in his first major role: the credits read “introducing Michael Caine,” although he’d been acting for more than a decade.
Adding to the joke, this dyed-in-the-wool Cockney plays a posh British lieutenant named Gonville Bromhead whom everyone called “old boy.”
“Zulu” starts with the father-and-daughter missionary team of Otto and Margareta Witt, played by Jack Hawkins and Ulla Jacobsson (a long way from Ingmar Bergman’s “Smiles of a Summer Night”), finding out that the Zulus have wiped out a sizable British force at the Battle of Isandlwana.
The Witts head back to their station at Rorke’s Drift, where Chard and Bromhead take on what seems to be a hopeless task of defending the place against an enormous multitude of Zulus because that’s what British officers are supposed to do.
Once the impressive Zulu impi or fighting force appears on the scene and the battle begins in earnest, the film’s use of Stephen Dade’s epic cinematography and an early score by John Barry (presented in full stereophonic sound for the first time in 50 years) adds to the impressive nature of the battle stagings. This may not be exact history, but it certainly makes an impression.
Playing at: Laemmle’s Royal in West Los Angeles, Playhouse 7 in Pasadena, Town Center 5 in Encino and Claremont 5 in Claremont at the following times: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday; 1 p.m. Thursday; 11 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.
WEAVING THE PAST: JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY Filmmakers Interviewed on KCAL9
We open the fascinating bio-doc WEAVING THE PAST: JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY this Friday at the Playhouse 7. It’s an uplifting story about how one person found profound meaning by learning about his long-dead grandfather’s extraordinary life. This week the filmmakers were interviewed on KCAL9. Watch it here.
Playhouse Q&A’s with COLDWATER director Vincent Grashaw
COLDWATER director Vincent Grashaw will participate in Q&A’s after the 7 PM screenings at the Playhouse on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, August 15 -17, as well as the 10 PM screening on Saturday the 16th.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CyKI3N5rgjM
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