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Throwback Thursday: BATTLE ROYALE at 7:30pm on 11/19 in NoHo. Early bird tickets are only $5!

November 17, 2015 by Lamb L.

This week’s Throwback Thursday selection is BATTLE ROYALE! An underground hit that anticipated The Hunger Games novels by eight years, veteran director Fukasaku’s epically violent, still-controversial and deeply influential genre masterpiece takes place in a dystopian alternate universe. In the near future, the economy has collapsed, unemployment has soared and juvenile crime has exploded. Fearful of its nation’s youth, the Japanese government passes the BR Law: Each year, a 9th grade class is sent to a remote island where they will be locked into exploding neck collars, given a random weapon, and forced to hunt and kill each other until there is only one survivor left. Battle Royale follows one such class, with an ice-cold performance from Takeski Kitano as the group’s teacher.

Hat tip to memerial.net.

Purchase tickets before Thursday and pay only $5! Regular price is $11.

BATTLE ROYALE screens at 7:30PM on 11/19 at the Laemmle NoHo 7 and is part of our THROWBACK THURSDAY series in partnership with Eat|See|Hear. For upcoming screenings, visit: www.laemmle.com/tbt.

Upcoming #TBT screenings include ROCKY IV, GREMLINS, SPACEBALLS and more. Click here for the schedule.

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Filed Under: NoHo 7, Throwback Thursdays

Writer-director Deniz Gamze Ergüven on MUSTANG, her fierce, feminist debut feature.

November 11, 2015 by Lamb L.

On November 20 at the Royal and Christmas Day at the Playhouse and Town Center we’ll be opening one of the best films we’ve screened all year, the Turkish/French production MUSTANG. It begins in a village in Northern Turkey in early summer. Five free-spirited teenaged sisters splash about on the beach with their male classmates. Though their games are innocent fun, a neighbor passes by and reports to the girls’ family what she considers illicit behavior. The family overreacts, removing all “instruments of corruption,” like cell phones and computers, essentially imprisoning the girls, subjecting them to endless lessons in housework in preparation for them to become brides. As the eldest sisters are married off, the younger ones bond together to avoid the same fate. Their fierce love for each other emboldens them to rebel and chase a future where they can determine their own lives in the filmmaker’s feature debut, a powerful portrait of female empowerment.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_JXyi1EGJk

The filmmaker is Deniz Gamze Ergüven. Born in Ankara in 1978, she had a very cosmopolitan upbringing, between France, Turkey and the United States. A compulsive cinephile, she studied directing at La Fémis in Paris, after a BA in literature and an MA in African History at Johannesburg. Her graduation film, Bir Damla Su (Unegoutted’eau), screened at the Cannes Festival Cinéfondation and won a Leopards of Tomorrow award at the Locarno Festival. Opening with a shot of a veiled woman blowing a bubble with chewing gum, the 19-minute short tells the story of a young Turkish woman (played by Deniz herself) rebelling against the patriarchal attitudes and authoritarianism of the men in her community.

After graduating from La Fémis, Denis Gamze Ergüven developed a debut feature set in South Los Angeles, during the 1992 riots. Titled Kings, the project was selected by Emergence, the Cinéfondation Workshop and Sundance Screenwriters Lab. Ms. Ergüven set it aside in favor of MUSTANG, co-written with Alice Winocour in the summer of 2012.

The story of an emancipation, MUSTANG is a powerful, feminist take on contemporary Turkey. Ms. Ergüven shot it around Inebolu in northern Turkey, 600 kilometers from Istanbul.

INTERVIEW WITH DIRECTOR DENIZ GAMZE ERGÜVEN

You were born in Ankara but have lived mostly in France. Why shoot your debut feature in Turkey?

Most of my family still lives in Turkey and I spent my whole life going back and forth. I feel particularly concerned by stories set in Turkey because the region is really fizzing, everything is changing. Recently, the country has swung toward a more conservative position but you can still feel the force and energy. There is a sense of being at the heart of something, that everything could go into a spin at any time, that it could go in any direction. It’s also an unbelievable reservoir of fiction.

MUSTANG_director_headshot
Deniz Gamze Ergüven

 

Just like your graduation short, MUSTANG is the story of an emancipation.  What were the origins of the project?

I wanted to talk about what it’s like to be a girl and a woman in modern-day Turkey, where the condition of women is more than ever a major public issue. Clearly, the fact that I had a different perspective, because I frequently left Turkey for France, played an important role. Every time I go back, I feel a form of constriction that surprises me. Everything that has anything to do with femininity is constantly reduced to sexuality. It’s as if everything a woman or even a young girl does is sexually loaded. For example, there are stories of school principals who ban boys and girls using the same stairs to get to class. They build separate staircases. It lends a huge erotic charge to the most banal things; climbing the stairs becomes a really big deal. It demonstrates the absurdity of that kind of conservatism: everything is sexual. In the end, they talk about sex the whole time. And a conception of society emerges that reduces women to baby-making machines who are only good for housework. Turkey was one of the first countries to give women the right to vote, in the 1930s, and now we have to defend basic rights, such as abortion.  It’s sad.

Why the English-sounding title, MUSTANG?

A mustang is a wild horse that perfectly symbolizes my five spirited and untamable heroines. Visually, even, their hair is like a mane and, in the village, they’re like a herd of mustangs coming through. And the story moves fast, galloping forward, and that energy is at the heart of the picture, just like the mustang that gave it its name.

How much of you personally is in the movie?

In the opening scenes, the minor scandal that the girls provoke by climbing onto the boys’ shoulders before being violently reprimanded really happened to me when I was a teen. Except that my reaction back then was absolutely not to answer back. I hung my head in shame. It was years before I was able even to protest. I wanted my characters to be heroines. And their courage had to pay off. They had to win in the end, in the most exhilarating way possible. I see the five girls as a kind of five-headed monster that loses a part of itself every time one of the girls is absent from the story, but the last-remaining piece succeeds. It’s because her elder sisters were ensnared that Lale, the youngest, rejects their destiny. She is a condensed version of everything I dream of being.

You seem to be saying that the only way out is education.

The girls’ removal from school and the reaction it provokes in them is crucial to the story, but I don’t adopt a militant approach. A film is not a political speech. Romain Gary used to say that he didn’t go on protests because he had a whole shelf of books that marched for him. There’s an element of that. The film expresses things much more sensitively and powerfully than I ever could. I see it as a fairy tale with mythological motifs, such as the Minotaur, the labyrinth, the Lernaean Hydra—the girl’s five-headed body—and a ball that is signified here by the soccer match that the girls long to attend.

A family with five teenage girls who arouse desires in local boys and must be protected for their own good. It brings to mind Sofia Coppola’s The Virgin Suicides. What were your cinematic references in making the movie?

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Featured Post, Playhouse 7, Royal, Town Center 5

Behold! Our new Culture Vulture trailer.

November 11, 2015 by Lamb L.

Have you partaken in one of our weekly screenings of opera, ballet, theater and fine art exhibitions or would you like to know more? For a taste, check out this new trailer we’ll be running on all Laemmle screens starting Friday:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWn3qxF2XFM

You can enjoy one of these screenings every Monday evening at 7:30 and every Tuesday afternoon in far-flung corners of Los Angeles County: from the Ahrya Fine Arts in Beverly Hills, the Playhouse 7 in Pasadena, the Town Center 5 in Encino, to the Claremont 5 in, uh, Claremont and early next year we’ll likely add the long-awaited, hotly-anticipated Monica Film Center to that list. We’ll announce the early 2016 program soon but for now here’s where you can always find our Culture Vulture slate and what we’ve got coming up as 2015 draws to a close: www.laemmle.com/culturevulture. (Hot tip: those December 21 and 22 screenings of HAMLET star one of the most exciting actors of his generation, Mr. Benedict Cumberbatch. Get your tickets while they last.)

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Filed Under: Ahrya Fine Arts, Claremont 5, Culture Vulture, News, Opera, Playhouse 7, Town Center 5

Throwback Thursday: FIGHT CLUB at 7:30pm on 11/12 in NoHo. Early bird tickets are only $5!

November 10, 2015 by Lamb L.

This week’s Throwback Thursday selection is David Fincher’s FIGHT CLUB starring Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, Helena Bonham Carter, and Meatloaf!

*Purchase tickets before Thursday and pay only $5! Regular price is $11.

Follow @laemmle on Twitter to participate in our FIGHT CLUB etiquette poll!

#FightClub with @eatseehear this #TBT @noho7! #POLL "Now a question of etiquette: As I pass, do I give you the…"

— Laemmle Theatres (@laemmle) November 10, 2015

fightclub

FIGHT CLUB screens at 7:30PM on 11/12 at the Laemmle NoHo 7 and is part of our THROWBACK THURSDAY series in partnership with Eat|See|Hear. For upcoming screenings, visit: www.laemmle.com/tbt.

Upcoming #TBT screenings include BATTLE ROYALE, ROCKY IV, GREMLINS, and more. Click here for the schedule.

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Filed Under: News, NoHo 7, Throwback Thursdays

INDIEWIRE: “Cinelicious Pics is bringing two rarely seen Agnès Varda gems to a new generation of audiences.” JANE B. PAR AGNES V. and KUNG-FU MASTER! open at the Royal on November 13th.

November 4, 2015 by Lamb L.

By Indiewire’s Ryan Lattanzio, April 13, 2015

L..A cinephiles had the pleasures of seeing two Agnès Varda discoveries from the middle of her career, and of seeing the legendary French filmmaker speak, at an American Cinematheque retrospective this past weekend.

Cinelicious Pics has just acquired the double bill “Jane B. by Agnès V.” and “Kung-Fu Master,” both starring Euro icon Jane Birkin, for U.S. theatrical, VOD and Home Video distribution. Supervised by Varda, the new restorations made their West Coast debut over the weekend, and looked gorgeous in digital 2K.

https://vimeo.com/135902729

Less a biopic than a quasi-fiction, poetic-realist documentary, “Jane B. By Agnes V.” looks at the actress’ many faces. Really, it’s Varda’s “Orlando,” a time-hopping stitching together of Birkin’s best and least-favorite roles, and the parts she dreams of playing (including Joan of Arc). The film features Birkin’s longtime collaborator and erstwhile lover Serge Gainsbourg, New Wave actor Jean-Pierre Léaud (a.k.a. Antoine Doinel), Birkin’s daughter Charlotte Gainsbourg (who went on to star in the films of Lars von Trier) and Varda’s son Mathieu Demy, whom she had with her filmmaker-husband Jacques Demy.

A young Mathieu Demy and 14-year-old Charlotte Gainsbourg also appear in Varda’s challenging romance “Kung Fu Master,” which stretches the “May-December” definition to its extremes. Aside from a video game that Demy’s early-teens Julien obsessively plays, the film has nothing to do with kung fu. Instead, the 40-year-old Birkin plays the single mother of two who falls in love with him. Their relationship is treated very matter-of-factly by Varda, who imbues it with a tenderness that is well-played, and earnestly acted, by Demy and Birkin.

https://vimeo.com/135903347?from=outro-embed

At the Aero Theatre on Saturday, Varda said she wrote the film in “two minutes” after Birkin pitched the story to her during the making of “Jane B.” They took a break on that production and shot “Kung-Fu” quickly in the summer. Varda, who most famously directed “Cleo From 5 to 7” and “The Gleaners and I,” didn’t feel weird about directing her young son as the object of a much older woman’s affections. “From the minute we started to film, he was Julien.”

According to Varda, “Kung-Fu Master” hasn’t played much on French TV due to its controversial subject matter. The film also deals head-on with the rise of AIDS in the ’80s, interjecting its whimsical broken-fairytale romance with PSAs about sexual awareness and the disease’s ever-growing reach.

When asked if “Jane B.” (never released in the U.S.) and “Kung-Fu” (released briefly in the 80s) belong together as a double bill, Varda said, “I don’t think so. They’re two separate films.” She may be right, but it’s a treat we get to see them at all, and newly resurrected from their original 35mm negatives.

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Royal

arts•meme: SPARTACUS Meets Its Maker, Dalton Trumbo

November 4, 2015 by Lamb L.

spartacus3The terrific fine arts blog arts•meme, published by longtime dance critic Debra Levine, gave our Anniversary Classics screening of SPARTACUS a nice plug last week. We’re showing it this Friday night November 6th at 7:30 in the Royal’s big auditorium on the same day that Trumbo opens in theaters. (We open it a bit later.) The new film celebrates the life of Dalton Trumbo, and with this 55th anniversary screening of their Oscar-winning film we pay our own tribute to the blacklisted screenwriter, as well as actor-producer Kirk Douglas and director Stanley Kubrick. The picture, adapted from Howard Fast’s novel about a slave revolt in ancient Rome, is generally regarded as “the best-paced and most slyly entertaining of all the decadent-ancient-Rome spectacular films,” as critic Pauline Kael wrote. Douglas bravely decided to break the blacklist by allowing Trumbo to use his own name on the screenplay for the first time in more than a decade.

dalton-trumboThe all-star cast includes Laurence Olivier, Charles Laughton, Jean Simmons, Tony Curtis, Woody Strode, and Peter Ustinov, who won the Academy Award for best supporting actor for his droll performance as a sycophantic slave dealer. (The film also won Oscars for cinematography, art direction, and costume design.) See this grand, thrilling sand-and-sandals epic—a precursor of Ridley Scott’s Oscar-winning Gladiator—on the big screen, in a brand new restoration.

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Filed Under: Anniversary Classics, Royal

Throwback Thursday: THE PINK PANTHER at 7:30pm on 11/5 in NoHo. Early bird tickets are only $5!

November 4, 2015 by Lamb L.

Sure, everyone will go see Daniel Craig as a white-hot man of action in SPECTRE, but you’re different. You’re going to revisit one of the great schlemiels of cinema, a white-hot man of action to himself alone, Peter Sellers’ timeless fool, Inspector Jacques Clouseau in THE PINK PANTHER (1963).

*Purchase tickets before Thursday and pay only $5! Regular price is $11.

Bring your appetite because Woody’s Grill Truck is will be on hand with sliders, mac and cheese, and my personal favorite, chicken crack nachos!

THE PINK PANTHER screens at 7:30PM on 11/5 at the Laemmle NoHo 7 and is part of our THROWBACK THURSDAY series in partnership with Eat|See|Hear. For upcoming screenings, visit: www.laemmle.com/tbt.

Click here to purchase tickets.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwA_ar7_qUw

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Filed Under: News, NoHo 7, Throwback Thursdays

Udo Bayer, 1944-2015

October 28, 2015 by Lamb L.

Print
Legendary founder of Universal Studios, “Uncle” Carl Laemmle

Laemmle Theatres was founded in 1938 by Max and Karl Laemmle, first cousins of iconic Universal Studios founder Carl Laemmle. Like everyone else, however, they called and considered him  “Uncle Carl.”  We were reminded of our origins this week after receiving an obituary in the mail.  Written by Roland Ray and published in the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung it was written upon the passing of UDO BAYER, the former deputy head of the Carl-Laemmle-Gymnasium, a high school in Laupheim, Germany.  Having been moved by Bayer’s story, we thought we’d share it with you.  Reprinted below.

 

9/28/15

Obituary: The CLG owes its name to Udo Bayer

Mourning Udo Bayer: The former deputy head of the Carl-Laemmle High School, an internationally recognized Laemmle specialist, died last Friday after a long illness. He was 71 years old.

In Hollywood a legend, a household name to film fans worldwide, but largely forgotten and misunderstood at home: after 1945, this was the fate of Laupheim-born cinema pioneer Carl Laemmle. In his native city, many covered up much that had to do with the Jewish community, which had been forcibly extinguished during the “Third Reich,” with the veil of silence. It wasn’t the only such case.

Udo Bayer’s endeavor was to keep the memory alive and to uphold Laupheim’s Jewish heritage. When the teacher’s son from Hechingen came to Laupheim in 1969, the young high school graduated its first class. A name wasn’t given to the school until 1994. The fact that the name Carl Laemmle was chosen is to be attributed to Udo Bayer. The friendship with Laemmle’s grandniece Ruth Regis, who visited Laupheim in 1988, had given him access to the life and work of the Universal founder. “I pushed his name through,” he later said. His ultimately successful recommendation to the city council was founded on three pillars: that Laemmle attended the local grammar school; that he generously supported Laupheim after the First World War; and that, after Hitler came to power, through Laemmle’s guarantees more than 300 German Jews were allowed to enter the United States, and he thus saved them from the deadly grip of the Nazis.

Bayer, who held a doctorate in semiotics (a specialty area of linguistics) and who was the deputy headmaster at CLG from 1989 until his retirement in 2008, where he taught history, social studies, German, philosophy, ethics and literature, published his research on several Jewish citizens of Laupheim. The focus of his research, however, was Carl Laemmle. For decades he meticulously put mosaic pieces together, combed archives, interviewed eyewitnesses, sparing no travel. He established ties of friendship to members of the Laemmle family. They, and especially Laemmle’s niece Carla, opened to him their private coffers and many doors. He also found information in the archives of Universal Studios, to which certainly not everyone is allowed admission, and on the Internet.

Bayer published the sum of his findings in the biography Carl Laemmle and Universal: A Transatlantic Biography in 2013, which he had assembled with scientific thoroughness from the sources — a standard work that embedded Laemmle’s life in the political and economic events of the time on both sides of the Atlantic. In an SZ interview the author, who also had a profound knowledge of film history, confessed: “This biography is the result of affection.” He had a high opinion of Laemmle’s human qualities.

A few months ago, as an addition to the Laemmle biography, Bayer published a wonderful coffee table book which tells Laemmle’s life in 160 annotated photos and documents. He could still complete a manuscript with short portraits of Jewish Laupheimers, and the Society for History and Remembrance, whose founding member he was, will probably take care of its publication.

Udo Bayer played a major role in establishing a Museum of the History of Christians and Jews. He contributed a wealth of documents, objects and photos — without him the Laemmle tract in its present form wouldn’t exist. He aso served as an adviser to the Museum and as an expert guide through the exhibition. Instead of vainly guarding his knowledge, as others do, he — all educator — had others participate willingly. Whoever visited the man with the dry, sometimes black humor at home in Baustetten, made acquaintance with his passion for painting and his hand-reared parrots.

With Udo Bayer, a part of Laupheim’s culture of remembrance is gone. His example remains.

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Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a special screening of one of the best loved movies of the 20th century, Jerry Zucker’s smash hit supernatural fantasy, 'Ghost.'
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In-Person Q&A with Director Jerry Zucker!

Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a special screening of one of the best loved movies of the 20th century, Jerry Zucker’s smash hit supernatural fantasy, 'Ghost.' When the movie opened in the summer of 1990, it quickly captivated audiences and eventually became the highest grossing movie of the year, earning $505 million on a budget of just $23 million.
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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/echo-valley | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | Kate lives a secluded life—until her troubled daughter shows up, frightened and covered in someone else's blood. As Kate unravels the shocking truth, she learns just how far a mother will go to try to save her child

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/echo-valley

RELEASE DATE: 6/13/2025

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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/drop-dead-city | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | NYC, 1975 - the greatest, grittiest city on Earth is minutes away from bankruptcy when an unlikely alliance of rookies, rivals, fixers and flexers finds common ground - and a way out. Drop Dead City is the first-ever feature documentary devoted to the NYC Fiscal Crisis of 1975, an extraordinary, overlooked episode in urban American history.

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/drop-dead-city

RELEASE DATE: 5/23/2025
Director: Michael Rohatyn, Peter Yost

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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/lost-starlight | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | In 2050 Seoul, astronaut Nan-young’s ultimate goal is to visit Mars. But she fails the final test to onboard the fourth Mars Expedition Project. The musician Jay buries his dreams in a vintage audio equipment shop.

The two fall in love after a chance encounter. As they root for each other and dream of a new future. Nan-young is given another chance to fly to Mars, which is all she ever wanted…

“Don’t forget. Out here in space, there’s someone who’s always rooting for you

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/lost-starlight

RELEASE DATE: 5/30/2025

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