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BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S 55th Anniversary Screening ~ A Tribute to Audrey Hepburn and Henry Mancini

April 13, 2016 by Lamb L.

Laemmle’s Anniversary Classics presents one of the most iconic romances in movie history, BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S (1961), with a 55th anniversary screening as a birthday celebration for its beloved star, Audrey Hepburn, and a tribute to her unique collaboration with the legendary composer Henry Mancini. Besides the image of Hepburn in that famous black Givenchy dress, the most enduring legacy of the movie is the song “Moon River,” composed by Mancini for Hepburn, and a “melody of a lifetime.” Henry Mancini’s widow, Ginny Mancini, and daughter, singer Monica Mancini, will participate in a Q&A before the screening, moderated by LAFCA President Stephen Farber. Want to refresh your memory of this iconic film ahead of the Q&A event? You can find BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S on DVD, Blu-Ray, and on a wide range of streaming services that you can access via your streaming box. Streaming services are an excellent way to enjoy classic films in remastered quality and high definition.

BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S was adapted from a popular Truman Capote novella and brought to the screen by director Blake Edwards and writer George Axelrod, with considerable alterations to the story about a flighty call girl from the country aspiring to the high life in New York City. Capote had envisioned Marilyn Monroe in the role, but it was Audrey Hepburn who immortalized Holly Golightly for the screen. Henry Mancini, who had a smash hit with his music for Edwards’ television series, Peter Gunn, provided the Oscar and Grammy-winning soundtrack that accompanied her romantic adventures. TIFFANY’S was a box office hit, and was nominated for five Academy Awards, including Hepburn as best actress and best screenplay. Mancini wrote one of the most popular songs of the twentieth century, “Moon River,” with frequent partner lyricist Johnny Mercer, and the pair won an Oscar (double-winner Mancini also won for his score). Hepburn had inspired Mancini for his most famous melody, and TIFFANY’S was the first of four collaborations for them, with CHARADE, TWO FOR THE ROAD, and WAIT UNTIL DARK to follow in the 60s; they remained lifelong friends.

BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S, also starring George Peppard, Patricia Neal, Mickey Rooney, and Buddy Ebsen, will screen on Wednesday, May 4, 2016 at the Ahyra Fine Arts theater in Beverly Hills. So join us as we celebrate Audrey Hepburn’s birthday and the creative bond she shared with her “huckleberry friend,” Henry Mancini. Tickets are on sale now.

“A completely unbelievable but wholly captivating flight into fancy composed of unequal dollops of comedy, romance, poignancy, funny colloquialisms and Manhattan’s swankiest East Side areas captured in the loveliest of colors.” (A.H. Weiler, New York Times)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THXpUvMrY14&feature=youtu.be

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Filed Under: Ahrya Fine Arts, Anniversary Classics, Q&A's

Just in time for Passover, STREIT’S: MATZO AND THE AMERICAN DREAM Opens at the Music Hall and Town Center on April 20

April 12, 2016 by Lamb L.

In the heart of New York’s rapidly gentrifying Lower East Side stand four tenement buildings that have housed the Streit’s Matzo factory since 1925. An iconic New York institution and a fifth generation family business, the Streit’s factory and the Streit family itself have long held firmly to tradition, churning flour and water into matzos through ovens as old as the factory itself.

Though the factory seems a century removed from the world around it, even Streit’s is not immune to the forces that challenge manufacturing and family businesses everywhere. Streit’s: Matzo and the American Dream is a story of tradition, of resistance and resilience, and a celebration of a family whose commitment to their heritage and to their employees is inspiring proof that the family that bakes together, stays together.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2yhF01g_bg&feature=youtu.be

Awards: Best Documentary – Rockland International Jewish Film Festival 2015

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Music Hall 3, Town Center 5

DOUGH director John Goldschmidt: “The best way to challenge prejudice is through comedy.” Plus a video message to audiences from Pauline Collins, the Oscar-nominated female lead of DOUGH.

April 8, 2016 by Lamb L.

In the comedy DOUGH, which we’ll open April 29 at our West L.A., Pasadena and Encino theaters and May 6 in Claremont, curmudgeonly widower Nat Dayan (Jonathan Pryce) obstinately clings to his way of life and his livelihood as a Kosher bakery shop owner in London’s East End. With a dwindling clientele and the pressures of encroaching big box stores, Nat reluctantly enlists the help of teenager Ayyash, who has a secret side gig selling marijuana to help his struggling immigrant mother make ends meet. When Ayyash accidentally drops his stash into the mixing dough, the challah starts flying off the shelves and an unlikely friendship forms between the old Jewish baker and his young Muslim apprentice. DOUGH is a warmhearted and gently humorous story about overcoming prejudice and finding redemption in unexpected places.

Dough (7)
Pauline Collins, Jerome Holder and Jonathan Pryce. Photo courtesy of Menemsha Films.

Director John Goldschmidt said this about his film: “Some of the most innovative and successful independent films have been comedies with contemporary social themes. I was looking for such a story when I met the screenwriter Jez Freedman. He pitched DOUGH, a story about the unlikely friendship of an old Jewish baker and a young Muslim cannabis dealer. What I liked was the ‘buddy movie’ concept. Two guys as different as can be, divided by race, religion, and age. Both prejudiced about the other, but needing each other to survive. This is a universal story, which will be understood everywhere. Tensions between Muslims and Jews are increasing worldwide and the best way to challenge prejudice is through comedy.

Dough (10)
Pauline Collins and Jonathan Pryce. Photo courtesy of Menemsha Films.

“The story is set in a multi-cultural part of London and is a film of contrasts. From the ethnic High Street shops, to the corporate environment of a big supermarket chain. From middle class suburbia, to a grotty housing estate. From the staid adult community to the vibrant youth culture.
“But it’s the humanity of the film that connects with people everywhere. The characters touch and move the audience and the casting of the leading roles was paramount. Legendary theatre actor Jonathan Pryce as the old Jewish baker became a real father figure to first-time black actor Jerome Holder, who played the Muslim cannabis dealer. And I like to think that everyone, young and old, will leave the cinema with a smile on their face, and the word will spread about their enjoyment of DOUGH.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPAcqo7ZzlU

Bonus: Pauline Collins is DOUGH‘s female lead and she created this greeting to audiences:

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

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Playhouse 7, Royal, Town Center 5

Spanish Director Alex de la Iglesia in Person for Q&A’s after EL CRIMEN PERFECTO and MI GRAN NOCHE

April 5, 2016 by Lamb L.

iglesiaFilmmaker Alex de la Iglesia will participate in Q&A’s after the 7:30 PM screening of A PERFECT CRIME at Ahrya Fine Arts in Beverly Hills on 4/13 and after the 4:30 PM screening of his new release MY BIG NIGHT at the Music Hall 3 in Beverly Hills on 4/16.

MY BIG NIGHT [Mi Gran Noche] is an audaciously inventive ensemble comedy brimming with showbiz satire that received four GOYA nominations. It opens April 15th at the Music Hall 3 in Beverly Hills and the Playhouse 7 in Pasadena. Click here for tickets.

THE PERFECT CRIME [El Crimen Perfecto or Crimen Ferpecto] is De la Iglesia’s 2004 black comedy set in an upscale department store in Madrid. It screens at 7:30PM on April 13th at the Ahrya Fine Arts in Beverly Hills, NoHo 7 in North Hollywood, and Playhouse 7 in Pasadena. Click here for tickets.

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Filed Under: Ahrya Fine Arts, Music Hall 3, News, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Q&A's

AFERIM! Return Engagement at the Fine Arts Starts Friday with Special Screenings at the NoHo, Playhouse, Monica Film Center and Claremont 5 April 11-14

April 5, 2016 by Lamb L.

Eastern Europe, 1835. Two riders cross a barren landscape in the middle of Wallachia. They are the gendarme Costandin and his son. Together they are searching for a gypsy slave who has run away from his nobleman master and is suspected of having an affair with the noble’s wife. While the unflappable Costandin comments on every situation with a cheery aphorism, his son takes a more contemplative view of the world.

Radu Jude’s brilliant third feature AFERIM! has been aptly compared to films as diverse as THE SEARCHERS, THE LAST DETAIL and PULP FICTION (the latter for its rambling, coarse and endlessly entertaining dialogue), but the film is ultimately a moving parable about late-feudal Europe developed from historical documents and songs: its power structures and hierarchies, people’s ideas of themselves and others, interaction with minorities and the resulting conflicts. A Balkan Western in black-and-white that brings the cacophony of the times strikingly to life and explores the thematic arcs that stretch into the present.

Cineuropa interviewed Mr. Jude on the occasion of his film’s inclusion at the Berlin Film Festival:

Cineuropa: These days, filmmakers prefer to shoot their films digitally; what persuaded you to return to film and black and white?


Radu Jude: DoP Marius Panduru and I decided that the film should be shot in black and white out of a wish to highlight the historical re-enactment artifice: we wanted to make the audience understand from the very beginning that what they are seeing is a subjective re-enactment, one carefully played out, but still only a re-enactment. We therefore tested different methods: a digital camera, one colour film and two types of black-and-white film. Comparing them, we concluded that the black-and-white film (namely, Kodak Double-X) was the most expressive and the one best suited for our project.

Information about Gypsy slavery was removed from the historical accounts published during the Romanian communist regime. What difficulties did you encounter in documenting the year 1835 and this particular topic?


It’s not really a subject lacking in documentation. There are several Rroma histories, studies and archives that also depict their slavery. Besides, our main historical consultant, Constanţa Vintilă-Ghiţulescu, helped us immensely by suggesting more titles of interest. I cannot say we faced major hurdles, but the past is obviously lost, and we can access only limited information. Starting from there, all one can do is try to create a sufficiently accurate image of the past.

Naturally, the biggest risk – and we have warned the audience of this risk through the way the film is made – is to forget that we are always involved in a process of interpretation. We interpret everything, starting from the reality around us that we access through our senses and brain, so of course we pass our historical reality through the same process. In this respect, I recommend the video installation created by Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan, Pacta sunt servanda (http://www.arnoldestefan.ro/art-projects/-pacta-sunt-servanda/). The installation shows how the same historical event, the Trianon peace treaty, is presented differently in history books from Hungary and Romania. This goes to show that when we speak of the past, we in fact speak of our perspective of the past. I hope this view is obvious in my film and that the vigilant cinemagoer will take note of it.

The events in the film take place 180 years ago, but many of the characters’ remarks are relevant to the present day. Is your film a satire of the present?


I truly believe what Johan Huizinga said: “We analyse every age for the sake of the promises it contains for the next age.” My film is about the relationship between the past and the present – or, even better rephrased, about the relationship of the present with the past.

The film’s conversations are peppered with sayings and aphorisms taken from the works of a number of Romanian and foreign authors from those times, whom you list in the closing credits. Why pay so much attention to the folkloric culture of the era?


I started by reading works from the 19th century in order to familiarise myself with the language and mentalities of those times (which, I think, are the true theme of the film). At one point, I found in Iordache Golescu’s works some beautiful sayings that were perfectly appropriate for one of the sequences in Aferim!. I used them in the screenplay, which I wrote together with Florin Lăzărescu, and then we found others that we used, gradually “stuffing” the story with quotes from the literature of those times. This was also a declaration of love for the Romanian language and a way to stress the “artificial construct” characteristic of the film.

https://vimeo.com/135831249

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Filed Under: Ahrya Fine Arts, Claremont 5, Films, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Santa Monica

April Fools: See Some of the Biggest Fools to Grace the Big-Screen Every Throwback Thursday in April at the Laemmle NoHo

April 4, 2016 by Lamb L.

Join Laemmle and  Eat|See|Hear for April Fools, a month-long Throwback Thursday (#TBT) celebration of our favorite big-screen dimwits! For tickets and our full #TBT schedule, visit laemmle.com/tbt!

tbt-jerk

April 7: THE JERK

After discovering he’s not really black like the rest of his family, likable dimwit Navin Johnson (Steve Martin) runs off and begins a series misadventures in this comedy that takes him from rags to riches and back again. Bernadette Peters co-stars. Buy Tickets.

tbt-raising

April 14: RAISING ARIZONA

When an ex-con (Nicolas Cage) and an ex-cop (Holly Hunter) decide to help themselves to one of another family’s quintupelets, their lives get more complicated than they anticipated. Combining influences from Tex Avery cartoons to Sam Raimi horror movies to 1940s B-movies, Joel Coen and Ethan Coen followed up the stylish film noir of their debut, Blood Simple (1984), with this frantic screwball comedy. Buy Tickets.

tbt-billandted

April 21: BILL & TED’S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE

With only a few days before their high-school graduation, it looks like air-headed rock star wannabes Bill (Alex Winter) and Ted (Keanu Reeves) are doomed to flunk all their finals. But aid comes from a very unexpected source: Rufus (George Carlin), an Emissary from the Future. Buy Tickets.

tbt-zoo

April 28: ZOOLANDER

Clear the runway for Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller), VH1’s three-time male model of the year. His face falls when hippie-chic Hansel (Owen Wilson) scooters in to steal this year’s award. The evil fashion guru Mugatu (Will Ferrell) seizes the opportunity to turn Derek into a killing machine. It’s a well-designed conspiracy and only with the help of Hansel and a few well-chosen accessories like Matilda (Christine Taylor) can Derek make the world safe for male models everywhere. Buy Tickets.

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Filed Under: NoHo 7, Throwback Thursdays

LOOK AT US NOW, MOTHER! Q&A’s with the Filmmaker in Santa Monica and Encino

April 4, 2016 by Lamb L.

LOOK AT US NOW, MOTHER! is a humorous, moving, intimate and courageous film following the transformation of an abusive mother and tumultuous mother-daughter relationship to that of acceptance and love as we follow the personal story of the filmmaker.Most screenings will feature Q&A’s. The complete schedule:

Monica Film Center:

Friday, April 8, 7:20 pm Dr. Mark Goulston, psychiatrist and author;

Saturday, April 9, 7:20 pm: Shirley Hirschberg, social worker, Beth Chayim Chadishim;

Sunday, April 10, 7:20 pm: Gayle Kirschenbaum, director-producer-subject & Rabbi David Wolpe, spiritual leader, Sinai Temple;

Monday, April 11, 7:20 pm: Shayna Lester, marriage and family therapist;

Tuesday, April 12, 4:30 and 7:20 pm: Gayle Kirschenbaum;

Wednesday, April 13, 7:20 pm: Sylvia Thompson, president, National Alliance for Mental Illness (NAMI) – Westside L.A.;

Thursday, April 14, 7:20 pm: Sylvia Thompson.

Town Center 5:

Saturday, April 9, 5:00 pm: Walter Jacobson, therapist and life coach;

Sunday, April 10, 5:00 pm: Gayle Kirschenbaum & Rosalyn Kahn, author & public speaker;

Sunday, April 10, 7:30 pm: Dr. Judy Rosenberg, founder, Psychological Healing Center;

Monday, April 11, 2:40, 5 and 7:30 pm: Gayle Kirschenbaum;

Tuesday, April 12, 2:40 pm: Gayle Kirschenbaum.

Thursday, April l4, 2:40 pm: Rosalyn Kahn.

https://vimeo.com/119594942

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Filed Under: Filmmaker in Person, Santa Monica, Town Center 5

SCI-FI WEEKEND: Re-visit the Golden Age of Science Fiction with Six Classic Films April 15-17 at the Ahrya Fine Arts

March 25, 2016 by Lamb L.

Laemmle_SciFiWeekend_Poster_v6_1080Re-visit the Golden Age of the Science Fiction Film as Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series presents SCI-FI WEEKEND, a festival of six classic films April 15-17 at the Ahrya Fine Arts in Beverly Hills.

It was dawn of the Atomic Age and the Cold War, as Communist and nuclear war paranoia swept onto the nation’s movie screens to both terrify and entertain the American public. All the favorite icons are here: Robby the Robot from FORBIDDEN PLANET, the pod people from INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, the blood-seeking creature from THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD, and so much more.

 

Schedule:

Date Title Tickets
04/15 at 7:30PM THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (1951) Available
04/16 at 2:30PM THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951) Available
04/16 at 5:00PM WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE (1951) Available
04/16 at 7:30PM INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1956) Available
04/17 at 2:30PM FORBIDDEN PLANET (1956) Available
04/17 at 5:00PM FANTASTIC VOYAGE (1966) Available

Tickets:

Tickets for individual shows are available NOW on Laemmle.com & at the Ahrya Fine Arts box office:

  • Single film Ticket: $13
  • Premiere Card Holders (Single Ticket): $12

Anniversary Classics Sci-Fi Weekend Ticket Specials (Available only at Box Office):

  • 6 Admissions for $48 (For any Sci-Fi Weekend Film 4/15-4/17)
  • Saturday Triple Bill: $30 (Ticket to 3 Saturday 4/16 films)
  • Sunday Double Feature: $20 (Ticket to 2 Sunday 4/17 films)

Trailer:

Movies:

ac-earthTHE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (1951) – 65th Anniversary

“Klaatu barada nikto”: One of the most famous phrases in all science fiction was first uttered in The Day the Earth Stood Still, which cast its spell over audiences in September 1951, in the early years of the Cold War and Atomic Age. This tale of a humanoid alien visitor (Michael Rennie), with a message and ultimatum for the human race, was directed by Robert Wise from a screenplay by Edmund H. North, and featured a memorably eerie score by Bernard Herrmann. Also starring Patricia Neal, Hugh Marlowe, and our special guest, Billy Gray, the only survivor of the cast and crew. Gray, who is also well known for his role in the classic 1950s sitcom Father Knows Best, will appear at the 65th anniversary screening on opening night of the Anniversary Classics Sci Fi Weekend, April 15-17. (April 15 at 7:30 PM) [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Ahrya Fine Arts, Anniversary Classics, Featured Post, Films, News, Q&A's

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