WHAT HAPPENED IN VEGAS? filmmaker Ramsey Denison will participate in a Q&A at the Music Hall following the 9 PM screening on Friday, December 1.
https://vimeo.com/242978686
by Lamb L.
WHAT HAPPENED IN VEGAS? filmmaker Ramsey Denison will participate in a Q&A at the Music Hall following the 9 PM screening on Friday, December 1.
https://vimeo.com/242978686
by Lamb L.
Big Sonia Q&A Schedule:
Music Hall, Beverly Hills
Friday 12/8 at 7:20pm: Directors Leah Warshawski and Todd Soliday
Saturday 12/9 at 2:30pm: Directors Leah Warshawski and Todd Soliday
Saturday 12/9 at 7:20pm: Director Todd Soliday
Town Center, Encino
Saturday 12/9 at 7:45pm: Director Leah Warshawski
Sunday 12/10 at 3:15pm: Directors Leah Warshawski and Todd Soliday
Sunday 12/10 at 7:45pm: Directors Leah Warshawski and Todd Soliday
Big Sonia praise:
“Poignant” —The New York Times
“It’s brilliant” —Film Journal International
“A stunning documentary” —Jeffrey Lyons, Lyons Den Radio, WCBS
“A film about history, how we carry it with us and why it matters” —Eye for Film
“An intimate and delicately measured documentary” —Slant Magazine
by Lamb L.
THE MOVIE OF MY LIFE director Selton Mello will participate in Q&A’s at the Music Hall after the 7:20 PM screenings on Wednesday and Thursday, November 29 and 30.
by Lamb L.
THE MOVIE OF MY LIFE director-actor Selton Mello will participate in Q&A’s at the Music Hall following the 7:20 PM screenings on Friday and Saturday, November 24 and 25, and Monday, November 27.
by Lamb L.
This is a Free Event
RSVP on Eventbrite
Join us December 3 at the Monica Film Center as we usher in the winter holidays with the joyful sounds of ELEMENTAL CHOIR.
The choir is a program of Elemental Music, created to inspire, train, and nurture young musicians in Santa Monica. The program began in 2004 by an SMMUSD music teacher who wanted to create an opportunity for elementary students to play in an orchestra throughout the school year, make new friends, and get excited about music. Since then, more than 1,000 students have participated in Elemental Music. Initially serving only 25 elementary school students, programs now serve nearly 300 elementary and middle school students in seven different programs this season.
Elemental Choir is one of Elemental Music’s newest and fastest growing programs. The Choir is comprised of third, fourth and fifth grade auditioned singers from over ten different Westside elementary schools. Teachers in the community recognize that engaging staff and inspiring repertoire choices help foster a strong sense of identity in young musicians. Our students work with expert teaching artists to polish their technical skills and dig into the joys of music-making, all in a social setting. We offer many opportunities for student performances throughout the year at three different Elemental concerts plus various public events in the Santa Monica community. Elemental Music’s young musicians blossom in their own ways, both socially and musically. This vibrant program inspires a love of music in the hearts of some of the westside’s youngest artists.
EVENT DETAILS
Sunday, December 3, 2017
11:00 AM
Monica Film Center
This is a Free Event
RSVP on Eventbrite
by Lamb L.
Takashi Miike’s 100th feature film, BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL screens November 10th – 16th in Pasadena, NoHo, and Beverly Hills. To celebrate we’re giving away two BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL posters signed by the legendary filmmaker himself!
Enter for a chance to win by sharing a picture of your movie tickets on Instagram, checking-in at one of our theaters, and/or retweeting us (you’ll find full entry details below).
CLICK HERE to purchase tickets for the film. Enter the giveaway below.
Signed BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL poster giveaway
Two winners will be selected at random and announced on November 17th, 2017. Giveaway open to California residents only. No purchase necessary.
by Lamb L.
A RIVER BELOW filmmaker Mark Grieco will participate in Q&A’s at the Music Hall after the 7:40 PM screenings on Friday and Saturday, November 3 and 4.
by Lamb L.
In 2016, the seminal artist EVA HESSE garnered national attention with an exhibit at the Whitney, an exhibit at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel in DTLA and with the opening of the film EVA HESSE , also featured at four Laemmle venues. The documentary, directed by Marcie Begleiter and produced by Karen Shapiro, was the first feature-length examination of Hesse’s life and work.
Laemmle’s Art in the Arthouse proudly presents an encore exhibit of ARCHIVING HESSE at the Royal starting on November 1, 2017. The exhibit, which premiered at the Monica Film Center last year, includes photography featured in the film. It showcases the work of photographer and raconteur, BARBARA BROWN, who, from 1962-1965, chronicled Hesse and the other luminaries that made up the Canal St. scene of New York’s Lower Eastside.
Unfortunately, most of Brown’s negatives were destroyed in a bizarre train fire and eternally lost. But we are pleased to present some surviving photos that capture the artist in particularly revealing moments. Interwoven are two images from Hesse’s 1968 solo exhibition at the Fishbach Gallery taken by NORMAN GOLDMAN.
About Eva Hesse: In 1938, at three years old, EVA HESSE was put on the kindertransport to escape Nazi Germany. She arrived in New York to reunite with her family, but seven years later lost her mother to suicide.
Hesse went on to study art and design at Yale University. As an artist, she had a unique ability to alchemize her personal tragedies into searing and poetic works. Based mainly in New York, Hesse and her husband Tom Doyle briefly relocated their studio to Kettwig Germany where she transitioned from painter to sculptor.
“Stop [thinking] and just do!” This strong note circa 1965 from her mentor Sol LeWitt opened Hesse up to an artistic stream of sculptures, paintings, drawings, and happenings. She incorporated industrial materials such as cord, wire, yarn, and latex to create magnificent walls sculptures that commanded attention. Hesse soon became a major figure in the post AbEx landscape movement. Tragically, Hesse died of brain cancer at age 34. She lives on in her works, which are displayed in museums worldwide.