Tuesday, November 22, 2011

New Beverly Cinema, Los Angeles, CA


PETITION TO SAVE 35MM

 
"I ... cannot stand idly by and let digital projection destroy the art that I live for. As one voice I cannot change the future, but hopefully if enough film lovers speak up, we can prove to the studios that repertory cinema is important and that we want 35mm to remain available to screen. Please sign this petition and forward it to any cinephiles you know. Let's fight for 35mm!"

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Occupy Cinema in Zucotti Park

Verizon Building, Brooklyn Bridge #N17 march


"As Occupiers took the bridge in a seemingly endless sea of people, words in light appeared projected on the iconic Verizon Building nearby: '"99% / MIC CHECK! / LOOK AROUND / YOU ARE A PART / OF A GLOBAL UPRISING / WE ARE A CRY / FROM THE HEART / OF THE WORLD / WE ARE UNSTOPPABLE / ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE / HAPPY BIRTHDAY / #OCCUPY MOVEMENT / OCCUPY WALL STREET / list of cities, states and countries / OCCUPY EARTH / WE ARE WINNING / IT IS THE BEGINNING OF THE BEGINNING / DO NOT BE AFRAID / LOVE.'"

 

Interview with Mark Read on the "Bat Signal" Project:  


Throw Away Your Books, Rally In the Streets

Libertas Film Magazine, 11/18


"It appears that we may have a new film movement afoot, inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protests: “Occupy Cinema.” For the moment this movement seems to be situated around just a few sites: Cine Foundation International, Occupy Cinema and Cinemas In Solidarity. However, I sense a trend growing – a filmic uprising that may change the cinema as we know it."


Cinebeats, 11/17

Bologna, Italy


"When the procession arrived at the main square, flares were set off and a human chain created around the entrance to an abandoned cinema. A small group of protestors entered the building first, checking for safety hazards and connecting the lights. When it was determined to be safe, an announcement was made over the loud speaker and all of the protesters poured into the building to begin the occupation."

Friday, November 11, 2011

Nyack Village Theatre, Nyack, NY

"We come together in solidarity with 'Occupy Wall Street' to TAKE THE NEXT STEP IN THIS MOVEMENT. Let's be more accountable to ourselves and to our children and let's start to OCCUPY THE FUTURE! Let's start thinking locally, building strong resilient communities, and creating and using our own local resources."


Arcata Theatre Lounge, Arcata, CA


"The audience cheered several times during the sold-out showing of V for Vendetta at the Arcata Theatre Lounge on Friday. The loudest cheers came during the movie’s ending credits, when a voice in the darkened theater shouted 'Occupy everything!'"


"The Arcata Theatre Lounge had no comment on a connection between the film and the Occupy movement. Desiree Perez, HSU alumna and staff member for Marketing and Communication, said she supports the Occupy movement. She said Occupy Humboldt requested the film be shown for Guy Fawkes Day. 'I know other people asked too,' Perez said, 'but it wasn’t on the calender, then we had our email conversation and then it was on the calender.'"



Globale Film Festival at Kino Moviemento, Berlin


"Citizen Kino presents “The Screen Is Not The Territory”: Selected shorts ranging from Adam Curtis to ZumbaKamera to Anonymous.The XLterrestrials, an arts + praxis laboratory, take you on an interactive tour through a collection of pioneering works and/or media flotsam. We do NOT provide a comfortable seat to passively download and feed the endlessly hungry eye. We are shouting “Fire!” in the all-consuming theater!  This is a program for Media Self-defense!"


"Surely we have now “become the media”, and we are all in, if not on, the Net!  A world of Server Clouds, Gamefication, Virtual Migration, Twitterization, Wikileaks, Social Networks, Data-Leeching + Surveillance, Augmented Hypermarkets, etc…. all spilling over into every corner of our lives, and voraciously eating up our days. Are we empowering communities or are we feeding the corporate monster state?! Will an information society on this scale bring about liberation + higher (collective) intelligence or be the final consumer mousetrap !?"



Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Anthology Flm Archives, New York

"There's no human microphone, but the distended scenes of radical planning meetings get at the logistics, principles, and painstaking crosstalk of social protest movements in a way that's rarely captured on film; that some of the weapons (political props?) come from a radical theater troupe recalls Rivette's investigations into the conspiracies of open-ended experimental theater, and reminds us, as does Occupy Wall Street, of the essential performative—perhaps even propagandistic—nature of social protest." 

Bagdad Theater, Portland, OR


"One of the great misconceptions about Hollywood is that it is a liberal institution."

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Booklyn Heights Cinema, New York


#occupycinema

Grand Lake Theatre, Oakland, California


Railroad Square Cinema, Waterville, Maine


Upstate Films, Rhinebeck NY


Cinemas In Solidarity Statement


Across the globe, as people are taking to the streets to redefine and reclaim the world they live in, Cinemas In Solidarity join with them in proposing a new, different, and better world.
We, too, are the 99%.

In our mass-mediated world – where studios make endless sequels to sell tickets, where films treat audiences like consumers rather than thinkers, where news stations flood screens with spin, and where technology drives the act of viewing to become more individuated and less public – we work to create alternatives.

Believing in film's power to inspire, inform, unite, and incite, we work to show movies that move people. By showing artistically groundbreaking work, we remind people there are always new ways to tell a story. By showing foreign films, we offer insights into worlds and perspectives many viewers may never see first-hand. And by showing documentaries, we challenge the static speed of the 24-hour news station.

None of this, of course, makes us any richer. Staffed by artists, intellectuals, workers, and dreamers, Indy cinemas generally attract people willing to accept little money in exchange for playful, gratifying, and value-driven work. We do what we do because we believe our screens do more than show great films; they perform a valuable public function. They allow people to get out of their houses, see something in common, and talk to each other. Film by film, topic by topic, we work to expand people's horizons and bring otherwise disparate communities together.

Today, when digital movies are available at the click of a button and Indy cinemas are fighting to get people in their seats, the future of arthouse exhibition doesn't always look bright. But as we continue to work with community groups, filmmakers, teachers, and activists, and as we play our films week after week to a core of returning film buffs, we know we're doing something important for the people we reach. We know we have to keep our doors open.

So we stand in solidarity – with occupiers everywhere and with each other. As institutions trying to create something different, something new and meaningful for ourselves and for our publics, we're occupying the world we're in every day.