Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule For 10/28-10/29

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28

RADIO FISHTOWN/MY PAL SKEETS

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

The New York Times (July ’95) described Simon Geller, the reclusive and last standing single-handed radio operator in the country, as a gruff mannered crotchety man who often expressed his dislike of Gloucester and its citizens. The Boston Globe’s John Koch called director Henry Ferrini’s “Radio FishTown” “a piece of poetic silver – a shimmering film impression of the odd Gloucester broadcaster who eventually fled the town that loved and endured his peculiar presence.” “Radio Fishtown” whisks the viewer up for a brisk half hour bushwhack from Gloucester, Massachusetts to New York City. Ferrini and his Total Assault TV crew track Geller from the rubble of his studio dungeon and his 56 cents-an-hour job as CEO of WVCA, to his Manhattan penthouse. Shown with Anne Rearick’s “My Pal Skeets,” the Riaf-penned short film which profiles Somerville’s Skeets Scioli, one of the oldest living participants in the sport of boxing during the past century.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29

FAN FILM SHOWCASE

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

A “fan film” is a fan-produced tribute to a favorite film, and in that commercial gain from such films is prohibited by law, some say it is filmmaking at its purest – “for the love of the thing.” Fan films range from short and comic, like Kevin Rubio’s “Star Wars” themed “Cops” parody “Troops” to the fantastic shared universe short “Batman: Dead End” to feature-length remakes like the legendary “Raiders: The Adaptation” (in which three kids from Mississippi spent nearly seven years making their own version of “Raiders Of The Lost Ark”).

Join us as we welcome author Clive Young as he presents a selection of hand-picked fan films and discusses his new book, “Homemade Hollywood,” which focuses on the surprisingly long history of this genre.


Isabel Natti At The Sara Elizabeth Shop at The Whistlestop Mall

Click The Picture To View The Interview

Sara Elizabeth Shop at Whistlestop Mall Rockport

All of these prints were made using the Acorn Press.   For more of the history of The Acorn Press, and The Folly Cove Designers click this highlighted text.   Interview with Isabel Natti due at 9:00AM

Acorn Press At Sara Elizabeth Shop

Here is the Acorn Press still used today at the Sara Elizabeth Shop at The Whistlestop Mall in Rockport.  Part one of my interview with Isabel Natti who maintains this tradition will run today at 9:00AM.

Twin Lights Postcards at Alexandra’s Bread

Alexandra being a fan of all things Twin Lights had these cool Twin Lights Postcards made up.  They are for sale at Alexandra’s Bread for  a meager 75 cents.  That’s short money Homie!  I’m thinking about buying a couple and framing them up for a cool piece of local art.

Twin Lights Postcards at Alexandra’s Bread

The Folly Cove Designers

From the Sara Elizabeth website-

“History of the Folly Cove Designers

The Folly Cove Designers grew out of a design course taught by Virginia Lee Burton Demetrios. She lived in Folly Cove, the most northerly part of Lanesville, Gloucester, Massachusetts. She was able to express the local consensus that the world was a beautiful place, and the elements of beauty surround us in nature.

Her block printing thesis grew out of the home industries/arts and crafts movements of the past. The artist/designer of products for home use is separated from the product by machine age technology (and now globalization). Fine art for home use is within our own power. To this end her design course taught an ability to see the design in nature, a set of good design rules (dark and light, sizing, repetition, reflection, etc.), and the craftsmanship of carving the linoleum, and then printing fabric for home use.

On completion of the course the graduate was permitted to submit a design to the jury(selected Designers rotated this responsibility starting in 1943) of the Folly Cove Designers. If it was accepted as displaying the design qualities as taught in the course, then they could carve the design in linoleum and print it for sale as a Folly Cove Design.

The design course started in 1938. In 1940 they had their first public exhibition-in the Demetrios studio. The following year they decided to go public, they called themselves the Folly Cove Designers. Every year they had an opening to present the new designs, and everyone enjoyed the coffee and nisu (Finnish coffee bread). They established a relationship to wholesale their work to the America House of New York which had been established in 1940 by the American Craftsman Cooperative Council. In 1944 they hired Dorothy Norton as an executive secretary to run the business end of the successful young enterprise. In 1945, Lord and Taylor bought non-exclusive rights to five designs which pushed the reputation of the group, and began some national publicity and diverse commissions for their work.”

For the rest of this click this text

Alexandra’s Bread has some of the wall hangings for sale from Sara Elizabeth-

Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule For 10/25-10/26

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25

BEAUTY IN TROUBLE

SHOWN AT 5:00PM


NORMA [ITALY’S GRAND OPERA]

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

Tickets to this special event are $20.00,
and can be reserved by e-mailing the CACC at the address at the top of this page.



SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26


MY MEXICAN SHIVAH

SHOWN AT 12:30PM

MAN ON WIRE

SHOWN AT 2:45PM

TUYA’S MARRIAGE

SHOWN AT 5:00PM

TRANSSIBERIAN

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

Sarah Elizabeth Prints At Alexandra’s Bread

Sara Elizabeth prints available at Alexandra’s Bread.  Check Out The Acorn Press that the Folly Cove Designers use to press these by clicking the highlighted text.

Sarah Elizabeth Prints, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Cape Ann Community Cinema Scedule for 10/24-10/25

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24

THE EDGE OF HEAVEN

SHOWN AT 12:30PM

“Like a more personal, less pretentious version of Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s ‘Babel’, this spiraling dissection of circumstance, choice and fate is more about thoroughness of vision than tricky storytelling.” -Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News

TUYA’S MARRIAGE

SHOWN AT 2:45PM

“A compact near-masterpiece that combines a slow-motion romantic comedy with a docudrama-style portrait of a remote, nomadic culture as it is gradually eroded by the tides of the 21st century.” -Andrew O’Hehir, Salon

TRANSSIBERIAN

SHOWN AT 5:00PM

MAN ON WIRE

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

GOD OF VAMPIRES

SHOWN AT 9:30PM



SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25

BEAUTY IN TROUBLE

SHOWN AT 5:00PM

NORMA [ITALY’S GRAND OPERA]

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

Tickets to this special event are $20.00,
and can be reserved by e-mailing the CACC at the address at the top of this page.

Come experience “Norma” with us in glorious HD, the next best thing to being there!
This dynamic duo of leading ladies fires up the stage with heartbreaking performances, making this Norma from Teatro Comunale di Bologna one of the most talked about and must-see productions of Italy’s 2008 Operatic Season.


Bodin Historic Photo-Busy During The Block Party

Bodin Historic Photo in Gloucester’s West End was very busy with people during the October Block Party.

Fred Bodin maintains a fantastic website with many Old Gloucester photographs.

Click this text to visit Bodin Historic Photo website

Thanks to David Cox for the Block Party photos.

Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule for 10/23-10/24

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23

NOISE

SHOWN AT 5:00PM

This is a story about the wrong person in the right place at the wrong time. Two heinous crimes have left a suburban town reeling. Police quickly connect them but are desperate for witnesses as the local community enfolds itself in a shroud of secrecy, borne from fear and an untrammeled mistrust of authority. A young police constable, Graham McGahan, suffers from a chronic hearing problem and applies for worker’s compensation. To his chagrin, he is stationed at a police caravan near the crime scene. Living on the periphery of the investigation, McGahan crosses paths with the various people affected by the tragedies and uncovers an unraveling nightmare of guilt and suspicion.

This free show is part of our Thursday FilmMovement series, which in November becomes

“It’s clear from the first few minutes of Matthew Saville’s “Noise” that this highly compelling first feature has no intention of being your average, run-of-the-mill thriller…[Noise] kicks off with a wallop, then constantly confounds expectations by approaching its subject matter from fresh directions.”
-Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter

TRANSSIBERIAN

SHOWN AT 7:15PM
Roy (Woody Harrelson) and Jessie (Emily Mortimer) are the perfect American couple traveling from Beijing to Moscow on the legendary Trans-Siberian Express train. The two strike a bond with another couple, Carlos (Eduardo Noriega) and Abby (Kate Mara), who are not exactly as they appear. Unwittingly, Roy and Jessie are caught in a web of drug trafficking and murderous deceit when all four become targets of ex-KGB detective Grinko’s (Ben Kingsley) investigation.

“‘Transsiberian’ starts in neutral, taking the time to introduce its characters, and then goes from second into high like greased lightning. I was a little surprised to notice how thoroughly it wound me up. This is a good one.” -Roger Ebert, The Chicago Sun-Times


FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24

THE EDGE OF HEAVEN

SHOWN AT 12:30PM
Nejat initially disapproves of his widower father Ali’s choice of prostitute Yeter for a live-in girlfriend. But the young professor warms to her when he learns that most of her hard-earned money is sent home to Turkey for her daughter’s university studies. After Yeter’s accidental death, Nejat travels to Istanbul to search for Yeter’s daughter Ayten. Political activist Ayten has fled the Turkish police and is already in Germany. She is befriended by a young woman, Lotte, who invites rebellious Ayten to stay in her home, much to the displeasure of her conservative mother, Susanne. When Ayten is arrested and her asylum plea denied, she is deported and imprisoned in Turkey. Passionate Lotte abandons everything to help Ayten. A tragic event brings Susanne to Istanbul to help fulfill her daughter`s mission.

“Like a more personal, less pretentious version of Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s ‘Babel’, this spiraling dissection of circumstance, choice and fate is more about thoroughness of vision than tricky storytelling.” -Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News

TUYA’S MARRIAGE

SHOWN AT 2:45PM
Tuya, hardworking and hardheaded, is a Mongolian desert herder who refuses to be settled in a town in accordance with the new industrialization policy. She is kept busy with two kids, a disabled husband and 100 sheep to care for, but one day she hurts her back. The only way for the family to survive is for her to divorce her husband on paper and look for a new spouse who can take care of the whole family. A series of suitors lines up, but it’s not easy to find a man who fits the bill. This warm, endearing tale, featuring stunning cinematography, won the top prize at the 2007 Berlin International Film Festival.

“A compact near-masterpiece that combines a slow-motion romantic comedy with a docudrama-style portrait of a remote, nomadic culture as it is gradually eroded by the tides of the 21st century.” -Andrew O’Hehir, Salon

TRANSSIBERIAN

SHOWN AT 5:00PM
Roy (Woody Harrelson) and Jessie (Emily Mortimer) are the perfect American couple traveling from Beijing to Moscow on the legendary Trans-Siberian Express train. The two strike a bond with another couple, Carlos (Eduardo Noriega) and Abby (Kate Mara), who are not exactly as they appear. Unwittingly, Roy and Jessie are caught in a web of drug trafficking and murderous deceit when all four become targets of ex-KGB detective Grinko’s (Ben Kingsley) investigation.

“‘Transsiberian’ starts in neutral, taking the time to introduce its characters, and then goes from second into high like greased lightning. I was a little surprised to notice how thoroughly it wound me up. This is a good one.” -Roger Ebert, The Chicago Sun-Times

MAN ON WIRE

SHOWN AT 7:15PM
On an August day in 1974, a young Frenchman named Philippe Petit stepped out on a wire illegally rigged between New York’s twin towers, then the world’s tallest buildings. After nearly an hour dancing on the wire, he was arrested, taken for psychological evaluation, and brought to jail before he was finally released. Structured as a caper, “Man On Wire” meticulously follows the story of a young juggler who becomes infatuated with the planned twin towers, through years of preparation to create the unique and magnificent spectacle that became known as “the artistic crime of the century.”

“They say that seeing is believing, but ‘Man On Wire’ will make you doubt what your eyes are telling you – it really will – as you shake your head in amazement and awe.” -Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times

GOD OF VAMPIRES

SHOWN AT 9:30PM

Five years ago, I wrote an action/horror script called “God Of Vampires” about Chinese vampires. It could described as an ultra-violent kung-fu horror movie, like a combination of a Hong Kong Action flick and “Evil Dead.” Having no money and knowing that nobody gives you money to make your first film (at least in my world), I set out to raise enough money to make the film myself on a barebones budget. I got people to invest about $26,000 and we started shooting on weekends and whenever people were available. Because our budget was so low, we all had to work regular jobs. As the years passed on I changed jobs many times but kept plugging away at “God Of Vampires.” Interestingly enough, as we progressed, the film became more involved and bigger in scale. The sets got more elaborate and the FX became more graphic. Instead of the enthusiasm fading away and slowing down, it would build and gain momentum even with the production being halted for several months at a time due to an array of bizarre circumstances. We’ve had our lead actor in a really bad car accident, we’ve run out of funds, our cameraman actually went to Iraq to film the war during the first couple of months as an entreched journalist. He actually got mortar shrapnel in his ass when one blew up next to him! There are a million things that happened to us over the years both good and bad, but we pulled through anyway and five years later, we have completed “God Of Vampires.”

Sincerely,
Your most humble Director,
Rob Fitz

Mr. Fitz will be on hand after the film to talk about the journey that was “God Of Vampires,” which is part of our Friday Night Frights series, which ends on Halloween Night with the Lovecraft tale, “Cthulhu.”

“A fun, bloody action/horror hybrid that actually presented us with a different kind of bloodsucker for once (always a good thing) and knew exactly what it was doing.” -Johnny Butane, Dread Central

Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule For 10/22-10/23

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22

THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

Set in and around a Budapest store, Ernst Lubitsch’s 1940 classic “The Shop Around The Corner” features co-workers Klara (Margaret Sullavan) and Alfred (James Stewart) harboring an intense dislike for each other while maintaining a secret letter-writing relationship, neither realizing whom each other’s pen pal is. They fall in love via their correspondence, while being antipathic and peevish towards one another in real life. A major subplot concerns the apparent infidelity of the store owner’s wife, and its spillover effect upon the various working relationships in the shop. The film was remade as “You’ve Got Mail” with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan in 1998, and was ranked #28 on the American Film Institute’s “100 Years…100 Passions” list.

Join Variety film critic Daniel M. Kimmel as he presents the film and talks about and signs his new book, “I’ll Have What She’s Having,” which goes behind-the-scenes of Hollywood’s greatest romantic comedies.


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23

NOISE

SHOWN AT 5:00PM

This is a story about the wrong person in the right place at the wrong time. Two heinous crimes have left a suburban town reeling. Police quickly connect them but are desperate for witnesses as the local community enfolds itself in a shroud of secrecy, borne from fear and an untrammeled mistrust of authority. A young police constable, Graham McGahan, suffers from a chronic hearing problem and applies for worker’s compensation. To his chagrin, he is stationed at a police caravan near the crime scene. Living on the periphery of the investigation, McGahan crosses paths with the various people affected by the tragedies and uncovers an unraveling nightmare of guilt and suspicion.

This free show is part of our Thursday FilmMovement series, which in November becomes

“It’s clear from the first few minutes of Matthew Saville’s “Noise” that this highly compelling first feature has no intention of being your average, run-of-the-mill thriller…[Noise] kicks off with a wallop, then constantly confounds expectations by approaching its subject matter from fresh directions.”
-Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter

TRANSSIBERIAN

SHOWN AT 7:15PM
Roy (Woody Harrelson) and Jessie (Emily Mortimer) are the perfect American couple traveling from Beijing to Moscow on the legendary Trans-Siberian Express train. The two strike a bond with another couple, Carlos (Eduardo Noriega) and Abby (Kate Mara), who are not exactly as they appear. Unwittingly, Roy and Jessie are caught in a web of drug trafficking and murderous deceit when all four become targets of ex-KGB detective Grinko’s (Ben Kingsley) investigation.

“‘Transsiberian’ starts in neutral, taking the time to introduce its characters, and then goes from second into high like greased lightning. I was a little surprised to notice how thoroughly it wound me up. This is a good one.” -Roger Ebert, The Chicago Sun-Times


Rob Foley Whale Carving

Rob brought me a whale carving and mounted it on a nice piece of wood for my desk.

Originally the haddock nape looks like the piece in the middle.  Rob’s grandfather would bury the haddock napes in the ground to let the bugs and worms eat all the meat off of the bones.  Then it would get whittled down to a blank from the pattern on the bottom piece.  Next you have the finished product on top.

Rob Foley Whale Carving, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule For 10/21-10/22

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21

SIR! NO SIR!

SHOWN AT 7:15

David Zeiger’s documentary energetically reveals the untold story of the GI movement to end the war in Vietnam. This is the story of one of the most vibrant and widespread upheavals of the 1960’s – one that had a profound impact on American society, yet has been virtually obliterated from the collective memory of that time. This hidden history combines fast-paced archival footage with thoughtful interviews, which Variety calls “perfectly timed with new doubts about the Iraq war.”

Holy Cross professor Jerry Lembcke, who is featured in the film,
will be on hand for a Q&A after the film.

“As it is, this one is compelling enough, a potent mix of outrage, residual anger, and sorrow that speaks not just to the legacy of our misadventures in Vietnam, but to the entire uncertain future of a nation at war.” -Bill Gallo, The Village Voice


WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22

THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER

SHOWN AT 7:15PM

Set in and around a Budapest store, Ernst Lubitsch’s 1940 classic “The Shop Around The Corner” features co-workers Klara (Margaret Sullavan) and Alfred (James Stewart) harboring an intense dislike for each other while maintaining a secret letter-writing relationship, neither realizing whom each other’s pen pal is. They fall in love via their correspondence, while being antipathic and peevish towards one another in real life. A major subplot concerns the apparent infidelity of the store owner’s wife, and its spillover effect upon the various working relationships in the shop. The film was remade as “You’ve Got Mail” with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan in 1998, and was ranked #28 on the American Film Institute’s “100 Years…100 Passions” list.

Join Variety film critic Daniel M. Kimmel as he presents the film and talks about and signs his new book, “I’ll Have What She’s Having,” which goes behind-the-scenes of Hollywood’s greatest romantic comedies.


Cape Ann Community Cinema Schedule For 10/20-10/21

Cape Ann Community Cinema, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 20

THE REAL DIRT ON FARMER JOHN

SHOWN AT 7:15PM
“The Real Dirt On Farmer John” will turn every idea you ever had about what it means to be an American farmer – or an American dreamer – on its head. Meet Farmer John, the incredible human being whose inspirational story of revolutionizing his family farm and redeeming his own life has won accolades and awards at film festivals around the world. Director Taggart Siegel of Collective Eye made the film in a most unusual way – shooting farmer John Peterson over 25 years of their evolving friendship, and using multiple media, from 8 mm home movies to modern video – allowing him to capture his alternately humorous, heartbreaking and spirited life with raw drama and intimacy.

Part of our

series of sustainability films.

“What a blessing this film is, for everyone who’s chosen the road less taken, and even perhaps for anyone who’s stood in their way.” -Jan Stuart, Newsday

SHOWN FOLLOWING THE SHORT:

THE STORY OF STUFF

From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. “The Story Of Stuff” is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. “The Story Of Stuff” exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.


TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21

SIR! NO SIR!

SHOWN AT 7:15

David Zeiger’s documentary energetically reveals the untold story of the GI movement to end the war in Vietnam. This is the story of one of the most vibrant and widespread upheavals of the 1960’s – one that had a profound impact on American society, yet has been virtually obliterated from the collective memory of that time. This hidden history combines fast-paced archival footage with thoughtful interviews, which Variety calls “perfectly timed with new doubts about the Iraq war.”

Holy Cross professor Jerry Lembcke, who is featured in the film,
will be on hand for a Q&A after the film.

“As it is, this one is compelling enough, a potent mix of outrage, residual anger, and sorrow that speaks not just to the legacy of our misadventures in Vietnam, but to the entire uncertain future of a nation at war.” -Bill Gallo, The Village Voice