AFI Docs 2015: The World’s Best Documentary Film Festival Begins Tonight in Washington DC

Posted on June 17, 2015 at 11:26 am

AFI Docs (formerly SilverDocs) begins tonight in Washington, D.C. with another spectacular slate of documentary films. The opening night festivities feature “The Best of Enemies,” a terrific film about the battle of the upper-class, socially connected, classically educated, hyperverbal writers and sometime candidates for election William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal. They had those qualities in common, but not much else. Politically, culturally, philosophically, and personally, they really could not stand each other. So when lowest-rated ABC, which could not afford the gavel-to-gavel coverage and gold-plated newsmen (they were all men in those days) of CBS and NBC, in desperation they decided to feature “commentary” from the right-wing Buckley and the left-wing Vidal. The filmmakers argue persuasively that this was the beginning of the highly partisan shriekfest that passes for television news today.

Some of the other films at the festival include Oscar-winner Alex Gibney’s “Steve Jobs,” “How to Dance in Ohio” (teens with autism prepare for a prom), “The Wolfpack” (kids kept inside their New York apartment by a controlling father spend their time re-enacting their favorite films), and three documentaries about significant magazines: “Very Semi-Serious” (New Yorker cartoons), “Drunk, Stoned, Brilliant, Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon,” and “Hot Type: 150 Years of the Nation.”

There are films about tennis star Althea Gibson, singer Nina Simone, and art collector Peggy Guggenheim, political protests, about the fallout (literal) from Chernobyl, and the psychological and political fallout from the “3 1/2 Minutes, 10 Bullets” that killed a Georgia teenager.

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Documentary Festivals

FREE Tickets: The Dazzling Animated “Book of Life”

Posted on October 7, 2014 at 11:21 pm

Copyright 2014 Dreamworks
Copyright 2014 Dreamworks

I love “The Book of Life,” the spectacular new animated film produced by Guillermo del Toro, with voice talent that includes Diego Luna, Zoe Saldana, Channing Tatum, and Ice Cube.  It has adventure, music, laughter, great music, and lots of heart.  I am thrilled to have tickets to give way to two Washington DC-area upcoming screenings of the film.

THE BOOK OF LIFE

Thursday, October 9
7:00pm
AMC Tysons Corner
McLean, VA

Gofobo link – AMC Tysons Corner: http://l.gofobo.us/9KScrERd

THE BOOK OF LIFE
Saturday, October 11
10:00am
AMC Mazza Gallerie
Washington, DC

Gofobo link – AMC Mazza Gallerie: http://l.gofobo.us/dKSBbm4F

NOTE: TICKETS DO NOT GUARANTEE A SEAT.  Seating is first come-first served, so get there early.  Have a wonderful time and let me know what you think!

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Contests and Giveaways

Environmental Film Festival: Family and Children’s Program

Posted on March 17, 2014 at 11:15 pm

Starting tomorrow, the 2014 Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital will present narrative, animated and documentary films for children and families across the Washington area from March 18-30. These films are a section of the larger Festival, which will screen over 170 films.

Films for young people will explore the depths of Earth’s oceans with legendary oceanographer Dr. Sylvia Earle and the natural wonders of land, from a diversity of captivating creatures, such as parrots, elephants and frogs to a variety of backyard bugs. Other films take to the sky, showcasing our winged creatures, including snowy owls and Bald Eagles, and even expand to outer space, toward the Moon. Animated films about natural history subjects are offered for young children.

Mission Blue, profiles legendary oceanographer Dr. Sylvia Earle, known as “her deepness,” and her lifelong mission to save our oceans and build a global network of marine protected areas, like underwater national parks, to protect the natural systems that keep humans alive. The free film will screen at the Warner Theatre and at the National Museum of Natural History.

The animated film, Moon Man captures fantasies about the moon and the fascination and importance it holds for young people. The film will be screened at the Avalon Theatre.

The Rooster Trademark Paper tells the story of Amir, a young, aspiring artist in Iran, who wants to enter a visual arts competition, but needs to get the costly art supplies and costly paper needed. Will he be able to pull it off?
This free film will screen at the National Gallery of Art.

Nature Unfolds, a series of animated short films celebrate nature’s unfolding beauty, screened free at the National Gallery of Art.

Tales from the Wild with Allison Argo will feature filmmaker Allison Argo, who shares clips from her award-winning films along with personal stories about such captivating creatures as parrots, elephants and frogs. The free program will take place at the Town Hall Education Arts & Recreation Campus (THEARC) in southeast Washington.

Two award-winning films from the 2013 Jackson Hole Wildlife Films Festival: Africa: Kalahari, showing the animals of Africa’s extreme southwestern deserts: giraffes, meerkats, black rhinos and giant insects and
A Year in the Wild: Snowdonia, exploring the breathtaking landscapes and spectacular wildlife of Snowdonia National Park in Britain. Both free films are screened at the National Museum of Natural History.

Backyard Bugs investigates 16 different types of bugs, including dragonflies, beetles, water bugs, tarantulas and cockroaches that can be found in our backyards, captured in stunning macro photography, with host and wildlife educator Sean Roach. The film will screen free at the Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital on Capitol Hill.

Magic of the Snowy Owl follows a breeding pair of snowy owls in the Alaska and Return Flight chronicles efforts to restore the Bald Eagle to California’s Channel Islands. These two films will screen free at the National Wildlife Visitor Center in Laurel, Md.

Desert Seas explores the stunning underwater realms of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Arabia with renowned naturalist David Attenborough, followed by Turtle Life Cycle, an ARKive education lesson focusing on the life cycle of the green turtle.

A series of animated films for young school age children (ages 5-8), include Blackout about what happens when the power goes out; Cloudette, showing the big difference a little cloud can make; and Bear Has a Story to Tell, an endearing tale of friendship. These free films will screen at Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital and the D.C. Public Libraries, including Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, Mt. Pleasant Library, Takoma Park Library, Anacostia Library and Deanwood Library.

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Environment/Green Festivals

Free “Life of Pi” Tickets for a DC Screening November 12

Posted on November 6, 2012 at 12:30 pm

I’m thrilled to have 25 pairs of tickets to give away for a Washington DC screening of “The Life of Pi,” Ang Lee’s spectacularly beautiful film based on the best-selling book about a teenager and a tiger who survive a shipwreck and must find a way to survive.  It is rated PG “for emotional thematic content throughout and some scary action sequences and peril,” and I am recommending it for middle schoolers and up.  The tickets will go to the first 25 who respond, so log in right away.  And REMEMBER: screening tickets do not guarantee that you will get in.  Seating is first come, first served so get there early!

 

For your complimentary tickets log onto www.gofobo.com/rsvp and input the following code: BLFA49J to download your tickets.

 

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Contests and Giveaways

Washington DC’s first Reelabilities Film Festival

Posted on February 1, 2012 at 8:08 am

Today Washington DC will begin its first-ever Reelabilities Film Festival, in association with the NY Disabilities Film Festival, the largest festival in the country dedicated to promoting awareness and appreciation of the lives, stories and artistic expressions of people with different disabilities through feature films and documentaries.  Some of the films to be presented:

Crooked Beauty: A visually stunning account of artist-activist Jacks Ashley McNamara’s transformative journey from troubled childhood to psych ward patient to pioneering mental health advocate. This poetic tale reshapes mental health stigmas while re-approaching madness as a tool for creativity, inspiration and hope.

Henry O!:  The remarkable and inspiring story of Henry Oliu, a man blind since birth, who has overcome all the odds and made his major league baseball dream come true. Calling upon his love for sports and an encyclopedic memory for facts and figures, Henry hears the crack of the bat and knows if it’s a single, double, or homerun; he listens for the ball singing into the catcher’s mitt and knows if it’s a curveball, fastball, or change-up. Henry is the color analyst on Mega Classica 820 radio, WMGG, the strongest Hispanic station in Florida’s Tampa Bay Market. And at his side in the broadcast booth above Tropicana Field, whispering in his ear up-to-the-minute stats and field action only the eyes can see, is the love of his life, his wife Deb. Partners both on and off the field, Henry and Deb walk arm-in-arm through life, having met on, of all things, a blind date.

Warrior Champions: Four Iraq War veterans turn the nightmares of war into Olympic dreams. After losing limbs and suffering paralysis fighting for their country in Iraq, they have set out to do what many thought impossible… but will they make the cut?

Zig-Zag Love: A truly modern love story of a unique affair between a teenage cancer patient and a girl with cerebral palsy. Together they escape to the Scottish Highlands in pursuit of a different reality.

 

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