Archive for the ‘screening’ Category

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

Creative League: Screening Mar 24 “The Innocents”

The Innocents

Jack Clayton’s atmospheric ghost story is one of the most chilling and disturbing horror films ever made. Based on William Archibald’s stage adaptation of Henry James’s classic novella “The Turn of the Screw”, the screenplay was written by Truman Capote. At the time it was released, it didn’t garner much of an audience, but it has gone on to be a cult classic, listed as one of the best British films ever made and one of the scariest horror films of all time.

The Innocents

Academy Award winning cinematographer, Freddie Francis (Elephant Man, Sons and Lovers) utililized wide angle lenses, stark lighting and deep focus to emphasize the classic haunted house atmosphere of the mansion at Sheffield Park in Sussex they used as a shooting location. And beautifully composed widescreen Cinemascope framing kept the audience peering into the corners of shots to see what was lurking in the shadows.

The film focuses on two children, and the director, Jack Clayton didn’t want their performances to be overly informed so he edited the copies of the scripts he gave them, removing a lot of the explanation of what was going on in the scenes. This technique resulted in some of the most layered and disturbing performances by children in the entire history of filmmaking.

The Innocents

The most interesting aspect of this film is the subtlety of the way the story is told. The tension builds to a devastating climax, but the audience is left not knowing exactly what happened at first. As you think about the ending of the film afterwards, the realization of the situation will come to you and you’ll experience a second chill of fear, long after the lights have come back up.

This very special screening will be held at 7pm on March 24th, 2012. We will be projecting a newly restored high definition Cinemascope bluray that was just released in Europe. Our screening room is located in Pacoima, CA. The Animation Creative League meetings are by invitation only. To request an invite, contact Taber Dunnipace at…

creativeleague@animationarts.org

If you can bring refreshments, please do. Confirmations will go out well in advance of the screening. Make sure you let us know if you can’t make it so we can offer your space to another person.




TRAILER


“The Innocents” trailer at YouTube

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STILLS

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Monday, February 20th, 2012

Creative League: Vote For Our Next Program!

You pick the film! March 17th, 2012

At the Animation Creative League Facebook Group we’re taking a poll to see which of three films our members would like to see at our next screening. We have beautifully restored high definition prints of all three choices…

“QUATERMASS AND THE PIT”
(AKA: “Five Million Years To Earth”)

Quatermass and the Pit

Quatermass and the Pit (US title: Five Million Years to Earth) is a 1967 British science fiction horror film. Made by Hammer Film Productions it is a sequel to the earlier Hammer films The Quatermass Xperiment and Quatermass 2. Like its predecessors it is based on a BBC Television serial – Quatermass and the Pit – written by Nigel Kneale. It was directed by Roy Ward Baker and stars Andrew Keir in the title role as the eponymous professor, replacing Brian Donlevy who played the role in the two earlier films. James Donald, Barbara Shelley and Julian Glover appear in co-starring roles.

The plot, which is largely faithful to the original television production, centres around the discovery of a mysterious object buried in the ground at the site of an extension to the London Underground. Also uncovered nearby are the remains of early human ancestors more than five million years old. Realising that the object is in fact an ancient Martian spacecraft, Quatermass deduces that the aliens have influenced human evolution and the development of human intelligence.


“Quartermass and the Pit” trailer at YouTube

“THE INNOCENTS”

The Innocents

The Innocents is a 1961 British horror film based on the novella The Turn of the Screw by Henry James. The title of the film was taken from William Archibald’s stage adaptation of James’ novella. Directed and produced by Jack Clayton, it stars Deborah Kerr, Michael Redgrave and Megs Jenkins. Falling within the subgenre of psychological horror, the film achieves its effects through lighting, music and direction rather than gore and conventional shocks. Its distinctive atmosphere owes much to cinematographer Freddie Francis, who employed deep focus in many scenes, as well as bold, minimal lighting. It was filmed on location at the Gothic mansion of Sheffield Park in Sussex. The film includes the first role in cinema for child actress Pamela Franklin.


“The Innocents” trailer at YouTube

“PEEPING TOM”

Peeping Tom is a 1960 British psychological thriller directed by Michael Powell and written by the World War II cryptographer and polymath Leo Marks. The title derives from the slang expression ‘peeping Tom’ describing a voyeur. The film revolves around a serial killer who murders women while using a portable movie camera to record their dying expressions of terror.

Its controversial subject and the extremely harsh reception by critics effectively destroyed Powell’s career as a director in the United Kingdom. However, it attracted a cult following, and in later years, it has been re-evaluated and is now considered a masterpiece.

Peeping Tom


“Peeping Tom” trailer at YouTube

Click To Vote!

The Animation Creative League meetings are held on Saturday evenings in the middle of the month. Our screening room is located in Pacoima, near where the 5 and the 170 meet. Attendence is by invitation only. We will be announcing the date of this screening and accepting RSVP requests as soon as we complete the voting on the program. Plan to attend a Creative League meeting. It’s a great way to meet other creative people like yourself!

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Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Creative League: Saved From The Flames Screening This Saturday

The Golden Beetle

ChaplinChaplin
SATURDAY, FEB. 18th 7PM
CREATIVE LEAGUE SCREENING
“SAVED FROM THE FLAMES”

FACEBOOK SIGNUP PAGE

Serge Bromberg of Lobster Films in France is on the cutting edge of film preservation. Each year, he prepares a show of rare and fascinating films culled from among the work restored that year. We will be screening a program of some of the oldest, most amazing and downright weirdest films ever made… cartoons, commercials, pioneering trick films, musical shorts, and more. You won’t believe your eyes.


The Dancing Pig (1907) at YouTube

Historical importance and giddy wonder converge in “Saved From the Flames: 54 Rare and Restored Films 1896-1944” (Flicker Alley), a wide-ranging three-disk anthology of short films. The works, ranging from primordial fictions and early documentaries to political propaganda and musical shorts, were lovingly collected and preserved by Serge Bromberg, of Lobster Films and David Shepard, of Blackhawk Films, and the slant is Franco-American. The three earliest films in the set, by the Lumière Brothers, are presented as never before: Bromberg owns the original negative to one of them, and the print it yields has an astounding sensual warmth; a hand-tinted copy of their 1896 “Card Party”—found by Bromberg in a French cheese shop!—is a Cézanne painting come to life. Georges Méliès performs magic on-screen as well as behind the camera, as director and star of “Excelsior!—Prince of Magicians,” from 1901, of which Lobster Films has the sole existing copy. A 1908 animation by Emile Cohl, “Fantasmagorie,” foretells the wildest inventions of the Fleischer brothers (represented here by an eye-popping Technicolor dreamscape and a follow-the-bouncing-ball musicale) and Chuck Jones (whose ultra-modernistic 1944 campaign cartoon for F.D.R. is also included). Josephine Baker takes part in the antic erotic fantasy “The Fireman of the Folies-Bergère,” from 1928; Duke Ellington is featured at the piano and with his band in the 1929 “Black and Tan”; Jacques Tati stars in a riotously inventive 1935 furniture commercial; “Kiriki, Japanese Acrobats,” from 1907, features astounding funambulists with a comic secret. Best of all is Charlie Chaplin’s second film, “Kid’s Auto Race,” from 1914, a manic metafiction in which a surly, aggressive precursor to the Little Tramp hogs the cameras set up to capture the action at an auto race. This living time capsule is a cornucopia of revelation and delight.—Richard Brody, The New Yorker



Le Hot Jazz Club Quintet of Paris with
Stephane Grappelli & Django Reinhardt
at YouTube

The Animation Creative League meetings are by invitation only. To request an invite, contact Taber Dunnipace at…

creativeleague@animationarts.org

If you can bring refreshments, please do. Make sure you let us know if you can’t make it so we can offer your space to another person.



Saved From The Flames DVDSaved From The Flames DVDSaved From The Flames – 54 Rare and Restored Films 1896 – 1944 is a unique and wonderful collection of 54 rare and restored short films from the inflammable years of cinema. Movies were once made on nitrate film stock, which has a chemical composition similar to gunpowder and is highly vulnerable to fire and decay. This remarkable seven-hour anthology, organized in eight thematic groups over three DVDs, presents amazing treasures from the vaults of Lobster Films in Paris and from the Blackhawk Films Collection, rescued during half a century of gathering movies from the nitrate era. Pick up the set at Amazon.

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