Week of July 24, 2022

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Sunday, July 31

Sunday, July 31, 2022
1 PM
Join local artist and educator Jenny Rosenberg to make cyanotype postcards.

Included with admission

Sunday, July 31, 2022
11 AM–7 PM

Drop-in Art Making

Sunday, July 31, 2022
7 PM
Kinuyo Tanaka,
Japan,
1961,
(93 mins)

4K Digital Restoration

The Sunday, July 31 screening features an introduction by Lili Hinstin.

Focused on the efforts of one young woman to build a new life in the wake of Japan’s 1956 Prostitution Prevention Law, Girls of the Night offers a sharp critique of the mistreatment of sex workers in postwar occupied Japan.
  • Lili Hinstin
    Introduction, July 31
    Lili Hinstin, an artistic director and programmer, helmed Entrevues Belfort International Film Festival from 2013 to 2018 and the Locarno Film Festival from 2018 to 2020.

Monday, August 1

Tuesday, August 2

Wednesday, August 3

Wednesday, August 3, 2022
7 PM
Samuel Fuller,
United States,
1951,
(85 mins)

Archival 35mm Print

Disdain for war creeps into every characterization of Fuller’s grim film about an American patrol lost in the woods of North Korea, which the Pentagon called “vicious [and] full of perversions.”

Thursday, August 4

Thursday, August 4, 2022
4—7 PM

This event has been canceled. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.

 

 

No binoculars required. Bird-watching has never been easier than a hike to the lower-level Study Center.

Free on first Thursday of the month

Thursday, August 4, 2022
7 PM
Charles Chaplin,
United States,
1925,
(88 mins)

The reedited 1942 version of The Gold Rush will be shown for free on Sunday, June 12, in the Barbro Osher Theater.

A hapless prospector tries his luck in the frozen north in a film that glitters with some of Charlie Chaplin’s most memorable nuggets of comedy, including a pair of dancing rolls.
At Outdoor Screen

Free on the outdoor screen

Thursday, August 4, 2022
7:30 PM
James Blue,
France,
1962,
(81 mins)

Digital Restoration

Blue tells a powerful story of common people living and struggling in their daily lives, while providing a valuable testimony to the complexity of the Algerian struggle for independence. “A neorealist take on the Algerian War made with nonprofessional actors is newly restored and still resonates today” (J. Hoberman, New York Times).

Friday, August 5

Friday, August 5, 2022
2 PM–7 PM

Drop-in Art Making

Friday, August 5, 2022
7 PM
Samuel Fuller,
United States,
1952,
A history in miniature of the emergence of modern journalism and a combined portrait of Joseph Pulitzer and other great newspaper editors of the period, Park Row was, for Fuller, “the story of my heart,” a love letter to the popular press. 

Saturday, August 6

Saturday, August 6, 2022
11 AM–7 PM

Drop-in Art Making

Saturday, August 6, 2022
7 PM
Mikio Naruse,
Japan,
1956,
(116 mins)

Imported 35mm Print

A trio of Japan’s finest actresses—Kinuyo Tanaka, Isuzu Yamada, and Hideko Takamine—is featured in this revealing picture of traditional geishas facing the decline of their way of life and the specter of prostitution in the mid-1950s.