The Ipcress File (1965)
THE IPCRESS FILE, 1965
THE IPCRESS FILE, 1965
September 1, 6 pm
Opening Reception (cash bar)
September 1, 7 pm
FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT, 1940
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
THE CAT RETURNS (Hiroyuki Morita, 2002)
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
WHISPER OF THE HEART (Yoshifumi Kondo, 1995)
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
ONLY YESTERDAY (Isao Takahata, 1991)
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE (Hiromasa Yonebayashi, 2014)
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
THE GIRL WHO LEAPT THROUGH TIME (Mamoru Hosoda, 2006)
BUY TICKETS
Pre-order ticketing is available online until 2 hours prior to each screening, then tickets will be available at the information desk or by calling 817.738.9215.
THE BOY AND THE BEAST (Mamoru Hosoda, 2015)
Special Guests:
Mike McFarland, ADR Director
John Swasey, voice of Kumatetsu
Bryn Apprill, voice of Kaede
July 26 – Notfilm, 2015
I am lost in admiration for this work . . . the film is ambitious, thrilling and illuminating. It represents an invaluable addition to Beckett scholarship. NOTFILM is a superb film.
James Knowlson, OBE (Beckett’s authorized biographer and founder of the Samuel Beckett Archive)
July 12 – La Jetée, 1962
La Jetée – a film made of photographs . . . but also made up of whispers, of heartbeats, of the roars of airplane – feels primitive to the eye and the ear even though it tells of the future. It is a time-travel story yet no movie is so frozen in time. It feels like a film in mourning for film, in memorial to itself.
Michael Koresky, Echo Chamber: Listening to La Jetée