Part 3 of 4: This week [November 4 - 12, 2006] in avant garde cinema

From: weekly listing (email suppressed)
Date: Sat Nov 11 2006 - 14:56:53 PST


Part 3 of 4: This week [November 4 - 12, 2006] in avant garde cinema

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2006
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11/10
Baltimore, Maryland: MicroCineFest
http://www.microcinefest.org
6 PM, MicroCineFest at The G-Spot, 2980 Falls Road

 MICROCINEFEST 2006 NIGHT TWO
  6:00 PM - Human BEEing w/shorts: Argus (Freddy Maskeroni); Bubblecraft
  (Geoff Marslett); Casket Climber Insect God (Brian Lonano);,
  Celebration's New Skin (Bump); Celestial Broadcast for Mrs. Jones
  (Kathleen Quillian): Greenie Travels (Bogdan Szabo); The Human BEEing
  (Tony Shea); In The Nick (Jason Middleton); Oomper Oomper (Michael
  Robinson); The Struggle (Luku Trembath); Team Queen (Leah Meyerhoff).
  8:00 PM - Experimiscellaneous Shorts: All (Arturo Menchaca); All That
  Remains (Stephanie Maxwell & Michaela Eremiasova); The Boy In The Air
  (Lyn Elliot); Caress (Mendel Hardeman); Dollar Disobedience (Bill
  VanDall); Given: The Undead (Adam Trowbridge); The Joy Of Leisure
  (Daniel J. Anderson); Kyrie Eleison (Mendel Hardeman); Let's Get Out Of
  Here (Rahne Alexander); LIFE (Daehwan Cho); Nebulous 1 (David Wanger);
  The One And The Many (André Silva); (rock/hard place)Roger Beebe; S A V
  E (Roger Beebe); Tempera (John Rouse); Yellow Cab (Michael L. Schmidt).
  10:00 PM - My Life As An Underdog (Boris Gavrilovic & Leon Martin).

11/10
HULL, ENGLAND: Hull Film
http://www.hullfilm.co.uk/
10 + 17th @ 7.30pm, Hull Screen|University of Lincoln|George Street|Hull|HU1 3BW

 DANCE MOVES
  Dance Moves HULL FILM presents DANCE MOVES a special two-part film
  programme taking place during the TWO WEEKENDS dance festival The
  marriage of dance, performance and film creates a very particular
  dynamic. The negotiation of the live performer with the mechanics of
  filmmaking makes for a naturally questioning form. The fusion, at its
  best, asks important questions about the nature of the body on the
  screen, how movement should be framed, what gesture can mean, how rhythm
  is exploited. How much can be said by not speaking, by asking us to
  look? RIZE PART ONE Feature Film programme Friday November 10th 7.30pm
  Hull Screen|University of Lincoln|George Street|Hull|HU1 3BW RIZE David
  LaChapelle 2005|86'|col|35mm|USA/UK|Rated:PG Rize reveals a
  groundbreaking dance phenomenon that's exploding on the streets of South
  Central, Los Angeles. Taking advantage of unprecedented access, this
  documentary film brings to first light a revolutionary form of artistic
  expression borne from oppression. The aggressive and visually stunning
  dance modernizes moves indigenous to African tribal rituals and features
  mind-blowing, athletic movement sped up to impossible speeds. Rize
  tracks the fascinating evolution of the dance: we meet Tommy Johnson
  (Tommy the Clown), who first created the style as a response to the 1992
  Rodney King riots and named it "Clowning", as well as the kids who
  developed the movement into what they now call Krumping. The kids use
  dance as an alternative to gangs and hustling: they form their own
  troupes and paint their faces like warriors, meeting to outperform rival
  gangs of dancers or just to hone their skills. For the dancers, Krumping
  becomes a way of life – and, because it's authentic expression (in
  complete opposition to the bling-bling hip-hop culture), the dance
  becomes a vital part of who they are.

11/10
London, England: Exploding Cinema
http://www.explodingcinema.org
7:30, The Albany Theatre - (The Studio), Douglas Way, Deptford, London SE8 4AG

 EXPLODING FUN CINEMA
  Attention loyal patrons and punters of Exploding Cinema! Are you sick of
  hearing about the London Film Festival? Are you doubtful of the value of
  shelling out double figure money to see a film that will either be
  coming out in two weeks anyway, can be downloaded for free, or just
  looks like crap? Let's face it, everything worth seeing has been sold
  out for weeks and the rest of what's on offer isn't fit to have the
  silver extracted from its celluloid and fashioned into cock rings* Now
  the unfounded bitter diatribe is out of the way, let us tempt you with a
  show that for ONE NIGHT only will tickle your retinas with films that
  will delight, stimulate and challenge in unequal measure. With a nod to
  our fans in southeast London, Exploding Cinema is back in New Cross! As
  well as a bevvy of fantastic underground, no budget, some budget and WTF
  short films from the UK and points abroad, there will be the usual
  prizes, live interval act, eye-popping projections and any other
  cine-related silliness we can think of. Tube: New Cross, Deptford Bridge
  DLR. Rail: Deptford, New Cross Buses: 21, 36, 47, 53, 136, 177, 188,
  199, 225 Doors 7.30pm 5 quid entry (no concs). *with the exception of
  anything that has been programmed by Philip Ilson. We love you, Philip.

11/10
London, England: Paul Tarrago + Jennet Thomas
http://www.wemakeourowntv.com
midday to 6pm, Friday to Sunday, Alma Enterprises, 1 Vyner Street, London E2 9DG

 WE MAKE OUR OWN TELEVISION
  10th Nov - 17th Dec 2006 WE MAKE OUR OWN TELEVISION: New video work by
  Paul Tarrago + Jennet Thomas Alma Enterprises Open: Friday-Sunday 12pm -
  6pm Preview Thursday 9th Nov 6pm-9pm WE MAKE OUR OWN TELEVISION is a
  collaborative venture between Paul Tarragó and Jennet Thomas, taking the
  form of a video installation show on tour internationally from September
  2006 - June 2007. In Because of the War a dapper Yellow Man Lecturer
  looks the viewer squarely in the eye and delivers an account of how it
  all came to pass: the conflict, the changes, everyday acts of
  transubstantiation, leading to a world where magick and ritual are
  suburban norms. Part slide show, with occasional forays into narrative
  interludes, this free verse instructional starts to shift the viewer's
  gaze-although a world governed by Neo-Absurdist un-sense, there's a
  burgeoning sense of familiarity. This not-quite-here, with its skewed
  and confusing folklore, isn't as elsewhere as first seems. The Badger
  Series has issues, and attempts-each episode-to resolve them. Recasting
  a glove puppet show through his own present day sensibilities, Tarragó
  himself assumes the role of the kindly uncle mentor to a household of
  capersome woodland creatures while modern themes are introduced.
  Mortality, sanity, depression, altered states of consciousness and
  transgressive art practices are all negotiated as part of everyday
  living. Meanwhile the show is mindful to adhere the old structural
  formulae, with entertainment numbers and routines appropriate to the
  scaled down sitcom world that they occupy. The series is equal parts
  moral instruction and narrative play, mediated through the forced fit of
  an experimental filmmaker as children's entertainer. WE MAKE OUR OWN
  TELEVISION features video work that defies classification - a hybrid of
  underground film, experimental art practices and personal folk cinema.
  visit the project website at www.wemakeourowntv.com For further
  information contact Sara Watkins at email suppressed or 07973 272543
  gallery website at www.almaenterprises.com

11/10
London, England: Tate Modern
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/film
7pm, Bankside, SE1

 SHOOT SHOOT SHOOT: BRITISH AVANT-GARDE FILM OF THE 1960S & 1970S
  The 1960s and 1970s were groundbreaking decades in which independent
  filmmakers challenged cinematic convention. In England, much of the
  innovation took place at the London Film-Makers' Co-operative, an
  artist-led organisation that enabled filmmakers to control every aspect
  of the creative process. LFMC members conducted an investigation of
  celluloid that echoed contemporary developments in painting and
  sculpture. The physical production of a film became integral to its form
  and content as Malcolm Le Grice, Lis Rhodes, Peter Gidal and others
  explored the material and mechanics of cinema, making radical new works
  that contributed to a new visual language. SHOOT SHOOT SHOOT: PROGRAMME
  1: The Materialist tendency characterised the hardcore of British
  filmmaking in the early 1970s. Distinguished from Structural Film, these
  works were primarily concerned with duration and the raw physicality of
  the celluloid strip. SLIDES (Annabel Nicolson) AT THE ACADEMY (Guy
  Sherwin) SHEPHERD'S BUSH (Mike Leggett) FILM NO. 1 (David Crosswaite)
  DRESDEN DYNAMO (Lis Rhodes) VERSAILLES I & II (Chris Garratt) SILVER
  SURFER (Mike Dunford) FOOTSTEPS (Marilyn Halford). Curated by Mark
  Webber. A "Shoot Shoot Shoot" DVD is published by LUX/Re:Voir.

11/10
Madrid: La Enana Marron
http://www.laenanamarron.org/home.htm
21.30, La Enana Marron, Sale de Cine Independiente, Travesia San Mateo 8, bajo dche, Madrid 28004

 LUZ Y TIEMPO: HISTORIA PARCIAL DEL CINE EXPERIMENTAL Y VIDEOARTE
 BRITANICO
  A selection of British artists film and video produced between 1968-2006
  Programme IV. The Art of Seeing and Throwing: The Videogames of Riccardo
  Iacono. 1. Pea Video Video, color, 2 min, 2006 2. P-Sample1 Video,
  color, 2' 45 min, 2006 3. P Process (Green) Video, color, 2' 20 min,
  2006 4. Seeing and Gaming After Sun Tzu Video, color, 8' 40 min, 2006 5.
  Maggie Blinks Video, color, 7' 30 min, 2006 6 Intermission Video, color,
  8' 40 min, 2006 7. Party Animal Video, color, 12 min, 2006 8. Sweet
  Sorrow Video, color, 4'47 min, 2006 9. Lookout Video, color, 5 min, 2006
  10. Zetlander Video, color, 2' 55 min, 2006 11. Kinky Video, color, 1'
  45 min, 2006 12. Whitechapel Video, color, 4 min, 2006 13. A Lecture In
  Throwing A Pea Video, color, 1 min, 2006 14. The Playing Field Video,
  color, 3' 30 min, 2006 15. Odd Socks Video, color, 3' 31 min, 2006 RT:
  70 mins

11/10
New York, New York: MIX NYC
http://www.mixnyc.org
10 PM, 3LD Art and Technology Center, 80 Greenwich St. (at Rector St.)

 POUR UNE NUIT (& OTHER NAUGHTY BITS)
  Pour une nuit is a series of five sexy short scenes, each recording an
  intense affair between two real live queers. Each participant chose a
  partner and discussed erotic fantasies prior to filming, yet events
  unfold naturally, with little attention to the camera's prying gaze. The
  result is magnetic. Jouvet's players act out their desires and delve
  into sexual practices as varied as the queer community itself. Pussy
  Buffet Kadet Kuhne & Ursula Rodriguez, USA, video, color, sound, 6 min.
  Desserts down there. Right After They Pet Me Janene Higgins, 2002, USA,
  Mini DV, color, sound, 3 min. As the torch singer laments the fact that
  she's a great lay, the video thumbs its nose at the idea that girls
  aren't supposed to want it. Music: "I'm Good for Nothing but Love" by
  Martin/Ballard; sung by the fabulous Ruth Etting. Pour Une Nuit (One
  Night Stand) Emile Jouvet, 2006, France, video, color, sound, French
  with English subtitles, 81 min. New York Premiere You can't always get
  what you want, unless you take matters into your own hands and do it
  yourself. Introducing queer young French director and photographer
  Emilie Jouvet, who gladly took matters in hand and recorded them to
  create the unforgettably sexy short film series Pour une nuit. Jouvet is
  the proud creator of this groundbreaking queer "sex-art" piece, also
  known as the first dyke and boi porno ever made in France. Get ready for
  an erotic and gritty romp into the broad universe of queer sexuality,
  beautifully handmade for your viewing pleasure.

11/10
New York, New York: MIX NYC
http://www.mixnyc.org
10:30 PM, 3LD Art and Technology Center, 80 Greenwich St. (at Rector St.)

 V.O.
  Rites of PTAH Micki Pellerano, 2006, USA, video, color, sound, 4 min.
  World Premiere Punk boy sex magick. V.O. William Jones, 2006, USA,
  video, color, sound, 59 min. V.O. consists (mainly) of sound quotes from
  more-or-less mainstream-foreign classics, by the likes of de Olivera,
  Renoir, Buñuel, Kaurismäki, Schroter, Eimgholz, and Debord, (None of
  which, by the way, are currently distributed in the USA) plus excerpts
  from American gay porno classics from the 70s and 80s, works by
  established masters like Tom de Simone (Confessions of a Groupie, 1970),
  Fred Halsted (L. A. Plays Itself, 1972), or Joe Gage (in particular his
  proletarian trilogy made between 1976 and '78: Kansas City Trucking Co.,
  El Paso Wrecking Corp., and L. A. Tool & Die). Nothing is ever done to
  hide the fact that these parts don't belong together per se, the sounds
  and images hit each other, violently, relentlessly, with solely the
  subtitles – the words these sounds mean, a layer all its own – as
  something like and equilibrating force in it all. These layers don't
  question each other; they start to hit on each other. They play with
  each other becoming one in an awesome evocation of love and passion, its
  conditions and guises. Plus…a surpise Super8mm film!

11/10
New York, New York: MIX NYC
http://www.mixnyc.org
7 PM, 3LD Art and Technology Center, 80 Greenwich St. (at Rector St.)

 A DIFFERENT TAKE: QUEER YOUTH SPEAK OUT
  In summer 2006, MIX NYC initiated its queer youth media training
  program, A Different Take, and joined other such successful public
  programs as REACH LA in offering lesbian, gay, bi- and transgender youth
  the tools and training to gain power as media-makers by expressing their
  perspectives through video production. Delivering their own State of the
  Union, the young auteurs represented here, many from A Different Take or
  from REACH LA's video production workshop, break down authentic queer
  stories with heart, craft and insight. Inside Out Jessica Scott, 2006,
  USA, video, color, sound, 8 min., World Premiere A lesbian teen's
  multi-media, confessional of life on the streets and in shelters.
  Cruzando La Frontera Maria Cruz, 2006, video, color, sound, 4 min. A
  passionate, poetic take on crossing the U.S. border Love is Shit Ali
  Kennedie, 2006, USA, video, color, sound, 10 min., World Premiere A
  young trans-female's lament for longed-for love in the West Village. I'm
  Gonna Die A Virgin Osuna, 2006, USA, video, color, sound, 8 min.
  Immortality and love. A yearning for love, for affection and the
  constant fear of dying young and alone. Boy Wonder Kery Isabel Ramierez,
  2005, USA, video, color, sound, 12 min. Luis struggles in a double life
  as straight male provider by day and transvestite prostitute by night,
  to satisfy his homophobic family. Billy Butch's Rockin' Rampage Catey
  McSweeny, Jeanna Tejada, 2006, video, color, sound, 9 min. A spoof of
  Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood that deals with dating issues in the lesbian
  youth community. My Crazy Life Carlos Arguello, 2005, USA, video, color,
  sound, 8 min. An animated short that playfully portrays the realities of
  a young gay Latino male living in South Central Los Angeles. The short
  explores friendship, education, homophobia and racism but in a dynamic,
  youth-friendly animation style. This innovative approach is designed to
  engage young people in meaningful conversation about difficult topics,
  shared from the perspective of their peers. Featuring the voice and
  video footage of 19 year-old Enzo Ybarra. Green Room Matt Palazzolo,
  2005, USA, video, color, sound, 6 min. New York Premiere "Green Room" is
  a rare opportunity for the parallels between growing up in a digital
  society and queer youth to collide. Through the archival footage and an
  intense existing process, "Green Room" offers unique insight into the
  experience of modern queer teen in the form of a visual autobiography.

11/10
New York, New York: MIX NYC
http://www.mixnyc.org
8 PM, 3LD Art and Technology Center, 80 Greenwich St. (at Rector St.)

 VIDEO BURNOUT
  I don't know that this video program is really about drugs and
  television at all; of course it's about something…it could simply be a
  small reflection of an archaeology of a train of thought, and perhaps
  that's all it really needs it be. In the least, it's about watching.
  Joshua Thorson, Guest Curator Edie After Hours Seth Kirby, 2005, video,
  color, sound, 2 min. An analogue disco processing, from the Maysles'
  Grey Gardens, of Edie dancing with the American flag as the world around
  her whirls into jagged bits of feedback. N.B.: strobing effect, if you
  are epileptic or otherwise strobe-sensitive please use caution. DARK
  STARS Marisa Olson, 2006, USA, video, color, sound, 2 min. Samples from
  VHS video games and internet video are fed back through analog
  processors in this witty and poetic comment on race and Warholian fame.
  Ringo Zapruder Dale Hoyt, 1981, video, color, sound, 5 min. A remake of
  Brackage's Desistfilm that also asks whether the hysteria of
  Beatle-mania might have had something to do with their first single's
  release date falling just six days after the Kennedy assassination. II:
  MK & A Sarah McKiel, 2006, video, color, sound, 1 min. Sarah McKiel's
  project NSM Fashions includes a book, and a long sequence of videos,
  mostly made about and during television viewing. This video watches,
  repeatedly and in slow-mo, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen on Saturday Night
  Live screaming. Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Paul Bush, 2001, video, color,
  sound, 5 min. The 1941 film version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde remade
  with a schizophrenic photographic apparatus. This video concretizes the
  thematic by transposing it into the structural. Based on the novel by
  Robert Louis Stevenson. The Possible Fog of Heaven John Knecht, 1993,
  USA, video, color, sound, 10 min. Speaking for the first time from the
  afterworld, Elvis describes his experience of Heaven. This is told
  through the tape's structure, predicated upon the King's last
  prescription. II: Caitlin Sarah McKiel, 2006, video, color, sound, 1
  min. From NSM Fashions. Caitlin, from Degrassi Junior High, in a rainy
  and somber moment writhes across the screen. pulse pharma phantasm Les
  LeVeque, 2002, video, color, sound, 6 min. A frame-by-frame weaving of
  nine different pharmaceutical television commercials into a pulsating
  hallucination. N.B.: strong strobing effect, if you are epileptic or
  otherwise strobe-sensitive please use caution. I Did It Peter Brinson,
  2001, video, color, sound, 17 min. Using the scientific method, Brinson
  evaluates himself and his video before and after taking Prozac to
  determine whether or not he needs anti-depressants and if they have an
  effect on his storytelling. I: Subplot Sarah McKiel, 2006, video, color,
  sound, 3 min. From NSM Fashions. An interventionist approach to the
  experience of experiencing America's Top Model, in this special instance
  where models meet a publicist to talk about self-image and, by proxy,
  eating disorders: dissecting it, enveloping it, and turning away.
  Mummenclean Anonymous, 2005, video, color, sound, 2 min. A conceptual
  Swiss cleaning service thwarts it's own productivity after discovering
  some un-consumed cocaine; the disco returns. Docu-Duster Donigan
  Cumming, video, color, sound, 3 min. To be a man, to be a hero, to be a
  wife; three conflicting voices inhabit the filmmaker as he re-enacts the
  climax of Delmar Daves' 3:10 to Yuma. Jean Genet in Chicago Frederic
  Moffat, 2006, video, color, sound, 26 min. A queer re-writing of the
  events surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago
  from the point of view of French writer Jean Genet, whose presence
  unearths the difficult alignment of political and sexual desires. II:
  Length of the Body Sarah McKiel, 2006, video, color, sound, 1 min. From
  NSM Fashions. "We don't want to have shoulders for earrings—like this."
  An exercise show is examined in a moment of absurd parlance.

11/10
New York, New York: MIX NYC
http://www.mixnyc.org
9 PM, 3LD Art and Technology Center, 80 Greenwich St. (at Rector St.)

 PSYCHOPATHIA SEXUALIS
  This collection of shorts is sure to appeal anyone with an interest in
  the intersections between sexuality, creativity and fetishism from the
  fringes to the silly and the sublime. Guy 101 Ian Gouldstone, 2005, UK,
  video, color, sound, 9 min. An S/M internet fantasy incorporating
  computer animation. This piece explores cyber-desire gone wrong...or
  right, depending on your taste. Both funny and sobering. Killer Fags Ian
  Jarvis, 2005, Canada, video, color, sound, 3 min. Killer Fags attempts
  to explore how negative stereotypical societal images translate into the
  construction of a larger and more dangerous gay homophobic identity.
  This film juxtaposes images of Hollywood homosexuality with famous gay
  serial killers to reveal some alarming conclusions. The Heart Scewer (Le
  Nicoeur) Herve Joseph Lebrun, 2005, France, video, color, sound, 17 min.
  At dawn of spring, at the foot of the Atlas Mountains, a young
  traveller, thirsty for... sex, steals the heart of a rich exiled boy
  recluse in his "douar"... The Heartscrewer is a post-porn poetic
  metaphor of furtive male passion, under the ochre light of Morocco.
  Yankee Lust Clark Nicolai, 2006, Canada, video, color, sound, 3 min.
  Shot at the Folsom Street Fair in 2000, this piece enjoys the beauty of
  leather daddies in all their glory. No longer hidden in the darkness of
  the backrooms, they proudly stroll the sunlight streets of San Francisco
  in their best gear. Pop Porn Party Panik Qulture, 2005, France, video,
  color, sound, 4 min. A roll of packing tape and a few dildos can lead to
  an exciting adventure beyond the binary gender system. Set to the music
  of Klaus Nomi. Feetish Eliza Steinbock & Christina Schafer, 2005, The
  Netherlands, video, color, sound, 4 min. A foot's eye-view of a hot
  multi-gender toe orgy in a public restroom. IML: Dog Eat Dog Charles
  Lum, 2006, USA, video, color, sound, 12 min. An exploration of people
  who are dogs and the people who love them. Shot at the International Mr.
  Leather conference, this piece uses experimental video techniques to
  portray an experimental lifestyle. Bad Boy Velveeta Krisp, 2005, Canada,
  video, B&W, sound, 5 min. Two women and a dog training session. We won't
  ruin the surprise....but consider yourself warned. Stick It To Hetero
  Culture (La Culture hétéro vous savez ou je me la mets?) Panik Qulture,
  2004, France, video, color, sound, 6 min. The Parisian radical queer art
  collective Panik Qulture confronts the public with their own style of
  "just say no" street theater. Chick On Chick Sepideh Saii & Maya Seuss,
  2005, Canada, video, color, sound, 3 min. An homage to The Miss Nomer
  Collective's docu/porn "Girl on Girl," the satirical video "Chick on
  Chick" explores the sexuality and sensuality between chicks, in and out
  of the coop. Raz D'ep Lionel Soukaz, 2002, France, video, B&W, 5 min.
  This piece of ritual shaving is a parody of the 1979 Lionel Soukaz & Guy
  Hocquenghem film "Race d'Ep." Albrecht Becker, Arsch Ficker Faust Ficker
  Herve Joseph Lebrun, 2004, France, video, B&W, sound, 7 min. Albrecht
  Becker (1906-2002) was one of the last people to have survived the Nazi
  suppression of homosexuals, which started in 1933, with the
  implementation of paragraph 175. Becker had started to 'decorate' his
  body in 1943, practicing the art of tattoos and piercing and taking
  photos of his progressive transformations. Lebrun puts the spotlight on
  the body of Becker with photographs resembling landscapes of a body,
  which by its constant mutations and history, left a mark on its century.

11/10
New York, New York: Anthology Film Archives
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
7:30pm, 9:30pm, 32 Second Ave. @ 2nd St.

 NY THEATRICAL PREMIRE! "ME & MY BROTHER" BY ROBERT FRANK
  ME AND MY BROTHER (1965-68 (re-edited 1997), 91 min (re-edited 85 min),
  35mm, b/w and color) Anthology is thrilled to present the first New York
  Theatrical Premiere Run of Robert Frank's ME AND MY BROTHER, his
  stunning first feature-length film, which places documentary footage of
  poets Allen Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky, and Peter's brother Julius within
  a fictional framework. Constantly delineating real and imaginary
  situations and moving back and forth between gorgeous color and
  black-and-white, the film describes the inner and outer worlds of
  Julius, a catatonic, who silently observes the world around him. The
  film was re-edited in 1997 to mark the passing of Allen Ginsberg and
  also features the late Joseph Chaikin, founder of the revolutionary
  Off-Broadway company, Open Theater. ME AND MY BROTHER's re-edited
  version "re-premiered" in 1998 at the San Francisco International Film
  Festival. ME AND MY BROTHER is a capturing film, which on the surface is
  about mental illness and the society's response to it. Montage, split
  screen, disrupted sense of time and unconventional sound are used in
  this film, which is a also a study of the fine line between documentary
  film and reality, and the relationship between film and fact.

(continued in next email)

__________________________________________________________________
For info on FrameWorks, contact Pip Chodorov at <email suppressed>.