Category Archives: Film Screenings

An award-winning new documentary to screen at The Museum of Modern Art February 25th and 26th: The Visitors

Text by Augusta Palmer

Melis Birder (photo by Bennu Gerede)

The Visitors is a subtle film about a brutal world: the world of the prison industrial complex that crushes many within its path, the families of inmates as much as the inmates themselves. Melis Birder’s 64-minute film provides an unexpected look at the U.S. prison system through the eyes of the travelers who ride late-night buses to remote New York prisons every weekend to visit their loved ones. The largely female riders of these buses go through financial and other hardships in order to see their husbands, brothers, boyfriends, and sons for only a few moments; they spend more than $100 on travel each weekend, pack up children for overnight bus trips to see their fathers, and are forced to keep secrets about their absences from bosses and disapproving family members.

Birder’s lens is never prurient or exploitative. Instead, as the bus moves on and the seasons pass, we see the beauty, strength and resilience of these people. They are led on their bus journeys (and we are led through the film) by the magnetic Denise, who shepherds her charges to prisons where she visits her own husband, whom she met and married in prison, and whose release she anxiously awaits. It would be easy enough to pass social or moral judgment on these visitors and their loved ones. My viewing companion at a screening of the film was dying to know what crimes the prisoners committed and wondered aloud about what would drive someone to marry a man in prison. Birder wisely chooses not to answer these questions. What drives anyone to get married, or to stand by loved ones in the face of adversity? Rather than psychoanalyzing its subjects, The Visitors contrasts their extremely personal stories of familial and romantic love with the inhumanity of the American system of incarceration.

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Film – Akira Kurosawa Centennial at Film Forum!

Text by flavorpill NY

Akira Kurosawa portraitAhead of Akira Kurosawa‘s centenary on March 23, Film Forum more or less runs through the auteur’s consummate filmography (on queue: Ikiru, Seven Samurai, Yojimbo) in six action-packed weeks. Two masterpieces also bracket this domo-arigato series: Stray Dog, an early, naturalistic film about a detective and the search for his missing gun in postwar Tokyo, and Ran, Kurosawa’s superlative, late-career translation of King Lear to the feudal East and its tragic, color-specific daimyos. The former stars Toshiro Mifune and the latter Tatsuya Nakadai, two Japanese icons who reappear throughout a canon that incorporates everything from pulp to Noh theatre, Shakespearean tragedy to the almighty Bushido code.

More about Akira Kurosawa

Filmography

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Screening dates: Women of Iran-Film Series & “Marathon Beirut, For the Love of Lebanon” (documentary)

1. Copresented by Asia Society and the Global Film Initiative
October/November 2009

All screenings at Asia Society, 725 Park Avenue at 70th Street, NYC
See discount code below!

Focusing on lives of women in contemporary Iran, this mini-film series presents portraits of strong women negotiating their space and freedom in a narrow world of strict social conventions.

For more information, visit Asia Society

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