ONE SINGS THE OTHER DOESN’T

  • Cannes Film Festival Unveils 2018 Cannes Classis Lineup Featuring ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ Turning 50

    [caption id="attachment_27819" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]2001: A Space Odyssey 2001: A Space Odyssey[/caption] 2001: A Space Odyssey turning 50 as seen by Christopher Nolan, an essay by Mark Cousins about Orson Welles, Margarethe von Trotta’s tribute to Bergman, Fernando Solanas and The Hour of the Furnaces, Five and the Skin by Pierre Rissient  are among the lineup for the Cannes Classics 2018 at the upcoming Cannes Film Festival.  Other highlights include spotlights of two women belonging to the history of cinema, Alice Guy and Jane Fonda, African patrimonial cinema, unknown treasures and internationally recognized masterpieces. By screening heritage films in restored 2K and 4K versions or an exceptional photochemical film recreation, Cannes Classics continues its work by exploring the history of cinema with documentaries produced in 2018 and feature films presented to us by producers, distributors, foundations, cinematheques, right-holders who work to protect the past and revive it in present days. All the screenings will be introduced either by directors, artists or specialists in charge of the restorations either by professionals from the archive world or cinematheques.

    Alice Guy and Jane Fonda

    Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché (Soyez naturel : L’histoire inédite d’Alice Guy-Blaché) by Pamela B. Green (2018, 2h, United States of America) First woman director, producer and director of a studio in the history of cinema, Alice Guy is the subject of a documentary carried out full swing like an investigation aiming to make us (re)rediscover the filmmaker and her work around the world. Presented by Wildwood Enterprises In Association with Artemis Rising. Produced by A Be Natural Production. Pamela B. Green in attendance. Jane Fonda in Five Acts by Susan Lacy (2018, 2h13, United States of America) Jane’s Fonda’s film career, her place in the history of the twentieth century, her relationship to the men of her life. Presented by HBO Documentary Films. Produced by Pentimento Productions. Jane Fonda and Susan Lacy in attendance.

    2001: A Space Odyssey turning 50

    2001: A Space Odyssey (2001 : l’odyssée de l’espace) by Stanley Kubrick (1968, 2h44, United Kingdom, United States of America) Presented by Warner Bros. 70mm print struck from new printing elements made from the original camera negative. This is a true photochemical film recreation. There are no digital tricks, remastered effects, or revisionist edits. The film will be introduced by director Christopher Nolan and will be screened in Debussy theater with a 15mn-intermission accurately reproducing the real-life experience of moviegoers when the film was released in the spring of 1968. Stanley Kubrick’s daughter, Katharina Kubrick and his coproducer, Jan Harlan, in attendance.

    Orson Welles

    The Eyes of Orson Welles (Les Yeux d’Orson Welles) by Mark Cousins (2018, 1h55, United Kingdom) A journey by film critic and historian Mark Cousins—director of Story of Film—in the pictorial world of Orson Welles, his drawings, paintings and works of youth, seen for the first time on screen thanks to his daughter Beatrice Welles. Presented by Bofa Productions. Produced by Bofa Productions with Creative Scotland, the BBC and Filmstruck. Mark Cousins in attendance.

    Ingmar Bergman’s Centenary

    Searching for Ingmar Bergman (À la recherche d’Ingmar Bergman) by Margarethe von Trotta (2018, 1h39, Germany, France) Director Margarethe von Trotta, extremely appreciated by Ingmar Bergman, follows the filmmaker’s footsteps as well as her own past and questions the new generation about the place left by the Swedish master. Presented by C-Films (Deutschland) in Hamburg and Mondex et Cie-France. International sales, Edward Noeltner, CMG in Los Angeles. Margarethe von Trotta in attendance. Bergman — ett år, ett liv (Bergman – A Year in a Life) by Jane Magnusson (2018, 1h56, Sweden) Bergman – A Year in a Life describes the existence of Bergman in 1957 when Wild Strawberries and The Seventh Seal were released. A film by Jane Magnusson, who directed in 2013 Trespassing Bergman with Martin Scorsese, Woody Allen, Francis Coppola, Wes Anderson. Presented by B-reel Films. Produced by Mattias Nohrborg, Cecilia Nessen, Fredrik Heinig for B-reel Film, with SvT, Nordsvensk, FRSM, Reel Ventures, SF and supported by SFI, NFI and NFTV. Distribution: Carlotta Films. Jane Magnusson in attendance. Det sjunde inseglet (The Seventh Seal / Le Septième Sceau) by Ingmar Bergman (1957, 1h36, Sweden) A knight and Death meet, a legendary game of chess. The most famous masterpiece by Ingmar Bergman and one of Max von Sydow’s most significant parts. Presented by Swedish Film Institute. Digitization and 4K restoration from the original negative and final mix on magnetic tape carried out by Swedish Film Institute. French distribution in theaters: Studiocanal and Carlotta Films.

    All the Cannes Classics Films

    Beating Heart (Battement de cœur) by Henri Decoin (1939, 1h37, France) 2K Restoration presented by Gaumont in association with the CNC. Image works carried out by Eclair, sound restored by L.E. Diapason in partnership with Eclair. Ladri di biciclette (Bicycle Thieves / Le Voleur de bicyclette) by Vittorio De Sica (1948, 1h29, Italy) Presented by Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna, Stefano Libassi’s Compass Film and Istituto Luce-Cinecittà. Restored by Fondazione Cineteca di Bologna and Stefano Libassi’s Compass Film, in collaboration with Arthur Cohn, Euro Immobilfin and Artédis, and with the support of Istituto Luce-Cinecittà. Restoration carried out at L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory. Enamorada by Emilio Fernández (1946, 1h39, Mexico) Presented by The Film Foundation. Restored by UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project in collaboration with Fundacion Televisa AC and Filmoteca de la UNAM. Restoration funded by the Material World Charitable Foundation. The film will be introduced by Martin Scorsese. Tôkyô monogatari (Tokyo Story / Voyage à Tokyo) by Yasujiro Ozu (1953, 2h15, Japan) Presented by Shochiku. Digital restoration by Shochiku Co., Ltd., in cooperation with The Japan Foundation. For the 4K restoration, the duplicated 35mm negative was provided by Shochiku, managed by Shochiku MediaWorX Inc. and conducted by IMAGICA Corp. French distribution in theaters: Carlotta Films. Vertigo (Sueurs froides) by Alfred Hitchcock (1958, 2h08, United States of America) Presented by Park Circus. 4K digital restoration from the VistaVision negative done by Universal Studios. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach). The Apartment (La Garçonnière) by Billy Wilder (1960, 2h05, United States of America) Presented by Park Circus with the co-operation of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 4K digital restoration from the original camera negative. Digital restoration completed by Cineteca di Bologna, Colour Grading by Sheri Eissenburg at Roundabout in Los Angeles. Supervised on behalf of Park Circus by Grover Crisp. Démanty noci (Diamonds of the Night / Les Diamants de la nuit) by Jan Němec (1964, 1h08, Czech Republic) Presented by the National Film Archive, Prague. The restoration was done by the Universal Production Partners studio in Prague, under the supervision of the National Film Archive, Prague. Voyna i mir. Film I. Andrei Bolkonsky (War and Peace. Film I. Andrei Bolkonsky / Guerre et paix. Film I. Andrei Bolkonsky) by Sergey Bondarchuk (1965, 2h27, Russia) Presented by Mosfilm Cinema Concern. Digital frame-by-frame restoration of image and sound from 2K scan. Producer of the restoration: Karen Shakhnazarov. La Religieuse (The Nun) by Jacques Rivette (1965, 2h15, France) Presented by Studiocanal. 4K restoration from the original camera negative. Sound restauration from the sound negative (only matching element). Works carried out by L’immagine Ritrovata laboratory under the supervision of Studiocanal and Ms. Véronique Manniez-Rivette with the help of the CNC, the Cinémathèque française and the Fonds culturel franco-américain. Četri balti krekli (Four White Shirts / Quatre chemises blanches) by Rolands Kalnins (1967, 1h20, Latvia) Presented by National Film Centre of Latvia. 4K Scan and 3K Digital Restoration from the original 35mm image internegative and print positive materials mastered in 2K. Restoration financed by the National Film Centre of Latvia, the restoration made by Locomotive Productions (Latvia). Director Rolands Kalnins in attendance. La Hora de los hornos (The Hour of the Furnaces / L’Heure des brasiers) by Fernando Solanas (1968, 1h25, Argentina) Presented by CINAIN – Cinemateca y Archivo de la Imagen Nacional. 4K Restoration from the original negatives, thanks to Instituto Nacional de Cine y Artes Audiovisuales (INCAA), in Buenos Aires. With the supervision of director Fernando “Pino” Solanas. French Distribution: Blaq Out. Fernando Solanas in attendance. Le Spécialiste (Specialists / Gli specialisti) by Sergio Corbucci (1969, 1h45, France, Italy, Germany) Presented by TF1 Studio. Full version previously unseen restored in 4K from the original Technicolor-Techniscope image negative and French and Italian magnetic tapes by TF1 Studio. Digital work carried out by L’Image Retrouvée laboratory, Paris / Bologne. French theater distribution: Carlotta Films. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach). João a faca e o rio (João and the Knife / João et le couteau) by George Sluizer (1971, 1h30, the Netherlands) Presented by EYE Filmmuseum, Stoneraft Film in association with Haghefilm Digital. A full 4K restoration of the original 35mm Techniscope camera negative shot by Jan de Bont. By bypassing the originally required analogue blow up to Cinemascope, this digital restoration presents a direct-from-negative color richness and image sharpness never seen before. Blow for Blow (Coup pour coup) by Marin Karmitz (1972, 1h30, France) Presented by MK2. Restoration carried out by Eclair from the original negative in 2K with the help of the CNC and supervised by director Marin Karmitz. The film will be re-released in French movie theaters on May 16th, 2018. Marin Karmitz in attendance. L’une chante, l’autre pas (One Sings the Other Doesn’t) by Agnès Varda (1977, 2h, France) Presented by Ciné Tamaris. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach) with Agnès Varda in attendance. 2k digital restoration from the original negative and restoration, color grading under the supervision of Agnès Varda and Charlie Van Damme. With the support of the CNC, of the fondation Raja, Danièle Marcovici  & IM production Isabel Marant, with the support of Women in Motion / KERING. International Sales MK2 films. Distribution in theaters: Ciné Tamaris (the film will be released in France on July, 4th, 2018). Grease by Randal Kleiser (1978, 1h50, United States of America) Presented by Park Circus and Paramount Pictures. 4K digital restoration from the original camera negative. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach) with John Travolta in attendance. Fad,jal (Grand-père, raconte-nous) by Safi Faye (1979, 1h52, Senegal, France) Presented by the CNC and Safi Faye. Digital restoration carried out from the 2K scan of the 16mm negatives. Restoration made by the CNC laboratory. Safi Faye in attendance. Five and the Skin (Cinq et la peau) by Pierre Rissient (1981, 1h35, France, Philippines) Presented by TF1 Studio. 4K restoration from the original camera negative and the French magnetic tape by TF1 Studio with the support of the CNC and the collaboration of director Pierre Rissient. French distribution in theaters: Carlotta Films. Pierre Rissient in attendance. A Ilha dos Amores (The Island of Love / L’île des amours) by Paulo Rocha (1982, 2h49, Portugal, Japan) Presented by Cinemateca Portuguesa – Museu do Cinema. 4K wet gate scan of two 35mm image and sound interpositives struck in a Japanese film lab in 1996. Digital grading was made by La Cinemaquina (Lisbon, Portugal) using a 35mm distribution print from 1982 as a reference. Digital restoration of the image was made by IrmaLucia Efeitos Especiais (Lisbon, Portugal). Out of Rosenheim (Bagdad Café) by Percy Adlon (1987, 1h44, Germany) Presented by Studiocanal. 4k Scan and restoration. Work led by Alpha Omega Digital in Munich and carried out under the continuous supervision of director Percy Adlon. Original negative, kept in Los Angeles in excellent condition, processed in Munich for scanning and image by image restoration. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach) with Percy Adlon in attendance. Le Grand Bleu (The Big Blue) by Luc Besson (1988, 2h18, France, United States of America, Italy) Presented by Gaumont. A 2K restauration. Image work carried out by Eclair, sound restored by L.E Diapason in partnership with Eclair. A screening organized to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the screening of the film opening the Festival de Cannes in 1988. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach). Driving Miss Daisy (Miss Daisy et son chauffeur) by Bruce Beresford (1989, 1h40, United States of America) Presented by Pathé. 4K restoration made from 35mm original image and sound negatives. Restoration carried out by Pathé L’image Retrouvée laboratory (Paris/Bologne) with the collaboration of director Bruce Beresford. Cyrano de Bergerac by Jean-Paul Rappeneau (1990, 2h15, France) Presented by Lagardère Studios Distribution. Scan from the original negative and 4K restoration carried out by L’Image Retrouvée for Lagardère Studios Distribution with the support of the CNC, the Cinémathèque française, the Fonds Culturel Franco-Américain, Arte France–Unité Cinéma, Pathé et Mr. Francis Kurkdjian. French distribution in theaters: Carlotta Films (in progress). Jean-Paul Rappeneau in attendance. Hyenas (Hyènes) by Djibril Diop Mambety (1992, 1h50, Senegal, France, Switzerland) Presented by Thelma Film AG with the support of the Cinémathèque Suisse. Scan from the orginal negative, cleaning and colorimetry correction in 2K. Works carried out by Eclair Cinéma SAS. International sales: Thelma Film AG. French distribution: JHR Films (in progress). Preceded by: Lamb (La Lutte sénégalaise) by Paulin Soumanou Vieyra (1963, 18 min, Senegal) Presented by La Cinémathèque de l’Institut français, Orange and PSV Films. Digital restoration made from 2K scan of the 35mm negatives. Restoration carried out by Eclair. El Massir (Destiny / Le Destin) by Youssef Chahine (1997, 2h15, Egypt, France) A preview of the full retrospective which will take place at the Cinémathèque française in October 2018, the film will be presented by Orange Studio and MISR International films with the support of the CNC, fostered by the Cinémathèque française. 4K restauration at Éclair Ymagis laboratory by Orange Studio, MISR International Films and the Cinémathèque française with the support of the CNC. The film will be screened at the Cinéma de la Plage (Movies on the Beach). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0swRBkl11rI

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  • 2018 Chattanooga Film Festival Releases FIRST WAVE of Films – LU OVER THE WALL, GHOST STORIES and More …

    [caption id="attachment_27508" align="aligncenter" width="1203"]LU OVER THE WALL LU OVER THE WALL[/caption] With the 5th annual Chattanooga Film Festival just under one month away, the first wave of films are here. These films join opening night films ROCK STEADY ROW and SUMMER OF ’84, as well as the world premiere of LIFE AFTER FLASH. Fresh off its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, LU OVER THE WALL is a gorgeously animated hallucinogenic-but-family-friendly take on the classic fairy tale of the little mermaid who falls in love with mankind, and then comes ashore to join a dysfunctional middle school rock band and propel them to fame. Exploring the pre-fame years of the celebrated American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, BOOM FOR REAL: THE LATE TEENAGE YEARS OF JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT shows how New York City, its people, and the tectonically shifting arts culture of the late 1970s and ’80s shaped his vision. In GHOST STORIES, Arch skeptic Professor Phillip Goodman embarks upon a terror-filled quest when he stumbles across a long-lost file containing details of three cases of inexplicable ‘hauntings’. Every once in a while, you see a film you just know is a classic in the making. LOWLIFE is such a film. Director Ryan Prows has crafted a darkly comic sublimely cinematic and strangely heartwarming crime tale that explodes off the screen like a Molotov cocktail. From filmmaker Josephine Decker comes MADELINE’S MADELINE, a drama that centers around a family in Queens, New York. In the film, Miranda July plays Regina, single mother to sixteen-year-old Madeline. Madeline finds herself as the youngest member of an experimental-theater company and begins to take her performance too seriously. For fans of THE EXORCIST, director William Friedkin delivers a chilling documentary with THE DEVIL AND FATHER AMORTH. Having never seen an exorcism, Friedkin wondered how close he came to truly portraying one on screen. Thus, he decided to follow Father Gabriele Amorth, an Italian Roman Catholic Priest and an exorcist of the Diocese of Rome, as he performs his ninth exorcist on an Italian woman. CFF is extremely proud to bring RBG to Chattanooga screens, a documentary about the life and work of legendary Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Directors Julie Cohen and Betsy West interview friends, family, colleagues and the woman herself, RBG. In keeping with the theme of strong, powerful women, but this time of the fictional kind, Coralie Fargeat’s REVENGE is the ultimate tale of payback and signals the arrival of a relentlessly bold new voice. From its eye-popping tracking sequences to a score that would make John Carpenter proud, Fargeat fills every inch of every frame with style, and anger. THE LAST MOVIE STAR finds an aging, former movie star, portrayed by Burt Reynolds, being forced to face the reality that his glory days are behind him. On its surface THE LAST MOVIE STAR is a tale about faded fame, but at its core, it’s a universal story about growing old. Crazy doesn’t scratch the surface of the things you’ll see and hear when you watch THE ROAD MOVIE. Painstakingly compiled entirely from Russian dashboard cams. This is one wildly entertaining car wreck you won’t want to look away from. ICEPICK TO THE MOON, which will make its world premiere at the festival, centers on cult following of the obscure, strip-mine crooner Rev. Fred Lane. His obsessive fans, who have described him as “subversive,” “completely satirical,” “the Dada Duke Ellington,” and “Demon Frank Sinatra,” have spent years examining every detail of Lane’s albums, and yet whatever information they have found out about their hero has led them deeper into blissful confusion. ICEPICK TO THE MOON not only examines the cult of Fred Lane fans, but it also pulls the curtain back on the artist who is Fred Lane, from his early involvement in the Raudelunas arts collective of Alabama in the 1970s to his current occupation making whirligigs to sell on the craft show circuit. Following the screening will be a Q&A with director Skizz Cyzyk. Also making its world premiere is WOLFMAN’S GOT NARDS. This heartfelt documentary explores the power of cult film told through the 1987 classic THE MONSTER SQUAD and the impact it has on fans, cast and crew, and the industry. Director Andre Gower, Ryan Lambert (both stars of The Monster Squad) and producer Henry McComas will be on hand for a post-film Q&A. ONE SINGS, THE OTHER DOESN’T (L’une chante, l’autre pas) is a feminist musical about the bond of sisterhood felt by Pomme and Suzanne throughout years of changes and fraught relationships with men. At the time of release in 1977, director Agnès Varda said, “If I put myself on the screen—very natural and feminist—maybe I’d get ten people in the audience. Instead, I put two nice young females on the screen, and not too much of my own leftist conscience. By not being too radical but truly feminist, my film has been seen by 350,000 people in France.” THE LAPLACE’S DEMON finds a team of seven researchers has developed a software capable of predicting the evolution of common physical events. The final test, the prediction of the exact number of fragments caused by the fall of a glass, was a success. Interested by these results, the mysterious Professor Cornelius invites the working team in his isolated mansion on a deserted island, hiding his true intentions. As time passes, the team will lead to paradoxical situations in a growing tension that will not only test their nerves but also one of their certainties: the free will. WE ARE STILL HERE director Ted Geoghegan is back, but this time with a different kind of story. MOHAWK tracks the events of one very long day late in The War of 1812, during which a young Mohawk woman and her two lovers strike back at a squadron of American soldiers responsible for the death of her people. Although set in 1812, this film with resonate with audiences even more so now than ever. It doesn’t get more wildly influential than the Shaw Brothers’ KING BOXER. Not only was it the first bonafide Kung Fu film to be a hit in the West (under the title FIVE FINGERS OF DEATH) it very literally helped kick off the Kung Fu craze of the 70’s, ushering in an era where Bruce Lee became a household name. There is simply no overstating the cultural importance or even the coolness of this Shaw Studios treasure.

    When an awkward date on Christmas Eve leads a couple into a strange theater, they’re treated to a bizarre and frightening collection of Christmas stories. The terrifying feature film debut of writer/directors Rebekah and David Ian McKendry, ALL THE CREATURES WERE STIRRING is a frightening and fun journey through the perils of Christmas Eve with an incredible cast and a style all its own. Following the world premiere screening, directors Rebekah McKendry and David Ian McKendry, along with producers Morgan Peter Brown and Joe Wicker will stick around for a Q&A.

    THE FIRST WAVES OF FILMS FOR 2018 CHATTANOOGA FILM FESTIVAL

    LU OVER THE WALL | Director Masaaki Yuasa New kid Kai is talented but adrift, spending his days sulking and isolated in a small fishing village after his family moves from Tokyo. When he demonstrates a proficiency at making music on his synthesizer, his classmates invite him to join their nascent garage band, but their practice sessions soon bring an unexpected guest: Lu, a young mermaid whose fins turn to feet when she hears the beats, and whose singing causes humans to compulsively dance – whether they want to or not. BOOM FOR REAL: THE LATE TEENAGE YEARS OF JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT | Director Sara Driver Exploring the pre-fame years of the celebrated American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, and how New York City, its people, and tectonically shifting arts culture of the late 1970s and ’80s shaped his vision. GHOST STORIES | Directors Jeremy Dyson, Andy Nyman Arch skeptic Professor Phillip Goodman embarks upon a terror-filled quest when he stumbles across a long-lost file containing details of three cases of inexplicable ‘hauntings’. LOWLIFE | Director Ryan Prows The sordid lives of an addict, an ex-con, and a luchador collide when an organ harvesting caper goes very, very wrong. Q&A with director Ryan Prows MADELINE’S MADELINE | Director Josephine Decker A theater director’s latest project takes on a life of its own when her young star takes her performance too seriously. THE DEVIL & FATHER AMORTH | Director William Friedkin Father Gabriele Amorth performs his ninth exorcism on an Italian woman. RBG | Directors Julie Cohen, Betsy West A look at the life and work of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. REVENGE | Director Coralie Fargeat Never take your mistress on an annual guys’ getaway, especially one devoted to hunting – a violent lesson for three wealthy married men. THE LAST MOVIE STAR | Director Adam Rifkin An aging, former movie star is forced to face the reality that his glory days are behind him. On its surface THE LAST MOVIE STAR is a tale about faded fame, but at its core, it’s a universal story about growing old. THE ROAD MOVIE | Director Dmitrii Kalashnikov A documentary comprised entirely of footage from dashboard cameras from Russian cars. ICEPICK TO THE MOON | Director Skizz Cyzyk *WORLD PREMIERE A feature length documentary about strip-mine crooner, Rev. Fred Lane, and the Raudelunas arts collective of Alabama in the Seventies. Q&A with director Skizz Cyzyk. WOLFMAN’S GOT NARDS | Director Andre Gower *WORLD PREMIERE This heartfelt documentary explores the power of cult film told through the lens of the 1987 classic The Monster Squad and the impact it has on fans, cast and crew, and the industry. Q&A with director Andre Gower, producer Henry McComas and Ryan Lambert ONE SINGS, THE OTHER DOESN’T | Director Agnès Varda ONE SINGS, THE OTHER DOESN’T (L’une chante, l’autre pas) is a feminist musical—with lyrics by the director—about the bond of sisterhood felt by Pomme and Suzanne throughout years of changes and fraught relationships with men. THE LAPLACE’S DEMON | Director Giordano Giulivi A team of seven researchers has developed a software capable of predicting the evolution of common physical events. The final test, the prediction of the exact number of fragments caused by the fall of a glass, was a success. Interested by these results, the mysterious Professor Cornelius invites the working team in his isolated mansion on a deserted island, hiding his true intentions. As time passes, the team will lead to paradoxical situations in a growing tension that will not only test their nerves but also one of their certainties: the free will. MOHAWK | Director Ted Geoghegan Late in the War of 1812, a young Mohawk woman and her two lovers battle a squad of American soldiers hell-bent on revenge. Q&A with director/writer Ted Geoghegan and writer Grady Hendrix KING BOXER AKA FIVE FINGERS OF DEATH | Director Chang-hwa Jeong Two martial arts schools prepare for an important tournament. (1972) ALL THE CREATURES WERE STIRRING| Directors David Ian McKendry, Rebekah McKendry *WORLD PREMIERE When an awkward date on Christmas Eve leads a couple into a strange theater, they’re treated to a bizarre and frightening collection of Christmas stories, featuring a wide ensemble of characters doing their best to avoid the horrors of the holidays. From boring office parties and last-minute shopping, to vengeful stalkers and immortal demons, there’s plenty out there to fear this holiday season. Q&A with directors Rebekah McKendry and David Ian McKendry, producers Morgan Peter Brown and Joe Wicker

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