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2004-2005 Season

$7.50 Non-Member Admission

All Film Society tickets are sold at the door beginning at 6:30pm the evening of the screening.


All Film Society screenings are held at the Vinegar Hill Theatre in Downtown Charlottesville at 7pm (unless otherwise noted).
Memberships

$50 Regular Membership
$40 Students and Seniors

Join the Virginia Festival Film Society now for our upcoming 2004-2005 season.

Member benefits include:
-Free admission to all 12 Film Society events
-One complementary pass to Regal Cinema.
-Half off regular admission to the Summer Classics Film Series at Vinegar Hill Theatre
- Free admission to Ozu's Late Autumn at the VA Film Festival
-$2 off Mondays at Sneak Reviews on non-new releases
- $2 off the regular $8 admission on Tuesdays at Vinegar Hill Theatre

Memberships can be purchased at the box office before each screening or by mail order. Click here for our Membership Form.

Screenings presented with the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities
 
Press

Please visit our Press page for related press releases and film stills.

Contact Anne Hooff with Payne Ross and Associates at (434) 977-7607 with publicity questions and requests.

Contact the Film Festival office (434) 982-5277 with general Film Society questions and requests.
 

 

Fall Film Society Season
September 14: What America Needs
with filmmaker Mark Wojahn

Traveling by train from N.Y.C. to L.A. (with an extended stop in Charlottesville), filmmaker Wojahn queried more than 500 people on the state of America. His beautifully shot and edited film is a rich tapestry of voices made thoughtful and troubled by the state of our nation.

September 21: Dear Frankie

A Sneak Preview of the new Miramax release, starring Emily Mortimer and Jack McElhone! Not wanting to tell her deaf son, Frankie that they’ve run away from his father, Lizzie pretends his Dad is away at sea. When the lie is about it be revealed, Lizzie must choose between telling her son the truth and finding the perfect stranger to play the perfect dad.

October 5: L’Avventura (1960), screening begins at 6:30pm

Michelangelo Antonioni’s classic Italian film is a story of romance, betrayal and mystery between a group of wealthy Italian friends. A woman disappears during a Mediterranean boat trip, but during the search for her, her lover and her best friend (unforgettably played by Monica Vitti) become attracted to one another.

October 19: Re-Imagining Ireland
with director Andrew Wyndham

Director Wyndham of the Virginia Foundation for Humanities brings the theatrical premiere of his documentary narrated by Frank McCourt and based on the groundbreaking Re-Imagining Ireland conference and festival held here in Charlottesville in 2003.


November 16: My Night At Maud’s (1969)

Eric Rohmer’s film centers around a night spent at Maud's, which becomes a chaste yet ticklish probing of male emotions and convictions. Rohmer’s characters are as articulate and informed as they are vulnerable in their exploration of the problems of moral responsibility in this “tale that is as ironic as it is moral” (Vincent Canby, The New York Times.)


November 30: Go Further

Calling his movie an “Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test on Tofu”, director Ron Mann joins actor Woody Harrelson as he pilots a hemp-fueled bus on an eco-consciousness raising incursion down the beautiful Pacific Coast.


Spring Film Society Season

Tuesday, February 8: The Chorus (Les Choristes)

This Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Film was a huge hit in France, where it sold over eight million tickets. Miramax is releasing the film, which Kevin Thomas of the L.A. Times calls “a well-nigh irresistible film celebrating the redemptive power of music.”


Sunday, February 20: Los Angeles Plays Itself

Newcomb Hall Theater at 7pm. Admission $3; free to Film Society members.
OFFScreen’s presentation of LAPI is cosponsored with the Virginia Film Society, whose members will be admitted free. Thom Andersen's Los Angeles Plays Itself is a documentary homage to the cinematic history of LA that is at once elegiac and elated, using clips from over 100 films.



Tuesday,February 22: The Exiles

One of the discoveries of Los Angeles Plays Itself, this remarkable 1961 independent film blurs the distinction between documentary and drama, as it follows an evening in the lives of a group of Arizonian Indians, residents of Bunker Hill, a low-rent neighbourhood on the west edge of downtown Los Angeles.





Tuesday, March 15: Walk on Water
with guest speakers Alon Confino

This acclaimed Israeli film by Eytan Fox (Yossi and Jagger) is a colorful and contemporary road movie that attempts to understand the role of the past in the lives of young Israeli and German people. Eyal is a tough Israeli Mossad agent. Axel, is a sweet natured German gay man, and the grandson of a Nazi fugitive.

Thursday, March 31: The Black Maria Film and Video Festival
with festival director John Columbus

John Columbus returns to Charlottesville for the eleventh year with another dazzling selection of short experimental, animation, and documentary award winners from this year’s Black Maria Festival.


Tuesday, March 29: Symbiopsychotoxiplasm Take 1 (7:00) and Take 2 ½ (8:45)
with filmmaker William Greaves

$7.50 admission prices gets you into both screenings!
In the 1960s cauldron of the Vietnam War and the civil rights and feminist movements, filmmaker/actor William Greaves began a brilliant cinematic experiment that examined the power dynamics of narrative filmmaking in Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One. Thirty years later, the veteran director has now profoundly advanced this inquiry with Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take 2 1/2, a further examination of race, gender, and filmmaking that premiered at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival.



Thursday, April 14: Sherman’s March
with filmmaker Ross McElwee
**SCREENING AT NEWCOMB HALL THEATER**

McElwee’s classic, comic road film is an autobiographical quest for true romance by filmmaker McElwee, who, after his girlfriend dumps him, pursues and films women along the original route of Sherman’s Civil War March.



Friday, April 15: Bright Leaves
with filmmaker Ross McElwee

Admission $8, $6 children and seniors; free to Film Society members. The film is tentatively scheduled to run for one week at Vinegar Hill Theatre.
Chosen as one of the top 10 films of 2004 by the Village Voice Critics’ Poll, the New York Times, Entertainment Weekly and many others! "Bright Leaves" is a meditation on the allure of cigarettes and their troubling legacy. And it's about filmmaking, as McElwee fences with the legacy of an obscure Hollywood melodrama that is purportedly based on the life of his great-grandfather, a tobacco magnate.








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