Rooftop Films: I'll Come Running (Event Over)
- When:Sat 8/9/08 (8PM)
- Where: roof of The Old American Can Factory
- Address: 232 Third Street Brooklyn, NY Map
Tickets for this Event
-
General Admission - $9.00
Not Available No refunds. In the event of rain, show will be held indoors at the same location. Seating is first come, first served. Physical seats are limited. That means a small percentage of the audience may not get a chair. NO POINTY HEELED SHOES ALLOWED ON THE ROOF.
Sat., August 9, 2008
I'll Come Running
An awkward, comic, sexy one night stand turns substantial, then
life-changing, in this dizzying mix of romantic comedy and drama.
Venue: On the roof of The Old American Can Factory
Address: 232 3rd Street at the corner of 3rd Avenue (Gowanus, Brooklyn)
Directions:
F, G to Carroll Street
or M, R to Union Street and read
here for directions from the train|
Map
Rain: In the event of rain the show will be held indoors at the same
location
8:30PM:
Sound Fix presents live music by
Bell
9:00PM: Films
11:00PM-1:00AM: After Party in the Courtyard with free wine courtesy of
Brooklyn Oenology
Tickets: $9 at
http://going.com
Preview: See short films from this and other programs at
www.IFC.com
Presented in partnership with:
IFC.com,
New York magazine, and
XØ Projects
I’ll Come Running (Spencer Parsons | Austin, TX & Copenhagen | 1:48:00)
Pelle (Jon Lange) is a Danish tourist in Texas, “a kitsch
paradise, where they execute the retarded.” Veronica (Melonie
Diaz) is a waitress in a tacky Tex-Mex joint. She takes him home,
but they go to bed in separate rooms. Now they both have second
thoughts about having second thoughts. Through a closed door, they
wait expectantly, sexual tension building.
“This kind of awkwardness gets points for style,” she
says.
It’s the awkwardness of getting to know someone through
Simpsons references, political graffiti, and tequila. The
awkwardness of being in a foreign country and not knowing why
anymore, because “no matter where you go, you’re still
stuck with yourself.” I’ll Come Running is about the
awkwardness of wanting love and finding it at the wrong time in the
wrong place.
The blossoming affair between Veronica and Pelle—or Lisa and
Millhouse, as they call each other, to help overcome language
difficulties—is a delight to watch because it’s
believable but unexpected. They flirt and dig at each other, get
serious then laugh, a perfect distillation of what fast, passionate
relationships are like: sharp, sweet, funny, then suddenly painful,
and ultimately blissful.
The film follows a similar pattern, as a twist so clean and total
it defies implausibility sends Veronica on an unplanned trip to
Copenhagen. There, Pelle’s family refuses to accept easy
answers, hurtling farther into the pain. There, lies build
themselves into truths, as Veronica and Pelle’s best friend
Soren try to comfort themselves and start anew (much the way in
Pelle’s TV show lies and tricks were a necessary
convalescence). There, the jaunty tourist attitude from Texas is
upended, and the mood of the film reflects Veronica’s sense
of displacement and loss.
Spencer Parsons, a Rooftop veteran (Resolution, 2002; Once and
Future Asshole, 2005; recipient of a 2007 Rooftop Filmmakers’
Fund grant), has crafted his debut feature with wit and poignancy,
lending remarkable weight to an unusual love story, and coaxing
stunning performances from the entire cast. The brilliance of
I’ll Come Running is that when the tone of the film u-turns,
you realize that Veronica and Pelle’s cavalier, comic
attitude toward their romance was a defense mechanism against both
the great tragedies and the quotidian disappointments of life. That
seemingly shallow defense has significance in and of itself. There
is a glorious importance to their one-night stand, to the Viking
Ship Museum, to a hand-rolled cigarette traded for a paint pen.
Because through the sadness and difficulty, there is still joy,
there is still laughter, there is still the possibility of love.


Talk