Rooftop Films: New York Non-Fiction (Event Over)
- When:Fri 9/12/08 (8PM)
- Where: Open Road Rooftop above New Design High
- Address: 350 Grand Street @ Essex New York, NY Map
- Cost: $9.00
Editors' Take
Films about New York--on a rooftop in New York! Maybe someone will be filming a documentary of all these people watching, and then...oh my god...the possibilities...
Tickets for this Event
-
General Admission - $9.00
No refunds.
Includes admission to music and films on the roof and to the after party at Fontana's after the screening. Folding chairs are limited, so chairs are distributed first come, first serve. In the event of rain, show goes on indoors at the same location. No alcoholic beverages are permitted on the premises. You can bring food and picnic blankets.
Fri
., September 12, 2008
New York Non-Fiction
It’s your city. Take a look.
Venue: on the roof of the
Open Road Rooftop
Address: 350 Grand Street @ Essex (Lower East Side, Manhattan)
Directions: F/J/M/Z to Essex / Delancey
Rain: In the event of rain the show will be held indoors at the same
location
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM: Sound Fix presents live music by
New Rap Order
9:00PM: Films
11:30PM - 1:00AM: Open Bar After Party at
Fontana’s (105 Eldridge St @ Grand) Courtesy of
Radeberger beer
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, Open Road New York & New Design High School
Program Notes:
Always one of our most popular programs, Rooftop Films’
annual New York Non-Fiction show has served as a showcase for new
documentaries about the extraordinary lives of
“ordinary” New Yorkers for nearly a decade. This
year’s films explore the magic in little metropolitan moments
and the poetry of the odd job, find humor in exploitative urban
institutions and capture the melancholy beauty of the dilapidated
underground. Above all, they express in particular what all of us
who live in New York know intuitively: in this great city there is
always an amazing story waiting around the corner.
The Films:
6 a.m. (Carmen Vidal Balanzat | New York | 8:33)
The city may not sleep, but it certainly seems a little quieter
before 6 A.M.
Bird Strikes (Chris Cassidy | New York | 7:00)
When technology and nature collide, Bob Leporati uses the ancient
art of falconry to clear the runways of JFK.
The Last Butcher in Little Italy (Laura Terruso | New York | 5:45)
Unlike most Italian Americans, Moe Albanese never left Little
Italy. Born on Elizabeth Street in 1925, Moe grew up on this street
and helped his parents run their small butcher shop. Today, this
shop is the last that remains of Elizabeth Street's Italian
American history. At eighty two, Moe is the shops only employee.
Native New Yorker (Steve Bilich | New York | 13:00)
Shot before, during and after 9/11 and filmed with a 1924
hand-crank Cine-Kodak camera, Native New Yorker follows Shaman
Trail Scout 'Coyote' as he takes a journey which transcends time,
from Inwood Park (where the island was traded for beads and booze),
down a native trail (now 'Broadway'), into lower Manhattan (then
and now a sacred burial ground).
Dimmer (Talmage Cooley | Buffalo, NY | 12:20)
Talmage Cooley's award-winning documentary short film presents a
poignant and memorable snapshot of life within a gang of
sight-impaired teenage boys who create their own world among the
abandoned factories of Buffalo's rust belt.
Intermission
New York Minute (Tim O'Grady | New York | 1:00)
One minute in a New York commute contains a collection of lasting
impressions.
Checkmate (Casimir Nozkowski, Dallas Penn and Rafi Kam | New York | 8:00)
Why are there always jewelry stores next to check-cashing spots?
Why is there only 1 bank per 50,000 people living in Bushwick? Is
it actually fun to make it rain on the streets of Brooklyn with
real dollar bills? Dallas and Rafi take us around check-cashing
joints in Brooklyn to answer these and other questions. Says
Dallas: “You know you’ve made it when you go from
check-cashing fees to ATM fees.”
Two Kids/Gentrificaiton (Gina Telaroli,
Brooklyn Filmmakers Collective | New York | 2:00)
Two Long Island City youths break down gentrification and the
fighting skills of white people.
Covered Tracks (Nathan Kensinger | New York | 12:00)
An exploration of life and death underneath Manhattan, travelling
through a 50 block-long train tunnel which was once an underground
homeless city.
Umbrellas (Eric Phillips-Horst,
Brooklyn Filmmakers Collective | New York | 2:20)
We might imagine that New York is a city full of unique characters,
but we all look the same when we pop open our umbrellas on a rainy
day.
Charge for That (Chris Cassidy | New York | 7:00)
The streets of New York City have been an endless palette for
artist Nilsen, and dog piss, manhole covers and passersby all make
their way into his very urban art.
Buttons (excerpts) (Josh Safdie, Alex Kalman, Benny Safdie | Boston, New
York | 4:00)
Josh, Benny and Alex roam the world with video cameras in hand,
capturing loose, magical moments. They collect these instances like
they are little buttons, so that is what they call them. Red
Bucket's first feature film, The Pleasure of Being Robbed was
selected for the 2008 Cannes Directors Fortnight and will be
playing September 19th at Rooftop Films.
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