Rooftop Films: Humpday (Event Over)
- When:Fri 6/26 (8PM)
- Where: Open Road Rooftop
- Address: 350 Grand Street New York, NY Map
- Cost: $9
Tickets for this Event
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General Admission - $9.00
No refunds. In the event of rain, show will go on indoors at the same location. Seating is first come, first served. Physical seats are limited. This means you may not get a chair. You are welcome to bring a blanket and sit picnic-style, but NO ALCOHOL IS PERMITTED.
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Rooftop friend ($9 General Admission ticket + $6 donation) - $15.00
Did you know that Rooftop Films is a non-profit organization? Consider making this additional $6 donation with the purchase of your General Admission ticket, and help sustain Rooftop Films during these difficult times. Additional donation is not tax deductible.
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Rooftop patron ($9 General Admission ticket + $16 donation) - $25.00
Did you know that Rooftop Films is a non-profit organization? Consider making this additional $16 donation with the purchase of your General Admission ticket, and help sustain Rooftop Films during these difficult times. Additional donation is not tax deductible.
FRIDAY, June 26
Rooftop Films and Magnolia Pictures Present
HUMPDAY
Male bonding goes a little bit too far in this bromantic comedy.
FREE OPEN BAR after the film
Venue: on the roof of the Open Road Rooftop
Address: 350 Grand Street @ Essex (Lower East Side, Manhattan)
8:00PM: Doors open
8:30PM:
Sound Fix presents live music
The Antlers
9:00PM: Films
11:30PM - 1:00AM: Open Bar at
Fontana’s (105 Eldridge St), courtesy of
Radeberger beer
Tickets: $9-$25
No refunds. In the event of rain, the show will be indoors at
the same locations.
Seating is first come, first served. Physical seats are limited.
This means you may not get a chair. You are welcome to bring a
blanket and sit picnic-style, but NO ALCOHOL IS PERMITTED.
MAP |
SOUND FIX
"Lynn Shelton’s whip-smart, uproariously funny comedy uses a
dumb, drunken, “bros will be bros” dare as the in point
to talk about, amongst other things, the inevitable loss of self in
long term relationships and the ongoing conquest to reconcile who
we really are with who we’d like to think we could be."
--Karina Longworth, Spout
“Shot in a manner that feels as improvised as the dialogue,
‘Humpday’ nonetheless possesses a comic structure as
rigorous as any "I Love Lucy" episode. From the opening shot of Ben
(Mark Duplass) and wife Anna (Alycia Delmore) enjoying a little
intimate bed talk, Shelton frames the action to emphasize physical
contact, and it's the potential of physicality of a very particular
kind that gives the film its special comic anxiety.”
--Variety
Humpday (Lynn Shelton | Seattle | 1:34:00)
When Andrew unexpectedly shows up on Ben's doorstep late one night,
the two old college friends immediately fall into their old dynamic
of heterosexual one-upmanship. To save Ben from domestication,
Andrew invites Ben to a party at a sex-positive commune. Everyone
there plans on making erotic art films for the local amateur porn
festival and Andrew wants in. They run out of booze and ideas, save
for one: Andrew should have sex with Ben, on camera.
It's not gay; it's beyond gay. It's not porn; it's an art project.
The next day, they find themselves unable to back down from the
dare. And there's nothing standing in their way - except Ben's wife
Anna, heterosexuality, and certain mechanical questions.
Lynn Shelton (My Effortless Brilliance, Summer Series 2008) returns
to the roof with Humpday, a hilarious and poignant new comedy. In
many ways, Shelton’s film is constructed like a classic
Hollywood high-concept comedy—one can almost imagine Steve
Carrell and Seth Rogen playing the leads in a film with the same
logline. But Shelton doesn’t settle for the cheap contrived
laughs, and the naturalistic dialogue--entirely improvised
on-set--creates an exhilarating sense of immediacy and realism. The
looseness of the dialogue and the sharpness of the plot structure
allows Humpday to feel at once invigoratingly real, yet at the same
time hilariously and outrageously absurd.
One of the central challenges in making a comedy film is that it is
exceedingly difficult to draw the audience in to the story while
the protagonists blunder their way into steadily more absurd
situations. But from the very beginning of Humpday, we can sense
the anxiety that Ben (Mark Duplass) and Andrew (Joshua Leonard)
feel about growing older and more staid, and when the opportunity
to break out and do something new arises, it’s easy to
understand why they would be willing to embark on an otherwise
improbably outlandish gambit. If we take a step back it might seem
absurd that two entirely straight males would end up agreeing to
sleep with each other for no particularly good reason, but as we
watch the story unfold, their interaction flows so naturally that
it seems to make perfect sense. When they awake the next morning
and remember the acts they have committed to perform, they feel
just as we do—well, that was funny, but how in the world did
we end up HERE?
As with My Effortless Brilliance, Shelton lets her lead actors take
the reins when it matters most, and once again she shows her trust
is well placed. Leonard and Duplass bring tremendous charisma and
impeccable comic timing to their roles, but most importantly they
never ham it up or do anything to allow us to believe that they are
actually anything but old friends who have gotten themselves into a
pretty damn funny situation. It’s a winning formula, and
hopefully Humpday will pave the way for a future filled with more
intelligent and excruciatingly entertaining independent comedies
like this one.
Humpday opens in theaters in New York and beyond, starting on July
10th. Support truly independent cinema and go see the film in
theaters and tell your friends about it.
www.humpdayfilm.com
Rooftop Films is a non-profit organization whose mission is to
engage and inspire the diverse communities of New York City by
showcasing the work of emerging filmmakers and musicians. In
addition to our Summer Series – which takes place in unique
outdoor venues every weekend throughout the summer – Rooftop
provides grants to filmmakers, teaches media literacy and
filmmaking to young people, rents low-cost equipment to artists and
non-profits, and produces new independent films. At Rooftop Films,
we bring the underground outdoors. For more information and updates
please visit our website at
www.rooftopfilms.com.


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