Rooftop Films Fourth of July: Americana (Event Over)
- When:Sat 7/4 (6PM)
- Where: The Xchange
- Address: 640 W 28th St. (btw. 11th & 12th Ave) New York, NY Map
- Cost: $40-50
Tickets for this Event
-
Limted Time Special - General Admission - $40.00
Not Available No Longer Available
-
General Admission - $50.00
Not Available No refunds. Must be 21 to drink. Due to the length of the event you are welcome to bring snacks/food. In the event of severe weather we will follow NYC's July 4th Fireworks policy. If there is some rain we will still be outdoors so we suggest you prepare accordingly.
SOLD OUT. NO MORE TICKETS AVAILABLE
Saturday, July 4
AMERICANA -
VENUE CHANGE! SEE BELOW.
Rooftop's annual celebration of the weird and wonderful country we
live in. A sunset party with free drinks, a fantastic fireworks
view, live music, and short film comedies, dramas and political
documentaries.
Venue:
The show has been moved to The
Xchange.
Address:
640 W 28th Street, between 11th and 12th Avenue (Chelsea,
Manhattan)
Directions: C, E, 1, 9, F, V, N, R, W to 23rd St or 34th street.
Rain:Show will go on, rain or shine.
6:00PM: Doors open
6:30PM - 8:00PM: Open bar provided by
Radeberger Pilsner and
Carlo Rossi sangria
7:00PM - 9:00PM: Music by
Bachelorette,
Love Like Deloreans, and
Class Actress presented by
Sound Fix
9:20PM: Great view of the fireworks
9:50PM: Films
Tickets:
SOLD OUT. THERE WILL
NOT BE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
Presented in partnership with:
Cinereach, and
New York magazine
Food, drinks, live music by
Bachelorette,
Love Like Deloreans, and
Class Actress, a fantastic fireworks view and explosive Americana films. A mix
of the wacky and the weighty in contemporary America.
Rooftop’s annual 4th of July show includes a party atmosphere
peppered with some prepossessing films; serious calls for social
justice tempered by some seriously funny films.

This program of short films walks us through various landscapes of the American Dream, and the American Nightmare. These films satirize many of America's problems, and celebrate America's strengths. It's easy to think that America is on the decline. The economy is in tatters. We're still waging two unpopular and so far unsuccessful wars. Civil rights issues like marriage equality and universal health care struggle to gain acceptance. Junk food, disposable products and ever more asinine "reality TV" shows continue to dominate the cultural landscape.
But all hope is not lost. If there's one great advantage to Americans' infatuation with superficial beauty, quick fixes, and a stubborn, willful disregard for the crumbling signs of decay which surround us, hey, at least it keeps us blissfully happy. At least we can still laugh at ourselves. We can still imagine a world where Jell-o molds and green lawns can stifle genocide, still see through the hardship to remember the value of a hardworking hometown store, the intensity of an immigrant's belief in a better life to come.
So whatever the problems may be, whatever troubles may be bubbling beneath the surface, these films will make you laugh, make you think, make you take another drink. Because today, it's ok. You go, America: it's your birthday!
THE FILMS:
Sovereignty (Jonathan Sale | New York, NY | 19:00)
Please do not attempt to adjust your lifestyle. Pulitzer Prize nominated author Rolin Jones, Producer and Writer of Showtime’s Emmy and Golden Globe winning series “Weeds,” uncoils a hilarious and caustic allegory of the lengths to which people—particularly Americans—will go to ignore the horrors in the world around them. laurelfilmsinc.com
Immersion (Richard Levien | San Francisco, CA | 12:00) *
Moises, a ten-year-old student, struggles to communicate in his new
American school with limited access to his native language.
immersionfilm.com
The Greatest Gift (Daniel Bloomberg | Brooklyn, NY | 4:00)
A shadowy force attacks a typical American all-girls school cafeteria. The most popular girl risks her life to save the school misfit, and through her sacrifice opens the misfit's eyes to the joys of life within the community. danielbloomberg.com
The First Kid to Learn English from Mexico (Peter Jordan | Palo Alto, CA | 20:00)
9-year-old Pedro's reluctant journey through elementary school in pursuit of the American Dream, which he describes as a "nightmare." Misbehaving and failing at school, Pedro becomes isolated from other children and tries to befriend unsuspecting animals he encounters along his way. Told from Pedro's point of view, as only a child could, this idiosyncratic documentary enters the subjective universe of a Mexican immigrant boy at odds with the new country around him. localfilms.org
O.W. Houts & Sons, Inc. (Richie Sherman & Aaron Matthews | Pine Grove Mills, PA | 9:30)
The American Dream is exemplified by the small town family business. The American Reality is that even after decades of exceptional service, small town family businesses can't compete with national corporate chain stores. A sweet and sad story that we hope renews interest in supporting local American shops.
Looking Back
(Emily Bokaer | Ithaca, NY | 5:30) *
Like many American veterans, Albert Lewis struggles with addiction
and with memories of war. Lewis uses photography to help him
survive in a supportive community of homeless veterans.
* Brought to Rooftop Films by the Media That Matters Film Festival
www.mediathatmattersfest.org








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