Tag Archives: Egyptian Theatre

GERMAN CURRENTS — FRANZ ROGOWSKI

Franz Rogowski made an indelible impression last year in Michael Haneke’s Happy End. He returns this weekend in a German Currents double bill featuring the local premiere of TRANSIT—the new film from Christian Petzold. This thriller addressing themes of identity and morality in times of advancing totalitarianism co-stars Paula Beer.

The evening will open with another Los Angeles premiere: Thomas Stuber’s IN DEN GÄNGEN/IN THE AISLES, co-starring Rogowski and Sandra Hüller—whose arresting portrayal of the daughter of the title character in Maren Ade’s Toni Erdmann is a comic highlight of recent world cinema.

IN THE AISLES and TRANSIT

Saturday, October 20, at 6:30 pm.

Egyptian Theatre

6712 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles.

From top: Franz Rogowski (foreground); Paula BeersLilien Batman and Rogowski, all in Transit. Image credit: Music Box Films..

MAE WEST

41sQ2CIA3pL._SX312_BO1,204,203,200_

“I wrote the story myself. It’s about a girl who lost her reputation and never missed it.” — Mae West

Editor Michael Gregg Michaud will introduce the Mae WestCary Grant classic SHE DONE HIM WRONG this weekend at the Egyptian.

He will also sign copies of his new book of West interviews, MAE WEST—BETWEEN THE COVERS, before the screening.

 

SHE DONE HIM WRONG

Saturday, August 18, at 4 pm.

EGYPTIAN THEATRE, 6712 Hollywood Boulevard,

Los Angeles.

americancinemathequecalendar.com/she-done-him-wrong

bearmanormedia.com/mae-west-between-the-covers

Cary Grant and Mae West in She Done Him Wrong.

Image result for mae west she done him wrong

Annex - West, Mae (She Done Him Wrong)_NRFPT_02

BARBARA LODEN’S WANDA

WANDA’s theme is elegantly revealed in its first few minutes: we have a woman who simply doesn’t fit within her environment, doesn’t belong anywhere (she’s never shown as having a home of her own), and whose very presence, more often than not, is an eyesore to the men around her (which doesn’t prevent her from being a sex object).” — Bérénice Reynaud

A new restoration of the Barbara Loden masterpiece WANDA (1970) opens in Los Angeles this week. A key work of modern American cinema, this was Loden’s only feature film as a director.

Loden’s son Marco Joachim, and Kate and Laura Mulleavy of Rodarte will introduce the screening this weekend at the Aero.

 

WANDA

Saturday, August 4, at 7:30 pm.

Aero Theatre

1328 Montana Avenue, Santa Monica.

 

Saturday and Sunday,

August 11 and 12, at 7:30 pm, and August 18 and 19 at 8 pm.

Spielberg Theatre at the Egyptian

6712 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles.

Poster image credit: Cinetic Media.

Barbara LodenWanda. Image credit: Janus Films.

CHRIS MARKER

La-Jetee-images-890bd6f0-3f69-44bc-a360-f0c308be914

As part of the American Cinematheque program “Symptoms of Vertigo,” Chris Marker’s seminal LA JETÉE (1964) will open a double-bill this week at the Egyptian.

“In addition to translating visually ideas about the mechanics of memory, the nature of identity, and the politics of history, LA JETÉE also draws attention to the character and function of imaging technologies in the post-war, Cold War era.  In so doing, it responds to that film theory of the 1940s concerned with the metaphysics of the photographic arts – that is, the status of the image, both still and moving – while simultaneously anticipating the questions that fueled the development of cine-semiotics in the 1960s — namely, those about the syntagmatic structures through which cinematic meaning is created.” – Corinn Columpar*

 

LA JETÉE and MULHOLLAND DR (2001, directed by David Lynch), Friday, May 25, at 7:30.

EGYPTIAN THEATRE, 6712 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles.

americancinemathequecalendar.com/mulholland-dr

*refractory.unimelb.edu.au/re-membering-the-time-travel-film-from-la-jetee-to-primer

Scene from La jetée.

Image result for LA jetee

fetch

INGMAR BERGMAN CENTENARY

SUMMER INTERLUDE was my first film in which I felt I was functioning independently, with a style of my own, making a film all on my own.” — Ingmar Bergman

The worldwide celebration of Bergman’s centenary continues this month at the American Cinematheque.

Little-seen titles such as WAITING WOMEN and ALL THESE WOMEN will screen this weekend in Hollywood, and SUMMER INTERLUDE and LESSON IN LOVE (later in May in Santa Monica) will play on double-bills with Bergman classics CRIES AND WHISPERS and WILD STRAWBERRIES.

WAITING WOMEN and ALL THESE WOMEN

Sunday, May 6, at 7:30 pm.

Egyptian Theatre

6712 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles.

 

CRIES AND WHISPERS and SUMMER INTERLUDE

Thursday, May 17, at 7:30 pm.

WILD STRAWBERRIES and A LESSON IN LOVE

Saturday, May 19, at 7:30 pm.

Aero Theatre

1328 Montana Avenue, Santa Monica.

From top:

Poster for A Lesson in Love.

Scenes from Summer Interlude and Waiting Women (a/k/a Secrets of Women).