Tag Archives: New Beverly Cinema

JACQUES DEMY — MODEL SHOP

MODEL SHOP opens on a rough patch of Venice Beach in decay—an ambience its director maintains throughout this essential glimpse of untethered lives and anomie at the end of the sixties.

The first and last American film directed by Jacques Demy, MODEL SHOP stars Gary Lockwood and Anouk Aimée as two Los Angeles drifters. Agnès Varda made the trip over from France with Demy to scout locations for her own California story, Lions Love (… and Lies).

MODEL SHOP and THEY CAME TO ROB LAS VEGAS

Tuesday, June 18, at 7:30 pm.

New Beverly Cinema

7165 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles.

From top: Anouk Aimée and Gary Lockwood in Model Shop (2); film poster; opening titles shot; Lockwood.

OKJA

Bong Joon Ho’s OKJA is streaming on Netflix, but Quentin Tarantino persuaded the filmmakers to strike a 35mm print, which he will screen at his New Beverly Cinema for one week, beginning in July. OKJA is also playing in Santa Monica for a very limited theatrical engagement.

OKJA, through July 4 only.

LAEMMLE MONICA, 1332 2nd Street, Santa Monica.

OKJA, in 35mm, July 2 through July 8 only.

NEW BEVERLY CINEMA, 7165 Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles.

laemmle.com/films/42463

thenewbev.com/schedule/

Tilda Swinton and Ahn Seo-hyun in Okja (2017), directed by Bong Joon Ho. Hanboks by Chanel, 2015 resort collection, slightly altered.

Image credit: Barry Wetcher/Netflix

Image result for okja netflix press photos

Okja00540.NEF

SOFIA COPPOLA’S BEGUILED

This week, Sofia Coppola—Best Director-winner at Cannes—brings her new film THE BEGUILED to Los Angeles for a pair of screenings.

On Wednesday, June 14, Quentin Tarantino’s New Beverly Cinema hosts a BEGUILED double-bill. (Don Siegel directed the 1971 version.) Schedule permitting, Coppola will participate in a Q & A at the end of the evening.

The following night, the LA Film Festival presents Coppola’s THE BEGUILED—followed by Lost in Translation, Coppola’s 2003 breakout—at LACMA. The director is expected to attend.

THE BEGUILED (2017), Wednesday, June 14, at 7:30 pm, followed by THE BEGUILED (1971) at 9:30 pm.

NEW BEVERLY CINEMA, 7165 Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles.

 

THE BEGUILED (2017), Thursday, June 15, at 6:30 pm, followed by LOST IN TRANSLATION at 8:30 pm.

LA FILM FESTIVAL

BING THEATER, LACMA, 5905 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles.

 

(From top): Kirsten Dunst and Colin Farrell, and Nicole Kidman, in The Beguiled (2017), directed by Sofia Coppola. Image credit: Focus Features.

The Beguiled

The Beguiled

CHILDREN OF PARADISE

After the fall of France in 1940, Jean Renoir, Julien Duvivier, and (briefly) Jean Gabin decamped for Hollywood. Director Marcel Carné and poet–screenwriter Jacques Prévert stayed in their occupied country and, under straitened circumstances, assembled their magnum opus LES ENFANTS DU PARADIS (CHILDREN OF PARADISE).

“The cast is a record of Paris under the Nazis, and one can only regret that some of the players [Arletty] did collaborate, while some were falsely accused of it. It is hard when actors are held up to the standards of human beings.” — David Thomson*

Les Enfant’s first screenings took place in Paris immediately after the Liberation, and the film was celebrated as an emblem of French fortitude and “patriotism” during wartime. Rather than talk about who did what to whom during the dark years, it was easier for Paris to find a symbol of freedom in a 3-hour “panorama of theatrical enterprise, from the lowest street performer to the loftiest actors” [Thomson], set in a simpler time one hundred years prior to its release.

 

LES ENFANTS DU PARADIS

Friday and Saturday, February 24 and 25, at 7:30 pm.

New Beverly Cinema

7165 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles.

*“Have You Seen…?”: A Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films, by David Thomson, is out in paperback.

Above: French poster.

Below: Jean-Louis Barrault (standing) as Baptiste in Children of Paradise.