Results tagged: Films

The Infernal Affairs Trilogy (restored)

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Friday, Jul 7, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Jul 8, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Jul 9, 2023
2 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee. All tickets include admission to all 3 parts

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Hong Kong/2002-2003—directed by Andrew Lau Wai-keung and Alan Mak

The Hong Kong crime drama was jolted to new life with the Infernal Affairs trilogy, a bracing, explosively stylish triumph that introduced a dazzling level of narrative and thematic complexity to the genre with its saga of two rival moles—played by superstars Tony Leung Chiu-wai (In the Mood for Love) and Andy Lau Tak-wah (House of Flying Daggers)—who navigate slippery moral choices as they move between the intersecting territories of Hong Kong’s police force and its criminal underworld.

Set during the city-state’s handover from Britain to China and steeped in Buddhist philosophy, these ingeniously crafted tales of self-deception and betrayal mirror Hong Kong’s own fractured identity in a post-colonial purgatory.

Each film in the trilogy will be shown separately over the course of the weekend.

Martin Scorsese’s 2006 remake, The Departed, won four Academy Awards® including Best Picture, Director and Screenplay – the first time in cinema history that Hollywood remade a Hong Kong film. Don’t miss this opportunity to see the fully restored, original Infernal Affairs trilogy on the big screen. In Cantonese with English subtitles.

“Combines exhilarating action with liquid-nitrogen existential cool.” –Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian (UK)

Two figures stand atop a high-rise roof with the city, a river, mountains and copious clouds behind them.

Hong Kong/2002-2003—directed by Andrew Lau Wai-keung and Alan Mak

The Hong Kong crime drama was jolted to new life with the Infernal Affairs trilogy, a bracing, explosively stylish triumph that introduced a dazzling level of narrative and thematic complexity to the genre with its saga of two rival moles—played by superstars Tony Leung Chiu-wai (In the Mood for Love) and Andy Lau Tak-wah (House of Flying Daggers)—who navigate slippery moral choices as they move between the intersecting territories of Hong Kong’s police force and its criminal underworld.

Set during the city-state’s handover from Britain to China and steeped in Buddhist philosophy, these ingeniously crafted tales of self-deception and betrayal mirror Hong Kong’s own fractured identity in a post-colonial purgatory.

Each film in the trilogy will be shown separately over the course of the weekend.

Martin Scorsese’s 2006 remake, The Departed, won four Academy Awards® including Best Picture, Director and Screenplay – the first time in cinema history that Hollywood remade a Hong Kong film. Don’t miss this opportunity to see the fully restored, original Infernal Affairs trilogy on the big screen. In Cantonese with English subtitles.

“Combines exhilarating action with liquid-nitrogen existential cool.” –Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian (UK)

The Trial (new restoration)

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Saturday, Apr 22, 2023
3 p.m.

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Saturday, Apr 22, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 23, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 23, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

France/Italy/West Germany/1962—directed by Orson Welles | 119 minutes

“Say what you like, but The Trial is the best film I ever made.”   – Orson Welles

In the aftermath of his indelible performance as a shy motel owner in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, Anthony Perkins became so associated with the persona of Norman Bates that traditional Hollywood work was hard to come by. Orson Welles, however, believed that Perkins’ vulnerability as Norman might make him the perfect embodiment of Joseph K in his film adaptation of The Trial, Franz Kafka’s classic tale of meaningless legal and social persecution in an authoritarian state, and the paranoia it inspires.

In Welles’ controversial interpretation, the great director has orchestrated Kafka’s tragic yet often comic fable as an overwhelming visual experience – a landscape in which an individual seems to grow ever smaller as he protests his fate. Never one to obey the rules, Welles tinkers with Kafka, changing and rearranging the plot, yet he remains faithful to the novel’s essence. Welles called it his first movie since Citizen Kane to be edited exactly as he intended, and now it’s been restored to the visual splendor he envisioned. With Welles, Romy Schneider and Jeanne Moreau. In English.

“A frenzy of expressionistic images bursts through the screen to evoke an oppressively incomprehensible system of edicts and constraints. Who better to reveal the system’s evil genius than Orson Welles?”  – Richard Brody, The New Yorker

 

Two men standing with their backs to each other in black and white.

France/Italy/West Germany/1962—directed by Orson Welles | 119 minutes

“Say what you like, but The Trial is the best film I ever made.”   – Orson Welles

In the aftermath of his indelible performance as a shy motel owner in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, Anthony Perkins became so associated with the persona of Norman Bates that traditional Hollywood work was hard to come by. Orson Welles, however, believed that Perkins’ vulnerability as Norman might make him the perfect embodiment of Joseph K in his film adaptation of The Trial, Franz Kafka’s classic tale of meaningless legal and social persecution in an authoritarian state, and the paranoia it inspires.

In Welles’ controversial interpretation, the great director has orchestrated Kafka’s tragic yet often comic fable as an overwhelming visual experience – a landscape in which an individual seems to grow ever smaller as he protests his fate. Never one to obey the rules, Welles tinkers with Kafka, changing and rearranging the plot, yet he remains faithful to the novel’s essence. Welles called it his first movie since Citizen Kane to be edited exactly as he intended, and now it’s been restored to the visual splendor he envisioned. With Welles, Romy Schneider and Jeanne Moreau. In English.

“A frenzy of expressionistic images bursts through the screen to evoke an oppressively incomprehensible system of edicts and constraints. Who better to reveal the system’s evil genius than Orson Welles?”  – Richard Brody, The New Yorker

 

Leonor Will Never Die

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Friday, Apr 14, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Apr 15, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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Saturday, Apr 15, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 16, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 16, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Philippines/2022—directed by Martika Ramirez Escobar | 99 minutes

Once a groundbreaking figure in the Filipino film industry during its action movie glory days, Leonor (the wonderful Sheila Francisco) now struggles with mounting bills, the untimely loss of her son, and the general indignities of old age. While revisiting an unfinished script about a fearless protagonist trying to avenge his brother’s murder, the cinema-obsessed and irresistibly cranky Leonor suffers one more test of her endurance when she’s struck on the head by a falling television set.

As she lays unconscious in the hospital, fantasy and reality blur when Leonor finds herself awake inside of her own script, becoming – not surprisingly – the hero of her own improbable tale. An innovative blend of pulpy action homages, playful comedy, and touching family drama, Leonor Will Never Die is an imaginative, witty tribute to the art of moviemaking – and the joy of movie-watching.

Winner, Special Jury Prize for Innovative Spirit, 2022 Sundance Film Festival; Best Narrative Feature Award, Center for Asian American Media (CAAMFEST 2022). In Filipino with English subtitles. 

“Wonderfully unclassifiable! Martika Ramirez Escobar’s heartfelt, zany tribute to the magic of movies and the power of love.”  – A.O. Scott, The New York Times
 

An older woman in a purple, patterned dress looks at the camera while holding up two fingers on her right hand.

Philippines/2022—directed by Martika Ramirez Escobar | 99 minutes

Once a groundbreaking figure in the Filipino film industry during its action movie glory days, Leonor (the wonderful Sheila Francisco) now struggles with mounting bills, the untimely loss of her son, and the general indignities of old age. While revisiting an unfinished script about a fearless protagonist trying to avenge his brother’s murder, the cinema-obsessed and irresistibly cranky Leonor suffers one more test of her endurance when she’s struck on the head by a falling television set.

As she lays unconscious in the hospital, fantasy and reality blur when Leonor finds herself awake inside of her own script, becoming – not surprisingly – the hero of her own improbable tale. An innovative blend of pulpy action homages, playful comedy, and touching family drama, Leonor Will Never Die is an imaginative, witty tribute to the art of moviemaking – and the joy of movie-watching.

Winner, Special Jury Prize for Innovative Spirit, 2022 Sundance Film Festival; Best Narrative Feature Award, Center for Asian American Media (CAAMFEST 2022). In Filipino with English subtitles. 

“Wonderfully unclassifiable! Martika Ramirez Escobar’s heartfelt, zany tribute to the magic of movies and the power of love.”  – A.O. Scott, The New York Times
 

The Novelist's Film

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Saturday, Apr 1, 2023
3 p.m.

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Saturday, Apr 1, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 2, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Apr 2, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

South Korea/2022—directed by Hong Sangsoo | 92 minutes

For his playful and gently thought-provoking 27th feature, Hong Sangsoo holds a mirror up to his own artistic process and asks what exactly it is we’re looking for from a work of art. To achieve this, his film takes on the perspective of a middle-aged novelist, Junhee (Lee Hyeyoung, the magnetic star of Hong’s In Front of Your Face), who's grown disenchanted with her own writing.

After visiting an old friend who now runs a bookshop outside of Seoul, she embarks on a restorative journey that leads her to a chance encounter with a famous actress and former movie star (Kim Minhee) who’s also questioning her role as an artist.

The two make an instant connection that stokes both women’s dormant creative impulses, soon providing this simple, loose-limbed tale with a deep well of emotional truth and a bounty of questions about the expectations of artmaking, culminating in an entirely unexpected, mode-shifting climax. Jury Prize Winner, 2022 Berlin Film Festival. In Korean with English subtitles.

“Exquisite! Tense, absorbing and finally enchanting.”  – Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times

A woman bundled in a coat and scarf holds flowers picked in a forest, pictured behind her.

South Korea/2022—directed by Hong Sangsoo | 92 minutes

For his playful and gently thought-provoking 27th feature, Hong Sangsoo holds a mirror up to his own artistic process and asks what exactly it is we’re looking for from a work of art. To achieve this, his film takes on the perspective of a middle-aged novelist, Junhee (Lee Hyeyoung, the magnetic star of Hong’s In Front of Your Face), who's grown disenchanted with her own writing.

After visiting an old friend who now runs a bookshop outside of Seoul, she embarks on a restorative journey that leads her to a chance encounter with a famous actress and former movie star (Kim Minhee) who’s also questioning her role as an artist.

The two make an instant connection that stokes both women’s dormant creative impulses, soon providing this simple, loose-limbed tale with a deep well of emotional truth and a bounty of questions about the expectations of artmaking, culminating in an entirely unexpected, mode-shifting climax. Jury Prize Winner, 2022 Berlin Film Festival. In Korean with English subtitles.

“Exquisite! Tense, absorbing and finally enchanting.”  – Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times

A Couple

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Saturday, Mar 18, 2023
4 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 18, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Mar 19, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Mar 19, 2023
4 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

USA/2022—directed by Frederick Wiseman | 63 minutes

Countess Sophia Behrs married Leo Tolstoy when she was 18 and he was 34. They were husband and wife for 48 years, had 13 children, and she outlived him by nine years. Yet their relationship, among the most discussed and written about in literary history, was anything but harmonious, as Sophia, an artist in her own right—a photographer, memoirist, and editor—was constantly forced to negotiate her happiness with her husband’s infidelities.

Legendary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman was inspired by Sophia’s story, and when a documentary he was scheduled to shoot was postponed due to Covid, he instead filmed this dramatic dream project based on Sophia’s letters from Leo to Sophia, structured as a series of lively monologues delivered with gathering intensity by actor and co-writer Nathalie Boutefeu, reinforced by graceful images of natural beauty inspired by the film’s bucolic French setting.

The 92-year-old Wiseman’s cinematic gamble paid off handsomely; this captivating one-woman performance offers a surprisingly contemporary rendering of a marriage. In French with English subtitles.

“Critic’s Pick! Devastating and essential. Sculpts the raw material of the diaries into an arc that works to peel back the emotional layers of the marriage. A Couple is Wiseman working to bottle a human soul.”  –Sophie Monks Kaufman, IndieWire

A woman in a black robe with a bright floral shawl stands amongst trees.

USA/2022—directed by Frederick Wiseman | 63 minutes

Countess Sophia Behrs married Leo Tolstoy when she was 18 and he was 34. They were husband and wife for 48 years, had 13 children, and she outlived him by nine years. Yet their relationship, among the most discussed and written about in literary history, was anything but harmonious, as Sophia, an artist in her own right—a photographer, memoirist, and editor—was constantly forced to negotiate her happiness with her husband’s infidelities.

Legendary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman was inspired by Sophia’s story, and when a documentary he was scheduled to shoot was postponed due to Covid, he instead filmed this dramatic dream project based on Sophia’s letters from Leo to Sophia, structured as a series of lively monologues delivered with gathering intensity by actor and co-writer Nathalie Boutefeu, reinforced by graceful images of natural beauty inspired by the film’s bucolic French setting.

The 92-year-old Wiseman’s cinematic gamble paid off handsomely; this captivating one-woman performance offers a surprisingly contemporary rendering of a marriage. In French with English subtitles.

“Critic’s Pick! Devastating and essential. Sculpts the raw material of the diaries into an arc that works to peel back the emotional layers of the marriage. A Couple is Wiseman working to bottle a human soul.”  –Sophie Monks Kaufman, IndieWire

2023 Oscar® Nominated Short Films – Animation and Live Action

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Friday, Feb 17, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Feb 18, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Feb 19, 2023
2 p.m.

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Thursday, Feb 23, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Feb 25, 2023
2 p.m.

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Saturday, Feb 25, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Feb 26, 2023
2 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 4, 2023
2 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 4, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Mar 5, 2023
5 p.m.

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Friday, Mar 10, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 11, 2023
2 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 11, 2023
7 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

We’re delighted to once again present the DFT’s most popular annual program in its original format – combining all the nominees in both the short animation and short live-action categories into one spectacularly entertaining presentation, with an intermission between the two sections. Discovering the narrative surprises and visual riches of the Oscar® Shorts on the big screen provides fresh jolts of pleasure and continuous, renewed wonder at the ways in which the cinema can explore the world through fresh eyes and unbridled imaginations.

Experience some of the year’s most imaginative works of cinematic storytelling with other fans, family, and friends whose first impressions of each film are uncluttered by advance hype – then make your personal picks for the best and see the winners announced when the Oscars® are awarded on Sunday, March 12th. Advance ticket purchase is strongly recommended. The remaining seats will be available at the door prior to each performance. Running time is generally around three hours, plus a 25-minute intermission. 

The showing on March 3 @ 7 p.m. was canceled due to inclement weather. 

An animated woman with thick, black rimmed glasses, red lips, and short, curly red hair looks back over her shoulder.

We’re delighted to once again present the DFT’s most popular annual program in its original format – combining all the nominees in both the short animation and short live-action categories into one spectacularly entertaining presentation, with an intermission between the two sections. Discovering the narrative surprises and visual riches of the Oscar® Shorts on the big screen provides fresh jolts of pleasure and continuous, renewed wonder at the ways in which the cinema can explore the world through fresh eyes and unbridled imaginations.

Experience some of the year’s most imaginative works of cinematic storytelling with other fans, family, and friends whose first impressions of each film are uncluttered by advance hype – then make your personal picks for the best and see the winners announced when the Oscars® are awarded on Sunday, March 12th. Advance ticket purchase is strongly recommended. The remaining seats will be available at the door prior to each performance. Running time is generally around three hours, plus a 25-minute intermission. 

The showing on March 3 @ 7 p.m. was canceled due to inclement weather. 

No Bears

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Friday, Feb 10, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Feb 11, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Feb 12, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Feb 12, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Iran/2022—directed by Jafar Panahi | 107 minutes

One of the world’s great filmmakers, Iranian director Jafar Panahi (The White Balloon, Taxi, 3 Faces – all screened at DFT) won the 2022 Venice Film Festival Jury Prize for this new, clandestinely-shot, brilliantly complex meta-drama about a filmmaker (Panahi) who temporarily relocates to an Iranian border town to remotely oversee the making of a new film in Turkey.

Though it begins playfully as a film-within-a-film, Panahi soon finds himself involved in a controversy with local villagers when he’s accused of taking a photograph of an unmarried couple, leading to larger clashes between tradition and progress, city and country, spiritual belief and photographic evidence, as well as the human desire to escape oppression.

No Bears is receiving worldwide theatrical release and critical praise, even as the international film community denounces Panahi’s summer 2022 arrest, resulting in a 6-year prison sentence for “collusion against the regime.” In Farsi, Azerbaijani, and Turkish with English subtitles. 

“An instantly gripping, formally ingenious drama… about the ways people weaponize fear in order to hide their own.”        – Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times

A man and a woman in a natural dwelling handing each other food over an in-ground fire pit

Iran/2022—directed by Jafar Panahi | 107 minutes

One of the world’s great filmmakers, Iranian director Jafar Panahi (The White Balloon, Taxi, 3 Faces – all screened at DFT) won the 2022 Venice Film Festival Jury Prize for this new, clandestinely-shot, brilliantly complex meta-drama about a filmmaker (Panahi) who temporarily relocates to an Iranian border town to remotely oversee the making of a new film in Turkey.

Though it begins playfully as a film-within-a-film, Panahi soon finds himself involved in a controversy with local villagers when he’s accused of taking a photograph of an unmarried couple, leading to larger clashes between tradition and progress, city and country, spiritual belief and photographic evidence, as well as the human desire to escape oppression.

No Bears is receiving worldwide theatrical release and critical praise, even as the international film community denounces Panahi’s summer 2022 arrest, resulting in a 6-year prison sentence for “collusion against the regime.” In Farsi, Azerbaijani, and Turkish with English subtitles. 

“An instantly gripping, formally ingenious drama… about the ways people weaponize fear in order to hide their own.”        – Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times

The Runner (restored)

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Friday, Mar 24, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Mar 25, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Mar 26, 2023
2 p.m.

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Sunday, Mar 26, 2023
4:30 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Iran/1984—directed by Amir Naderi | 91 minutes

An illiterate but resourceful 11-year-old orphan (Madjid Niroumand), living alone in an abandoned tanker in an Iranian port city, survives by shining shoes, selling water, and diving for deposit bottles thrown overboard by foreigners. Madjid does his best to stay focused on his daily tasks – despite the routine bullying he’s subjected to from adults and older kids – by dreaming about the destinations of the departing cargo ships and airplanes that surround him, and by the exhilarating escape provided by running – but to where?

Frequently compared to such great international works of neo-realism as Vittorio De Sica’s The Bicycle Thief, Héctor Babenco’s Pixote and François Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, Amir Naderi’s 1984 The Runner was inspired, like Truffaut’s film, by the director’s own childhood, and was instrumental in drawing attention to the New Iranian Cinema thanks to screenings at the Venice and London Film Festivals. Seen only briefly in the U.S. since the 1990s, this excellent new restoration will change all that. In Farsi with English subtitles.  

“A landmark film of astonishing power and simplicity. Madjid Niroumand’s performance ranks among the finest ever given by a child.”  –Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times

A young boy in a loose-neck t-shirt holds his hand up to his forehead as he looks out in the distance.

Iran/1984—directed by Amir Naderi | 91 minutes

An illiterate but resourceful 11-year-old orphan (Madjid Niroumand), living alone in an abandoned tanker in an Iranian port city, survives by shining shoes, selling water, and diving for deposit bottles thrown overboard by foreigners. Madjid does his best to stay focused on his daily tasks – despite the routine bullying he’s subjected to from adults and older kids – by dreaming about the destinations of the departing cargo ships and airplanes that surround him, and by the exhilarating escape provided by running – but to where?

Frequently compared to such great international works of neo-realism as Vittorio De Sica’s The Bicycle Thief, Héctor Babenco’s Pixote and François Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, Amir Naderi’s 1984 The Runner was inspired, like Truffaut’s film, by the director’s own childhood, and was instrumental in drawing attention to the New Iranian Cinema thanks to screenings at the Venice and London Film Festivals. Seen only briefly in the U.S. since the 1990s, this excellent new restoration will change all that. In Farsi with English subtitles.  

“A landmark film of astonishing power and simplicity. Madjid Niroumand’s performance ranks among the finest ever given by a child.”  –Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times

Drylongso (Newly Restored)

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Sunday, Feb 5, 2023
2 p.m.

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General admission $9.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $7.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

USA/1998—directed by Cauleen Smith | 86 minutes

A lost treasure of 1990s independent filmmaking, Afrofuturist artist Cauleen Smith’s UCLA thesis film embeds an incisive look at racial injustice within a lovingly handmade buddy movie-murder-mystery-romance. Observing the alarming rate at which the young Black men around her are dying—indeed, “becoming extinct,” as she sees it—brash California art student Pica (Toby Smith) begins preserving their existence in Polaroid snapshots, along the way forging a friendship with a gender nonconforming young woman (April Barnett), experiencing love and loss, and being drawn into the search for a serial killer at large in the city.

Capturing the vibrant community spirit of Oakland in the nineties, Smith crafts both a rare cinematic celebration of Black female creativity and a moving elegy for a generation of lost African American men. This superb new 4K restoration, undertaken by The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, was supervised by Cauleen Smith and premiered at the 2022 New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center.

The DFT presents this special preview screening in advance of the film’s national release. 2000 Independent Spirit Award Winner; Grand Jury Prize for Best Film, Urbanworld Film Festival.
 

Two teens laying on the ground in school clothes and using tarot cards.

USA/1998—directed by Cauleen Smith | 86 minutes

A lost treasure of 1990s independent filmmaking, Afrofuturist artist Cauleen Smith’s UCLA thesis film embeds an incisive look at racial injustice within a lovingly handmade buddy movie-murder-mystery-romance. Observing the alarming rate at which the young Black men around her are dying—indeed, “becoming extinct,” as she sees it—brash California art student Pica (Toby Smith) begins preserving their existence in Polaroid snapshots, along the way forging a friendship with a gender nonconforming young woman (April Barnett), experiencing love and loss, and being drawn into the search for a serial killer at large in the city.

Capturing the vibrant community spirit of Oakland in the nineties, Smith crafts both a rare cinematic celebration of Black female creativity and a moving elegy for a generation of lost African American men. This superb new 4K restoration, undertaken by The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, was supervised by Cauleen Smith and premiered at the 2022 New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center.

The DFT presents this special preview screening in advance of the film’s national release. 2000 Independent Spirit Award Winner; Grand Jury Prize for Best Film, Urbanworld Film Festival.
 

New York International Children’s Film Festival – Celebrating Black Stories

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Saturday, Feb 4, 2023
2 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Black stories take the spotlight to highlight short films that share the joy, determination, resilience, and complexity of being Black and young. Explore a range of genres and styles in a program that spans the globe. These amazing short films were audience favorites and award-winners at the 2022 New York International Children’s Film Festival and are sure to inspire curiosity and conversation for viewers big and small.  

Recommended for families with children ages 9 and up. In English, Portuguese, and Luganda with English subtitles. (76min)  

Black History Month programs are generously supported by the Arn and Nancy Tellem Foundation.

Comic Escape

  • United States, Live Action, Alphonso McAuley, 2021, 15 min.  

A young boy unexpectedly finds a comic book that changes his reality. 

Cupids

  • United States, Live Action, Zoey Martinson, 2021, 10 min.      

This whimsical comedy love letter to New York's essential workers follows a whole class on the last day of school as they scheme to find the perfect partner for their adored bus driver, Ms. Cheryl, and save her from a lonely summer without them. 

Generation Impact: The Coder

  • United States, Documentary, Samantha Knowles, 2021, 7 min.  

Jay Jay Patton was only 13 when she designed and built an app to help kids connect with their incarcerated parents, inspired by her own experience. Now she is creating a coding academy to help other kids do the same. 

My Name is Maluum 

  • Brazil, Animation, Luísa Copetti, 2021, 8 min.  

Maalum comes from a home surrounded by love and Afro-centered references. When her classmates tease her about her name, Maluum discovers the lovely legacy of her name and ancestry. 
 

The Night I Left America

  • Uganda, United States, Live Action, Laki Karavias, 2021, 14 min. 

While anxiously awaiting the results of his mother’s visa renewal request, a teenage boy living in Texas conjures memories of his life in Uganda. 

Room Rodeo

  • United States, Live Action, Daniel Kayamba, 2021, 14 min.  

Grounded and with a last-minute school project due, Jamil takes matters into his own hands in order to prove he is the great-grandson of a legendary Black cowboy. 
 

Wolf and Cub

  • United States, Animation, Marvin Bynoe, 2021, 8 min.  

A father and son cross a world of imagination in order to return their mother’s forgotten lunch. 

 

Presented in partnership with New York International Children’s Film Festival 

Three kids sit on a bus seat

Black stories take the spotlight to highlight short films that share the joy, determination, resilience, and complexity of being Black and young. Explore a range of genres and styles in a program that spans the globe. These amazing short films were audience favorites and award-winners at the 2022 New York International Children’s Film Festival and are sure to inspire curiosity and conversation for viewers big and small.  

Recommended for families with children ages 9 and up. In English, Portuguese, and Luganda with English subtitles. (76min)  

Black History Month programs are generously supported by the Arn and Nancy Tellem Foundation.

Comic Escape

  • United States, Live Action, Alphonso McAuley, 2021, 15 min.  

A young boy unexpectedly finds a comic book that changes his reality. 

Cupids

  • United States, Live Action, Zoey Martinson, 2021, 10 min.      

This whimsical comedy love letter to New York's essential workers follows a whole class on the last day of school as they scheme to find the perfect partner for their adored bus driver, Ms. Cheryl, and save her from a lonely summer without them. 

Generation Impact: The Coder

  • United States, Documentary, Samantha Knowles, 2021, 7 min.  

Jay Jay Patton was only 13 when she designed and built an app to help kids connect with their incarcerated parents, inspired by her own experience. Now she is creating a coding academy to help other kids do the same. 

My Name is Maluum 

  • Brazil, Animation, Luísa Copetti, 2021, 8 min.  

Maalum comes from a home surrounded by love and Afro-centered references. When her classmates tease her about her name, Maluum discovers the lovely legacy of her name and ancestry. 
 

The Night I Left America

  • Uganda, United States, Live Action, Laki Karavias, 2021, 14 min. 

While anxiously awaiting the results of his mother’s visa renewal request, a teenage boy living in Texas conjures memories of his life in Uganda. 

Room Rodeo

  • United States, Live Action, Daniel Kayamba, 2021, 14 min.  

Grounded and with a last-minute school project due, Jamil takes matters into his own hands in order to prove he is the great-grandson of a legendary Black cowboy. 
 

Wolf and Cub

  • United States, Animation, Marvin Bynoe, 2021, 8 min.  

A father and son cross a world of imagination in order to return their mother’s forgotten lunch. 

 

Presented in partnership with New York International Children’s Film Festival 

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