Civics & Politics Film Series

March 7, 2017 by e_steffian

politics
The Providence Center for Media Culture & the Cable Car Cinema present:

CIVICS & POlITICS FILM SERIES: Spring 2017
All films will be screen at the Cable Car Cinema unless otherwise noted.  204 South Main St. Providence RI 02903 Tickets can be purchased at cablecarcinema.com.  Free community screenings are on a first come first serve basis.  Please pick up passes at  the Cable Car Box office prior to Cable Car events. Passes will secure you a seat.

THE GREAT DICTATOR / 1940 / Comedy, Drama                                                    
February 15th 7:00 pm
Written &  Directed by Charles Chaplin  125 minutes

I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO 
March 7th  7:00pm
Co-sponsored by The Center for the Study of Slavery & Justice at Brown University, Fox Point Cape Vedean     Heritage Park Project, Swearer Center for Public Service, The office of the Provost, Emerson College, Everett Dance Company, SPIA Media Productions, DARE, Black Studies Program, NAACP providence Branch Youth Council, Charles “Chachi” Carvahlo, Erik Andrade, SOUL RENNAISSANCE, and MET High School

Free Community Screenings  throughout March at 12:00pm on Sundays
April 1st  4:00pm
Free community screening at the  Woodman Center for Performing Arts, Moses Brown school
250 Lloyd Ave, Providence, RI 02906

1984 / 1984 / Drama, Science Fiction                                                            April 4th  7:00 pm 
May –
 

Filed Under: PCMC Post

Portals: The History of the Future Film Series

April 10, 2016 by e_steffian

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The Providence Center for Media Culture & the Cable Car Cinema in collaboration with the Providence Public Library are proud to present:

PORTALS: THE HISTORY of the FUTURE FILM SERIES
Wednesdays 6 – 8 pm May 11th – June 8th 2016
Downtown Library Auditorium. (3rd floor) 150 Empire Street, Providence, RI 02903 (401) 455-8000
All films free and open to the public!

May films are here : http://portals.provlib.org/category/may/
June films are here: http://portals.provlib.org/category/june/

Come travel through time, explore space, investigate alternate worlds and discover the design and imagination of the future as we consider the the way filmmakers from the past and present depict utopian and dystopian futures.

May 11th – Dreams Rewired / 2015 / Documentaryimgres
Discussion with design historian Matthew Bird.
Directed by Maru Luksch, Martin Reinsert, Thomas Tode
Written by Manu Luksch, Mukul Pate, Martin Reinhart, Thomas Tode
Narrated by Tilda Swinton
88 minutes

The social anxiety we see in our hyper-mediated world of today was well on its way during the electric revolution of the late 19th century. Dreams Rewired presents a collection of films from the 1880s to the 1930s, many rare and previously unscreened, that trace contemporary obsessions and anxieties back to the birth of the telephone, television and cinema. The earliest electronic inventions were as revolutionary, inspiring and alarming to the public as the internet and artificial intelligence are today.

May 18th – H.G Wells Things to Come / 1936 Dramathingstocome_wells_poster_vert
Discussion with Gloria Jean Masciarotte
Directed by William Cameron Menzies
Written by H.G. Wells
Starring Raymond Massey, Edward Chapman, Ralph Richardson
100 minutes

A global war begins in 1940 and lasts for decades, destroying cities, inducing plagues and fascist regimes, leaving the few survivors to live in underground cities. The first space travel is imminent as Wings Over the World, a group of pacifist, scientists and thinkers plan to build a utopian society on the ruins of the old. In order to do this however, they must overthrow the latest ruling despot played by Ralph Richardson.

May 25th – Dr. Who & the Daleks / 1965 Dramab71fe2a59b95d1dd2a0d9ea45159cd1f
Discussion TBA
Directed by Gordon Flemyng
Written by Terry Nation and Milton Subotsky
Starring Peter Cushing, Roy Castle, Jennie Linden
82 minutes

Tardis, a time machine disguised as a police telephone box is accidentally activated by its inventor, Scientist Dr. Who. Inadvertently, he and his companions are transported through time and space to the planet Skaro, which is inhabited by a peaceful race called the Thals. Upon their arrival, The Thals are under threat of nuclear attack from the evil robotic mutant Daleks. Based on a story from the BBC TV serial “Doctor Who”.

June 1st – Sleeper / 1973 / Comedy
Discussion with design historian Matthew Birdlarge_v43ez7xKqqbM35phWHqlq27P1jw
Directed by Woody Allen
Written by Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman
Starring Woody Allen, Diane Keaton
89 minutes

In 2173, scientists discover the 200 year old cryogenically frozen body of Miles, a quiet, awkward clarinet player and health food store owner from Greenwich Village. Miles is enlisted to help anti-government radicals overthrow the totalitarian police state that has destroyed any evidence of recorded history. Off on his own, Miles begins to explore this brave new world, which has Orgasmatron booths and confessional robots to replace sex and religion.

June 8th – Login 2 Life / 2011 / DocumentaryMV5BMjI0NDg5MDYzM15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNTU2MTM3OA@@._V1_SX292_CR0,0,292,430_
Discussion TBA
Directed by Daniel Moshel
Written by Daniel Moshel
87 minutes

An engrossing exploration of the lives of seven people, who experience deep connections in cyberspace. Travel with them as they find love, hate, loneliness and intimacy within the digital universe. Can we imagine a future when we will all have an avatar, a reimagined, new improved version of ourselves? Login 2 Life invites us to ponder what our world will look like if and when these digital selves become a natural extension of our physical selves?

 

Matthew Bird has a varied range of skills and experiences. In his rear view mirror can be seen ten years running his own giftware design and manufacturing company, thirteen years developing and running retail venues, eleven years of teaching industrial design at Rhode Island School of Design, hundreds of hours lecturing about various aspects of design history, countless wholesale and retail trade shows and craft shows, numerous juries, myriad visits as guest critic, multiple projects curating shows for galleries and museums, a truck load of freelance design projects, occasional business and design consulting, and more than twenty years of treating old house restoration as an aerobic sport.

Gloria-Jean Masciarotte is a Senior Lecturer of Liberal Arts at RISD where she teaches courses on film at the intersection of race and gender and popular political culture and a Special Lecturer in Women’s Studies at Providence College. In addition to her academic work, she is a free-lance writer of popular culture analyses & public lecturer having wrote and edited award-winning screenplays for experimental and independent documentaries and worked as a Senior Strategist for alternative production and distribution for Women Make Movies. She is working on a book Imagined Communities: Feminism & Choice in Popular Culture and a research-to-theater project about Rhode Island’s own art collector and RISD patroness Lucy Truman Aldrich and the debates about Deaf citizenship and disability during her life “Getting Away With It”—My Weekend with Chinese Bandits.”

Filed Under: PCMC Post

A New Space for the Providence Cinematheque

February 28, 2016 by e_steffian

We are thrilled to report that The Providence Cinematheque has a new home! With help from the RI Innovation Grant, the property once known as the Paramount Office Supply at 819 Westminster St.,  was secured in November of 2015.  Vacant for the last 25 years, the building and adjacent property will need extensive restoration and development. We are in the process of putting together a series of funding sources through Federal, State and City grant opportunities, that we hope will help us build Rhode Island’s new film Center.

Here are some photos of the of the 20,000 ft space as it exists presently as well as the adjacent  lot which can accommodate close to 30 parking spaces.

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Filed Under: Cinematheque Post

RI Fellows recognized by Sundance Institute

September 30, 2015 by design_agency

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Providence Journal • Alan Rosenberg

Providence’s Cable Car Cinema recognized by Sundance Institute
The theaters chosen “embody a benchmark of excellence in programming, community involvement and operations.”

The Sundance Institute’s Art House Convergence has recognized Providence’s Cable Car Cinema among its first class of Art House Project theaters, those “that embody a benchmark of excellence in programming, community involvement and operations.”
READ MORE

Filed Under: Cinematheque Post

R.I. innovation grants aim to attract moviegoers, mussels


April 15, 2015 by design_agency

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Providence Journal • Kate Bramson

Co-owners of the Cable Car Cinema on South Main Street, Daniel Kamil and Emily Steffian, have grander plans than showing movies at the single-screen theater. They hope to develop an art house cinema to show independent films, host film festivals, offer media education workshops and house artists-in-residence.

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Filed Under: Cinematheque Post

We’re Innovation Fellows!

April 15, 2015 by design_agency

On April 15th, 2015, we were awarded the Rhode Island Innovation Fellowship to support the development and creation of a for profit/non profit film and media center. With that, we will launch the Providence Cinematheque, Rhode Island’s only multi-screen exhibition space and educational facility focusing on first-run, independent film programming; repertory series, film festivals and a curriculum in film history and media literacy.

Filed Under: Cinematheque Post

Behind every proposal is a passionate, creative, positive advocate

April 15, 2015 by design_agency

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RI Foundation blog • Jessica David

We are excited to announce the 2015 Rhode Island Innovation Fellows, John Haley and the team of Daniel Kamil and Emily Steffian. Daniel and Emily will launch the Providence Cinematheque, Rhode Island’s only multi-screen exhibition space and education facility focusing on first-run, independent film programming, repertory series, film festivals, and a curriculum in film history and media literacy. Their aim: to provide a space for often under-represented and diverse voices and enhance Rhode Island’s reputation as a cultural innovator.

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Filed Under: Cinematheque Post

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