Program > Film Schedule > Special Programs

A VERY SPECIAL EVENING WITH MALCOLM MCDOWELL
hosted by Robert K. Horton
- Saturday 6:30 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
IF...
Using the culture of hazing and persecutions among students and teachers in the British public school system as its metaphor, IF... is a study of revolution against an autocracy that denies individual freedom, a revolution symbolized by Mike Travis (Malcolm McDowell) demanding, "When do we live?" Subject to ever escalating punishments, the students are beaten one by one with a cane after which they are expected to "thank" their tormenter. Ultimately, a group of students headed by Travis discovers a cache of automatic weapons, which they put to use in bloody counter-attack. UK, 1971, 111 min.Director: Lindsay Anderson; Producer: Lindsay Anderson,
Michael Medwin; Screenwriter: David Sherwin, John Howlett; Cinematographer: Miroslave
Ondricek; Cast: Malcolm McDowell, David Wood, Richard Warwick,
Christine Noonan, Mona Washburn; Print Source: Paramount
SPONSOR: Puget Sound Energy
Support PTFF and purchase IF… from Amazon.com.

FORMATIVE FILMS
with Turner Classic Movies host Robert Osborne
- Saturday 12:25 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
All movie-lovers have favorite films, movies that have touched them
in some way, creating a response that remains with them since first
viewing. This year's Formative Film curator is Robert Osborne, who
as a film historian is so associated with classic movies he might as
well have coined the term. After struggling to be a film actor with
little success, at the suggestion of his mentor Lucille Ball, he turned
to his second love: writing about movies. In 1965 he wrote the first
of several official histories of the Oscar® at the request of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. He maintains a weekly
column in the Hollywood Reporter, but he is best known as
the prime-time host of Turner Classic Movies where he delivers his
vast and intimate knowledge in introductions before almost every film.
Robert has been a long-time friend of the Rose Theatre and the Port
Townsend Film Festival, returning this year for the fourth time.
Robert was a teenager when he saw what became one of his favorite films,
Laura.
LAURA
Laura, a 1944 film noir, tells the story
of a police detective who falls in love with the portrait of a woman
who has been murdered. The story begins with cop Mark McPherson investigating
the murder of a beautiful advertising director, Laura Hunt. McPherson
interviews a newspaper columnist, who relates how he fell under Laura's
spell and used his influence and fame to advance her career. McPherson
also questions Laura's fiancée, her wealthy aunt, and her loyal housekeeper.
Through the testimony of her friends and the reading of her letters,
McPherson comes to know Laura and slowly falls in love with the dead
woman. He becomes obsessive – using the excuse of trying to solve
the murder, he hangs around her apartment and is at one point accused
of falling in love with a corpse. He falls asleep under her portrait,
drunk, whereupon she enters, like a dream or a ghost. It was not Laura
who was murdered, but a model at the advertising agency. Laura's resurrection
starts the mysterious plot spinning in new directions. Is someone trying
to kill Laura? Is Laura, the woman McPherson has fallen in love with,
a murderer?
Laura won an Oscar® for Best Cinematography, black and white;
and was nominated for Writing, Director, Actor in a Supporting Role
and Art Direction – Interior Decoration, black and white. In 1999
the film was deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library
of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. USA,
1944, 88 min.
Director and Producer: Otto Preminger; Original Story:
Vera Caspary; Screenwriters: Jay Dratler, Samuel Hoffenstein,
Betty Reinhardt; Cinematographer: Joseph LaShelle; Editor:
Louis Loeffler; Cast: Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews, Clifton
Webb, Vincent Price, Judith Anderson
SPONSOR: Roger Katz & Associates Architects, Inc.
Support PTFF and purchase the Laura DVD from Amazon.com.

LOL
with Director Joe Swanberg
- Friday 6:20 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
The acronym LOL is Internet shorthand for "laugh out loud." A common
abbreviation for emails, message boards and text messages, it is meant
to simplify communication, but like many other technology- driven shortcuts,
its meaning is often misinterpreted. This film about technology addiction
and its tendency to damage human relationships follows a cast of characters
who all seem to spend most of their time looking into either computer
or cell-phone screens. Their dependence on technology and its products
becomes increasingly poignant and relevant. The end result is a remarkable
film that may herald a new form of filmmaking. USA, 2006, 82
min.
Director: Joe Swanberg; Producer: Joe Swanberg; Screenwriters: Joe
Swanberg, C. Mason Wells, Kevin Bewersdorf; Cinematographer: Joe
Swanberg; Editor: Joe Swanberg; Cast: Kevin Bowersdorf,
Joe Swanberg, C. Mason Wells, Tipper Newton, Brigid Reagan, Greta Gerwig,
Kate Winterich; Print Source: Joe Swanberg, info@lolthemovie.com, http://www.lolthemovie.com/
SPONSOR: The Green Eyeshade

THE WHALES OF AUGUST
with Producer Mike E. Kaplan
hosted by Robert J. Osborne
- Sunday 6:35 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
jokes." USA, 1987, 90 min.
Director: Lindsay Anderson; Producer: Mike E. Kaplan, Carolyn Pfeiffer; Screenwriter: David Berry; Cinematographer: Mike Fash; Editor: Nicolas Gaster; Cast: Bette Davis, Lillian Gish, Vincent Price, Ann Sothern; Harry Carey Jr.; Print Source: Mike E. Kaplan
SPONSOR: Waltenbaugh Construction
Support PTFF and purchase The Whales of August DVD from Amazon.com

A CLOCKWORK ORANGE
- Friday 11:30 pm - Alpha Cine Forde Rose Theatre
Published as a novel by Anthony Burgess in 1962, the controversial
1971 Stanley Kubrick film version of A Clockwork Orange is
set in a futuristic England, circa 1995. It follows the career of a
young man named Alex (Malcolm McDowell) whose main pleasures in life
are classical music (especially Beethoven), rape, and random acts of
"ultra violence." Alex is alternately subdued, rehabilitated
and released to commit more mayhem throughout the film. One of the
central moral questions of A Clockwork Orange is the definition
of
"goodness." Once he has undergone the aversion therapy, Alex behaves
like a good member of society, but not through choice; his "goodness"
is as artificial as the clockwork orange of the title.
But for all its serious intent and its nomination for a best picture
Oscar®, the film's violence and sexually explicit material alienated
as many as it enthralled. It was condemned by the United States Conference
of Catholic Bishops' Office for Film and Broadcasting and withdrawn
from circulation in Britain for nearly 30 years. UK, 1971,
136 min.
Director: Stanley Kubrick; Producer: Warner Bros.; Screenwriter:
Anthony Burgess (novel); Stanley Kubrick (screenplay); Cinematographer:
John Alcott; Editor: Bill Butler; Cast: Malcolm McDowell,
Patrick Magee, Michael Bates
SPONSOR: Scarecrow Video
Note: Viewers should be advised that this film is Rated R—no one under 17 will
be admitted without a parent or guardian.
Support PTFF and purchase A Clockwork Orange DVD from Amazon.com

BRAZIL
- Saturday 11:30 pm - Alpha Cine Forde Rose Theatre
UK, 1985, 131 min.
Director: Terry Gilliam; Producer: Arnon Milchan; Screenplay: Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard, Charles McKeown; Cinematographer: Roger Pratt; Editor: Julian Doyle; Cast: Jonathan Pryce, Robert De Niro, Kim Greist, Michael Palin, Katherine Helmond, Bob Hoskins, Ian Holm
SPONSOR: Water Street Brewing and Ale House
Support PTFF and purchase the Brazil DVD from Amazon.com.

HELL 'S HEROES
- Sunday 3:25 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
A powerful story of three outlaws who try to redeem themselves by
saving a newborn child, Hell's Heroes has had many incarnations
under different titles: The Three Godfathers (1919, 1936,
and 1948) and The Godchild (for television, 1974). In 1985,
the French reshaped the story as Trois Hommes et un Couffin (Three
Men and a Cradle) which Hollywood turned into Three Men and
a Baby two years later as a showcase for Steven Guttenberg, Ted
Danson and Tom Selleck. In our version, the story goes like this: When
four men rob a bank, one is killed and the other three escape into
the desert where they lose their horses in a storm. Finding a woman
who gives birth, they are made godfathers only to learn that the baby's
father was the man they killed in the holdup. When the woman dies they
head back with the baby, but they have little water and it is a 40-mile
journey. (Based on material in IMDb.) USA, 1930, 68
min.
Director: William Wyler; Producer: Universal Pictures; Screenplay:
Tom Reed, C. Gardner Sullivan; Cinematographer: George
Robinson; Editor: Harry Marker; Cast:
Charles Bickford, Raymond Hatton, Fred Kohler
SPONSOR: The Historic Lynwood Theatre

SHOW PEOPLE
- Saturday 3:25 pm - Wind's Eye Design Broughton Theatre
Marion
Davies, one of the great comedians of the silent era, stars in this
King Vidor chestnut that has maintained popularity over the decades. In
the story, Colonel Pepper brings his daughter, Peggy, to Hollywood from
Georgia to be an actress. There she meets Billy who gets her work at
Comet Studio doing comedies with him. But Peggy is discovered by High
Art Studio and she leaves Billy and Comet to work there. For her new
image, she is now Patricia Pepoire and ignores Billy when he sees her
on location. When she is not longer wanted by the little people who do
not understand "ART", she plans to marry Andre to get a fake title.
Billy will not let her go without a fight. Davies’ ability as a
comedian was repressed by her lover, William Randolph Hearst, who
wanted her to appear only in serious films. Show People preserves her delightful comedic gifts. USA, 1926, 82 min.
Accompanied on the piano by Donald Sosin
SPONSOR:Courtsey Ford
Support PTFF and purchase Show People from Amazon.com

FILM 2880
- Saturday 9:10 pm - Alpha Cine Forde Rose Theatre
On Friday, September 8, at 7 pm, filmmakers from around the world
received a theme, a line of dialog and the name of a common household
prop via email. By Sunday night, September 10, again at 7 pm, – exactly
2,880 minutes (or 48 hours) later – filmmakers will have produced
a short film of less than 10 minutes that they will have written, shot,
edited, and scored, complete with titles and credits – without any
creative work done prior to 7 pm Friday.
One week later the top ten films from the 2006 Film 2880 contest will
be shown at the historic Rose Theatre on Saturday night during the
7th annual Port Townsend Film Festival. Films are judged on originality,
use of prop and dialogue, and adherence to the theme and production
values.
Film 2880 exists to challenge the resourcefulness and creativity of
filmmakers, film students and anyone crazy enough to sign up. The annual
filmmaking project was founded and is still managed by filmmaker Peter
Wiant, assisted by graphic designer Lou Faulkner. www.film2880.com.
SPONSOR: Sirens
