2012 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS – DOCUMENTARY

Five of the year’s best, and Oscar-nominated, live action short films from across the globe are brought together to be played as one, 130-minute cinematic experience at The Tower Theatre. After watching, be sure to cast your vote for your favorite and watch The Oscars to see if it wins.

 

The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

Tower Theatre ● 39 min ● NR ● Japan/USA ● Lucy Walker
Showtimes: 2:00

Survivors in the areas hardest hit by Japan’s recent tsunami find the courage to revive and rebuild as cherry blossom season begins.

 

 

 

 

Incident in New Baghdad

Tower Theatre ● 25 min ● NR ● USA ● James Spione
Showtimes: 2:00

One of the most notorious incidents of the Iraq War – the July 2007 slayings of two Reuters journalists and a number of other unarmed civilians by US attack helicopters – is recounted in the powerful testimony of an American infantryman whose life was profoundly changed by his experiences on the scene. US Army Specialist Ethan McCord bore witness to the devastating carnage, found and rescued two children caught in the crossfire, and soon turned against the war that he had enthusiastically joined only months before. Denied psychological treatment in Iraq for his PTSD, McCord returned home, struggling for years with anger, confusion, and guilt over the war. When WikiLeaks released the stunning cockpit video of the incident, McCord was finally spurred into action, and began traveling the country, speaking out for the rights of PTSD sufferers against the American wars in the Middle East.

 

Saving Face

Tower Theatre ● 40 min ● NR ● Pakistan/USA ● Daniel Junge, Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy
Showtimes: 2:00

Every year hundreds of people — mostly women — are attacked with acid in Pakistan. The HBO Documentary SAVING FACE, which premiers March 8 at 8:30 PM PT, follows several of these survivors, their fight for justice, and a Pakistani plastic surgeon who has returned to his homeland to help them restore their faces and their lives.

 

The Barber of Birmingham:

Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement

Tower Theatre ● 25 min ● NR ● USA ● Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday
Showtimes: 2:00

Mr. James Armstrong is a barber, a “foot soldier” and a dreamer whose barbershop in Birmingham, Alabama has been a hub for haircuts and civil rights since 1955. “The dream” of a promised land, where dignity and the right to vote belongs to everyone is documented in photos, headlines and clippings that cram every inch of wall space (and between the mirrors). 85-years-young, jauntily wearing a bowtie and suspenders, Mr. Armstrong will cut your hair while recounting his experiences as a “foot soldier”, citing the pictures on his wall as he does. In March 1965, civil rights activists began a march from Selma to Montgomery calling for voting rights. Mr. Armstrong, an Army Veteran, was the proud bearer of the American flag in that march, and it’s said that even as state troopers tear-gassed the crowd and beat marchers with billy clubs, he held the flag high. On the annual commemoration of Bloody Sunday he carries that flag. He used his barber chair to educate: “If you want a voice, you have to vote; you can’t complain about nothing if you don’t vote.” Despite threats to his life and home, his two sons were the first to integrate an all white elementary school. “Dying isn’t the worst thing a man can do. The worst thing a man can do is nothing.” No one can accuse Mr. Armstrong of doing nothing; and on the eve of the election of the first African-American president, THE BARBER OF BIRMINGHAM sees his unimaginable dream come true.

Pina

Pina

Broadway Centre Cinemas ● 103 min ● PG
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:20, 2:30, 4:45, 7:10, 9:25
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 7:15, 9:35

An exhilarating film from acclaimed director Wim Wenders documenting the brilliant and inventive dance world of Pina Bausch, while also serving tribute to the late choreographer.

Critical Reviews  Full Summary

The Oscar Nominated Short Films – Animation – Details

Five of the year’s best, and Oscar-nominated, short films from across the globe are brought together to be played as one, 80-minute cinematic experience at The Tower Theatre. After watching, be sure to cast your vote for your favorite and watch The Oscars to see if it wins.

 

DIMANCHE / SUNDAY

Tower Theatre ● 9 min ● NR ● Canada
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:15, 9:15
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 12:15

Every Sunday, it’s the same old routine! The train clatters through the village and almost shakes the pictures off the wall. In the church, Dad dreams about his toolbox. And of course later Grandma will get a visit and the animals will meet their fate.

 

 

 

 

THE FANTASTIC FLYING BOOKS OF MR. MORRIS LESSMORE

Tower Theatre ● 17 min ● NR ● USA
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:15, 9:15
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 12:15

Inspired by Hurricane Katrina, Buster Keaton, The Wizard of Oz, and a love for books, this fantastic short is a poignant, humorous allegory about the curative powers of story. The films’ variety of techniques (miniatures, computer animation, 2D animation) present a hybrid–old fashioned, yet cutting edge–style of animation.

 

 

A MORNING STROLL

Tower Theatre ● 7 min ● NR ● UK
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:15, 9:15
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 12:15

When a New Yorker walks past a chicken on his morning stroll, we are left to wonder which one is the real city slicker.

 

 

Wild Life

Tower Theatre ● 14 min ● NR ● Canada
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:15, 9:15
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 12:15

Calgary, 1909. An Englishman moves to the Canadian frontier, but is singularly unsuited to it. His letters home are much sunnier than the reality. Intertitles compare his fate to that of a comet.

 

 

 

 

LA LUNA

Tower Theatre ● 6:53 min ● NR ● USA
Showtimes thru 2/23: 12:15, 9:15
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 12:15

The timeless fable of a young boy who is coming of age in the most peculiar of circumstances. Tonight is the very first time his Papa and Grandpa are taking him to work. In an old wooden boat they row far out to sea, and with no land in sight, they stop and wait. A big surprise awaits the little boy as he discovers his family’s most unusual line of work. Should he follow the example of his Papa, or his Grandpa? Will he be able to find his own way in the midst of their conflicting opinions and timeworn traditions?

 

BONUS SHORTS

Additional, non-Oscar-nominated bonus titles in the program include Skylight (Canada, 5 mins), The Hybrid Union (Ukraine, 5 mins), Nullarbor (Australia, 11 mins), and Amazonia (USA, 5 mins).

The Oscar Nominated Short Films – Live Action – Details

Five of the year’s best, and Oscar-nominated, live action short films from across the globe are brought together to be played as one, 110-minute cinematic experience at The Tower Theatre. After watching, be sure to cast your vote for your favorite and watch The Oscars to see if it wins.

 

Pentecost

Tower Theatre ● 11 min ● NR ● Ireland
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:00
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:30

When Damian is forced to serve as an altar boy at an important mass in his local parish he faces a difficult choice: conform to the status quo or serve an extended ban from his passion in life, football.

 

 

Raju

Tower Theatre ● 30 min ● NR ● Northern Ireland
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:00
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:30

A German couple adopts in Kolkata an Indian orphan. Their child suddenly disappears and they realize that they are part of the problem.

 

 

Time Freak

Tower Theatre ● 11 min ● NR ● USA
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:00
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:30

A neurotic inventor creates a time machine, only to get caught up traveling around yesterday.

 

 

 

Tuba Atlantic

Tower Theatre ● 25 min ● NR ● Norway
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:00
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:30

Everybody is going to die one day. Oskar, 70, is going to die in 6 days. He is now ready to forgive his brother for a disagreement years ago. Will he reach his brother, who he believes live on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, before it’s too late?

 

 

The Shore

Tower Theatre ● 30 min ● NR ● Northern Ireland
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:00
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:30

Two boyhood best friends are brought back together after 25 tumultuous years of “The Troubles,” with unexpected results. What happened all those years ago? Can old wounds be healed? The answer is both hilarious and moving.

The Crucible

The Crucible

Free screening presented by SLFS and SLCC
The Grand Theatre (1575 South State Street) ● 124 min ● PG-13
7:30pm on 2/15

When Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible was first staged in 1953, it was widely acclaimed as a metaphor for the recklessness of Joseph McCarthy and his spurious crusade against communism. After a group of young women is accused of witchcraft in the Puritan community of Salem, Mass. in 1692, Abigail Williams (Winona Ryder) is held in suspicion of practicing magic. Abigail in turn levels charges against John Proctor (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his wife Elizabeth (Joan Allen).

2012 Oscar Nominated Shorts – Documentary

2012 Oscar Nominated Shorts – Documentary

Tower Theatre ● 130 min ● Not Rated
Showtimes: 2:00

Five of the year’s best, and Oscar-nominated, short documentaries from across the globe are brought together to be played as one, 130-minute cinematic experience at The Tower Theatre. After watching, be sure to cast your vote for your favorite and watch The Oscars to see if it wins. Click here for a detailed list of titles.

Shame

Shame

Broadway Centre Cinemas ● 101 min ● NC-17
Showtimes thru 2/23: 7:15, 9:35
Showtimes 2/24 – 3/1: 9:40

A New York man’s carefully-cultivated private life, based around his compulsive sex addiction, begins to unravel after his younger sister moves in. Starring Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan.

Critical Reviews  Full Summary

Ivory Tower

SLFS and the Westminster Film Program are collaborating once again to bring the 3rd-annual Ivory Tower screening series. The program brings a classic film on 35mm print to the Tower Theatre for a free screening on the first Monday of each month, complete with intros and facts about the films from select Westminster film students. This month’s title is the director’s cut of Brazil.

 

Brazil – Director’s Cut

Tower Theatre ● 142 min ● R
Showtime: (2/6) 7:00

A visually stimulating dystopian satire set in the retro future, in which a bureaucrat becomes an enemy of the state by attempting to fix an administrative error.