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Live From Memphis has announced the details for the next Li’l Film Fest — and it’s gonna be another fun one! This time, participants are being provided with 3 video clips and are required to use a minimum of 10 seconds of each clip in their submitted film.
Click here for details, to download SD versions of the clips, and to find out how to get your hands on the fancy HD clips you crave.
Theme: Free Footage
Duration: 5 minutes or less
Entry Deadline: Postmarked Friday Dec. 4th
(in hand by Monday, Dec 7th)
The Li’l Film Fest screening will take at 2 pm on Saturday Dec. 19 at the Brooks Museum of Art. Once again, the ”Grand Jury Award” will be accompanied by a customized, thematic trophy and $500 in cash prizes presented by Indie Memphis and the Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission. The ”Audience Choice Award” will come with a trophy and the prize money is the cash from the door — so the more people that come to the festival the bigger the pot!
Congrats once again to H.G. Ray for taking home the Grand Jury award with “Spacecrane 2010″ and to Adam Remsen for winning the Audience Choice award with “Frankenstein vs. Dracula: The Opera!” at Li’l Film Fest 11 at the 12th annual Indie Memphis Film Festival last month. Hooray!
Click here for complete Li’l Film Fest details.
Indie Memphis and the Memphis College of Art are honored to welcome Bill Plympton to Memphis and present his latest feature…
Idiots & Angels
Monday, Nov. 2 @ 7:30 pm at the Studio on the Square *Presented on 35mm film.
$5 for the General Public
/ Free for Indie Memphis members and Memphis College of Art students with valid ID
Bill Plympton is scheduled to attend and participate in a Q&A after the screening.

Idiots & Angels
In Bill Plympton’s latest feature, Idiots & Angels, a selfish and morally bankrupt man, wakes up one morning with wings on his back. Even more troublesome than their embarrassing appearance is the wings’ tendency to want to do good deeds.
After much ridicule, he desperately tries to rid himself of the good wings, but eventually finds himself fighting those who view the wings as their ticket to fame and fortune. Is Angel’s misguided soul capable of being rescued?
Told through Plympton’s trademark animation style Idiots and Angels is a dark comedy about a man’s battle for his soul.
Bill Plympton Lecture
Tuesday, Nov. 3 @ 7:00 pm at the Memphis College of Art
Free and open to the General Public.

Bill Plympton
Legendary animator Bill Plympton’s work is instantly recognizable. The simple beauty of the pastel sketches set in motion is often in stark contrast with the filmmaker’s fevered surreality and sharp humor. Plympton began his career as an illustrator and syndicated cartoonist in the 1970s before realizing his dream to become an animator with 1983’s Boomtown. In 1988, he received his first Oscar nomination for the now-classic animated short Your Face. His short Push Comes to Shove won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 1991, and was later incorporated into The Tune, which became the first animated feature entirely hand-drawn by its creator.
On Tuesday, Nov. 3 at 7:00 pm, Bill Plympton will speak at the Memphis College of Art as part of their Visiting Artists Lecture Series. Plympton will show short films from throughout his career, talking about each film and how to enjoy them. Free and open to the public, the one-hour lecture will take place in Callicott Auditorium.
Indie Memphis members and newsletter subscribers are also invited to attend Bill Plympton’s Master Class, which will take place Tuesday, Nov. 3 at 9:00 am, also in Callicott Auditorium. In the three-hour Master Class, Plympton will show his short films, talk about the creative and business aspects of his work, and do live drawings to illustrate the secret of his success. He will also show an exclusive sneak preview of his new work-in-progress feature film Cheatin’. Attendees of the Master Class will get a free Bill Plympton drawing.
Indie Memphis and the Brooks Museum of Art continue their year-round collaboration with this special program of restored Art House essentials.
Admission is $5 for Indie Memphis members and members of The Brooks, $7 for non-members, and is free with Indie Memphis ‘09 Silver or Gold Pass or Brooks VIP Film Pass.

Jules and Jim
Jules and Jim
Thursday, Oct. 22 @ 7:30 pm
at the Brooks Museum of Art
** New, restored high-definition digital transfer.
Hailed as one of the finest films ever made, legendary director Francois Truffaut’s early masterpiece Jules and Jim (Jules et Jim) charts the relationship between two friends and the object of their mutual obsession over the course of twenty-five years. Jeanne Moreau stars as Catherine, the alluring and willful young woman whose enigmatic smile and passionate nature lure Jules (Oskar Werner) and Jim (Henri Serre) into one of cinema’s most captivating romantic triangles.
An exuberant and poignant meditation on freedom, loyalty, and the fortitude of love, Jules and Jim was a worldwide smash upon its release in 1962 and remains as audacious and entrancing today.

The Seventh Seal
The Seventh Seal
Thursday, Oct. 29 @ 1 pm & 7:30 pm
at the Brooks Museum of Art
** New, restored high-definition digital transfer.
Disillusioned and exhausted after a decade of battling in the Crusades, a knight (Max von Sydow) encounters Death on a desolate beach and challenges him to a fateful game of chess.
Much studied, imitated, even parodied, but never outdone, Bergman’s stunning allegory of man’s search for meaning, The Seventh Seal (Det Sjunde Inseglet), was one of the benchmark foreign imports of America’s 1950s art-house heyday, pushing cinema’s boundaries and ushering in a new era of moviegoing.
Winner of the Special Jury Prize at the 1957 Cannes Film Festival.

La Strada
La Strada
Thursday, Nov. 5 @ 1 pm & 7:30 pm
at the Brooks Museum of Art
** New, restored high-definition digital transfer.
There has never been a face quite like that of Giulietta Masina. Her husband, the legendary Federico Fellini, directs her as Gelsomina in La Strada, the film that launched them both to international stardom. Gelsomina is sold by her mother into the employ of Zampano (Anthony Quinn), a brutal strongman in a traveling circus. When Zampano encounters an old rival in highwire artist the Fool (Richard Basehart), his fury is provoked to its breaking point.
With La Strada, Fellini left behind the familiar signposts of Italian neorealism for a poetic fable of love and cruelty, evoking brilliant performances and winning the hearts of audiences and critics worldwide.
Winner of the first official Academy Award for Best Foreign-Language Film, awarded in 1956.

Rashomon
Rashomon
Thursday, Nov. 12 @ 7:30 pm
at the Studio on the Square
** New, restored 35mm film print.
Brimming with action while incisively examining the nature of truth, Rashomon is perhaps the finest film ever to investigate the philosophy of justice. Through an ingenious use of camera and flashbacks, Kurosawa reveals the complexities of human nature as four people recount different versions of the story of a man’s murder and the rape of his wife.
Toshiro Mifune gives another commanding performance in the eloquent masterwork that revolutionized film language and introduced Japanese cinema to the world.
missmayabee added OMG/HaHaHa (screening: 10/14/08 7:00 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added I.O.U.S.A. (screening: 10/13/08 6:45 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added The Order of Myths (screening: 10/13/08 1:45 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added The Order of Myths (screening: 10/12/08 8:30 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added Opera Jawa (screening: 10/12/08 8:15 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added Hi My Name Is Ryan (screening: 10/12/08 6:00 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added Bi the Way (screening: 10/11/08 9:30 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added All For Free (screening: 10/11/08 7:15 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added Pip & Zastrow: An American Friendship (screening: 10/11/08 7:00 PM) to the calendar
aepitts added Conversation with Craig Brewer (screening: 10/11/08 3:15 PM) to the calendar
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