March 2003


Next Cinema Lounge

The Cinema Lounge meets on Monday, March 10 at 7:00pm to look at the auteur behind such classics as M*A*S*H, Nashville and Gosford Park. Suggested viewing: M*A*S*H (1970), The Long Goodbye (1973), Nashville (1975), A Wedding (1978), Popeye (1980), The Player (1992), Short Cuts (1993), and Gosford Park (2001).

Cinema Lounge, a film discussion group, takes place the second Monday of every month at 7:00 PM at Borders Books, 600 14th St., NW in Washington, DC (near the Metro Center Metro stop).



Live on the Big Screen!

The 11th Annual Capital Oscars Party

By Bonnie Joranko

Join us on Sunday, March 23, 2002 for the Washington D.C. Film Society's 11th Annual Capital Oscars Party FUN-raiser held at the historic Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse, 2903 Columbia Pike, Arlington, Virginia. While Steve Martin hosts at the 75th Academy Awards in Hollywood, our own Capital Oscar Party will be hosted by area film critics, Joe Barber and Bill Henry! The pre-Oscar festivities begin at 8:00 p.m. with the Academy Awards at 8:30, but the doors open at 7:15 p.m. so you can get there early to join the fun and watch the Oscars live on the big screen.

Ticket prices are $15.00 for Silver level members of the Film Society and $20.00 for non-members. Gold level members receive one free ticket per membership, but must reserve that ticket in advance. You must be 21 or older to attend. To ensure everyone's comfort and health, this year there will be no smoking inside the theater.

This event always sells out. Guarantee your ticket by sending a check, payable to the DC Film Society, to: DC Film Society, Attn: Capital Oscars, PO Box 65992, Washington, DC 20035-5992. For more information as it becomes available, please check the website or call the hotline at (202) 554-3263.

You'll want to be sure to bring cash or your checkbook (no credit cards, please) to bid for the fabulous prizes in the Silent Auction. So far, we have autographed books, posters and scripts from Academy Award nominated movies, gift baskets, dinner tickets, theater and movie tickets, and more items are still rolling in.

In addition to the Silent Auction, there are door prizes, lots of free movie promotional items, and let's not forget the ever-popular Pick the Winners contest, and more surprises. And, as if this weren't enough already, the winners of the DC Film Society's own Best of 2002 will be announced that night.

There is no better way to experience the Oscars in the Washington Metro area than to watch the Oscars on the big screen. Big isn't just better; it's best! Don't miss out on this great opportunity to relax and enjoy the broadcast in the spacious comfort of the Drafthouse's cafe tables and chairs, with affordable food and drinks. Enjoy the company of people who love movies as much as you do while watching the Oscars just as they should be: bigger than life!!!



JUST ADDED!

Volunteers Needed for Upcoming FilmfestDC

Filmfest DC starts April 23 and runs through May 4. As always, volunteers are needed. If you are interested, plan to attend one of two orientation meetings:

Tuesday, March 25 – 6:30-7:30 p.m.
Cleveland Park Branch Library
3310 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20008
202.282.3080
Nearest Metro: The Cleveland Park station on the Red line

OR

Monday, March 31 – 6:30-7:30 p.m.
West End Branch Library
1101 24th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037
202.724.8707
Nearest Metro: The Foggy Bottom station on the Blue/Orange lines

For questions, call Bill McLeod at (202) 745-9727



The 11th Annual Environmental Film Festival

Washington Goes Green in March with Environmental Film Festival

The 11th annual Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital will coincide with the spring equinox, bringing 130 documentary, animated, feature, archival and children's films to Washington, D.C. from March 13 through 23. Selected to provide fresh perspectives on environmental issues around the globe, these films represent cinematic work from 30 countries, including 70 Washington, D.C., United States and World Premieres. Most screenings include discussion with prize-winning filmmakers and scientists and are free.

Two of the Festival's animations: the Japanese film, Mt. Head, and Germany's Rocks have been nominated for the 2003 Academy Award in the category of Animated Short Film. They will be shown three times during the Festival: at the Embassy of Canada, the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library and the Hirshhorn Museum. A Festival feature from New Zealand, Whale Rider, which is also a Washington, D.C. Premiere, won the AGF People's Choice Award at the 2002 Toronto International Film Festival as well as the audience award for World Cinema at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival.

Premiere highlights include Lawrence Hott's The Harriman Alaska Expedition Retraced, exploring changes to the Alaskan coast over the past century; Alexei and the Spring about survival in the aftermath of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster; and Photos to Send in which Irish-American cinematographer Dierdre Lynch revisits the people of County Clare who were photographed by Dorothea Lange for Life magazine in the 1950s. In addition, activist filmmaker Judith Helfand will screen her toxic comedy, Blue Vinyl, exposing the hazards of America's most popular plastic, vinyl, while Ric Burns will show his portrait of the acclaimed nature photographer, Ansel Adams.

Entering its second decade in Washington, D.C., the Environmental Film Festival has become the leading showcase for environmental films in the United States. The eleven-day Festival features some of the finest in contemporary filmmaking, bringing winning selections from international film festivals to Washington, D.C. as well as launching films that subsequently win major recognition elsewhere. Selections from Wildscreen Film Festival in England, Germany's Okomedia International Environmental Film Festival, Yamagata Documentary Film Festival in Japan, the Ottawa International Animation Festival in Canada, Colorado's Telluride Mountainfilm Festival, and the United Nations Association Film Festival in California are among the highlights of the Festival.

Major themes of this year's Festival include advocacy for protecting scarce resources and human health; reflections on Chernobyl; tributes to the world's spectacular wildlife, from China's Yunnan Snub-nosed Monkey to the octopus of the deep sea; environmental and human impacts of war; and the struggles of indigenous peoples to retain their lands and traditions in the face of modernization and globalization.

The Festival celebrates the globe's protected areas, from the grand peaks of Alaska's Wrangell-St. Elias National Park to the unique wildlife of Tanzania's Serengeti; built and created environments in architecture, art and photography; and personal visions of the living world. Topics encompass farming and organic food, the Chesapeake Bay's pfiesteria blight, and recycling sewage water to create clean drinking water in northern Virginia's Occoquan River watershed.

For a complete film schedule, visit the
Festival website or call 202-342-2564 for a film brochure.



An Interview with Dagur Kari

By Jim McCaskill

ROTTERDAM, The Netherlands. The following interview with the director of the film, Noi Albinoi (Noi the Albino, Iceland/Germany/UK/Denmark 2003) took place at the 2003 International Film Festival Rotterdam, where the film had its World Premiere. The next IFFRotterdam will be held from January 21-February 1, 2004.

Dagur Kari, an Icelandic filmmaker, was born in France where he lived for his first three years after which his parents returned to Iceland. At 21 he moved to Denmark to attend the National Film School of Denmark, graduating in 1999. His graduation film, Lost Weekend, entered 11 international festivals and won 11 prizes. His current film continues that tradition as it won the Youth Jury Award at Rotterdam. The film has been picked up for distribution in Italy, France and is scheduled for US screens later this year after the film festival circuit.

"I wanted to make my first feature film in Iceland to share my heritage," said Kari. "It was not my intention to make a typically Icelandic film. I like to make films that take place in an isolated microcosm, in a confined universe that is not really a part of the world as we know it, but not surreal either. Somewhere in between. But apart from that, I guess the film is just my version of a story that has been told over and over again: The young rebel, who doesn't fit in anywhere and tries to escape."

The film tells the story of 17-year-old Noi, played by the Icelandic-French actor Tomas Lemarquis, who lives with his grandmother on a remote fjord in northern Iceland. Most of the community consider him the village idiot while others think he is a genius. All would agree that he is eccentric as Noi practices the violin in a closet and digs a hiding place under the house. His dream of escaping this snow locked prison with Iris, the city girl working at the gas station end in catastrophe.

"Noi is a character that has been living inside me for many years," he continued, "He is even older than my interest in film. Throughout the years I have collected all kinds of ideas around him and, by the time I graduated from film school, these ideas were ripe to be locked into a script. I did not have a First Aid kit but kept him alive by placing him with good actors. In the end I kept the good parts, the intensity, the side characters."

"The film industry is so small and relatively new. The first Icelandic film was made in 1978. Making the 'first' anything brings a special energy as making the first Icelandic horror film or the first Icelandic love story." When asked about the difficulty in casting films where the country's population is 28,000 people he said, "Iceland is small and everybody knows everybody. If you sit in a bar long enough in Reykjavik you will have met all your cast and crew. For Noi I didn't go after blockbuster names. Most of the actors are new to cinema and not celebrities. I mainly went after the right types, and that is why it is a combination of non-professional and professional actors. The woman who plays Lina, the grandmother, delivers the mail in my neighborhood; I met the girl who plays Iris in a vegetarian restaurant. Many members of the cast are personal friends, like the psychologist."

"The actor who plays Noi's father has had an interesting career. He will act in a play or film then take time off for another job, like fishing. This recharges his battery and he returns to acting."

"Regarding the character of Noi, it was clear that he would need to have a very distinctive and almost alienated look. And since I do not know any Icelandic albinos of that age that are good actors, Tomas Lemarquis was by far the best choice. Not only is he a very dedicated and talented actor, but he also has the look that I wanted."

"To me heroes are extremely boring," he responded when asked if liked the loser type of character, "I mean people who can do everything. I think it's more interesting when people are miscommunicating and don't know how to deal with things. Like in sitcoms, where the characters have the same problems in every episode. They never learn and it continues for ten years! If they were heroes they would just need one episode to solve everything and move on."

When asked if Noi's hometown really existed Kari said, "The film was not supposed to take place in an isolated village. I was thinking more about Reykjavik. I wanted to create a universe that did not really exist but could exist. To me the West Fjords were most interesting because of the eerie atmosphere and beautiful, extremely visual scenery. Of course we were very dependent on snow and that was the area that was most likely to have snow. During winter it can be completely cut off from the rest of the world due to extreme weather."

How hard was it shoot in this remote area? "It was very hard. We had to depend very heavily on the snow but that winter there was almost no snow. Actually we were extremely lucky because the only snow for the whole winter fell exactly while we were shooting exterior scenes. I'm very happy that no artificial snow was used in the whole film and yet it is snowing in every shot. 95% of the indoor scenes were shot on location. The shooting schedule was tight and all in all it would have been impossible if we hadn't been in these small Icelandic villages. Very few movies have been made there so people are not fed up with film crews coming and everybody is so helpful. When in other countries you often have monstrous bureaucracy, in this area you just need to make one phone call to be able to shoot. The solution for every problem you might have is always a phone call away."

"Snow adds a lot of production design just by nature," Kari said when asked about the difficulty of shooting so much snow. "It gives a physical dimension to the film because it's difficult to move through the snow. Especially when you are being chased by cops. Physically, it is impossible to get away from a place like this. For the escape scene I tried to imitate a B-movie car chase and just added the snow as a surprise obstacle."

Without telling the ending would it fair to say the final event is a kind of punishment? "The ending is supposed to have this double meaning that sometimes the worst thing possible can also be a new beginning. You've lost everything and it is terrible but then you are also liberated from everything. For me it was the only possible escape for Noi. It is open for interpretation and the audience has to decide for themselves. I like to put a definite ending."

This film seems to mix comic and absurd elements into a tragic story. "Noi Albinoi does have strange and humorous situations and then a curse at the end," Kari continues, "I find it strange that my scripts are like a comic book but then the film itself turns out to be much more serious than anyone had expected, myself included."

"Strange thing is that at some time you lock the film and it is finished. It has grown up and moved a way from home. It is interesting to see what it does out there."

This young director finds that "Film is imprecise. You have a thousand opportunities to wish you had shot something different. So you go to editing and not knock your head against the wall. You have to make the best of what you have."

What is next for this talented director? "I have two or three ideas for film projects but none of them take place in Iceland. One is a Dogme film that I'm currently developing in Copenhagen. I think it is easier to work abroad in a foreign language. It helps to abstract things. In Iceland, I know the country and the language so well that it is a little bit difficult to get the necessary distance to create a universe of its own. It comes much easier to me when I'm abroad."

Why Dogme? "They are difficult to make. You learn a lot along the way. The film after that is a bigger production. It is nice to do a quick film in between. Dogme requires you work quickly. It is less developed then in usual productions. Because of all the Dogme rules (no make-up, no added music, no artificial lighting) as a filmmaker you learn very much. Sort of like going on a desert island with a pocket knife and survive for yourself. When you come back you appreciate what you have in your kitchen. Sort of like a refresher course in Film School.

Not certain Dagur Kari needs a refresher course yet. Maybe time to catch his breath. In addition to directing the film, he wrote the screenplay and his musical group, slowblow, did the score.

The film's international sales is in the capable hands of The Coproduction Office. They produce and sell 2 or 3 very select films a year. This year it is Noi Albinoi and Pleasant Days (that film has been re-edited and scenes added since the Edinburgh Film Festival [September 2002 Storyboard]. Previous films include Lars von Trier's Breaking the Waves and The Kingdom.

Cast Credits: Noi (Tomas Lemarquis), Kiddi Beikon(Thostur Leo Gunnarsson), Iris (Elin Hansdottir), Lina (Anna Fridriksdottir), Oskar (Hjalti Rognvaldsson), Prestur (Petur Einarsson), Gylfi (Kjartan Bjargmundsson), Dabbi (Greipur Gislason).



Calendar of Events

FILMS

American Film Institute JUST ADDED!
Latin American films shown as part of "AmericArtes" include The Day Silence Died (Paolo Agazzi, 1998) on March 19 at 6:30pm and March 20 at 9:00pm; The Caiman's Dream (Beto Gómez, 2001) on March 19 at 9:15pm and March 20 at 6:30pm; I Am Bolivar (Jorge Ali Triana, 2002) on March 21 at 6:30pm and March 22 at 9:00pm; and Santa Julia's Tiger on March 21 at 9:00pm and March 22 at 6:30pm.

Freer Gallery of Art
In March, the Freer begins a complete retrospective of the films of Adoor Gopalakrishnan, the poet laureate of Indian cinema. On March 7 at 7:30pm is The Man of the Story (1995); on March 9 at 2:00pm is The Servile (1993); on March 28 at 7:00pm is One's Own Choice (1972); and on March 30 at 2:00pm is Ascent (1977). More follow in April.

JUST ADDED--The film Better Luck Tomorrow (Justin Lin) will be substituted for the panel discussion "Korean Americans in Film and Television".

Taking part in the Environmental Film Festival, the Freer shows The Land of the Wandering Souls (Rithy Panh, 2001), about laying fiber-optic cable through Cambodia. On March 16 at 2:00pm is A2 (Tatsuya Mori, 2001) revisiting members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult, years after the 1995 Sarin gas attack.

An anime marathon will take place on March 29 with films to be announced at 11:00am, 1:30pm, 4:00pm and 7:00pm.

National Gallery of Art
A series of films by Russian director Alexander Sokurov begins on March 1 at 3:00pm with Evening Sacrifice (1984-87), Moscow Elegy (1986-88), and Maria (1975-88). That program is repeated on March 2 at 4:00pm. On March 9 at 4:00pm is Sonata for Hitler (1979), Petersburg Elegy (1989), and Dimistry Shostakovich: Viola Sonata (1981-86). On March 15 at 1:00pm is Mother and Son (1977) shown with Dolce (1999). On March 15 at 3:30pm is Oriental Elegy (1996) shown with A Humble Life (1997). And finally on March 14 is Russian Ark (2002) shown with Elegy of a Voyage (2001).

A selection of films shown at the 2002 "Flaherty" symposium is on March 29 at 2:30pm, including Hiroshima/Nagasaki: August 1945 (Eric Barnouw, Paul Ronder, Akira Iwasaki, 1970), Hitler's Hat (Jeff Krulik, 2002), Eaux d'Artifice (Kenneth Anger, 1953), Seven Days 'til Sunday (Reynold Reynolds and Patrick Jolley, 1998-2002), Lost Book Found (Jem Cohen, 1996), and Twenty-Four Dollar Island (Robert Flaherty, 1925).

Taking part in the Environmental Film Festival, the Gallery shows Alexei and the Spring (Seichi Motohashi, 2002) on March 20, and 21 at 12:30pm and March 22 at 1:00pm; Ludmila's Voice (Gunnar Bergdahl, 2002); and Photos to Send (Diedre Lynch, 2001).

On March 28 at 2:00pm and March 20 at 4:00pm is Barry Lyndon (Stanley Kubrick, 1975).

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
On March 6 and 7 at 8:00pm is Gerhard Richter: Four Decades (Michael Blackwood, 2002), a documentary about the Richter retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York with curator Robert Storr. Shown with Volker Bradke, a 1966 short film by Gerhard Richter.

As part of the Environmental Film Festival, a progam of films about Navajo perspectives on the environment will be shown on March 13 at 8:00pm, including Emergence (1981) and The Return of Navajo Boy (2000). A film program of nature and rituals in Mexico is on March 14 at 8:00pm, including In Xanini/Corn Stalks (1999), Water Festival (1995) and Powerful Mountain (1998).

Selections from the annual Black Maria Film Festival take place on March 20 and 21 (separate programs each day) at 8:00pm, introduced by festival director John Columbus.

National Museum of African Art
On March 14 at 7:00pm, as part of the Environmental Film Festival, two films will be shown: Fishers of Dar (2002) about fishing methods and Diamonds and Rust (2001) about the daily life of an international crew working in a mining conglomerate.

On March 21 at 7:00pm is The Last Salt Caravan shown with Nuba Conversations. On March 28 at 7:00pm is In Danku the Soup Is Sweeter shown with The Virgin Diaries. That program also repeats on March 30 at 3:00pm.

Museum of American History
On March 15 at 2:00noon is Ansel Adams (Ric Burns, 2002) with the director present; part of the Environmental Film Festival. At 6:30pm on March 15 is Becoming American: The Chinese Experience, a 30 minute highlight from the PBS film that will premiere in the spring. William College scholar K. Scott Wong will speak after the film. On March 16 at 12:30pm is Crown of the Continent (John Grabowska, 2001) about the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park in Alaska, shown with Remembered Earth a work in progress by John Grabowska, who will be there to discuss the films. At 2:30pm on March 16 is Wilderness and Spirit: A Mountain Called Katahdin about the great mountain in Maine. The filmmaker and a Baxter State Park director will discuss the film and the mountain. Part of the Environmental Film Festival.

National Museum of Women in the Arts
In conjunction with its exhibit "Women Artists From the State Hermitage Museum," Russian Ark (Alexander Sokurov, 2002) will be shown on March 9 at 7:00pm.

As part of the Environmental Film Festival, a program of films by Charles Guggenheim (A Place in the Land, 1998; and The Johnstown Flood, 1989) will be shown on March 16 at 7:00pm.

Films on the Hill
Films on the Hill also takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with a two-part program on whaling, both old and modern. On March 14 at 7:00pm is the silent film Down to the Sea in Ships (Elmer Clifton, 1922), which also features Clara Bow in her first role, accompanied on piano by Ray Brubacher. On March 21 at 7:00pm is Hell Below Zero (Mark Robson, 1954), featuring Alan Ladd and covering modern whaling in the Antarctic. Both of these are feature films with documentary-like parts on whaling.

On March 5 at 7:00pm is René Clair's inventive musical comedy Le Million (1931) shown with Bulles de Savon (1934). Both films are in French with English subtitles.

DC Jewish Community Center
On March 4 at 7:00pm is a documentary double feature: Ramleh (Michal Aviad, 2001) about women residing in the town of Ramleh which was filmed between the elections in 1999 and 2001. Shown with A Biography of Lilith (Lynne Sachs, 1997), a feminist view of the ancient myth and an investigation of its cultural persistance. For tickets call 800-494-TIXS.

On March 25 at 7:00pm is Shylock (Pierre Lasry). JUST ADDED!

Pickford Theater
The Pickford Theater also takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with Animals Are Beautiful People (Jamie Uys, 1974) on March 17 at 7:00pm and The Living Desert (James Algar, 1953) on March 20 at 6:30pm shown with Perri (Paul Kenworthy, Jr. and Ralph Wright, 1957).

Also in March is Queen Bee (1955) on March 21 at 7:00pm and Dirty Harry (Don Siegel, 1971) on March 28 at 7:00pm. Check the website for others.

Goethe Institute
The Goethe Institute continues its German TV crime series with Moltke (Hajo Gies, 1988) on March 3 at 6:30pm; Death in the Chaffchopper (Nico Hofmann, 1991) on March 10 at 6:30pm, Manila (Nikolaus Stein von Komienski, 1998) on March 17 at 6:30pm, A Fatal Fairy Tale (Manuel Siebenmann, 2001) on March 24 at 6:30pm and Three Bottles of Tokay (Udo Witte, 1989) on March 26 at 6:30pm. More follow in April.

Beyond Silence (Caroline Link, 1996), about a hearing child in a deaf family is on March 31 at 6:30.

The Goethe Institute also takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with a program of two films which received awards at the 19th Okomedia, an German Environmental Film Festival in Freiburg. On March 20 at 7:00pm is Greasy Loot (Ingeborg Altemeier, 2002), a television documentary about palm oil production and distribution in Indonesia and Chernobyl--The Coverup (2002), about the well-known environmental catastrophe.

Griot Cinema at Erico Cafe JUST ADDED!
On March 5-9 at 7:30pm is Sugar Cane Alley (Euzhan Palcy, 1983), about a boy living on a sugarcane plantation in Martinique. On March 12-16 at 7:30pm is Black Women on: That Light Dark Thang (Celeste Crenshaw and Paula Caffey, 1999), a documentary about the politics of color within the African-American community. The filmmakers will be present for discussion on March 13, 14, and 16. On March 19-22 at 7:30pm and March 23 at 4:30pm is Through the Door of No Return (Shirikiana Aina, 1998), a documentary about the filmmaker's trip to Ghana to trace the footsteps of her father. The filmmaker will be present for discussion on March 19.

French Embassy
Taking part in the Environmental Film Festival, the French Embassy shows Les Terriens (2000), a documentary by Ariane Doublet about the 1999 total eclipse of the sun. See the Film Festivals section below for more films at the French Embassy.

National Museum of Natural History
On March 7 at 12:00noon is Southern Treasures (2001) about the first black female master blaster in a Johannesburg gold mine. This program is repeated on March 8 at 1:00pm. On March 21 at 12:00noon is The Pfiesteria Files (Michael W. Fincham, 2001) about the toxic margine organism with the filmmaker present for discussion.

Part of the Environmental Film Festival: March 14 at 12:00noon is The Octopus Show (2002) shown with Cartoon Sea (2001) and at 7:00pm is The 1899 Harriman Expedition Retraced (Larry Hott, 2003) about Alaska's coast. On March 15 starting at 11:00am is a program of winners from the 2002 Wildscreen Film Festival, March 16 starting at 11:00am another program winners from the Wildscreen Film Festival. On March 22 starting at 1:00pm is a program of winners from the 2002 Telluride Mountain Film Festival.

Smithsonian Associates
As part of the Environmental Film Festival, the Smithsonian Associates shows The Disenchanted Forest (Sarita Siegel, 2002) on March 19 at 7:00pm about orangutangs in Borneo. On March 23 at 2:00pm is a program of Oscar-winning short animated films from past years including The Old Man and the Sea, Crac!, and The Man Who Planted Trees.

The series of Russian films continues in March with The War (2002) on March 6 at 7:00pm, and The Cuckoo (2002) on March 13 at 7:00pm.



FILM TALKS

Smithsonian Associates
Women in Film On March 2 at 1:00pm Emmy Award-winning writer Steve "Mr. Movie" Friedman screens film clips as he presents an overview of the industry and a tribute to the women who set the standards for future generations of filmgoers and filmmakers.



FILM FESTIVALS

The Environmental Film Festival takes place March 14-23. See the story above.

The D.C. Independent Film Festival takes place from February 27 to March 6. See the website.

The Festival de films francophones takes place at three locations: Visions, Embassy of France and Embassy of Canada. The films include: Paris XY (Zeka Laplaine, Congo, 2001) on March 22 at 1:00pm at Visions; Door to the Sky (Farida Ben Lyazid, Morocco, 1989) on March 22 at 7:00pm at the Embassy of Canada; Lumumba (Raoul Peck, Haiti, 2001) on March 23 at 11:00am at Visions; Buud Yam (Gaston Kaboré, Burkina Faso, 1998) on March 23 at 3:00pm at the Embassy of Canada; B comme Béejart (Marcel Schupbach, Switzerland, 2001) on March 24 at 8:00pm at Visions; Le grand Blanc de Lambarene (Bassek Ba Kobhio, Cameroon, 1995) on March 24 at 7:00pm at the Embassy of France; Testamento (Francisco Manso, Cape Verde, 1998) on March 25 at 7:00pm at the Embassy of France; L627 (Bertrand Tavernier, France, 1992) on March 25 at 9:00pm at the Embassy of France; Le roi danse (Gérard Corbiaud, Belgium, 2001) on March 26 at 7:00pm at the Embassy of France; Guelwaar (Sembène Ousmane, Senegal, 1992) on March 26 at 9:00pm at the Embassy of France; and Un crabe dans la tête (André Turpin, Canada, 2001) on March 27 at 9:00pm at Visions.



This on-line version of the newsletter was last updated on March 20. Please check periodically for additions and corrections.


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