MicroCinema Club

Monthly short film screening series, presented by Indie Memphis & Crosstown Arts.

This month: The Ann Arbor Film Festival Tour
The longest running avant-garde and experimental film festival in North America (est. 1963) presents nine new short films that will expand your imagination.

Doors open at 6:30 p.m./Screening begins at 7 p.m. Admission is pay-what-you-can.


More information:
NEITHER GOD NOR SANTA MARIA | Samuel M. Delgado and Helena Girón

Madrid, Spain | 2015 | 12 min
In the daily life of a woman, the magic of her tales begin to materialize as night falls. Night is the time when travel is possible.

BISONHEAD | Elizabeth Lo
Los Angeles, CA | 2015 | 10 min
A family of Ponderai Native Americans embark on a controversial journey from northern Montana to Yellowstone to take part in the federal culling of 900 wild bison.

THE MESS | Peter Burr
Brooklyn, NY | 2015 | 14 min
In this game-like computer animation we take a journey to the threshold of a utopian labyrinth. Following the perspective of a solitary female figure whose job is to clean up the mess it inadvertently spawned, we end up in a seemingly endless hall of mirrors.

THE PERPETUAL MOTION OF MY LOVE FOR YOU | Karen Yasinsky
Baltimore, MD | 2016 | 8 min
A collage film slipping between narrative starts of images and sounds: May Sarton’s snapshots, a resplendent Liz Taylor, internal and external awkwardnesses, a short respite of peace and a dogged, deeply sad positivism. If this movie was a person, it would be the awkward girl, but she will never gain grace and confidence in her intelligence when older. She will forever remain in 8th grade with her frustrations and ambiguities.

LOVE UNDER WILL OF THE HAGS LONG TOOTH | Mica O’Herlihy
Westby, WI | 2015 | 4 min
A psychotronic gender-fucked pagan meditation on the animal in us all.

FUNDIR | Allison Cekala
Boston, MA | 2015 | 23 min
A biography of a material — the processing and importation of Boston’s road salt from one of its main sources in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile to the ice-covered streets of Boston.

THE RESONANCE | Mateusz Sadowski
6 min | 2013 | Poznan, Poland
The Resonance was made using stop-motion animation. The artist split the recorded footage into separate frames which were printed and re-photographed. The process underlined the characteristics of two contrary realities – photography and video. Providing the viewer with an insight into its own making, Sadowski’s video is both a reflection on scientific theories about the structure of the world and an attempt to create an alternative reality. Winner, Best Animated Film

BABA DANA TALKS TO THE WOLVES | Ralitsa Doncheva
Bulgaria/Canada | 2015 | 11 min
An impressionistic portrait of Baba Dana and her solitary existence in one of the oldest monasteries in Bulgaria, Zelenikovsky Monastery. Winner, The Eileen Maitland Award for Women’s Voice

not even nothing can be free of ghosts | Rainer Kohlberger
Vienna, Austria | 2016 | 11 min
An Algorithmic work generated entirely from computer-generated code; where “the intentional overload of the human perception apparatus leads to visual impressions that appear exclusively in the literal “eye of the beholder.” These “ghosts” appear from “nothing” and are “nothing”; they are mere hallucinations evoked by the imperfect human-biological data processing system” – Norbert Pfaffenbichler.

Indie Wednesday Film Series: Trivia Night

Weekly film screenings hosted by Indie Memphis. Films will screen at Crosstown Arts, Malco’s Studio on the Square, and Ridgeway Theatre on a rotating basis.

This week: Trivia Night — an underground trivia legend in New York City faces an unbeaten game show from his past to reclaim the greatness he once had.

Commercial Appeal film critic John Beifuss will lead a speed movie trivia contest at 6 p.m.; Q&A will follow the film.

Indie Wednesday Film Series: Raising Bertie

Weekly film screenings hosted by Indie Memphis. Films will screen at Crosstown Arts, Malco’s Studio on the Square, and Ridgeway Theatre on a rotating basis.

This week: Raising Bertie, a powerful in-depth look at the issues facing African-American rural youth and the complex relationships between generational poverty, educational equity, and race.

A Q&A session will follow.

Shoot & Splice: Cinematography Case Study of The Republic

Monthly filmmmaking forum presented by Indie Memphis and Crosstown Arts. February topic: Cinematography Case Study of The Republic .


Join cinematographer Jordan Danelz, key grip Patrick Durkin, and best boy Andy Allmendinger as they lead a case study presentation based on their experience working on the set of the Greek crime thriller The Republic.

Learn the specifics of what the camera and electrical department goes through in making a high-octane independent film. They’ll also share stories and insights regarding the unique experience of working on a film shot entirely in Greece, with a predominantly Greek cast and crew.  “The Republic” will be screened in between the case study presentation.

Doors open at 6:00 p.m./panel case study starts at 6:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Complimentary beverages will be available.

This film is intended for mature audiences. No one under 17 will be allowed without parental supervision.

View the film’s trailer here.

MicroCinema Club: Documentary Shorts Festival Encore

MicroCinema is back in 2017 with more short film presentations. To kick it off, we are featuring an encore of the documentary shorts from the Indie Memphis Film Festival. These shorts cover a wide range of subject matter and interesting characters.

Shorts include:
The Honeys and Bears
Oh My Father
The Carousel
More is More
The Purrtraitist
In This World
All the President’s Heads
Soul City
Mezzo


Presented by Indie Memphis in collaboration with Crosstown Arts and made possible through support by ArtsFirst, the First Tennessee Foundation and ArtsMemphis.

Doors open at 6:30 p.m./Screening begins at 7 p.m.


More Information:

THE HONEYS AND BEARS | Dir. by Veena Rao | 4 min.
Members of the Harlem Honeys and Bears, a synchronized swim team for seniors, describe the freedom of the water.

OH MY FATHER | Dir. by Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck | 11 min.
A middle-aged woman spends her days taking care of her live-in 98-year old father and ponders the essence of familial love

THE CAROUSEL | Dir. by Jonathan Napolitano | 12 min.
In Binghamton, New York there spins a 1925 carousel that once inspired Rod Serling and has since become a portal into… the Twilight Zone.

MORE IS MORE | Dir. by Alexis Boling | 6 min.
Unearthly creatures from another dimension climb out of the mind of a transformation artist and onto the streets of NYC.

THE PURRTRAITIST | Dir. by Mark Zemel | 10 min.
Meet Larry Johnson, the world foremost glamour photographer… for cats.

IN THIS WORLD | Dir. by Kelly Creedon | 15 min.
15-year-old Courvosier Cox knows he is destined to be a star. Struggling to find his place in the complex world of inner-city Durham, NC, he undertakes a relentless quest to escape into the spotlight.

ALL THE PRESIDENTS’ HEADS | Dir. by Adam Roffman | 8 min.
One man is on a quest to save the Presidents of the United States.

SOUL CITY | Dir. by Monica Berra, SheRea DelSol, Gini Richards | 20 min.
SOUL CITY tells the story of a band of idealists who attempt to build a multiracial utopia in Klan Country, North Carolina during the 1970s.

MEZZO | Dir. by Nicole Opper | 14 min.
MEZZO celebrates the life and artistic endeavors of Breanna Sinclaire, an African American opera singer and openly trans woman.

Shoot & Splice: Social Justice Filmmaking

Monthly filmmaking forum presented by Indie Memphis and Crosstown Arts

January topic: Social Justice Filmmaking

Join us  for “Social Justice Filmmaking,” the first Shoot & Splice of 2017! Films have the power to bring awareness and different perspectives to social issues. Artists and filmmakers are uniquely positioned address the injustices that permeate our world.

Memphis filmmakers Emmanuel Amido (Orange Mound, Tennessee: America’s Community), Sarah Fleming, and Joann Self Selvidge (Viola) will discuss how they approach their work in making these films — from finding the subject matter to effectively and empathetically communicating their story. Moderated by Laura Sullivan.

Doors open at 6:30 p.m./panel discussion at 7 p.m. Free and open to the public. Complimentary beverages will be available.