Monday, July 16, 2007

By popular demand: BAD BOYS OF SUMMER

FILM ARTS FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES
ADDED BADS BOYS OF SUMMER SCREENING

July 11, 2007 - San Francisco, CA - Film Arts Foundation is excited to announce an encore presentation of Bad Boys Of Summer, to be held on Friday July 20, 2007 @ 7:00pm, at the Screening Room of the Ninth Street Media Consortium. In attendance for the post-screening Q&A will be Elliot Smith, the player/manager for the Oaks, San Quentin's rival baseball team. The Oaks play the San Quentin Giants on opening day every year. Also in attendance will be scorekeeper Alison Harrington, San Quentin PR Officer Eric Messick, and San Quentin Warden Robert Ayers, Jr.

Originally programmed as part of Film Art's award-winning True Stories Documentary Series at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Bad Boys Of Summer is a feature documentary that follows the charismatic coach of the San Quentin Giants through his final season with the prison baseball program, as he tries to change the lives of the men on his team. By peeling back the layers of their dark personal histories, he reveals their inner core as human beings. In the process, he gives a startling new face to our national pastime. Bad Boys Of Summer brings together inmates, guards, parolees and their families, and shows us a side of the prison system few ever could imagine, and for those that live it, they will see it anew when they see the film for the first time.

Bad Boys of Summer marks the fourth documentary collaboration between filmmakers Loren Mendell and Tiller Russell through their production company Angry Young Ranch. Founded in 2001, the company’s slate of films includes the IDA Award nominee Cockfight (PBS), Change Up (Discovery), and One Strong Arm (A&E Indie Films). This is their first feature length film. More information can be found at www.angryyoungranch.com.

WHAT: A special screening of BAD BOYS OF SUMMER, followed by Q&A
WHEN: Friday July 20, 2007 @ 7:00pm
WHERE: Ninth Street Media Consortium, Screening Room
145 Ninth Street, # 104
San Francisco, CA 94103
Tickets $8/$6 for Film Arts or YBCA members. Cash and checks only.

SPACE IS LIMITED. Please contact Reynaldi Lolong, True Stories Program Manager,
at 415-552-8760 x304, or via e-mail: reynaldi@filmarts.org if you would like to attend.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

BAWIFT General Meeting, featuring Judy Irving

On July 11, Judy Irving, director of our August film 19 Arrests, No Convictions, will be a featured speaker at the upcoming general meeting for BAWIFT (Bay Area Women In Film And Television).

Veteran documentary maker Judy Irving has achieved great success with her film Wild Parrots Of Telegraph Hill and several other productions over the years, including theatrical distribution of this amazing and delightful feature length documentary. Hear her stories and tips at our July meeting.

Agenda:
7 pm - networking and light dinner
7:30 to 9 PM - Judy's presentation/discussion and clips from Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill, including a Q&A.
9 to 9:30 PM - More networking.
Although our special events include both men and women, our monthly meetings, such as this one, are for women only.
Free for paid BAWIFT members, $5 for non-BAWIFT members.
$3 for non-BAWIFT member students with ID.
Location: San Francisco School of Digital Filmmaking,
2565 Third Street, Suite 337, between 22nd & 23rd Sts.

Directions by Public Transit:
BART: Exit at the 16th Street/ Mission Station.Take the #22 bus from the SW corner to the last stop on the line, which is Third St. at 20th.Walk 2 blocks south.
SF MUNI: To use Muni from downtown SF or from the East Bay, take the T-THIRD MUNI line (inbound to SF) on the Embarcadero. This is the street level. Pick it up anywhere along the Embarcadero and it goes down Third Street and stops just opposite the SFSDF building, at 22nd St. For more MUNI info go to: www.sfmuni.com
Bus Lines in San Francisco to use: #22 (take it to the last stop, at Third & 20th), and #49
Driving from East Bay: West toward San Francisco Cross Bay Bridge (toll) Stay on US 101, towards San Jose Exit right onto Cesar Chavez Blvd - EAST Turn left onto 3rd St. The school is located between 22nd & 23rd Streets.
Driving from South Bay: US 101 or US 280 North toward San Francisco Exit right onto Cesar Chavez Blvd., go EAST Turn left onto 3rd Street The Administrative building is located at 20th Street. The school is located between 22nd & 23rd Streets.
Driving from North Bay: US 101 S toward San Francisco (toll) Turn right onto Van Ness Ave./US101 Turn left onto Golden Gate Ave. Turn slight right onto 6th St. Merge onto I 280 S / US280 South Take Mariposa St. exit toward 18th St. Take the 18th St. ramp Turn left onto 18th St. Turn right onto 3rd St. - Go South a few blocks. The school is located between 22nd & 23rd Streets.
Driving from San Francisco:, South of Market Area Take 3rd Street (by SBC Park). Go South to 22nd. St. The school is located between 22nd & 23rd Streets.

Monday, July 2, 2007

Next up: Bad Boys of Summer


Bad Boys of Summer

by Loren Mendell & Tiller Russell (2007, 76 min)
Wed, Jul 18, 7:30 pm
$8 regular
$6 FAF members, seniors, students & teacher
$6 YBCA Members

Every spring, 24 convicts taste the cool, crisp air of freedom—not by stepping out of prison walls, but by putting on a pair of spikes and picking up a glove. And for four months, they’re not just inmates, they’re…ballplayers. Bad Boys of Summer follows the charismatic coach of the San Quentin Giants through his final season with the prison baseball team as he tries to change the men’s lives.

-also showing-

"The Ghost in the Material" by Kelcey Edwards and solo exhibit of new work by William Noguera

From the confines of his 4x10 foot cell on Death Row at the notorious San Quentin State Prison, down on his knees, hunched over a makeshift easel erected from his steel mattress frame, William Noguera crafts painstaking canvases of chilling beauty and great emotional depth. Mr. Noguera is a completely self-taught artist; he has been imprisoned since 1983. During an enforced 27 day stay in solitary confinement, William began to draw on the walls of his cell, and has focused on this means of expression ever since to escape the confines of his difficult circumstances.


"The Ghost in the Material" is a four-minute short in 16mm black & white film which presents a haunting, outsider's look at the black-and-white world of William Noguera. An exhibit of Noguera's work will also be on display, courtesy of the Institute For Unpopular Culture.