Showing posts with label Castro Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Castro Theatre. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Joan Rivers...funny lady appears @ Castro Theatre! San Francisco March 12th!




Dishy Senior Citizen!





Joan Rivers may not be a sexy senior citizen, but she sure is an energetic one!

Flip the dial on your TV, and you're bound to stumble across her overly-stretched over-the-top mask-like persona on Fashion Police (where she roasts celebrity style victims each week on E Entertainment) or run smack-dab into the outrageous funny lady alongside daughter Melissa at a Red Carpet celebration at the Oscars, or the opening for a local supermarket (you-name-it).

In spite of her hectic non-stop TV schedule, Ms. Rivers still finds time to jet around the country for personal appearances, too!

Undoubtedly, Joan's comprehensive file - consisting of every joke she ever quipped over the last half-century-or-so from Vegas to Timbuktu - gets her through the fast-paced whirlwind of high-profile engagements (and the vigour's of coming up with zany entertaining material at-the-drop of-a-hat).

Indeed!

It's anticipated that when Ms. Rivers takes a trek up to the Castro Theatre on the Weekend (Saturday March 12th) - in fact - that there will be a bevy of stinging barbs aimed at celebrities in the glare of the spotlight sure to bust a gut or two.

Charlie Sheen and Lindsay Lohan take cover!

Joan - the loud-mouthed broad with a penchant for ubiquitous gaudy jewellery, who made my worst-dressed list for 2010 ( http://ijulian.blogspot.com/2010/12/julian-ayrs-3rd-annual-worst-dressed.html) surely won't disappoint the gay boys sure to pack the house in a neighborhood that is affectionately known as "Gay Gulch".

Can we talk?

You betcha, girl!

Our paths actually crossed a few years ago, when I was hired to play a "gay" fireman for a sight gag (a spoof on the Beverly Hills Fire Department) in her comedy special: 

A Salute to Heidi Abromowitz

Thanks to Ms. Rivers, residuals occasionally trickle in, when the hilarious bill-of-fare broadcasts on cable, mainstream TV, or in the International overseas market.

I expect the gig in San Francisco will sell out.

Break a leg, Joan!

LOCATION

Castro Theatre
429 Castro Street
San Francisco, CA

CURTAIN

8 p.m.

CONTACT & INFO

415.392.4400

www.cityboxoffice.com





Britney Spears to appear @ Castro Theatre March 27th!


Saturday, March 5, 2011

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art...Director Haskell Wexler hailed @ "Exposed" film series!










Film buffs warmly received filmmaker Haskell Wexler last night at the Castro Theater at a screening of his feature "Medium Cool".

"I got emotional just seeing my film again on screen," he confessed to the audience with a touch of sentiment in his distinctive speaking voice later in the evening when the lights went up and he trotted on to the stage to take a bow.

The screening was part of a film series running in tandem with a major exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art titled:

Exposed: Voyeurism, Surveillance, and the Camera since 1870

According to the curators, the main thrust of the the provocative series is to cast a light on the - "shifting boundaries between seeing and spying, the private act, and the public image" - that challenge the viewer to consider how the camera has transformed the very nature of looking.

The series has attempted to accomplish this lofty feat by focusing on a collection of contemporary photographs, films, and video works (by both unknown photographers and internationally renowned artists) with the ultimate aim of examining the camera's most unsettling uses (including pornography, surveillance, stalking celebrity, and witnessing violence).

In a nutshell, the ambitious curators have sought to pose compelling questions about who is looking at whom and why.

The Wexler flick - which unfolded in a stream-of-consciousness documentary kind-of-style - turned an insightful lens on events leading up to the Chicago riots in the heady 60's.

The silver-haired auteur (a respected documentarian and cinematographer who worked Oscar award-winning films such as the drama "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf") fessed up at one point - during the informative Q & A session - that a handful of scenes (where a young mother searches for her son) were weak.

"The critics didn't like the end, either," he recalled to the rapt audience.

Of course, he was referring to a shot where a motorist takes a photograph of a tragic accident on the highway, as he drives by.

"We all end up in someone's film," he explained in his defense.

Wexler approached the project the way he did - in part - for economic reasons.

But, stressed bottom-line - that he blended fiction and reality in the storyline - for good reason.

"Everyone sees reality through their own lens."

Although, some of the footage is compelling, overall "Medium Cool" fails as a feature.

The drama is disjointed, sometimes lacks focus, and at times can't seem to decide what it wants to be in the final analysis.

The talented artist (with a knack for a celluloid language which consists primarily of images that often resonate profoundly) appeared to be making a commentary on the role of the news media one moment, while issuing up a cautionary tale about the horrors of "War" the next.

"Anyone who was anti-war was anti-establishment. And, the media was in on it," he asserted to the audience.

Some anecdotes caused the fans to roar.

"I wish I could remember some of the comments censors made about the nudity. The genitals bobbing up and down and that sort-of-thing," he wicked laughed in amusement.

The filmgoers - consisting of movie buffs and budding movie-makers - reacted with knee-jerk enthusiasm when he recalled being treated as the "enemy" by officials and Law Enforcement personnel on location in Chicago during the shoot.

"Because I wore blue jeans, I was the enemy."

I recall when I caught sight of the first promos for "Medium Cool" a few weeks ago at the Castro Theater, that they were so melodramatic in nature, when compared to today's standards.

How did Wexler come to name his project "Medium Cool"?

"One of the actors in the militant scene suggested it. He recommended that I also read Marshall McLuhan. But, I didn't understand McLulan's writing. I thought the title was great, though."

Some of the scenes in the flick are so darn jarring and out-of-whack.

The project is pretty dated now, too, and doesn't hold up in my humble opinion.

In contrast, "Blow Up" (Michelangelo Antonioni)  - a second feature on the bill - was still timely.

Too bad Wexler left the theater before the screening, he may have learned something about excellence in filmmaking.

Over the weekend, a smattering of films are slated for the SFMOMA event, too, including "Streetwise", "Pretty Baby", "Lost Highway", and "Deep End".

Check the programs at the Castro Theatre or the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art for details.

See 'ya there!

http://www.thetattler.biz





Thursday, February 24, 2011

Rufus Wainwright...guest appearance @ screening of A.I.D.S. Documentary! Castro Theatre in San Francisco! February 25th!




 



Popular Rufus Wainwright!

 




Friday evening, Rufus Wainwright - a much-sought-after stage performer and recording artist - is slated to attend a screening of "We Were Here" at the historic Castro Theatre in picturesque San Francisco.

The insightful documentary - directed by David Weissman - zeroes in on the perspective of five locals who witnessed the outbreak of the A.I.D.S. pandemic and the havoc it wrought on the Castro neighborhood (and elsewhere) at the height of the shocking crisis.

According to the producers, by the time the killer virus was identified - and subsequently under control - more than 15,000 San Franciscans were felled (mostly gay men).

The benefit for the Shanti Project and Project Inform has been causing quite a buzz in recent days.

Needless to say, the unveiling at the Art Deco Venue, is expected to sell-out.

In addition to Wainwright and the director - story-tellers featured in the poignant documentary (Paul Boneberg, Guy Clark, Eileen Glutzer, Daniel Goldstein, and Ed Wolf ) are scheduled to appear for a Q & A.

Catch the flick if you can!

LOCATION

Castro Theatre
429 Castro Street
San Francisco, CA

SCREENING INFO

VIP Reception
6 p.m.

Film Screening
7:30 p.m.

Q & A
9 p.m.

TICKETS
$25.00 - $100.00

CONTACT

http://www.shanti.org/
415.674.4700

See 'ya there!

http://www.thetattler.biz




Documentarian David Weissman

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Berlin & Beyond Film Festival...San Francisco!









Berlin & Beyond - a highly touted film festival featuring flicks from - Germany, Austria, and Switzerland - is currently underway over the next 7 days at the Castro Street Theatre.

The annual event is presented by the Goethe-Institut San Francisco and has been serving as a gateway for the American public to experience the diversity, history and progression of the German-speaking countries in Europe.

In the last 14 years, over 500 films have been presented to over 100,000 filmgoers and enthusiasts - of the film genre - as well as inspiring hundreds of guest artists in the celebrated duration.

For the 15th Anniversary, the eclectic program is unveiling 24 captivating feature films from seasoned masters - up-and-coming innovators - and six short films from bright new talents.

The impressive roster of luminaries includes - Michael Verhoeven, Benjamin Heisenberg, Feo Aladag, Florian David Fitz, and Donna Woolfolk Cross - who will appear on stage in lively Q & A interchanges with audiences.

Featured Films


*A Lost and Found Box of Human Sensation
*Animals United 3D (Die Konferenz der Tiere)
*Autumn Gold (Herbstgold)
*Draft Dodgers (Réfractraire)
*Edgar
*Home from Home (Endstation der Sehnsüchte)
*Human Failure (Menschliches Versagen)
*In the Shadows (Im Schatten)
*It's Me, Helmut (Ich bin's, Helmut)
*Julia’s Disappearance (Giulias Verschwinden)
*Krauts, Doubts & Rock ’n‘ Roll (Fleisch ist mein Gemüse
*Lebensadr
*Lola
*Men in the City (Männerherzen)
*Pianomania
*Pope Joan (Die Päpstin)
*Rock Hudson: Dar  and Handsome Stranger
*Run if You Can (Renn, wenn Du kannst
*Same, Same But Different
*Side by Side (Nebeneinander)
*Silver Girls (Frauenzimmer)
*Soul Kitchen
*The Last Giants - Oceans in Danger (Wenn das Meer stirbt
*The Last Wheel (Das letzte Rad)
*The Robber (Der Räuber)
*The Silence (Das letzte Schweigen)
*Vincent Wants to Sea (Vincent will Meer)
*Wedding Fever in Campobello (Maria, ihm schmeckt's nicht)
*The Welfare Worker (Der Fürsorger)
*When We Leave (Die Fremde)
*Will you marry us (Die Standesbeamtin)
*The Woman with the 5 Elephants (Die Frau mit den 5 Elefanten)

See 'ya there!

http://www.thetattler.biz