Films begin at 7:00 P.M.. in Cornell Auditorium (formerly Matthews Hall Auditorium) on the campus of Missouri Southern State University in Joplin, MO. For information about the Film Festival call (417) 625-9614.
From the Film Festival Director:
It is a pleasure to announce that, in addition to the Film Society’s regular programming, you have an opportunity to enjoy the film offerings of Missouri Southern’s theme semester. The MSSU Institute of International Studies presents the Mexico Film Festival, which includes both classic and contemporary films, during the fall 2005 semester. In the spring semester of 2006, the Society will show significant and rarely seen films from around the world. These include new digital restorations of neglected or long-lost treasures that have been rediscovered and preserved for us, and future generations, to enjoy. In addition to the screenings, program notes are distributed which provide information about the directors, their creative efforts and national filmmaking trends. Admission is free and open to the public.
| Sept. 7 (Wednesday) Love's a Bitch (Amores perros) (Mexico, 2000) |
Directed
by Alejandro González Iñárritu. |
| Sept. 21 (Wednesday) |
Directed
by María del Carmen Lara. |
| Oct. 5 (Wednesday) |
Directed
by Fernando Sariñana. |
| Oct. 19 (Wednesday) |
Directed
by Carlos Carrera. |
| Nov. 2 (Wednesday) |
Directed by Luis Estrada. |
| Nov. 16 (Wednesday) |
Directed by Antonio Serrano. |
| Feb. 14, 2006 |
Emir Kusturica’s first feature is the tale of a young man’s entry into adulthood. Set in Sarajevo during the early 1960s, Kusturica gives an honest account of the reality of intrusive cultures, when Western influences such as fashion and rock and roll and the promise of European socialism threatened to roll over traditional customs. Bergan and Karney’s Foreign Film Guide noted that “...the film is a beautifully perceptive, bitter-sweet comedy full of delightful eccentric touches.” |
| Feb. 28, 2006 |
This is Istvan Szabo’s chronicle of Hungary’s post-war history, told through the memories, dreams and nightmares of the inhabitants of an old house in Budapest on the eve of its demolition. Through the long, hot summer night they re-experience moments of happiness and tragedy from the previous four decades. An intricate flashback structure in the style of Alain Resnais was used by Szabo for exploring change across history. |
| March 14, 2006 |
This marvelous discovery is perhaps the least known of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s features but is also likely to be one of his very best. Anna Magnani, in the title role, gives a terrific performance as a former Roman prostitute who desperately wants a good, respectable life for her teenage son. J. Hoberman of Village Voice wrote: “It’s instant over-the-top. Thirty seconds into the movie, Mount Magnani is sputtering, singing, screaming, and otherwise spewing lava... As a movie actress, Magnani stands alone... As always, Pasolini can toss off an image of startling poetry.” |
| March 28, 2006 |
Jacques Becker’s “elegant masterwork is a glowingly nostalgic evocation of the Paris of the Impressionists.” Set in the underworld at the turn of the century, this beautifully stylized film is based on the tragic love story of a famous gigolette, Marie, with golden hair. It is a haunting and evocative mood piece which recreates both the decorative charm of its period and a world of terror and violence. Simone Signoret received the British Film Academy’s “Oscar” for her superb performance as Marie. |
| April 11, 2006 |
Andrzej Munk’s classic of anti-Stalinism examines the mystery surrounding
the death of a veteran train engineer who lost his job through forced retirement.
He is subsequently remembered, through flashbacks, by different characters
who investigate his death and relate to their own interpretation in a manner
which recalls Citizen Kane and Rashomon. The film won Munk the Best Director
Award at the 1957 Karlovy Vary festival and the “Warsaw Siren” Polish
Film Critics Prize. |
| May 2, 2006 |
This rediscovered masterpiece of the late silent era, co-directed by Grigori Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, follows the events of the doomed “forgotten revolution” of the Paris Commune of 1871. It dramatizes the fight of the communards through the story of its heroine, Louise, a salesgirl in the New Babylon department store who is caught up in the class struggle against the bourgeoisie. Includes Dmitri Shostakovich’s first film score (opus 18). |
Missouri Southern State University
3950 E Newman Rd · Joplin, MO 64
Copyright©; Missouri Southern State Univrsity,
all rights reserved.