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Summer Nights!

Every year, the people of Indianapolis anxiously await the announcement that means summer is surely right around the corner… the list of movies that will play at Summer Nights!

Without further ado, here is the list!

  • June 4 Across the Universe / 2007
  • June 11 Rebel Without A Cause / 1955
  • June 18 The Usual Suspects / 1995
  • June 25 Pee-wee’s Big Adventure / 1985
  • July 2 Stella Dallas / 1937
  • July 9 North by Northwest / 1959
  • July 16 The Rocky Horror Picture Show / 1975 (midnight showing; gates open at 10pm)
  • July 23 Monty Python: The Holy Grail / 1975 (midnight showing; gates open at 10pm)
  • July 30 The Muppets Take Manhattan / 1984
  • August 6 A Fish Called Wanda / 1988
  • August 13 Stand By Me / 1986
  • August 20 L.A. Confidential / 1997
  • August 27 O Brother, Where Art Thou? / 2000

We also have exciting news for members:

  • Presale Tickets Beginning April 8, members will have exclusive access to online tickets for all Summer Nights films. This means no waiting in line on the day of the movie!
  • Priority Seating Members get the best spots on the terrace! Gates open for members a half-hour earlier than for the public (6 pm).
  • Big Savings Members receive tickets for 50% off the public price (Public $10 / Members $5)

I am thrilled we can offer these savings to our most devoted fans. I have attended several Summer Nights films that have sold out, and it’s hard when we have to turn people away.  Become a member and get your (half price!) tickets early.

Also, I will be here for the midnight showing of Rocky Horror Picture Show.  I guarantee it is going to be a wicked good time.  Won’t you come join me?

Filed under: Current Events, Film, Local

 

Serious Animation

Who doesn’t love a kung fu panda? HI-YA! From cave paintings, frieze reliefs and spinning pottery attempting to convey motion, to the Victorian thaumatrope toy and the 1868 flip book, the development of animation has come a long way to reach a fully animated martial arts panda. This development urges us to think of animation as art, not just entertainment.

You may not first think of animation as a highly esteemed visual art form, but it certainly captures a large and important audience, along with highly talented creators, not to mention a hefty chunk of revenue. Possibly the first animated film, created in 1906 by American J. Stuart Blackton, was Humorous Phases of Funny Faces. The film tells the story of a cartoonist drawing faces on a chalkboard, with the faces coming to life. In the United States, animation began in the 1900s age of silent film with Bray Studios in New York City with characters like Felix the Cat, and moved into the Golden Age of Hollywood animation with Walt Disney’s many creations including Mickey Mouse, Betty Boop and Popeye. The 1950s through the 1980s brought the beginning of Saturday Morning Cartoons, perhaps the first visual art to which most children are exposed. Today, modern animation seems limitless with evolving computer technology, marked by the first fully computer generated feature film Toy Story. Animation now caters to adult audiences and appeals to the masses with niches such as Japanese Anime and stop motion animation like Wallace and Gromit. It is also incorporated into live action movies such as the Lord of the Rings series, blurring the lines between the two forms of cinema.

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Filed under: Art, Film, Musings

 

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