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SEASON ONE
"Philadelphia"
The film festival is an
ongoing Sunday evening event at our house where we show movies,
serve flavored popcorn, and encourage a lively discussion of the
films afterwards.
In honor of our fair city,
all the films in season one were about, or shot
in, Philadelphia.

AUG 19, 2007: A History Of
Violence (2005). SEASON FINALE!!! Operating a diner in a small-town
community, Tom Stall (Viggo Mortensen) and his wife (Maria
Bello) are the picture of normalcy. But when Tom prevents a
robbery and enjoys hero status in the local media, he attracts
the wrong kind of attention from mobsters (Ed Harris and William
Hurt) who think he's someone else. David Cronenberg (The Fly)
directs this taut suspense/thriller based on the graphic novel
by John Wagner and Vince Locke.

JULY 29, 2007: My
Architect
(2003). Documentarian Nathaniel Kahn examines
the life and career of his father, Philadelphia architect Louis
I. Kahn (1901-1974), whose work included the Salk Institute and
the Parliament and Capitol Buildings in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The
elder Kahn died of a heart attack in a Penn Station bathroom in
1974, unidentified and broke despite having been one of the
century's most influential architects.

Popcorn flavor of the
week: Parmesan & Chive.
JULY 22, 2007:
Twelve
Monkeys (1995). In the year 2035, convict James Cole
(Bruce Willis) reluctantly volunteers to be sent back in time by
scientists to 1996 to discover the origin of a virus that wiped
out nearly all of the earth's population. When Cole is
mistakenly sent to 1990, he's arrested and locked up in a mental
hospital, where he meets a psychiatrist (Madeleine Stowe) and
the son (Brad Pitt) of a famous virus expert (Christopher
Plummer). Terry Gilliam directs.

Popcorn flavor of the
week: "Mushroom Cloud Popcorn" w/ mushroom, onion, &
bell pepper
JULY 8, 2007:
Philadelphia
(1993). When attorney Andrew Beckett (Tom Hanks) reveals
his HIV-positive status -- and his homosexuality -- to his
co-workers, he soon finds himself unemployed. Seeking to sue for
wrongful termination, Hanks works with the only lawyer who'll
take the case: ambulance-chasing, homophobic Joe Miller (Denzel
Washington). Hanks received an Oscar for his work in this
Jonathan Demme-directed film -- the first major-studio picture
to tackle the topic of AIDS.

Popcorn flavor of the
week: "South of the Border" made with monterey jack, chili,
paprika, & cumin.
JUNE 24, 2007: Mannequin
(1987). Jonathan
(Andrew McCarthy), a struggling artist who can't hold down a
job, builds a beautiful, realistic mannequin -- who happens to
be a reincarnated Egyptian princess. But Emmy (Sex and the
City's Kim Cattrall) only comes to life around Jonathan,
which leads to a lot of wacky confusion, especially when a
competitor tries to take over the department store Jonathan's
working for!

Popcorn flavor of the
week: "The Simon & Garfunkel" made with parsley, sage,
rosemary & thyme
JUNE 17,
2007:
Witness (1985). In director Peter Weir's tense
thriller, cop John Book (Harrison Ford) goes undercover in an
Amish community to protect a boy who witnessed a murder. Once
inside, he must adjust to major culture shock while cautiously
romancing the child's mother (Kelly McGillis).

Serving Red & Blue
Amish Popcorn w/ parmesan, and also peach & blueberry
cobbler
MAY 20, 2007:
Birdy
(1984). A man (Matthew Modine) returns from the war in Vietnam
mentally shattered and convinced he's a bird. Confined to a
military hospital, he sits in his room day after day in silence,
emulating a parakeet. His friend Al (Nicholas Cage), also a
Vietnam veteran, visits him in his hospital room every day,
determined to bring Birdy back to reality and help him deal with
the emotional battle wounds of war.

Popcorn flavor of the
week: Sun-dried
Tomato & Basil
MAY 6, 2007: Trading Places
(1983). Eddie
Murphy established himself as a comedy superstar playing
streetwise hustler Billy Ray Valentine, who trades places with
wealthy investment executive Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd).
It's all part of a bet cooked up by the rich, greedy Duke
brothers (Don Ameche and Ralph Bellamy), who want to see whether
circumstances truly do make the man. But when Valentine and
Winthorpe find out about the wager, the payback begins!

Popcorn flavor of the
week: 5-spice
APR 29, 2007:
Blow Out
(1981). In this Brian
DePalma classic, B-movie soundman Jack Terri (John Travolta) has
heard it all in his line of work -- until he accidentally
records a murder. He follows the sound of a blown-out tire and
finds a sinking car and a female survivor (Nancy Allen). But
when the vehicle's driver -- a sitting governor and presidential
hopeful -- doesn't survive, Jack knows something's afoot. Now, a
killer (John Lithgow) wants Jack dead before he can prove the
crash was no accident.

Popcorn flavor: Dill &
Lemon
APR 22, 2007: Rocky
(1976). Gritty, grim, and
epic, Rocky is the real deal -- a crowd pleaser but with a
less-than-storybook ending. When Muhammad Ali-esque boxing champ
(Carl Weathers) wants to give a nobody a shot at the title as a
publicity stunt, his handlers pick palooka Rocky Balboa
(Sylvester Stallone). Rocky won the 1976 Best Picture
Oscar thanks to John Avildsen's direction and Stallone's
root-for-the-underdog script. This film really very little like
the five sequels that followed, and it will often surprise folks
who haven't seen it in years who have come to think of the Rocky
franchise as tacky Hollywood sentimental schlock.

Popcorn flavor of the
week: Garlic Parmesan (of course)
MAR 25,
2007:
The Young Philadelphians (1959). In this Academy
Award-nominated melodrama, Paul Newman plays Anthony Lawrence,
an ambitious young lawyer raised to place success and material
gain above all else. And he does -- until his wartime buddy
(Robert Vaughn, who received an Oscar nod for the role) is
accused of murder, and Lawrence agrees to defend him.

Popcorn flavor:
Saffron Butter
MAR 11,
2007:
The Philadelphia Story
(1940).
Socialite Tracy Lord (Katharine Hepburn) prepares to remarry,
but her ex (Cary Grant) and a tabloid reporter (Best Supporting
Actor Oscar-winner James Stewart) have other ideas as they
converge on her home for a fateful visit.

Popcorn flavor: Lime &
Chili
OTHER
SEASONS....
For information about the
other seasons of the Rowhouse Film Festival go to:


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