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SEASON TWO
"Swindlers, Liars, & Con Artists"
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. The second season
was called "Swindlers, Liars, & Con Artists."

APR, 13,
2008:
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
(2005). Petty thief
Harry Lockart (Robert Downey Jr.) gets caught up in a murder
investigation in this action-packed comedy. Posing as an actor,
Harry heads to Los Angeles for an unlikely audition and finds an
authentic acting coach in detective Perry Van Shrike (Val
Kilmer). But the bright lights of Hollywood fade when a murder
takes place and Harry, Perry and Harry's high school dream girl
(Michelle Monaghan) become part of the investigation.
(103 mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

MAR 16,
2008:
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
(2002).
Chuck Barris (Sam Rockwell) has it all -- a hot TV hit, "The
Gong Show," and the love of a good woman (Drew Barrymore). But
he's got one big secret: He's a CIA assassin who kills while
purportedly escorting his game show winners on their vacation
prizes. George Clooney directs and co-stars with Julia Roberts
in this film based on the book of the same name, authored by the
real-life Barris. (113
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

JAN 20,
2008:
Boiler Room
(2000). A college dropout (Giovanni Ribisi) with chutzpah
to spare runs a successful gambling casino out of his Queens
apartment. But then a friend comes knocking with a better deal:
the chance to join an up-and-coming securities firm as a
top-line stockbroker. There's only one hitch to this sure thing:
The firm is shadier than the dark side of the moon. (110
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

JAN 13,
2008:
The Talented Mr. Ripley
(1999). Charming
sociopath Tom Ripley (Matt Damon) maneuvers his way into the
lush life of a young heir (Jude Law) vacationing in Italy in
this increasingly creepy thriller from Anthony Minghella (The
English Patient). Nominated for multiple Oscars and Golden
Globes, the film features breathtaking cinematography and
standout performances from all involved, including Gwyneth
Paltrow, Cate Blanchett and Philip Seymour Hoffman. (139
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

DEC 16,
2007:
Six Degrees of Separation
(1993). Paul (Will
Smith) is a charming and engaging young con artist who appears
one day on the doorstep of Flan and Ouisa Kittredge (Donald
Sutherland and Stockard Channing). Professing to be a friend of
the affluent couple's son, Paul spins a tale of celebrity and
despair that deeply affects the pair and their socialite
friends. Playwright John Guare's psychological drama also stars
Ian McKellen, Mary Beth Hurt, Bruce Davison and Heather Graham.
(112
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

DEC 9,
2007:
My Own Private Idaho
(1991). Gus Van Sant's
indie hit hones in on the friendship between Mike (River
Phoenix) and Scott (Keanu Reeves), two hustlers living on the
streets of gritty Portland. Scott's lifestyle is his way of
embarrassing his rich, oppressive father; Mike, a narcoleptic
who's in love with Scott but maintains he's straight, is content
to struggle from day to day. Their relationship stumbles when
they hit the road to find Mike's mother and Scott falls for a
woman. (105
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

NOV 11,
2007:
The Grifters
(1990). Roy Dillon's (John
Cusack) life is turned upside down when a con job goes bad. His
estranged mother, Lilly (Anjelica Huston), who happens to be on
the lam, reunites with her son to oversee his health care, only
to be faced by Roy's headstrong, competitive, con-artist
girlfriend Myra Langtry (Annette Bening). Myra does her best to
win over her man in Stephen Frears's darkly funny and
intricately layered look at life's seedy side. (115
mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

OCT 14,
2007:
House of Games
(1987). Psychologist Margaret
Ford (Lindsay Crouse) decides to help one of her patients out of
a gambling debt. Margaret finds the person to whom the money is
owed: slick-talking Mike (Joe Mantegna). Mike, who runs poker
games, persuades Margaret to help him look for "tells," or
telltale body language, in a game. She falls for the con and for
Mike, becoming deeply involved in his world. David Mamet wrote
and directed this psychological thriller. (101
mins)

SEPT 30,
2007:
The Sting (1973). Fueled by ragtime music,
The Sting takes the thrill of the confidence game to giddy
heights. After rookie grifter Johnny Hooker (Robert Redford)
tracks down veteran flim-flam man Henry Gondorff (Paul Newman)
in 1930s Chicago, the duo plans to fleece a homicidal racketeer
(Robert Shaw) through a phony racetrack scam. Ripe with double
and triple crosses, The Sting keeps viewers guessing, and
yearning for another Newman-Redford seriocomic teaming.
(129 mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

SEPT 23,
2007: Midnight Cowboy
(1969). Hayseed hustler Jon Voight comes to Manhattan to
earn cash as a freelance sex stud. There, he meets seedy gimp
Ratso Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman), and an improbable friendship
blossoms. Rated X in 1969, the movie won Oscars for Best
Picture, Director (John Schlesinger) and Screenplay. Although
Hoffman didn't win a Best Actor Oscar, his Ratso
characterization -- the vilified butt of everyone's jokes -- is
heartbreaking. (113 mins)
VIEW THE THEATRICAL TRAILER HERE.

OTHER
SEASONS....
For information about the
other seasons of the Rowhouse Film Festival go to:

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