Showing posts with label Gene Siskel Film Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gene Siskel Film Center. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

ALEX JENNINGS at Gene Siskel Film Center following National Theatre Live screening of Hansard, Friday evening, December 6

Three-time Olivier Award-winning actor ALEX JENNINGS,
in Chicago for The Light in the Piazza,
makes a special appearance at Gene Siskel Film Center
following National Theatre Live screening of Hansard,
Friday evening, December 6

NT Live, Alex Jennings in person! Film Series : National Theatre Live
NT LIVE: HANSARD
2019, SIMON GODWIN, UK, CA. 100 MIN.
WITH ALEX JENNINGS, LINDSAY DUNCAN

Three-time Olivier Award winner Alex Jennings (Netflix’s The Crown), in Chicago rehearsing for his upcoming role in the Tony Award-winning musical, The Light in the Piazza, at the Lyric Opera House Dec. 14-29, will make a special appearance at the Gene Siskel Film Center of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (164 N. State Street) following the National Theatre Live screening of the engrossing new work, Hansard, in which he co-stars with Olivier and Tony Award-winning actress Lindsay Duncan (Private Lives), Friday evening, December 6, at 7:45pm.  Jennings will be on hand afterwards to answer questions about his acclaimed Broadway, West End, and TV career.

Hansard, a witty and devastating portrait of the ruling class by Simon Woods, portrays a summer’s morning in 1988, as Tory politician Robin Hesketh (Jennings) has returned home to the idyllic Cotswold house he shares with Diana (Duncan), his wife of 30 years.  But all is not as blissful as it seems.  Diana has a stinking hangover, a fox is destroying the garden, and secrets are being dug up all over the place.  As the day draws on, what starts as a gentle ribbing and the familiar rhythms of marital scrapping quickly turns to blood-sport. Directed by Simon Godwin as part of National Theatre Live, this brand new play is part of an initiative operated by the Royal Theatre in London which broadcasts performances of their productiions live via satellite to cinemas and arts venues around the world.

Tickets for Hansard at the Gene Siskel Film Center will be on sale Friday, November 22 and priced at $14 (general) and $8 (members/students). Hansard will be screened Friday, Dec. 6, at 7:45pm, and Sunday, Dec. 8 at 2:30pm; Jennings will appear following the Dec. 6 screening only.  For more information, please visit http://www.siskelfilmcenter.org/nt-live-hansard.

Alex Jennings reprises his role as Signor Naccarelli in The Light in the Piazza after appearing in the production at London’s Royal Festival Hall. Alex is a three-time Olivier Award winning TV, film and theatre actor who has worked extensively with the Royal Shakespeare Company, the National Theatre and throughout the West End. His three Olivier Awards include Best Comedy Performance for Too Clever by Half (Old Vic), Best Actor for Peer Gynt (Royal Shakespeare Company) and Best Actor in a Musical for My Fair Lady (Theatre Royal, Drury Lane). His screen appearances include playing Edward VIII in the critically acclaimed Netflix series The Crown, Alan Bennett in The Lady in the Van and Prince Charles in The Queen, alongside his many television roles which most recently include Unforgotten (ITV), A Very English Scandal (BBC), The Halcyon (Left Bank) and Victoria (Mammoth Screen).

Jennings is in Chicago rehearsing for his role as Signor Naccarelli opposite four-time Grammy Award winner and Tony Award nominee Renée Fleming as Margaret Johnson in the limited holiday engagement of the beloved Tony Award-winning musical The Light in the Piazza, December 14-29, 2019, at Lyric Opera House (20 N. Wacker Drive).  Fresh from critically acclaimed runs in LA and London, The Light in the Piazza is produced by John Berry CBE and Anthony Lilley OBE for Scenario Two and Karl Sydow. The production is directed by multiple Olivier Award-winning director Daniel Evans and features the Lyric Opera Orchestra under the baton of Kimberly Grigsby, conductor of the original Broadway production.

The perfect feel-good alternative to traditional holiday fare, The Light in the Piazza’s rich, emotional score is unique amongst 21st-century Broadway musicals. Unapologetically lyrical, it was described upon its Broadway debut as having “the most intensely romantic score of any musical since West Side Story” (New York Times).

Based on the novel by Elizabeth Spencer, The Light in the Piazza book is by Craig Lucas, with music and lyrics by Adam Guettel. Scenario Two’s production of The Light in the Piazza is directed by Olivier Award winner and critically acclaimed musicals expert Daniel Evans and designed by Robert Jones, with costumes by Brigitte Reiffenstuel, movement by Lucy Hind, lighting by Mark Henderson and sound by Kai Harada.

Tickets for the limited holiday engagement of The Light in the Piazza at Chicago’s Lyric Opera House (20 N. Wacker Drive), December 14-29, 2019, start at $49 and are on sale now. The Chicago engagement follows the production’s acclaimed runs at the LA Opera and London’s Royal Festival Hall. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit www.lightinthepiazzathemusical.com.

Since 1972, the Gene Siskel Film Center of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago has presented cutting edge cinema to an annual audience that has grown to over 120,000. The Film Center’s programming includes annual film festivals that celebrate diverse voices and international cultures, premieres of trailblazing work by today’s independent filmmakers, restorations and revivals of essential films from cinema history, and insightful provocative discussions with filmmakers and media artists. Altogether, the Film Center hosts over 1,700 screenings and 200 filmmaker appearances every year. The Film Center was renamed the Gene Siskel Film Center in 2000 after the late, nationally celebrated film critic, Gene Siskel. Visit www.siskelfilmcenter.org to learn more and find out what’s playing today.

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Family Friendly Films: APRIL AND THE EXTRAORDINARY WORLD Now playing at Gene Siskel Film Center

Family Friendly Films On Our Radar:
Now playing at Gene Siskel Film Center

ChiIL Mama's ChiIL Flix Picks


AVRIL ET LE MONDE TRUQUÉ
2015, CHRISTIAN DESMARES AND FRANCK EKINCI, FRANCE, 105 MIN.

From the creators of the Academy Award-nominated PERSEPOLIS comes this hand-drawn animated adventure based on the graphic novel by Jacques Tardi, and boasting the neo-Victorian technology of steampunk in a flight of fancy reminiscent of both Jules Verne’s sci-fi novels and thedystopian vision of Fritz Lang’s METROPOLIS. All the world’s scientists and inventors have mysteriously disappeared, leaving an oppressively smoke-shrouded Paris stalled in time circa the Industrial Revolution. The orphan April and her strangely endowed cat Darwin go in search of theformula that will reverse a 19th-century laboratory experiment gone horribly awry. April is kidnapped to a bizarre and wildly imaginative parallel sphere, only to to discover the animal kingdom’s ambitious scheme for world domination. In French with English subtitles at indicated times, with voices by Marion Cotillard, Jean Rochefort, and Olivier Gourmet. In English at indicated times, with voices by Susan Sarandon, Paul Giamatti, Tony Hale, and J.K. Simmons. DCP digital.

IN FRENCH WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES:
Fri. 5/6 at 2:00 pm - Sat. 5/7 at 4:45 pm - Mon. 5/9 at 7:45 pm - Tue. 5/10 at 6:00 pm - Thu. 5/12 at 6:00 pm - Sun. 5/15 at 3:00 pm - Mon. 5/16 at 6:00 pm - Tue. 5/17 at 7:45 pm - Thu. 5/19 at 6:00 pm

ENGLISH-LANGUAGE:
Fri. 5/6 at 6:00 pm - Sun. 5/8 at 3:00 pm - Wed. 5/11 at 7:45 pm - Fri. 5/13 at 2:00 pm - Sat. 5/14 at 5:15 pm - Wed. 5/18 at 6:00 pm


Friday, December 5, 2014

OPENING: THE TALE OF THE PRINCESS KAGUYA AT SISKEL FILM CENTER #ChiILFlixPicks #review

Chicago premiere!

FOUR WEEK RUN!

New 

from the director of 

GRAVE OF THE FIREFLIES AND POM POKO!



THE TALE OF THE 
PRINCESS KAGUYA

(KAGUYA-HIME NO MONOGATORI)


Here at ChiIL Mama, we were lucky enough to get an advanced sneak peek at this incredible film and highly recommend it. The hand drawn animation and the subtle play of shadow and light is sublime. We've long been fans of Studio Ghibli works so we had high expectations, and Princess Kaguya exceeded them. We have also long admired the work of Isao Takahata and earlier films he directed like Grave of the Fireflies which we own, and Pom Poko, which we absolutely adore.

We've actually seen this story acted out on stage in an incredible one man puppet show by Nori Sawa as part of the Humanities Fest last year, so we were extra excited to see Takahata's take. 


Nori Sawa's Kaguya: The Bamboo Princess 

Like many Ghibli films, it's a slow slice of life, lovingly painting the beauty of the banal, like breast feeding and carrying infants in wraps while working the fields. It's a poignant coming of age story and a fascinating glimpse into class, wealth versus poverty, family love and loss, riches in nature, and the source of true happiness. We adore the headstrong princess who isn't content to sit by silently and be a rich and pampered prince's treasure. She laughs, loves, plays, embraces nature and music, and grows. Kaguya is a great role model and a princess we can get on board with, as opposed to the coma cadre--Sleeping Beauty, Snow White and their ilk, who don't do much. 

ChiIL Tips: We love that Siskel Film Center is offering both Japanese subtitled showings and dubbed showings. If you are going with adults or taking kids old enough to comfortably keep up with the pace of reading the translation we strongly recommend doing the original version to hear the dialogue and songs in Japanese.

If your kids enjoy Frozen, this may spark an interesting compare and contrast discussion. Both films are about girls navigating the journey between childhood and womanhood, learning from nature, and running from and finally embracing their power and destinies, with plenty of action and plot points to keep the story exciting. 

2013, Isao Takahata, Japan, 137 min.

“A staggering masterpiece…a thing of endless visual beauty…a true work of art.”
— Glenn Kenny,
RogerEbert.com

"The best animated film of the year…one of the revered Studio Ghibli’s finest achievements."
— David Ehrlich,
A.V. Club

“Alternatingly jubilant and heartrending...an instant Oscar contender.”
— Inkoo Kang,
The Wrap

A childless bamboo-cutter discovers a tiny baby girl no bigger than the palm of his hand in the woods and takes this apparent gift from the heavens home to his wife. The enchanted child grows rapidly, and, when her doting adoptive father also finds a pot of gold under a tree, greed inspires his ambition to make the girl a princess in the royal court and marry her off to one of a host of venal suitors. The beautiful, headstrong wood nymph and the far-off gods have other plans.

Based on a 10th-century Japanese folk tale, THE TALE OF THE PRINCESS KAGUYA is a marvelous journey steeped in the profound humanism that is the trademark of Studio Ghibli’s Isao Takahata (GRAVE OF THE FIREFLIES, ONLY YESTERDAY). 

Suitable for all ages, the film is simultaneously a uniquely joyous exploration of childhood and a chronicle of love and loss with a poignant mystical dimension. Takahata’s seductively subtle animation incorporates watercolor techniques and charcoal line drawings for a masterful and ravishing approach to storytelling. DCP. (BS)




Legendary Studio Ghibli cofounder Isao Takahata (Grave of the Fireflies, Pom Poko) revisits Japan’s most famous folktale in this gorgeous, hand-drawn masterwork, decades in the making. Found inside a shining stalk of bamboo by an old bamboo cutter (James Caan) and his wife (Mary Steenburgen), a tiny girl grows rapidly into an exquisite young lady (Chloë Grace Moretz). The mysterious young princess enthralls all who encounter her – but ultimately she must confront her fate, the punishment for her crime.

From the studio that brought you Spirited Away, My Neighbor Totoro, and The Wind Rises comes a powerful and sweeping epic that redefines the limits of animated storytelling and marks a triumphant highpoint within an extraordinary career in filmmaking for director Isao Takahata.


  • In English at indicated times, with voices by James Caan, Mary Steenburgen, Lucy Liu, Darren Criss, and Chloë Grace Moretz.
  • In Japanese with English subtitles at indicated times, with voices by Aki Asakura, Kengo Kora, and Takeo Chii.

TWO-FILM DISCOUNT!
Buy a ticket at our regular prices for THE TALE OF THE PRINCESS KAGUYA, and get a ticket for any show of ISAO TAKAHATA AND HIS TALE OF THE PRINCESS KAGUYA at the discount price of $4 with proof of your original purchase. (This discount price applies to the second film only.)  Click here for tickets and further info on 
THE TALE OF THE  PRINCESS KAGUYA and other current showings at Gene Siskel Film Center.

ENGLISH DUBBED
JAPANESE WITH SUBTITLES


December 5—11
December 5—11
Fri. at 6:00 pm;
Fri. at 7:45;
Sat. at 3:00 pm;
Sat. at 7:30 pm;
Sun. at 2:30 pm;
Sun. at 5:15 pm;
Tue. at 6:00 pm;
Mon. at 6:30 pm;
Wed. at 6:00 pm;
Wed. at 8:15 pm;
Thu. at 6:00 pm
Thu. at 7:30 pm


December 12—18
December 12—18
Fri. at 6:00 pm;
Fri. at 7:45 pm;;
Sat. at 2:30 pm;
Sat. at 7:30 pm;
Sun. at 2:30 pm;
Sun. at 5:15 pm;
Wed. at 6:00 pm;
Mon. at 6:30 pm;
Thu. at 6:00 pm;
Tue. at 7:45 pm;

Wed. at 7:45 pm;

Thu. at 8:00 pm;


December 19—23
December 19—23
Fri. at 6:00 pm;
Sat. at 8:00 pm;
Sat. at 5:00 pm;
Mon. at 6:30 pm;
Sun. at 2:30 pm;
Tue. at 8:00 pm;
Tue. at 6:00 pm;



December 26—30
December 26—30
Sat. at 3:00 pm;
Fri. at 7:30 pm;
Sun. at 3:00 pm;
Sat. at 8:00 pm;

Mon. at 6:30 pm;

Tue. at 7:30 pm


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