Archive for Monthly Screenings at Chatham 14

SUS, arrested on suspicion

Thursday, SEPTEMBER 2, 2010
7:00pm
General Admission: $5.00

ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 West 87th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60620
773-892-3204 • icetheaters.com

“Highly-charged, socially conscious drama like this is not just welcome but necessary. SUS has powerful and important things to tell us about how we live – and how we ought to live.”
– New York Times

“It was writers like Barrie Keefe that opened up the world for me. For the first time there was a purpose in this goddamn work other than just strutting around and spouting.”
– Daniel Day Lewis

SUS – UK, 2010, 91 min
Directed by Robert Heath.
With Ralph Brown, Clint Dyer, Anjela Lauren Smith.

1979: Election Night – A police interview room. Delroy’s pregnant wife has been found dead in a pool of blood and he is brought in as the chief suspect. He is interrogated by D.S. Karn, a witty, psychotic racist and his violent sidekick D.C. Wilby. Both high on the prospect of a Conservative landslide victory they try to lure him into a quick confession. Callous humiliation gives way to a barrage of sinister violence, leading to a devastating conclusion.

WHAT IS SUS?

In Britain, the Sus law was the informal name for a stop-and-search law that permitted a police officer to act on suspicion, or ‘sus’, alone. It was based upon Sections 4 and 6 of the Vagrancy Act 1824 which made it “illegal for a suspected person or reputed thief to frequent or loiter in a public place with intent to commit an arrestable offence” and effectively permitted the police to stop and search and even arrest anyone they chose, purely on the basis of suspicion as a crime-prevention tactic. The law caused much discontent among certain sections of the population, particularly black and ethnic minority communities, against whom the police use of the law was particularly targeted. The sus law was abolished following race riots in St Pauls, Bristol, in 1980, and in Brixton, London, and Toxteth, Liverpool, in 1981, because it’s alleged abuse was believed to be a contributory factor to these events.


Black World Cinema, a showcase of seldom seen classic features and new films from around the world. Black World Cinema presents films by filmmakers that bring us story with compelling content and a human dimension seldom presented in mainstream cinema.

All screenings are followed by lively discussions moderated by program director Floyd Webb or local schalars, screenwriters and directors.

Screenings occur the first Thursday of every month at
ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 87th Street
Chicago, IL

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Thursday, SEPTEMBER 2, 2010
7:00pm
General Admission: $5.00

ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 West 87th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60620
773-892-3204 • icetheaters.com

AFRICA AS YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN IT
MOTHERLAND
A film by Owen ‘Alik Shahadah
124 min duration


Motherland looks unflinchingly toward a positive Pan-African future.
With breathtaking cinematography and a fluid soundtrack sculpted by Sona Jobarteh. Motherland is a beautiful vision of global African diversity and unity. From the multi-award winning producers of the acclaimed documentary 500 Years Later, Motherland is directed by Owen ‘Alik Shahadah and produced by M.K. Asante, Jr.

With a distinctive African voice. Fusing history, culture, politics, Motherland sweeps across Africa to tell a new dynamic story of a continent. From the glory and majesty of Africa’s past through its complex and present history.

Owen ‘Alik Shahadah is a multi-award master of the Documentary format. With a distinctive aesthetic Shahadah uses film to give agency and visibility to African people. He is best known for authoring works, which deal with African history, social justice, education and world peace. He produces work that articulates a multidimensional African world perspective. His entry into Motherland was to produce a single body of work which would articulate African past and present indignity reaffirming terms.

FEATURING:
MAULANA KARENGA • HAKIM QUICK •  ESTHER STANDFORD • ALI MAZRUI NICOLE LEE• JACOB ZUMA • MOLEFI ASANTE • KIMANI NEHUSI• HAKI MADHUBUTI • DESTA MEGHOO • HARRY BELAFONTE • DIDYMUS MUTASA• ANTONY BROWDER


Black World Cinema, a showcase of seldom seen classic features and new films from around the world. Black World Cinema presents films by filmmakers that bring us story with compelling content and a human dimension seldom presented in mainstream cinema.

All screenings are followed by lively discussions moderated by program director Floyd Webb or local schalars, screenwriters and directors.

Screenings occur the first Thursday of every month at
ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 87th Street
Chicago, IL

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Thursday, November 4, 2010
7:00pm
General Admission: $5.00

ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 West 87th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60620
773-892-3204 • icetheaters.com

BESOURO
Brazil (2004) 95 min, English Subtitle
Director: Joao Daniel Tikhomiroff
Screenwriter: Patricia Andrade
Cast: Ailton Carmo, Jessica Barbosa, Anderson Santos de Jesus, Flavio Rocha, Irandhir Santos, Macale.
Set in the jungles of Bahia in the 1920s, the tale is firmly grounded in its historical time and place, when rich white landowners exploited black workers like slaves, even after the nominal abolition of slavery. The action begins when Master Alipio (Macale), who has taught the art of Capoeira to Besouro, Dinora and Quero-Quero since they were children, is brutally murdered on the orders of Col. Venancio, the young plantation owner. The Colonel’s attempt to nip rebellion in the bud has just the opposite effect, and from beyond the grave, Master Alipio urges his young student Besouro (played by the athletic Ailton Carmo, a professional Capoeira player) to fight for his people.

Escaping to the jungle to prepare himself for heroic deeds to come, Besouro receives magical powers that allow him to fly and make his body virtually impenetrable. Some of the films finest sequences involve his initiation into the forces of nature by the wind and water goddess Orixa. As his consciousness enters the bodies of a flying beetle and then a frog, the camera assumes the animals’ point of view as they fly through the air and dive underwater.


Black World Cinema, a showcase of seldom seen classic features and new films from around the world. Black World Cinema presents films by filmmakers that bring us story with compelling content and a human dimension seldom presented in mainstream cinema.

All screenings are followed by lively discussions moderated by program director Floyd Webb or local schalars, screenwriters and directors.

Screenings occur the first Thursday of every month at
ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 87th Street
Chicago, IL

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Fela: Music is The Weapon August 5th at ICE Theaters

AUGUST 5, 7:00pm
General Admission: $5.00

ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 West 87th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60620
773-892-3204 • icetheaters.com

Can’t get to New York for the stage play?  Come on out to ICE Theaters Chatham to view and discuss the amazing life of Fela Anikulapo Kuti.

Fela was born Olufela Olusegun Oludotun Ransome-Kuti in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria into a middle-class family. His mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti was a feminist activist in the anti-colonial movement and his father, Reverend Israel Oludotun Ransome-Kuti, a Protestant minister and school principal, was the first president of the Nigerian Union of Teachers. Fela was a first cousin to the African writer and Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, the first African to win a Nobel Prize for Literature.

Music Is the Weapon is essential viewing for Fela fans. Filmed in 1982, the 53-minute documentary captures the late Nigerian musician/activist at his peak. For the uninitiated, it’s hard to explain–in mere words–how one man could so successfully mate the sexuality of James Brown with the righteous politics of Bob Marley and sinuous sounds of Miles Davis. Fela drew as much inspiration for his “Afro-beat” from Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X as funk, reggae, and jazz. Music Is the Weapon features interviews with Fela and a few of his many wives, along with performances of “ITT,” “Army Arrangement,” and other anthems. A controversial figure throughout his life, Fela is described as both “superstar” and “man of the people.” This short, but potent document ably explores that dichotomy.

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Thanks to all who attended the 35 Shots of Rum Screening at ICE Theaters this past Thursday. NIna Cartier told me about the lively discussion
afterwards. Our ICE audiences always repond to the call for creative engagement over cinema art, y’all.

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July 1, at ICE Theaters, 35 Shot of Rum with Mati Diop and Alex Dascas

35 Shot of Rum with Mati Diop and Alex Dascas

35 Shots of Rhum
director: Claire Denis
Starring Mati Diop, Alex Descas, Grégoire Colin, Nicole Dogue

@ ICE Theaters, Thursday, July 1, 7pm | General Adm: $5.00
210 West 87th Street | 773-892-3204 |http://icetheaters.com
102 minutes / 35mm / 1.85 / Dolby Digital / France / French with English Subtitles
Lionel, a widower who drives RER trains for a living, has raised his daughter Josephine alone for many years. They have always shared a special bond and live a secure and contented life somewhat isolated from others, in an apartment building in a suburb of Paris. Josephine an anthropology student, is now grown and become a young woman but remains deeply devoted to her father. Noé is a moody young man living alone with his cat in the same apartment building. He leads a disorganized life and goes abroad often. His sole reason for remaining in the building is Josephine, whom he has feelings for but he is temperamentally unable to commit to. Gabrielle, a cab driver and another neighbor, who once had a love affair with Lionel appears to still harbor feelings for him and motherly feelings towards Josephine, but both father and daughter are ambivalent toward anything more than a casual friendship outside their special relationship.


35 Shots of Rhum on YouTube
As their lives are pulled in different directions,father and daughter realize they must finally confront an aspect of their past in order to embrace their own destinies.

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June 3, A Good Day to be Black and Sexy at ICE Theaters
A GOOD DAY TO BE BLACK AND SEXY
- USA, 2008, 92 min, director: Dennis Dortch
@ ICE Theaters, Thursday, June 3, 7pm | General Adm: $5.00
210 West 87th Street | 773-892-3204 |icetheaters.com
Press play on A GOOD DAY TO BE BLACK AND SEXY. A mixed tape of deftly arranged vignettes on Black Love, Sex, and Reciprocity. What you hear may be unrecognizable at first… Neo-realistic intimacy between black people found in rare grooves previously drowned out by the sounds of modern hook-ups and bougie preoccupations, a cacophony of mass-produced beats created with drum machine loops and software. A Good Day to be Black and Sexy is that dusty LP you find in the crates. But as soon as you put the needle to wax, all the forgotten lyrics return to your lips in this dreamy love sonnet to the beautiful and chocolate coated. The intro track is a prelude into the heavily sensual world of expectations – the rhythm that drives the film. Erotic moments are lullabies that turn into syncopated groves without notice. This record skips, and jumps to the hook of a Millie Jackson remix. An anthem belted out by a minx who knows her limits, but can’t resist testing the boundaries. It’s a song a sistah can roll her neck and snap her fingers to, exuding, at least for the moment, the confidence that every Black woman wished they had underneath the facade. When the bridge is over, a slow jam slides in- the one from prom night when curfews were extended and hotel rooms were reserved. Back when wistful notions of love were only true when written in diaries and carved on school desks. A sticky interlude eases in and out of the song, and you move a little closer and wrap your arms around to dance tighter, until growing up too fast and maturing too late, causes innocence to be lost too soon. Needle getting closer to the middles leaving the last cut a re-imagined version of masculinity, basketball, and the inability to freely love who you want to love, at the ease that non-Negroes take for granted. Time runs out and so does the tape. EJECT

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Thomas Sankara: The Upright Man

May 6 at ICE Theaters, 7pm, $5 general admission


Thomas Sankara: the Upright Man
52 minutes, 2006, France
Director: Robin Shuffield
In French with English subtitles
Thursday, May 6, 7pm, $5 general admission
ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 87th Street
Chicago, IL

Sankara, a charismatic army captain, came to power in Burkina Faso, in 1983, in a popularly supported coup. He immediately launched the most ambitious program for social and economic change ever attempted on the African continent. To symbolize this rebirth, he even renamed his country from the French colonial Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, ‘Land of Upright Men.’ As soon as he took office, he reduced the salaries of all public servants, including his own, and forbade the use of chauffeur-driven Mercedes and 1st class airline tickets. Like many revolutionary leaders, he banned unions, a free press, anything which might stand in the way of his plans for the immediate and radical transformation of society.

Thomas Sankara was stalwart in his uphill fight against neo-colonialism and white supremacy from his post as leader of the small West African nation of Burkina Faso. Yet in a story with Shakespearean overtones of intrigue and betrayal, he is overthrown–and murdered–at the behest of one of his closest comrades. Mixing extensive research in archival footage with a taut and gripping narrative, this documentary is an instant classic-in short: a masterpiece.”
Gerald Horne, University of Houston

“Thomas Sankara was more than the “Ché of Africa”; he was a promise to the poorest peasant and a ray of hope for Burkina women.”
Nehanda Imara, Merritt College

The Little Girl Who Sold the Sun, 44 Min., 1999
Director: Djibril Diop Mambety
Country: France, Switzerland, Senegal
Thursday, May 6, 7pm, $5 general admission
ICE Theaters Chatham 14
210 87th Street
Chicago, IL


La petite vendeuse de Soleil (The Little Girl who Sold the Sun), Mambety brings us the feisty Sili Lam, a twelve year old paraplegic who becomes the first girl to sell a daily newspaper in the competitive world of young male newspaper vendors. She takes on a policeman whom she accuses of shaking her down as well as the boys who taunt her. When some boys take her newspapers and crutches, and her friend asks her “What next?” she triumphantly responds, “We continue”. The scenes – moving, satiric and comic, are expertly played by non-professional actors to a score by acclaimed musician Wasis Diop (Mambety”s brother).

The Little Girl who Sold the Sun

Shown with Thomas Sankara

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BLACK THE FILM

A funky riff on the theme music from 2001: A Space Odyssey opens Black, a new crime thriller from France. The catchy redux leads to a bank robbery that goes quickly awry, a maniacal, island-dwelling millionaire who’s slowly turning into a snake, a volatile and crazy Russian general, witches, witch doctors, gunfire, machete-wielding wrestlers, and two antiheroes imbued with cat powers who dress up like the members of an African Kiss tribute band.


The initial robbery attempt in France ends in a shootout with police, and three of the four thieves end up dead. Black (MC Jean Gab’1 – the villain in District 13), the only survivor, escapes with his life but without the money. He soon gets an offer for a job in Senegal involving millions of dollars in diamonds and is immediately on a plane for the dark continent.

Black was born in Africa before moving to France, and he sees the Senegalese bankers and police as easy targets. His assumption is essentially correct except that he fails to consider that others might be after the diamonds too. And these others are crazy don’t mess-with-me-dudes. His team of robbers is assembled, introduced, and dispatched fairly quickly, and once again Black is on his own.

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TRUTH BE TOLD – A CELEBRATION OF BLACK HERITAGE
@ ICE THEATERS Every Thursday in February.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

SKIN
South Africa/2009/107 min/Drama/Rated PG-13/Directed by Anthony Fabian

“SKIN” is one of the most moving stories to emerge from apartheid South Africa: Sandra Laing (Sophie Okonedo) is a black child born in the 1950s to white Afrikaners, unaware of their black ancestry. Her parents are rural shopkeepers serving the local black community, who lovingly bring her up as their ‘white’ little girl. But at the age of ten, Sandra is driven out of white society. The film follows Sandra’s thirty-year journey from rejection to acceptance, betrayal to reconciliation, as she struggles to define her place in a changing world – and triumphs against all odds.

Post-Film Panel Discussion – Moderator: Santita Jackson, WVON; Panelists:   Ambassador Nomvume Magaqa, Consul General, South African Consulate General in Chicago; Rev. Calvin Morris, PhD, Executive Director of the Community Renewal society of Chicago; and  Dana Starks, Commissioner, Chicago Commission on Human Relations.


Thursday, February 11, 2010
INVICTUS
USA/2009/134 minutes/Drama/Rated PG-13/Directed by Clint Eastwood

“Invictus” tells the inspiring true story of how Nelson Mandela (Morgan Freeman) joined forces with the captain of South Africa’s rugby team, Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon), to help unite their country.   Newly elected President Mandela knows his nation remains racially and economically divided in the wake of apartheid. Believing he can bring his people together through the universal language of sport, Mandela rallies South Africa’s underdog rugby team as they make an unlikely run to the 1995 World Cup Championship match.

Post-Film Audience Q&A – Moderators: Matt McGill and Perri Small, WVON


Thursday, February 18, 2010
THE PROVIDENCE EFFECT
USA/2009/92 minutes/Documentary/Rated PG/Directed by Rollin Binzer

Providence-St. Mel, a private school in Chicago, is celebrated nationwide for its remarkable success rate: for nearly 30 years, 100 percent of its students have gone on to attend college. As the nation faces an ongoing crisis in public education, many administrators and activists have begun turning to the Providence model to boost test scores and student confidence. This documentary chronicles the school’s unique history, and offers testimonies from generations of Providence-St. Mel teachers and alumni, most importantly the man who has led the school during all those years, Paul J. Adams III.

Post-Film Audience Q&A – Moderator: Cliff Kelley, WVON


Thursday, February 25, 2009

WITHIN OUR GATES
USA/1920/90 minutes/Drama/Unrated/Written, Directed and Produced by Oscar Micheaux

Recognized as the oldest known surviving film by an African-American director, “Within Our Gates” is a silent race film that dramatically depicts the racial situation in America during the violent years of Jim Crow, the Ku Klux Klan, the Great Migration, and the emergence of the “New Negro”. The story focuses on an African-American woman who goes North in an effort to help a minister in the Deep South raise money to keep a school open for poor Black children. Her romance with a black doctor eventually leads to revelations about her family’s past that expose the racial skeletons in America’s closet, most famously through the film’s depiction of the injustice of lynching.

Post-Film Panel Discussion – Moderator: Salim Muwakki, WVON; Panelists: Timuel Black, Professor Emeritus of Social Science at the City Colleges of Chicago; Nina Cartier, Doctoral Candidate at Northwestern University; and Floyd Webb, filmmaker/producer


All screenings will be held at the ICE Chatham Theaters, 210 West 87th Street, Chicago.  Showtime is 7:00PM and admission is $5.00 for all screenings listed above. A post-film discussion will follow each screening. For program information or private group screenings, contact Venisha White Johnson at 773-892-3204 ext. 2 or venishajohnson@icetheaters.com.

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