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Schedule for Wednesday, February 17

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The Last Station

“New Releases”

 "Every second Helen Mirren is on-screen in The Last Station is a study in peerless talent." (USA Today)

Helen Mirren and Christopher Plummer, both nominated for Academy Awards for their performances, dazzle in this captivating look at the turbulent final year in the life of Leo Tolstoy. As Tolstoy (Plummer) becomes increasingly radical with age, he decides to reject his vast wealth—much to the dismay of his wife, the Countess Sofya (Mirren). The desperate countess is soon employing every trick she can muster to seduce her husband’s loyal disciple (James McAvoy), the man she blames for Tolstoy’s new will. Much more than a simple period biopic, The Last Station is high drama, filled with intrigue, sensuality, and a classical marital showdown featuring two legends in prime form.

USA Today review

Michael Hoffman. 2009. 112 m. R. UK. Sony Pictures Classics.

5:00 7:20

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Crazy Heart

“New Releases”

 "Few American actors over the past 35 years have flickered and smoldered with such craft and resilience." (New York Times)

Bad Blake (Jeff Bridges) is a hard-living, fading country star reduced to playing bowling alleys and hoping for complimentary drinks to get him through the night. Overshadowed by a former protégé (Colin Farrell), Blake eventually seeks redemption from a sympathetic and lovely young journalist (Maggie Gyllenhall).Crazy Heart features nuanced, understated performances by Farrell, Gyllenhall, and Robert Duvall—but the real story here is Jeff Bridges. In a career filled with “career performances,” Bridges manages to top himself. Oozing authenticity and gutter charm, Bridges sings and strums his way through a set of original songs and embodies this beat-up country sage with incredible ease. A remarkable turn, it’s no surprise Bridges has been nominated for the Academy Award (Best Actor), alongside fellow Academy Award nominee Maggie Gyllenhaal (Best Supporting Actress).

Official Website / Trailer | New York Times review

Scott Cooper. 2009. 111 m. R. US. Fox Searchlight.

5:10 7:30

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Andrei Roublev

“FrameWorks: Art on Film 2010”

“A masterwork of extraordinary depth and spiritual power.” (Boston Globe)

A screening of the director’s cut of Andrei Roublev, the masterpiece by Andrei Tarkovsky (Solaris). The film, shot in widescreen and sharp black and white, dazzles the eye with the charged image-making that exemplifies great Russian cinema. Based on the life of the 15th-century monk and icon painter Andrei Roublev, and steeped in the natural beauty and barbaric violence of a turbulent time, it summons up the mystic power of art in the service of faith. 35MM PRINT!

Note: Although the film is unrated, please be aware that it contains scenes of graphic violence.

Andrei Tarkovsky. 1966. 205 m. NR. Soviet Union, Russian with subtitles. Kino International.

6:30