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August 2006

Local Websites for Kids Activities

Date: Aug. 18, 2006
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      http://www.filmnight.org/
Click on the Schedule for location, movie and times.

 

http://www.filmnight.org/eight_and_half.htm


Saturday, August 25 - Washington Sq. Park in San Francisco

Showtime: 8:00 PM

Presented by The San Francisco Neighborhood Theater Foundation

In 1963, Federico Fellini broke with the tradition of great linear storytelling that had brought him international acclaim with such films as La Dolce Vita, The Nights of Cabiria, and La Strada. Filmmaking in Europe and elsewhere was taking a turn toward the radical and experimental: in Italy (Fellini’s compadre Antonioni broke new ground with his trilogy L’Avventura, La Notte, and L’Eclisse), in France (where the New Wave of Truffaut, Resnais, Godard and others was in full swing), and inspiring it all was the work of Ingmar Bergman in Sweden. The common thread was that a new, more interior vocabulary for film was developing.  Film prose was becoming film poetry. Using stories taken from myth, or sometimes from dreams, intensely autobiographical or even literary, directors now felt free to break the rules, using jump cuts, quick, almost subliminal images, disjointed soundtracks, leaps in time, anything that would wake audiences up and demand a deeper kind of attention to the medium itself.

In 8 1/2, (the title is a reference to the fact that he had previously directed eight features and a couple of shorts), Fellini makes an semi-autobiographical film. There is no doubt that Guido (Marcello Mastroianni), the great film director who is creatively blocked, due to begin shooting on his next picture but secretly sure he has lost his inspiration (and therefore hiding out at a health spa), is meant to be Fellini himself. Instead of telling the story “straight,” Fellini puts his stamp on the evolution of film history, by creating a collage of images and impressions from the span of Guido’s life that he must deal with as they come to consciousness for him. The images conjure issues of religion, family, guilt, lust, redemption, the multiple views men have of women (as mother, whore, angel, wild animal, etc.). All of it is through the filter of Jungian psychology, which Fellini was a devotee of, at least at the time – and therefore it is about passion and animus.

And while all this might sound kind of esoteric, really, it’s not. Why? Because the images and memories are so compelling, and (as he would so often from this point on) Fellini uses the metaphor of life as a circus, a never-ending show, full of strange and interesting characters, not to be taken too terribly seriously. Near suicide at the thought of the loss of the muse, desperate to hide his insecurities, frantically juggling wife and mistress, cast and crew, to keep the nuts and bolts of his life together, what Guido (and we) ultimately discover is: life gives you “wiggle room” if you keep your sense of perspective, if you remember to celebrate, and if you invite everyone to the party.

Fellini would never completely return to the strict narrative form of his earlier films. In his next film, Juliet of the Spirits, he would add Technicolor to his multi-layered dream world, and create for his wife, actress Guilietta Masina, a kind of feminist fable. From that point on, Fellini’s dreams would only get bigger, wilder, and grander.

By Kenn Rabin

 

FELLINI'S 8 1/2

http://www.gocitykids.com/?area=199

We're a group of veterans of the publishing and online worlds, who dreamed up GoCityKids to make our own lives as parents easier. GoCityKids is the city guide and family management tool we've always wanted. Aimed at both the city dweller and urban traveler, it appeals to what parents everywhere need—more time.

   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

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Restaurant - Butterfly - Four Stars!

Date: Aug. 10, 2006
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Butterfly at Pier 33 is so good. The happy hour menu here is one of my favorite (along with Chaya and others....). The Pork dish for $5, lettue wraps for $5, the salmon/strawberry sushi rolls are really great....does not sound like it I know, but they are.

This is on my short list for taking people that are visiting from out of the area. Walking down from Coit Tower down the Filbert Stret steps is the best way to get here.

The views here are great, and when a boat is docked it is really wild. You walk in and you almost think you are going to bump into the front of the whole thing. Literally. But you can sit at the bar, or anywhere in the place really, and just watch the water, the boats, the lights hitting off the east bay homes, the birds, etc. The big container ships cruising by makes you feel like a kid sometimes the way you catch yourself watching them.

The drinks here are great as well, and they have good DJ music some nights.

The big secret here..........the flat panel HD TV on the side of the bar, next to the wall of windows over the water, that always shows sports. You are not going to find a better "sports bar" anywhere in SF!! I have watched a few Michigan Woverine college football games here late Saturday mornings....

The bartenders here are usually really great also.

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Restaurant - Truly Mediterranean - Middle Eastern Dive Take out

Date: Aug. 10, 2006
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Truly Mediterranean is one of these places you love, but you tend to not tell to many people about. It is not that the food isn't excellent, but that it is at.....Valencia and 16th. Which is not as bad an area as Mission and 16th I guess. Actually 16th and Valencia is great. There are a lot of great restaurants, bars and stores everywhere.

Truly Mediterranean is one of these. On Tuesday's and Friday's it has a chicken shwarma which is the best in San Francisco. I eat it about once a week. Sometimes I have been known to hit it twice even. The humus is also fantastic here. As is the falafel, and the baklava....the yogart drink is not good though.

I usually park illeaglly right in front, order really quick and stand outside to make sure my car is not in anyone's way. If someone comes up, I just move it and drive around the block. The guys that work here are really great as well.

 

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