Fern Creek Traditional High School

Address: 9115 Fern Creek Road
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Monthly art-house films at a price anyone can afford: free!

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Feb 13, 2010

Can't get to Cannes? Or the Sundance Film Festival? Can't even afford the Sundance cable Channel? You can still enjoy the best in documentary and art-house films once a month, and it's completely free!

Every third Thursday of the month, the Community Cinema Series offers two showings of an independent film, most often an award-winning documentary. The film series, free and open to the public, began in October 2009. It's a joint project of Fern Creek Traditional High School Film Club, the Louisville Film Society and KET. The movies of the Community Cinema Series are slated to be broadcast on PBS' "Independent Lens" series, but they're shown first at Fern Creek and at more than 50 other locations across the country.

Showings are at 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. in the school's auditorium. You can view the film schedule online and even view trailers for each movie.  

Recent films include "Young @ Heart," the 2007 documentary on a Northampton, Mass., chorus made up seniors more likely to break out into Coldplay and Sonic Youth than Crosby or Sinatra; "Garbage Dreams," the award-winning 2009 documentary that explores the lives of the Christian garbage collectors of Cairo and the threat foreign corporations pose to them; and the 2009 documentary, "Copyright Criminals," on the creative commercial value of musical sampling that features some of today's top hip-hop artists.

One of the first films in the series was the award-winning "Between the Folds," a 2008 documentary on artists, mathematicians and scientists who have abandoned conventional jobs to devote themselves to origami, the Japanese art of paper folding. The film contained one intricately crafted paper beauty after another. One of the primary subjects in the movie, Dr. Erik Demaine, actually won a MacArthur "Genius" Award for his work in computational origami; his work is now on exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

Said Vanessa Gould, director, producer and writer on "Between the Folds": "When I first learned about the curious phenomenon of fine artists, scientists and mathematicians from all over the world working in the very same medium of origami, I knew there had to be something special about it — that in the simplicity of a square must be hiding some untold potential for creativity and new ideas."

 

 

 



- by Ivonne Rovira, Louisville Reporter for HelloMetro  (Click to leave a message)

Ivonne Rovira

A graduate of the prestigious Columbia University School of Journalism in New York City, Ivonne Rovira worked as a reporter for the Miami News, The Miami Herald and The Associated Press. She has written articles for The National Catholic Reporter and The Courier-Journal. For more than 15 years, Ivonne wrote and edited articles aimed at middle-school children.
"We employ our own Local professional journalists (not bloggers) to give you an accurate hyperlocal story"







 

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Click Images To Enlarge
"Between the Folds" (2008) follows artists and scientists alike who have devoted themselves to origami, the Japanese art of paper folding. Photo, courtesy of Green Fuse Films
In the documentary "Between the Folds," French master Eric Joisel discusses his art. Photo, courtesy of Green Fuse Films
"Garbage Dreams" is just one of the many award-winning documentaries shown as part of the Community Cinema Series. Photo, courtesy of "Garbage Dreams" producer and director Mai Iskander
Appearing in "Copyright Criminals" is the Long Island hip-hop group De La Soul, who helped set a high bar for sampling artistry with their debut album "3 Feet High and Rising," released in 1989. Photo by Benjamin Franzen




 



     
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