Thursday, April 07, 2011

[HvEXAS] TONIGHT at 7:30! Red Shoes screening | EMPAC, Troy, NY

"Before The Red Shoes, there were films with dance numbers. After it, there was a new medium which combined dance, design, and music in a dreamlike spectacle." — Ian Christie

SCREENING
Cinematic Chimera: The Red Shoes
Thursday, April 7, 7:30 PM
Theater
$5


Based on the Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale about a young girl caught in an endless dance by a pair of magical shoes, The Red Shoes is Powell and Pressburger's celebrated film about the life of an artist. Set in a ballet production of The Red Shoes, the film follows a ballerina struggling with dueling allegiances to love and career.
 
The Red Shoes was unprecedented in its treatment of dance on film, featuring an extended 17-minute ballet sequence, and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra performed its Oscar-winning score. One of cinema's most famous early uses of Technicolor, this newly remastered digital version was restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archives in 2009.
 
"For 10 years [following both world wars] we had all been told to go out and die for freedom and democracy; but now the war was over, The Red Shoes told us to go out and die for art." — Michael Powell
Evelyn's Café will open at 6:30 PM. Parking for this event is available in the Rensselaer parking lot on College Avenue.

Additional event information can be found on the EMPAC website: http://www.empac.rpi.edu/. Questions? Call the EMPAC Box Office: 518.276.3921.

Hungarian-born Emeric Pressburger was a journalist before becoming a screenwriter in the late 1920s. After working at Germany's UFA studios for several years, he fled after Hitler's rise to power and eventually came to England, where he joined London Films as a screenwriter and began his association with Michael Powell, a gifted young English filmmaker. The two worked together on The Spy in Black, and after leaving London Films, formed a filmmaking partnership. Their collaborations together included 49th Parallel, One of Our Aircraft Is Missing, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, A Canterbury Tale, I Know Where I'm Going!, Stairway to Heaven (A Matter of Life and Death), Black Narcissus, The Red Shoes, The Small Back Room, and The Tales of Hoffmann. The partnership split up after 1956, and Pressburger returned to writing. His novel Killing a Mouse on Sunday was later adapted into the movie Behold a Pale Horse.

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