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Tickets Now
Available for LCCC’s Stocker Arts Center Winter/Spring 2013 Film
Series
Film lovers will enjoy the excitement and variety of the
Stocker Arts Center Winter/Spring 2013 Film Series at
Lorain County Community College.
Patrons, except LCCC students/faculty/staff with valid ID, must
purchase an annual membership in the LCCC Film Society for $3
each, which is good through the end of the 2013 Film Series. The
admission price for each film is $6 with the membership card. In
addition to tickets to individual shows, anytime tickets are
available for $6 each and may be used at any film from now
through the end of the 2013 film series.
The Stocker Arts Center box office is open Mondays through
Fridays from 12-6 p.m. and one-and-one-half-hours before
ticketed events, including films. For more information, call the
box office at (440) 366-4040 or go to
www.stockerartscenter.com
The Stocker Arts Center Film Series is truly an alternative
cinema, as most of these films have not played in Lorain County
and are often not readily available on video. Audiences have the
opportunity to sample the gourmet flavor of prize-winning
foreign films, and the exciting energy and originality of
contemporary independent American and international cinema.
The Stocker Arts Center’s Film Series focuses on human
relationships, moral and social issues, cultural and religious
diversity, and universal human emotions and aspirations,
including humor, disappointment and tragedy.
Below is a partial
listing of films in the LCCC Stocker Arts Center Film Society’s
Winter/Spring 2013 Film Series. For more information on the Film
Series or to be added to the mailing list, please call the Box
Office at (440) 366-4040.
2013 Winter/Spring Film Series
A ROYAL AFFAIR, Friday,
January 4, 2013, 7:30 p.m.:
2012 (R) 137 min. Denmark/subtitles Director: Nikolaj Arcel
Cast: Mads Mikkelsen, Alicia Vikander, Mikkel Boe Folsgaard.
Winner of the Best Actor and Best Screenplay awards at the
Berlin Film Festival, “A Royal Affair” is an epic tale of a
passionate and forbidden romance that changed an entire nation.
Denmark, 1766, English Princess Caroline Mathilde is married to
the mad and politically ineffectual King Christian VII. Ignored
by the wild king who chooses to live scandalously, Caroline
grows accustomed to a quiet existence in oppressed Copenhagen.
When the King returns from a tour of Europe accompanied by
Struensee, his new personal physician, Queen Caroline finds an
unexpected ally within the kingdom. The attraction between the
two is initially one of shared ideals and philosophy, but soon
turns into a passionate and clandestine affair that would divide
a nation. Committed to the ideals of the Enlightenment that are
banned in Denmark, Struensee convinces the King to assert his
previously untapped power to remove the conservative political
council and implement drastic social changes to Danish society.
As the court plot their return to power and the downfall of the
queen and Struensee, the consequences of their affair are made
clear and the entire nation will be changed forever. This is a
magnificent historical drama, universally praised by film
critics from around the world.
ROBOT AND FRANK, Friday,
January 11 - 7:30 p.m.:
2012 (PG-13) 90 min. USA Director: Jake Schreier Cast: Frank
Langella, Susan Sarandon, James Marsden, Liv Tyler.
Set in the near future, Frank, a retired cat burglar, has two
grown kids who are concerned he can no longer live alone. They
are tempted to place him in a nursing home until Frank's son
chooses a different option: against the old man's wishes, he
buys Frank a walking, talking humanoid robot programmed to
improve his physical and mental health. What follows is an often
hilarious and somewhat heartbreaking story about finding friends
and family in the most unexpected places. The film is a warm,
clever satire on the loss of personality in the digital age, and
the disposable nature of modern life. The more we come to rely
on technology for everything, the less we ourselves are
practically capable of, giving rise to a generation of limited,
purposeless people. What “Robot and Frank” highlights is not
just the fragility of aging, but also the value of a mind filled
with life experience and skills.
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