Here’s an invitation to the boxing series for Ring8 members.
From August 18-28. Anthology Film Archives in Manhattan’s East Village (32 2nd avenue, 2nd street) will be showcasing 10 of the best boxings in film history.
Attached is a copy of the postcard and schedule.
Here is the online link to the program:
http://anthologyfilmarchives.org/film_screenings/series/47709
Anthology would like to offer a discounted member price for all Ring8 members. In other words, instead of the $11 full price tickets, you are eligible for the $7 member price tickets. The price applies to whoever else you plan to invite, should you do so. If you would like to take advantage of this offer, please get in touch with Sean Nam at seany90@gmail.com to reserve your member price tickets.
BoxingPC_F
BOXING ON FILM: PART 1
August 18 – August 27
Boxing announces itself as two combatants, enclosed in a square ring, using nothing but their fists to pummel each other into oblivion. Where, you might ask, is the appeal in that? We might mention first that Virgil and Homer featured it in their epic poems; G.B. Shaw had a lifelong obsession with it, writing a book on the subject in between his plays, and going so far as lacing up a pair of gloves himself; and James Baldwin, a complete stranger to the sport, was moved nonetheless to pen a rueful essay on sympathetic heavyweight Floyd Patterson. Boxing, to be sure, has long found a way of bewitching its observers, compelling them to memorialize, by way of philosophic introspection and metaphor alike, their experience of seeing violence waged in the ring. But violence is only half the picture. What permits boxing to emerge out of its purview as a bloodsport and become something like a broadly-recognized motif, is its seemingly innate possession of those grand, humanistic themes that have populated the great novels: the tales of redemption, bravery, sacrifice, ungodly willpower, flirtation with death, and so on – such elements more than earn boxing its cultural keep. Boxing, in other words, is the stuff of movies.
Since the last days of the bareknuckle era and the first flickers from a projector, boxing and cinema have gone hand-in-hand. In his book “Fight Pictures,” film scholar Dan Streible explores how the inherent thrills and simplicity of boxing caught the attention of Edison and other early film practitioners as an easy way to monetize on the new invention. Indeed, the subject of the world’s first feature film was none other than the heavyweight fight between James J. Corbett and Bob Fitzsimmons.
To celebrate the longstanding and ongoing ties between boxing and cinema, Anthology presents the first of a two-part series devoted to the very best examples of boxing on screen. This first chapter features classic Hollywood noirs and dramas like THE SET-UP and GENTLEMAN JIM; Leo McCarey’s more lighthearted take on the subject, THE MILKY WAY; New Hollywood gems such as FAT CITY and RAGING BULL, and superlative documentaries including THE FIGHT, ON THE ROPES, and BOXING GYM. And best of all, we welcome Dan Streible for a special presentation showcasing some of the remarkable and long-forgotten materials he discovered in his research for his seminal book on the subject.
Co-programmed by Sean Nam, who also wrote the introduction and (unless otherwise noted) all film descriptions. Special thanks to Dan Streible; Carlos Acevedo (The Cruelest Sport); Nanette Burstein; Chris Chouinard (Park Circus); Louise Greaves; Dave Jennings (Sony); Brett Morgen; Kristie Nakamura (WB); Anton Perich; Bill Powers; Nicolas Rapold; Richard Šteinhübel (Slovak Film Institute); and Todd Weiner & Steven Hill (UCLA).
Steve Farhood, Boxing Hall of Fame analyst and journalist, will be here in person to introduce the screenings of THE SET-UP and FAT CITY on Friday, August 18; and film critic Nicholas Elliott will introduce the screening of GENTLEMAN JIM on Friday, August 25!
Upcoming Screenings
- Robert Wise
THE SET-UP
August 18 at 7:15 PM
August 22 at 9:15 PM
August 24 at 7:00 PM
- John Huston
FAT CITY
August 18 at 9:00 PM
August 22 at 6:45 PM
August 23 at 9:15 PM
- Nanette Burstein & Brett Morgen
ON THE ROPES
August 19 at 4:15 PM
August 21 at 9:15 PM
- Raoul Walsh
GENTLEMAN JIM
August 19 at 6:30 PM
August 25 at 9:15 PM
- William Greaves
THE FIGHT
August 19 at 9:00 PM
August 24 at 8:45 PM
August 26 at 4:00 PM
- Martin Scorsese
RAGING BULL
August 20 at 3:45 PM
August 23 at 6:30 PM
August 26 at 9:00 PM
- Frederick Wiseman
BOXING GYM
August 20 at 6:30 PM
August 26 at 6:45 PM
- Peter Solan
THE BOXER AND DEATH
August 20 at 8:30 PM
August 25 at 6:45 PM
August 27 at 3:15 PM
- Leo McCarey
THE MILKY WAY
August 21 at 7:15 PM
August 27 at 8:30 PM
- DAN STREIBLE: FIGHT PICTURES
August 27 at 6:00 PM
It would be great to see many of you at some of these films.
Thank you,
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