Nice
Press!
Christopher
Smith reviews RCC's If It's Friday, This Must Be Bangor" series
in the June 23, 2006 issue of the BANGOR DAILY NEWS!
Weekly
Word Views
River City Cinema series takes local filmgoers around the globe
Two summers ago, when the River City Cinema
Society truly made its mark on the scene, they did so from the
shadows of downtown
Bangor's Pickering Square, letting loose with a hail of classic
movies in their successful film festival, "Noir Beneath the
Stars." Last summer, feeling a bit cheerier, they slayed audiences
with "Smiles on a Summer Night."
This
summer, the society has packed its bags with a different agenda.
On Friday, June
30, their latest festival, "If It's Friday,
This Must be Bangor"-a spin on Mel Stuart's 1969 movie, "If
It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium"-wants us to see the
world, but via the most agreeable sort of traveling.
Forget
the hassles of busy airports and clogged highways. As
society co-founder Jorge Gonzales notes, "With us, you
don't have to spend money on airfare or gasoline. You can travel
the
world
without ever having to leave the comfort of your lawn chair."
True
to form, this year's lineup of movies is a wanderlust of
classics, each as solid as audiences have come to expect
from
the free festival,
which over the course of its two-year run has drawn thousands.
Beginning next Friday evening is Michael Curtiz's "Casablanca," with
Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman mooning in Morocco. On
July 7, the destination is wartime Europe in Alfred Hitchcock's
1940
film, "Foreign Correspondent," with Joel McCrea,
Laraine Day and George Sanders.
On
July 14, Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck are in Rome in
William Wyler's 1953 movie, "Roman Holiday," and
on July 21, it's Hepburn again, this time glamming it up
in Paris with Fred
Astaire and Kay Thompson in 1957's "Funny Face." On
July 28, the 1974 Agatha Christie-inspired "Murder
on the Orient Express" rails through Istanbul with
its huge, who's-who cast of characters, and on Aug. 11,
Raquel
Welch has something of an
inner-body experience (if that's possible) in 1966's "Fantastic
Voyage."
Once again, audiences
are encouraged to bring lawn chairs. Shows begin at sundown, with a
rain date planned
for Aug.
18. Since
the festival has families in mind, all films are rated
either G or
PG.
"
There are no PG-13 films this year," says society co-founder
Kathy Tenga-Gonzales. "For those bringing children,
we offer links on our Web site (www.rivercitycinema.com)
that allow people
to research each film featured in the festival. This
way, they can decide for themselves if a particular movie
is suitable for
them and their families."
To
raise funds for the event, the society secured 11 sponsors - WBRC
Architects
and Engineers, Bangor Savings
Bank, Eaton
Peabody, Groth & Associates, Bangor Center Corporation,
Cuddy & Lanham,
Bennett Auto Center, Main 1 Travel, Bangor True Value
Hardware/Penobscot Paint, RBC Dain Rauscher and Bangor
International Airport. Popcorn,
soft drinks, ice cream and candy also will be sold,
with all proceeds assisting the society in its mission
of
showcasing underseen films
around the Bangor area via their traveling, state-of-the-art
theater, "Cinema
to Go."
A typical night's
attendance at their summer series ranges anywhere between 400-500 people,
filling Pickering
Square
to capacity,
with room left only for standing. The happy buzz
of
those in attendance,
the smell of fresh popcorn in the air, the cars circling
along the periphery and the giant screen gifted to
the society by
the Stephen and Tabitha King Foundation, have made
this community event a showcase for Bangor.
"
A lot of people now have made it a tradition," says Tenga-Gonzales. "At
the end of each festival, we've had people ask
us what they're now going to do on Friday nights."
No doubt
the society would prefer that its patrons spend it with them.
Founded in 2001 by the Gonzaleses,
Michael
Grillo
and Sandra
Johnson, as well as Barbara and David Clark,
who have since relocated out of state, the society's
longtime
goal has
been to have their
own cinema in the Bangor area. For those who
have followed the society's progress in these pages,
the realization
of that goal
has been a while in coming.
At the start of 2006,
a board was to be in place, with the society hoping to have their
own space
to show
films at the
beginning
of 2007. Having missed that first goal, a board
now is slated to be
in place by summer's end, with its mission
to launch a fundraising campaign that will create
a new film
center in downtown Bangor.
"
We are working on it," says Gonzales. "We want to be
part of the engine that drives people to
downtown Bangor. We have a couple of locations in mind that would
be ideal for such a complex.
If anyone reading this shares our vision,
please visit our Web site and contact us."
Should their vision come together, the economic
ripple of such a complex could be significant,
as it was
in Rockland with
the recent renovation of The Strand. Downtown
restaurants, in particular,
have been positively affected by the festival. "When
we're in town, [area restaurants] have noticed
more of a crowd carrying
lawn chairs," says Gonzales.
Chris
Geaghan, owner of the Whig & Courier Pub, confirms
it. "There
is no question that the film festival makes
a difference," he
says. "We have outdoor seating and
you can see the movies from our seats.
The festival
also has a community feel to it," he
says. "I see people walking by with
their lawn chairs, which is neat. The event
gets people not only used to being downtown,
but also parking downtown. Downtown Bangor
has things that other
places don't offer. Anytime there is anything
going on here, it shows that we are vibrant
and existing. The film festival, the
art show, the Folk Festival - all are important."
This
year, as last year, the society is collaborating
with the Maine International
Film Festival
to bring two films
to the Bangor
Opera House on July 15.
First
is the documentary "Top of the World," which follows
filmmaker Bill Kern's trek to the top
of Mt. Everest, and the rewarding, unexpected relationships he mines
from his journey. Second is "I
Shot Andy Warhol," the 1996 movie
in which Lili Taylor becomes Valerie
Jean Solanas, the rough-and-tumble
lesbian playwright who
shot Warhol (nicely portrayed by Jared
Harris) because he didn't produce her
play, the title of which can't be printed
in a family
paper. The film's director, Mary Harron,
who currently is generating solid reviews
for her new movie, "The Notorious
Bettie Page," will
be on hand to discuss her films.
More
information about the series, the
society, and the Maine International
Film Festival
can be found
on the
society's Web site, www.rivercitycinema.com.
For information about arrangements
in
case of rain, call 989-9494, courtesy
of Voyager
Call
Center.
©2006
Christopher Smith. Used with permission.
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Visit
www.weekinrewind.com, the archive of Bangor Daily News film critic
Christopher Smith's reviews, which appear Mondays in Discovering,
Fridays in Happening, and Weekends in Television. He may be reached
at
Christopher@weekinrewind.com.
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