Hello, Guest! [Login] [Register]
Rural Intelligence: The Online Magazine for Eastern New York, Western Connecticut and the Southern Berkshires
Search Archives:

RI Archives: Arts

View past Movie articles.

View all past Arts articles.



Barrington Stage Company

Norfolk Chamber Music Festival

Berkshire Actors Theater

Joie de Livres Gallery

Ludwig Live

The RE Institute

Johnnycake Books

Fisher Center for the Performing Arts

TriArts Sharon Playhouse

Helsinki Hudson

Music & More

Close Encounters With Music

Gallery on the Green

Darren Winston, Bookseller

Hancock Shaker Village

Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center

Lauren Clark Fine Arts

Movie Theaters

Bank Street Theater
New Milford, CT

Bantam Cinema
Bantam, CT

Bardavon Theater
Poughkeepsie, NY

Beacon Cinema
Pittsfield, MA

Berkshire International Film Festival
Great Barrington, MA

Berkshire Jewish Film Festival
Lenox, MA

The Chatham Film Club
Chatham, NY

Cinema Salon at the Clark
Williamstown, MA

Cinerom
Torrington, CT

Crandell Theatre
Chatham, NY

Fairview 3
Hudson, NY

FilmColumbia
Chatham, NY

FilmWorks Forum
Millerton, NY

Gilson Cafe and Cinema
Winsted, CT

Hudson Movieplex
Hudson, NY

Images Cinema
Williamstown, MA

Litchfield Hills Film Festival
Kent, CT

Little Cinema at the Berkshire Museum
Pittsfield, MA

Lyceum Cinemas
Red Hook, NY

The Mahaiwe
Great Barrington, MA

MASS MoCA’s Thursday Night Cinema
North Adams, MA

The Moviehouse
Millerton, NY

Norfolk Library Documentary Series
Norfolk, CT

Regal Berkshire Mall 10
Lanesborough, MA

Roosevelt Cinemas
Hyde Park, NY

PS/21
Chatham, NY

Spectrum 8 Theatres
Albany, NY

Time & Space Limited
Hudson, NY

The Triplex
Great Barrington, MA

Upstate Films
Rhinebeck, NY

Williamstown Film Festival
Williamstown, MA

[See more Movie articles]

40 Films in Four Days in Kent

Rural Intelligence Arts Section Image

You’d think that a town without a proper movie theater would have a tough time pulling off a serious film festival, but the arts community of Kent, CT, does not let that inconvenient detail get in its way. “It requires a lot of imagination,” says Frank Galterio, who founded the festival three years ago. “We’re still wondering how we’ve we done it. The first year we had two six-by-eight screens. Now, we have one that is nine-by-twelve and one that is ten-by-sixteen, plus three other screening rooms.”

Beginning on Thursday, March 27, Kent will show 40 films in four-days, and host panels and workshops for anyone who loves movies. The festival kicks off with a screening of Doughboy [trailer below], the story of two brothers and their family’s bakery in the Bronx, which was directed by Louis Lombardi, who played federal agent Skip Lipari on The Sopranos.

One of the festival’s highlights is a master class on Saturday afternoon with Albert Maysles,  the dean of American documentarians, whose films include Grey Gardens and Gimme Shelter.“There are only a few tickets left for that,” says Galterio. Rural Intelligence ArtsAnd on Friday night, the premier of A.D. Calvo’s The Other Side of the Tracks will be followed by a Q&A with Tony- and Emmy-award winning actress Shirley Knight, who is in the film. Saturday night’s big film is Josseph Merhi’s Oranges, a drama about five families who each have a ten-year-old son on the same soccer team; the cast of Oranges includes Heather Locklear, Jill Hennessy, Orson Bean and Tom Arnold.

Galterio, who had a film in the first festival, no longer has time to make movies himself. “This has become a full-time job for me,” he says. “As soon as this one is over, I have to start organizing next year’s.”

Tickets are $8 for individual films; a full-day pass for Saturday or Sunday is $35; for $195, you can purchase a pass that gets you into all screenings, workshops, panels, and parties. Click here for the complete lineup.

(1) Comments

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

Tell-a-Friend TwitThis    Facebook    del.icio.us    Diigo    Digg    Reddit    StumbleUpon   

Posted by Dan Shaw on 03/24/08 at 11:58 AM • Permalink