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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Five BIFF films you can see for FREE!

Of course there's a catch! You have to be a student older than 12, and younger than 19. That's it!

Here at BIFF, we want to encourage young people not only to get into movies -- but movies with VITAMINS. Yeah, movies that engage you and make you think . . . without being the kind of films that you are forced to watch that are so boring and stupid that you fall asleep in the back.

We have good ones this year! Take a look! There are two on Friday, two on Saturday and one on Sunday:

FRIDAY

THE FIRST GRADER
Noon, Boulder Theater
United Kingdom
Directed by Justin Chadwick
2010
103 min.



People’s Choice Award Runner-Up at the Toronto Film Festival
Closing Night Film at the 2011 Palm Springs Int’l Film Festival

When the Kenyan government declared free public education for all in 2002, 84-year-old tribesman and former Mau Mau warrior during the Kenyan war of independence from colonial rule, Kimani Maruge, shows up at school. This beautiful, unforgettable film tells Maruge’s true, sometimes shocking story, through flashbacks, and we find out why school officials had no chance against this warrior’s ferocity of purpose.

CALL 2 ACTION: Join us for a brief Q&A after the film, and visit the Call 2 Action tent to learn more about adult literacy from Diana Sherry of Boulder Reads! – and how you can help make a difference.

From National Geographic Entertainment
Colorado Premiere
www.thefirstgradermovie.com

THESE AMAZING SHADOWS
5 p.m., First United Methodist Church
USA
Feature Documentary
Directed by Kurt Norton
2010
88 min.


Direct to BIFF from Sundance

What do the films "Casablanca," "Blazing Saddles," "West Side Story" and "This Is Spinal Tap" have in common? They have been deemed “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress and listed on the National Film Registry. "These Amazing Shadows" tells the history and importance of The Registry, a roll call of American cinema treasures that reflects the diversity of film and, indeed, the American experience itself. The current list of 525 films includes selections from every genre—documentaries, home movies, Hollywood classics, avant-garde, newsreels and silent films. This film reveals how American movies tell us so much about ourselves—not just what we did, but what we thought, what we felt and what we aspired to.

Colorado Premiere
Director Kurt Norton in person

SATURDAY


THE LAST LIONS
10 a.m., Boulder Theater
Botswana
Directed by Dereck and Beverly Joubert
Feature Documentary
2010
88 min.


Renowned naturalists, Dereck and Beverly Joubert, track Ma di Tau (Mother of Lions) on her perilous, 3-year journey with her cubs, during her titanic primal bid to preserve the thing that matters most—the future of her bloodline. Spectacular, close-up filming and narration by Jeremy Irons, makes this a “must see” for everyone. And find out how you can work to preserve the King of Beasts who will be extinct in 20 years if they are not protected.

CALL 2ACTION: Join us for a Q&A with WILD Foundation’s Vance Martin, and visit the Call 2 Action tent to hear more about his recent trip to the very community this film depicts.

From National Geographic Entertainment
Colorado Premiere

BAG IT!

12:30 p.m., First United Methodist Church
USA
Feature Documentary
Directed by Suzan Beraza
2010
78 min.


Winner at the Telluride Mountainfilm Festival 2010

Come see where all the 500 billion plastic bags used on Earth every year end up! In this humorous and unsettling documentary, narrator, Jeb Berrier, travels around the world to find better possible models for getting rid of plastic bags.

CALL 2 ACTION: Join filmmaker Suzan Beraza after the film for a Q & A and visit the Call 2 Action tent to continue the conversation with her, and with representatives from New Vista High School’s EARTH TASK FORCE and ECOCYCLE about all the small ways we can make a huge difference.

Boulder Premiere
Suzan Beraza in person

SUNDAY

STUDENTS ONLY!

FREEDOM RIDERS
12:30 p.m., Boulder Public Library
USA

Feature Documentary
Directed by Stanley Nelson
2010
113 min.


Share the experience of Civil Rights activists who rode buses from Washington D.C. to Jackson, Misssissippi during the height of segregation. Along the way they encountered the hatred of white segregationists and were beaten, fire-bombed and tear-gassed. Their triumphant efforts are recorded in this amazing documentary. Join U.S.-Rep.(GA) John Lewis, after the film for an intimate conversation about his experience as a Freedom Rider!

Students should arrive 20 minutes prior to seating
Contact Ruth @ ruthe@biff1.com for group reservations or questions.

Boulder Premiere
Congressman John Lewis will be introduced by Senator Mark Udall and Congressman Jared Polis