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Beat Film Festival 2016
May 28 - June 5
 

BeatThe 7th Beat Film Festival will take place in Moscow from 28 May to 7 June 2016. In this year the festival will change conception and tagline: program will devide by several topics, where music will adjoin arts, books, social idea and youth culture.The festival will take place at some venues: Formula Karo October Cinema Hall, Documentary Movie Center, Summercinema at Muzeon Park, Pioner Open Air Sokolniki, MAMM, Strelka Insitute anf Garage museum.

The program includes Russian premieres of international movie fastivals' hits, films about music phenomenons, youth subcultures and cult figures of generations whose names are contemporary pop-culture. One of the main event of the festival will be a premiere of "Uncle Howard" (2016) by Aaron Brookner. Director Howard Brookner died of AIDS in 1989, at the age of 35. He was gay; an Ivy League graduate; broke artist; rising Hollywood star; heroin user; jet-setter; bohemian; seedy nightlife lover; director of cult docs; an honest and devoted friend – he was many things to many people. To director Aaron Brookner, he was a loving and inspirational uncle. Featuring rare archival footage of William Burroughs, Patti Smith, Allen Ginsberg, Madonna, and more, the film reveals a portrait of the tumultuous and mysterious life, struggles, and untimely death of Howard Brookner. Among films about music will be a hit of the last Berlinale, "B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin" by producer and director Klaus Maeck, the ally of Fatih Akin and producer of such his works as "Soul Kitchen" and "Auf der anderen Seite". The film tells about music, art and chaos in the wild West-Berlin of the 1980 where Nick Cave, Tilda Swinton, Blixa Bargeld have lived. Klaus Maeck will visit the festival in Moscow with the support of Goethe Institute in Moscow.

The British program of the Beat Festival will be presented with the support of British Soviet if frame of "Future of the Word" forum. Its headliners are "Bitter Lake" by Adam Curtis. This documentary takes on a daunting challenge, making a two-hour dive into the troubling history of western relations with Afghanistan over the past 50 years. The film starts with the doomed dam projects of the 1950s that sought to remake southern Afghanistan in America’s image, then looks at ill-fated Soviet efforts to transform the country, and finally returns to castigate Washington’s second attempt at social and economic engineering. Drawing from the deep pool of the BBC archive footage, the film is a hypnotic collection of rare snippets from the war-torn country: A mesmering meditation on What Went Wrong in the country torn by war, violence, and in the long run – the attempts to restore peace. Another film is "Innocence of Memories" by Grant Gee. Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s Nobel laureate for Literature, opens a museum dedicated to a fictional doomed love story in 70’s Istanbul, illustrating the fictional with real, tangible artifacts: from 4,213 cigarette butts in a glass case to a collection of salt shakers. Director Grant Gee interlaces the story of this unique institution’s genesis with that of the romantic encounter that inspired it, a meditation on the city itself, and Pamuk’s relationship to all three.

The films will be demonstrated on English with Russian subtitles.

Festival Films

American Rebels by Levi's

Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars. UK 1973, 90 min. Directed by D.A. Pennebaker. Starring: David Bowie, Mick Ronson, Trevor Bolder. This documentary is a testament of the past, when things were done differently: the funny clothes, technical mishaps, AV effects and the fortunate non-existence of smartphones blocking the experience. It’s also a piece of cultural memorabilia capturing perhaps the most amazing musician of all times at his best: Bowie has always known how to play his audience, and the film shows him as a fiercely concentrated performance artist on and offstage, micromanaging everything from his makeup palette to the length of his kimono sleeves. To cut a long story short, are you ready for some time travel? London, Odeon Theatre, July 3, 1973. Don’t miss this.

Janis: Little Girl Blue. USA 2015, 104 min. Directed by Amy Berg. Starring: Janis Joplin, Cat Power, Karleen Bennett, Laura Joplin, Michael Joplin. anis Joplin is one of the most revered and iconic rock’n’roll singers of all time, a tragic and misunderstood figure who thrilled millions of listeners and blazed new creative trails before her death in 1970 at age 27. This in-depth examination, presented by the Oscar-nominated director Amy Berg, is an intimate and insightful portrait of a complicated, driven, and often beleaguered artist. Joplin’s own words tell much of the film’s story through a series of letters she wrote to her parents over the years, many of them made public in the film for the first time. A new understanding of a bright, complex woman whose surprising rise and sudden demise changed music forever.

Uncle Howard. UK, USA 2016, 96 min. Directed by Aaron Brookner. Starring: Rutger Hauer, Madonna, Ronald Reagan, Jim Jarmusch, Andy Warhol. Director Howard Brookner died of AIDS in 1989, at the age of 35. He was gay; an Ivy League graduate; broke artist; rising Hollywood star; heroin user; jet-setter; bohemian; seedy nightlife lover; director of cult docs; an honest and devoted friend – he was many things to many people. To director Aaron Brookner, he was a loving and inspirational uncle. His body of work, which captured the late 70s and early 80s cultural revolution, was buried in William S. Burroughs’ bunker in New York for 30 years. Now in a deeply personal journey, his nephew Aaron unearths Howard’s filmmaking legacy and the memory of everything he was. Through conversations with family and close friends – including Jim Jarmusch and Tom DiCillo – comes an exploration of the New York City in the 70s and 80s, the eruption of the AIDS plague, sex, drugs, politics, and the amazing artistic determination of a filmmaker whose life was cut short. Featuring rare archival footage of William Burroughs, Patti Smith, Allen Ginsberg, Madonna, and more, the film reveals a portrait of the tumultuous and mysterious life, struggles, and untimely death of Howard Brookner.

Millennials

When Earth Seems to Be Light. Georgia, Germany 2015, 76 min. Directed by Salome Machaidze, David Meskhi, Tamuna Karumidze. A film about young Georgian skaters, artists, and musicians being trapped between the political and religious powers. They create their own open spaces beneath viaducts and in other ‘non-places’, giving them the feeling of a free existence. The way the teenagers see it, Georgia is all about the old rather than the new. They get no acknowledgement here, so they spend their evenings throwing Molotov cocktails at a concrete slope. The portraits of the skaters are based on a series of photos by David Meskhi, one of the three co-directors. The story is told on the backdrop of the amazing Georgian landscapes, with the wilderness and ruins providing a frame for the characters’ turbulent teenhood.

Hot Sugar's Cold World. USA, France 2015, 87 min. Directed by Adam Bhala Lough. Starring: Frank Andrews, Danny Brown, Shelby Fero, Jim Jarmusch. A rare look into the life of a modern-day Mozart, Nick Koenig (Hot Sugar) as he creates unique music made entirely out of sounds from the world around him. Nick lives every young musician’s dream, but when his internet- famous girlfriend, rapper Kitty, goes on tour and they split, he flies to Paris where he grew up, to move on with his life, while hunting for increasingly exotic sounds to sample and turn into beats. Through his journey, Hot Sugar goes on crazy adventures, meets fascinating people and learns what it takes to survive as an artist. The film features outstanding people from all walks of life: from legendary filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, to the world’s most renowned Astrophysicist and Science Communicator, Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson.

Fonko. Sweden 2016, 87 min. Directed by Göran Olsson, Daniel Jadama, Lars Lovén. The great musical revolution of our time is taking place in Africa, affecting hundreds of millions of people. But only few have told the story of this avalanche of amazing, innovative and visual music. Fonko gives a unique glimpse at the sounds of Africa, as well as travels to rapidly developing cities like Lagos, Luanda, and Johannesburg. The narrator of Fonko is one of the greatest African music revolutionaries, Fela Kuti, as if speaking from the grave. Fela was also a Nigerian political activist, uniting the change in the society, as well as the breakthough in sound. Fela died in 1997, his voice will come from old recordings.

Retro

B-Movie: Lust and Sound in West Berlin. Germany 2015, 92 min. Directed by Klaus Maeck, Jörg A. Hoppe, Heiko Lange. Starring: Blixa Bargeld, Gudrun Gut, Annette Humpe, Nick Cave, Tilda Swinton, Mark Reeder. Music, art, and chaos are intertwined in the documentary that features young Nick Cave, Tilda Swinton, Blixa Bargeld, and New Order. These are just a few among the now internationally-known musicians who came to Berlin in 1980s, when the city became a melting pot for both sub- and pop-culture. ‘B-movie’ is a fast-paced collage of mostly unreleased rare footage from a frenzied but highly charged creative decade, starting with punk and ending with the Love Parade, in a city where the days are short and the nights are endless.

Scott Walker: 30 Century Man. UK 2006, 95 min. Directed by Stephen Kijak. Starring: Damon Albarn, David Bowie, Dot Allison, Mark Almond. This BAFTA-nominated film is a look at one of the most influential and enigmatic figures in the rock history, from his early days as a jobbing bass player on the Sunset Strip, to mega-stardom during Britain’s swinging 60’s and Walker’s evolution into one of the most astonishing soundmakers. The film features the making of 63-year-old Walker’s first album in over a decade – released to widespread critical acclaim – as well as interviews with his close friends and collaborators, some of which are: David Bowie, Radiohead, Jarvis Cocker (Pulp), Brian Eno, Damon Albarn (Blur, Gorillaz), Marc Almond, and Sting. The film’s team is as illustrious, with Grant Gee as the director of photography, and David Bowie as an executive producer.

Meeting People Is Easy. UK 1998, 99 min. Directed by Grant Gee. Starring: Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Ed O'Brien, Colin Greenwood, Phil Selway. Meeting People Is Easy is a Grammy-nominated documentary following legendary British rock band Radiohead on their 104-concert world tour following the success of their 1997 album OK Computer. Unlike most music-focused documentaries, this film deals mostly with the downside of being on the road: director Grant Gee observes the band as they are booked into a long series of non-descript arenas, invited to perform on award shows where they clearly feel out of place, and repeatedly answer the same questions from an endless parade of journalists, with lead singer Thom Yorke often seeming to buckle under the strain. The film is an intimate exploration of the effects of super-stardom, and super-stress it entails.

Future of the Word

Bitter Lake. UK 2015, 136 min. Directed by Adam Curtis. Starring: George Walker Bush, George Bush, Joanne Herring. This documentary takes on a daunting challenge, making a two-hour dive into the troubling history of western relations with Afghanistan over the past 50 years. The film starts with the doomed dam projects of the 1950s that sought to remake southern Afghanistan in America’s image, then looks at ill-fated Soviet efforts to transform the country, and finally returns to castigate Washington’s second attempt at social and economic engineering. Drawing from the deep pool of the BBC archive footage, the film is a hypnotic collection of rare snippets from the war-torn country: A mesmering meditation on What Went Wrong in the country torn by war, violence, and in the long run – the attempts to restore peace. Public Talk with Adam Curtis and Andrey Loshak before the show (June, 2, 20:00 Strelka Institute).

Innocence of Memories. UK 2015, 97 min. Directed by Grant Gee. Starring: Pandora Colin, Mehmet Ergen. Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s Nobel laureate for Literature, opens a museum dedicated to a fictional doomed love story in 70’s Istanbul, illustrating the fictional with real, tangible artifacts: from 4,213 cigarette butts in a glass case to a collection of salt shakers. Director Grant Gee interlaces the story of this unique institution’s genesis with that of the romantic encounter that inspired it, a meditation on the city itself, and Pamuk’s relationship to all three. Documentary and archive footage, interviews with the writer, enactments of the doomed love adventures of the couple, a poetic look at the objects in the museum: all that takes the viewers on an elegant and dreamily sensous tour of memory, longing, love and loss. Public Talk with Grant Gee, Apollinaria Avrutina and Anna Narinskaya before the show (June 3, 20:00, Strelka Institute).

Requiem for the American Dream. USA 2015, 73 min. Directed by Peter D. Hutchinson, Kelly Nicks, Jared P. Scott. Starring: Noam Chomsky. The film is the definitive discourse with Noam Chomsky, renowned linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist, and the person widely regarded as the most important intellectual alive, on the concentration of wealth and power at the hands of the selected few. Profoundly personal and thought-provoking, the documentary has at heart interviews with Chomsky filmed over four years, and combines his meditation on 50 years of policies designed to favor the richest at the expense of the majority, as well as a look at his own life of political activism. However, most of all, this film is a must-see for those who maintain hope in the democracy, and a potent reminder that the power is ultimately in the hands of the governed.

Sport

Becoming Zlatan. Sweden 2015, 96 min. Directed by Fredrik Gertten, Magnus Gertten. Starring: Zlatan Ibrahimović, Leo Beenhakker, Hasse Borg, Fabio Capello.The decisive years of legendary soccer player Zlatan Ibrahimovic are told through rare archive footage in which a young Zlatan speaks openly about his life and challenges.The film closely follows the famous player, from his debut with the Malmö FF team in 1999 through his conflict-ridden years with Ajax Amsterdam, and up to his final breakthrough with Juventus in 2005. The soccer superstar is constantly under pressure: from teammates in Malmö who think he’s too egoistical and only plays for himself; from the tough managers at Ajax who send him to the bench, where he loses his self-confidence; and from his father, who tells the 18-year-old Zlatan: “You’re nothing. You’re nothing special until you’ve succeeded internationally.” A powerful coming-of-age portrait of this young, talented, and troubled player, as he jumps to stardom in the international football world.

Free to Run. Switzerland, France, Belgium 2016, 90 min. Directed by Pierre Morath. Starring: Bobbi Gibb, Kathrine Switzer, Noël Tamini. Only 50 years ago, distance running was a Puritan and elitist activity reserved for men. Those who went out running in nature in their free time were seen at best as eccentric and at worst as dangerous. But within the tumult of the 60s, the sport became an act of freedom and self-expression, gradually changing the face of the world. ‘Free to Run’ tells the amazing story of the running movement over the past 50 years, through first-hand accounts, as well as rich and rare historical footage. It is the story of the right to run, and an exciting exploration of the revolutionary social change that made that freedom possible.

Events

Vladivostok Vacation and the Great Russian Break. USA, Russia 2016, 72 min. Directed by Danny Drysdale & Ilya Lagutenko. Starring: Ilya Lagutenko, Yuri Loghechnick, Oleg Pungin, Evgeniy Zhvidenniy, Yuri Tsaler, Grigoriy Romanov. The documentary is about a legendary Russian-based band ‘Mumiy Troll’, whose latest US show took place at the key film, music and innovation showcase, SXSW festival in Austin, Texas. ‘SOS to Sailor’ is a ‘documentary extravaganza’, a rock-and-roll madness along the lines of ‘Help!’, but most of all, it’s about dreams, ocean, and music. Combining rare archival footage and amazing animation, the band’s frontman – and the documentary’s co-director and producer – Ilya has called it ‘a realistic setting for the fantasies every rock group has’. It all begins at the Russian far eastern Vladivostok sea port. The band’s frontman is dreaming about worldwide fame, but ditches his Grammy ambitions… for a sailor’s job on board of a ship. So the entire band embarks on a journey across the globe to discover the places ‘where people love rock’n’roll’.

Art

Heart of a Dog. USA, France 2015, 75 min. Directed by Laurie Anderson. Starring: Lollabelle, Archie, Jason Berg, Heung-Heung Chin. A dreamy documentary that first seems to be world-known artist Laurie Andreson’s lament over her death of her beloved rat terrier Lolabelle, a dog whose boho West Village existence included painting lessons and a meditation teacher. However, there is something deeper than that in the movie, with Anderson narrating over a collage of 8mm home video, iPhone footage, canine-level camera, and animation. When Lou Reed’s resonant “Turning Time Around” comes on the soundtrack, it becomes clear that telling the story of her cherished dog has been a way of mourning the loss of someone else than her pet. A magical meditation on love and death, as well as a celebration of life to enjoy while we’re still here.

Mapplethorpe: Look at the pictures. USA, Germany 2016, 108 min. Directed by Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato. Starring: Debbie Harry, Fran Lebowitz, Robert Mapplethorpe, Brooke Shields. The only thing more candid than legendary photographer Robert Mapplethorpe’s works was his life, pure obsession with magic of photography and of sex. The authors have unprecedented unlimited access to his archives and work, turning it into the most complete and profound documentary about the provocative and outstanding artist. Mapplethorpe is the narrator in the film, along with his family and collaborators: due to a few rediscovered interviews, he speaks about his life, loves, and works with shocking honesty. What we get is a portrait of an artist who contributed to making his medium, photography, valued and respected as a fine art. Even today, his Foundation gives generous gifts to most renowned museums to help them maintain photography collections.

The Season in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger. USA 2016, 90 min. Directed by : Tilda Swinton, Colin MacCabe, Christopher Roth, Bartek Dziadosz. Starring: John Berger, Yves Berger, Melina Berger, Vincent Berger. The documentary is the result of a five-year project by Tilda Swinton, Colin MacCabe, Christopher Roth, and Bartek Dziadosz, to produce a portrait of the intellectual and storyteller John Berger. It comprises four films about Berger, each shot by one of the directors. However, boundaries merge here, with creators crossing over and popping up in their collaborators’ films, with the whole project turning out to be a reverential, though most of the time informal, warm and affectionate, love letter to a father figure and a mentor that is the 80-year-old writer and artist John Berger.

Music

Junun. USA 2015, 54 min. Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. Starring: Jonny Greenwood, Ehtisham Khan Ajmeri, Gufran Ali, Shazib Ali. In this film, Oscar-nominated director Paul Thomas Anderson follows Radiohead guitarist – and his frequent soundtrack collaborator – Johny Greenwood to Rajasthan in northwest India. There, the legendary musician is set to record an album ‘Junun’ (translated as ‘madness of love’) with a host of international artists. Starting with a single title card briefly explaining Greenwood’s exotic musical journey, the film then turns into an amazing audiovisual experience: the interviews and contextual information are kept to a bare minimum, and we can’t but entirely submerge into the creation of music, and delve into the country in which the sounds are born. An amazing trip created by a masterful, melodious artistic collective.

The Shows of Shows. Iceland, UK 2015, 76 min. Directed by Benedikt Erlingsson. Starring: Sigur Ros. Welcome to the circus: Icelandic director Benedikt Erlingsson takes you on a spectacular journey across a century of circuses, carnivals, and vaudeville. UK’s National Fairground Archive was the essential source of archival footage for the feature, mixing Super-8 home movies, classic Edison films, amateur footage and any other kind of moving-picture material from the beginning of cinema through the 1960s. Although there is no narrative in one sense – the film is almost completely wordless – the story is there in the editing, and in the soundtrack, composed by Sigur Ros among others. Beauty queens, human cannonballs, knife throwers give way to animal acts like lionesses riding on horseback, and polar bears on seesaws. All this circus parade leaves us somewhat in discomfort, and wondering: aren’t we still attracted to the idea of a show we’ve never seen before? And why?

Oleg and the Rare Arts. Spain 2016, 70 min. Directed by Andres Duque. Starring: Oleg Karavaychuk. Oleg Karavaychuk is the living legend in Russia and beyond, and the mysterious and moving subject of this loving film by the Spanish director Andres Duque, the first ever foreigner to win the trust of the 88-year-old eccentric, and still very active, composer. In the film, the octogenerian is first seen in an opulent corridor of the Hermitage museum in Saint-Petersburg, delivering a trilling (and very Russian) rant, along the lines of ‘People have lost their soul!’ But it doesn’t take us long to see him play, showing the virtuoso and amazingly experimental piano skills, on none other instrument than the Czar Nicolas’s exquisitely gilded piano. A peek into the composer’s ethereal realm turning into a meditation on a Russian soul, ambigous, torn, and incredible at times.

Waiting for B. Brazil 2015, 71 min. Directed by Paulo Cesar Toledo, Abigail Spindel. Starring: Charles Angels, Bruno Brunet, Rick Caled. To wait two months in front of a stadium to get front row spots to a Beyoncé concert is something few fans can do (and would do). But if you are a Beyoncé fan in Sao Paulo, this is the only option, if you want to secure a good seat for the superstar’s spectacular show. Who are those people going for such lengths to see their Queen B? The Beyoncé phenomenon has given the city’s persecuted homosexuals both a voice and a place in the limelight: her show in the Brasilian megapolis quickly becomes a meeting place for youths who in all other walks of life encounter a wall of discrimination, but who can here finally revel in full bloom –and in full drag, if that’s what you’re into. ‘Waiting for B’ is a compelling portrait of an entire (fan) culture, but also a pretext to talk seriously and candidly about Brazilian society, discrimination and the consequences of poverty.

LEF. Ukraine 2016, 96 min. Directed by Dmitry Lavrinenko. Starring: Leonid Fyodorov. An amazing, deeply intimate collage about outstanding Russian musician Leonid Fedorov. Rare archival footage, profoundly personal stories: from the making of the first solo album at the freezing cold, unheated Leningrad Documentary Film Studio, and drinking vodka with his fans, to the death of Fedorov’s father. And above all this: the stern and dark Saint Petersburg’s water and fire, tracing a thorny way of an artist, his boldness to leave the comfort zone, his search for poetry of the soul.

We are X. UK, Japan, USA 2016, 93 min. Directed by Stephen Kijak. Starring: Yoshiki, Toshi, Pata. X Japan was formed by childhood friends, Yohiki and Toshi, who ignited a musical revolution in Japan during the late 80s, created a famous Japanese cultural rock phenomenon called ‘Visual-Kei’, and were the biggest Japanese superstars in history: 18 sold out nights at the Tokyo Dome venue hosting 55,000 spectators, over 30 million albums sold worldwide. But their success never translated to the West, and the group eventually broke up in 1997, leaving millions of devastated fans and the frontmen battling with their physical and spiritual demons. Twenty years afterwards, renowned director Stephen Kijak traces their super-stardom and dissolution up to the present day, as X Japan prepare for a long-awaited reunion at the Madison Square Garden. Tune in for the story of the most influential band in the world that you haven’t heard of… yet.

Schedule

May 29, Sunday
17:00 - Uncle Howard. The Documentary Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
17:00 - The Season in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger. Multimedia Art Museum, Ostozhenka, 16
19:00 - The Shows of Shows. Multimedia Art Museum, Ostozhenka, 16
19:00 - Waiting for B. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
19:30 - Heart of A Dog. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
20:00 - Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:00 - Fonko. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
22:00 - Meeting People Is Easy. Muzeon Park, Krymskii Val, 2

May 30, Monday
20:00 - When Earth Seems to Be Light . Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:00 - Mapplethorpe: Look at the pictures. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2

May 31,Tuesday
19:20 - Requiem for the American Dream. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:00 - The Season in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2

June 1, Wednesday
19:30 - Waiting for B. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
20:00 - Junun. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:05 - When Earth Seems to Be Light. Karo October 11,New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:30 - Free to Run. Pioner Open Air Sokolniki, Mitkovskiy pr-d, 10
22:00 - Scott Walker: 30 Century Man. Muzeon Park, Krymskii Val, 2

June 2, Thursday
20:00 - Free to Run. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
20:00 - LeF. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:00 - Hot Sugar's Cold World. The Documentary Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
22:00 - Bitter Lake. Strelka Institute, Bersenevskaya Embankment, 14, Bldg. 5A

June 3, Friday
19:00 - Ziggy Stardust and The Spiders From Mars. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
19:00 - We are X. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
19:30 - The Shows of Shows. Multimedia Art Museum, Ostozhenka, 16
21:00 - Janis: Little Girl Blue. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
21:00 - Fonko. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
22:00 - Innocence of Memories. Strelka Insitute, Bersenevskaya Embankment, 14, Bldg. 5A

June 4, Saturday
17:00 - LeF. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
17:30 - Requiem for the American Dream. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
19:00 - Heart of A Dog. Multimedia Art Museum, Ostozhenka, 16
19:00 - Innocence of Memories. Karo Ocrober 11, New Arbat Boulevard, 24
21:00 - Uncle Howard. The Documentary Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
22:00 - Meeting People Is Easy. Muzeon Park, Krymskii Val, 2

June 5, Sunday
17:00 - Oleg and The Rare Arts. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 24
17:00 - Free to Run. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
17:00 - We are X. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
18:00 - Vladivostok Vacation and the Great Russian Break. Karo October 11, New Arbat Avenue, 24
19:00 - Mapplethorpe: Look at the pictures. The Documental Film Center, Zubovsky Boulevard, 2
19:00 - Innocence of Memories. Karo Ocrober 11, New Arbat Boulevard, 24
22:00 - B-Movie: Lust and Sound in West Berlin. Muzeon Park, Krymskii Val, 2

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