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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140404
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140407
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140330T184824Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3726-1396573200-1396745999@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Cousin Jules / April 4 & 5
DESCRIPTION: THIS WEEKEND’S SCREENINGS\n  \n\nApril 4\nGrand Piano 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nCousin Jules 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 5\nCousin Jules 4:00 & 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts – Last Chance!\n\nGrand Piano 6:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 4:30 & 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\n April 6\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\nscroll down for additional screenings \nDominique Benicheti’s Cousin Jules enjoyed acclaim at festivals after its completion in 1973 but never got distribution\, even in its home country. (Benicheti’s refusal to let his film be screened in anything other than CinemaScope and stereo meant most art houses couldn’t accommodate it.) Nearly lost to the annals of cinema\, the film was rescued after the director’s 2011 death. Cousin Jules made its U.S. debut at the 2012 New York Film Festival\, almost 40 years after it was made. An almost wordless\, wholly observational account of the daily lives of the director’s cousin Jules and his wife Felice\, French farmers living alone in rural Burgandy. Cousin Jules is a time capsule; although it does not exactly burst with mainstream potential\, patient and observant moviegoers will be transported by this long-lost gem. (France; 1973\, 2013; 91 min) Playdates: March 21\, 22\, 23\, 28\, 29;  April 4\, 5\, 6\n \nThe Playlist:  A masterpiece…Cousin Jules has finally been found and is receiving its due.\nThe Hollywood Reporter:  For the patient viewer\, particularly one seeking respite from the modern world\, this day-in-a-life may be an almost spiritual experience.\n Time Out New York: For 91 minutes\, the pleasure of the Guiteauxes’ company is ours. We are ultimately the richer for it.\n  \nApril 2\nGrand Piano 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 4\nGrand Piano 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nCousin Jules 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 5\nCousin Jules 4:00 & 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts\nGrand Piano 6:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 4:30 & 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\n April 6\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 9\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ The Back Door\n April 11 & 12\nNo God No Master 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nGrand Piano 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 13\nNo God No Master 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 16\nNo God No Master 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 18 & 19\nRedwood Highway 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nNo God No Master 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nA Farewell to Fools 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nApril 20\nRedwood Highway 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 23\nRedwood Highway 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 25 and 26\nRedwood Highway 6:30 @ IU Woodburn\nAftermath 7:00 @ IU Fine Arts\nNo God No Master 8:15 @ IU Woodburn\n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/cousin-jules-march-28-29-30/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/3RFF_cousinjules.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140402
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140404
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140331T021306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3751-1396400400-1396486799@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Grand Piano / April 2
DESCRIPTION:April 2\nGrand Piano 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 4\nGrand Piano 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nCousin Jules 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 5\nCousin Jules 4:00 & 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts\nGrand Piano 6:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 4:30 & 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\n April 6\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\nScroll to the bottom for additional screenings. \nMarch 28 – April 12  The most talented pianist of his generation\, stopped performing in public because of his stage fright. Years after a catastrophic performance\, he reappears in public in a long-awaited concert in Chicago. In a packed theater\, in front of the expectant audience\, Tom finds a message written on the score: “Play one wrong note and you die.” Elijah Wood and Jon Cusack star. \n \nGrand Piano is directed by Eugenio Mira\, a Spanish filmmaker and composer. His previous thrillers\, The Birthday and Agnosia\, have received international acclaim. This is his first English-language film.\n \n \nApril 2\nGrand Piano 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 4\nGrand Piano 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nCousin Jules 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 5\nCousin Jules 4:00 & 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts\nGrand Piano 6:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 4:30 & 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\n April 6\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 9\nA Farewell to Fools 7:00 @ The Back Door\n April 11 & 12\nNo God No Master 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nA Farewell to Fools 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nGrand Piano 8:15 @ IU Fine Arts\n April 13\nNo God No Master 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 16\nNo God No Master 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 18 & 19\nRedwood Highway 6:45 @ IU Fine Arts\nNo God No Master 7:30 @ IU Woodburn\nA Farewell to Fools 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts\nApril 20\nRedwood Highway 7:00 @ Bear’s Place\n April 23\nRedwood Highway 7:00 @ The Back Door\nApril 25 and 26\nRedwood Highway 6:30 @ IU Woodburn\nAftermath 7:00 @ IU Fine Arts\nNo God No Master 8:15 @ IU Woodburn\n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/grand-piano-april-2/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Grand-Piano.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140322
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140325
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140318T001630Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3718-1395450000-1395622799@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:The Great Beauty / Final Screenings  Mar 23
DESCRIPTION:  \n“Sometimes\, movies need to move. Paolo Sorrentino’s cinema\, with its rapturous camera moves\, its bursts of music\, and its almost naïve belief that the screen can still evoke bold emotions\, is the antidote to the Cinema of Lack.”   —Bilge Ebiri\, Vulture \nA libertine writer in Rome turns 65 and looks back on his life. The Great Beauty has been named Best Foreign Language Film by both the Golden Globes and the 2014 Academy Awards and has been compared to Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita. “Critics’ Pick” – The New York Times  Written and directed by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy; 142 min) \nThe Great Beauty is supported by the Mary-Margaret Barr Koon Fund of the Department of French and Italian \nTHIS WEEK’S SCREENINGS\n\n \n \n  \n March 21  \nThe Great Beauty 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nCousin Jules 7:45 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \n March 22 \nThe Great Beauty 4:30 and 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nCousin Jules 5:15 and 7:45 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \n March 23 \nThe Great Beauty 3:30 @ IU Woodburn; 7:00 at Bear’s Place (Last Chance)\n \nCousin Jules 4:15 at Fine Arts
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/the-great-beauty-final-screenings-mar-21-22-23/
LOCATION:IU Woodburn Hall Theater\, - next to the Lilly Library - 1100 E 7th St\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47404
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/The-Great-Beauty_ver3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140319T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140319T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140227T220507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3666-1395255600-1395255600@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:The Great Beauty / Upcoming Screenings
DESCRIPTION:  \n“Sometimes\, movies need to move. Paolo Sorrentino’s cinema\, with its rapturous camera moves\, its bursts of music\, and its almost naïve belief that the screen can still evoke bold emotions\, is the antidote to the Cinema of Lack.”   —Bilge Ebiri\, Vulture \nA libertine writer in Rome turns 65 and looks back on his life. The Great Beauty has been named Best Foreign Language Film by both the Golden Globes and the 2014 Academy Awards and has been compared to Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita. “Critics’ Pick” – The New York Times  Written and directed by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy; 142 min) \nThe Great Beauty is supported by the Mary-Margaret Barr Koon Fund of the Department of French and Italian \nTHIS WEEK’S SCREENINGS\n\n \n \nMarch 19 \nThe Great Beauty 7:00 @ The Back Door \n March 21  \nThe Great Beauty 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nCousin Jules 7:45 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \n March 22 \nThe Great Beauty 4:30 and 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nCousin Jules 5:15 and 7:45 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \n March 23 \nThe Great Beauty 3:30 @ IU Woodburn; 7:00 at Bear’s Place (Last Chance)\n \nCousin Jules 4:15 at Fine Arts
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/the-great-beauty-2/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/The-Great-Beauty_ver3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140312
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140318
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140223T030300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3619-1394586000-1395017999@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Upcoming Screenings
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr Hublot\, voted Best Actor in an Animated Short in the 2014 Academy Awards \n  \nTHIS WEEK’S SCREENINGS\n\nMarch 12 \nOscar Short Film Festival: Animation  7:00 @ The Back Door\n \nMarch 14 \nThe Great Beauty 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nOscar Short Film Festival: Animation  6:30 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nOscar Short Film Festival: Live Action 8:30 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 15 and 16 \nThe Great Beauty 4:30 and 7:00 @ IU Woodburn \nOscar Short Film Festival: Animation 4:00 and 8:00 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nOscar Short Film Festival: Live Action 6:00 @ IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nOscar Short Film Festival: Documentary Program A*  4:45 @ IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nOscar Short Film Festival: Documentary Program B   6:30 @ IU Fine Arts Downstairs \n\n*The first film in Program A is “The Lady from Number 6.” \nIf you did not have a chance to catch all of the Oscar short film nominees\, all is not lost. You can still see them this weekend on campus.  Each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday and Sunday matinees.\n\n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 40 min)\n\nThe Animated program includes 8 films – the five nominees and three films that were short-listed for a nomination. Here are brief descriptions of the nominated films…\n \n“Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization. \n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” The Winner! (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 53 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” The Winner! (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\nThe documentaries are divided into two 90 minute programs. Program A features three films\, including this year’s winner\, “The Lady in Number 6\,”  and Program B features two films. One $5 ticket admits you into both documentary programs.\n \n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” The Winner! (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music. This was also the clear winner in our audience vote. Alice Herz Sommer passed away in late February at 110.\n\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-animation-9/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Mr-Hublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140302
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140304
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140226T211141Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3664-1393722000-1393808399@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Sunday Documentary Screenings
DESCRIPTION:pictured above: The Lady in Number 6\n \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees — 4:00\, Fine Arts — for the Animation program.\n At the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM or the Uptown Cafe.  \n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\nThe five documentary nominees run a combined 3 hours and are divided into two programs. One $5 ticket admits you into both programs. \n“The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n  \n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-documentary-program-a-4/
LOCATION:Bear’s Place  – All Ages during Ryder Films\, 1316 East 3rd Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Lady-In-Number-6-DVD.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140303
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140223T164121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3625-1393635600-1393721999@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Saturday Screenings
DESCRIPTION:pictured above That Wasn’t Me\, nominated for Best Live Action Short\n \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 4.20 at Fine Arts Downstairs; 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30 \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees — 4:00\, Fine Arts — for the Animation program. \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-live-action-5/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/noerame.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140226T192000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140226T192000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140225T025711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3604-1393442400-1393442400@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Live Action
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Helium \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\n\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 at Fine Arts Downstairs;  7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-live-action-7/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/noerame.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T181321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3591-1393183800-1393183800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Shorts - Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr Hublot \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Tickets can be purchased in advance at the BCT box office or online. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets on the day of show would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. The Animation program\, by the way\, is appropriate for children. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 40 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 53 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\nThe documentaries are divided into two 90 minute programs. Program A features two films and Program B the other three. One $5 ticket admits you into both documentary programs. \n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-animation-7/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Mr-Hublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T193000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T175056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3584-1393183800-1393183800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Documentary (Program B)
DESCRIPTION:pictured above: Karama Has No Walls \n \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie. Eight of you will also win Dinner for Two at Farm or at the Uptown Cafe. \n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (90 min)\n\nThe five documentary nominees run a combined 3 hours and are divided into two 90 minute  programs. One $5 ticket admits you into both programs. \n“The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (90 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 22 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-documentary-program-b-2/
LOCATION:Bear’s Place  – All Ages during Ryder Films\, 1316 East 3rd Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/karamahasnowalls.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T170000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140212T223056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3561-1393174800-1393174800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Live Action
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me) \nFeb 14 – March 2 (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\n \nAT THE BUSKIRK-CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Tickets can be purchased in advance at the BCT box office or online. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets on the day of show would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. The Animation program\, by the way\, is appropriate for children. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nSunday\, Feb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nSunday\, Feb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-live-action-6/
LOCATION:Buskirk-Chumley Theater\, 104 East Kirkwood Ave\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/noerame.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140223T143000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140212T214729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3555-1393165800-1393165800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Shorts - Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Room on the Broom \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets on the day of show would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. The Animation program\, by the way\, is appropriate for children. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 40 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES (1 hr\, 53 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\nThe documentaries are divided into two 90 minute programs. Program A features two films and Program B the other three. One $5 ticket admits you into both documentary programs. \n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-animation-5/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/uktv-room-on-the-broom-8.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T183344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3598-1393095600-1393095600@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr. Hublot \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show.\n\nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\nThe documentaries are divided into two 90 minute programs. Program A features two films and Program B the other three. One $5 ticket admits you into both documentary programs. \n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-animation-2/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Mr-Hublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T183000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140212T215641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3558-1393093800-1393093800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Documentary (Program A)
DESCRIPTION:pictured above: The Lady in Number 6\n \n\nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees — 4:00\, Fine Arts — for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nThe programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – it’s definitely kid-friendly. The Live-Action and Documentary programs would probably be rated R.  \n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\nThe five documentary nominees run a combined 3 hours and are divided into two programs. One $5 ticket admits you into both programs. \n“The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-documentary-program-a-2/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Lady-In-Number-6-DVD.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T162000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T162000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140217T174736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3600-1393086000-1393086000@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Live Action
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Helium \nFeb 14 – March 2 (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\n \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\n\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 at Fine Arts Downstairs;  7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-live-action-2/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/HELIUM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140222T160000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140212T215250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3557-1393084800-1393084800@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr. Hublot \nFeb 14 – March 2 (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\n \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show.\n\nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\nThe documentaries are divided into two 90 minute programs. Program A features two films and Program B the other three. One $5 ticket admits you into both documentary programs. \n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts;  7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-animation-6/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/mrhublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T210000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T210000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T180252Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3587-1393016400-1393016400@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Documentary (Program B)
DESCRIPTION:pictured above: Karama Has No Walls \n \nFeb 14 – March 3  (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\n \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie. Eight of you will also win Dinner for Two at Farm or at the Uptown Cafe. \n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (90 min)\n\nThe five documentary nominees run a combined 3 hours and are divided into two 90 minute  programs. One $5 ticket admits you into both programs. \n“The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (90 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 22 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-documentary-program-b-3/
LOCATION:IU Woodburn Hall Theater\, - next to the Lilly Library - 1100 E 7th St\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47404
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/karamahasnowalls.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T184500
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T184500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140207T010717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165007Z
UID:3531-1393008300-1393008300@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Live Action
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me) \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\n\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-live-action-2/
LOCATION:IU Woodburn Hall Theater\, - next to the Lilly Library - 1100 E 7th St\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47404
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/noerame.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140221T183000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T175338Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3585-1393007400-1393007400@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr. Hublot \nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show.\n\nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n\n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 at Fine Arts Downstairs;  7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-animation/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/mrhublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140219T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140219T204500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140207T015745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3536-1392836400-1392842700@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Animation
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Mr. Hublot \nFeb 14- March 2 (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show.\n\nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here… http://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n\n\nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder film and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at FARM. \n \nANIMATED SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n\nLIVE ACTION SHORT FILM NOMINEES\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will see a familiar face.\n\n DOCUMENTARY SHORT NOMINEES\n “Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 22 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-animation-4/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/mrhublot.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140216T194500
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140216T194500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T182506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3596-1392579900-1392579900@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Live Action
DESCRIPTION:pictured above Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me) \n\nScreenings This Weekend: \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30\n \nScroll to the bottom for screenings through March 2 \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\n\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nThe programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – it’s definitely kid-friendly. The Live-Action and Documentary programs would probably be rated R.  \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie and be entered into a contest for Dinner for Two at Farm or the Uptown Cafe. \nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (95 min)\n\n “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (85 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 4:20 Downstairs at Fine Arts; 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nSunday\, Feb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nSunday\, Feb 23 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-short-film-festival-live-action/
LOCATION:Bear’s Place  – All Ages during Ryder Films\, 1316 East 3rd Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/noerame.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140216T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140216T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140216T020641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3577-1392577200-1392577200@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:The Dialogue (One Night Only!)
DESCRIPTION:A film by Wang Wo\, The Dialogue documents the attempt by a group of Chinese intellectuals to circumvent the restrictive measures in place in China that prevent Chinese citizens from having free contact with the Dalai Lama\, Tibet’s exiled leader. Using internet technologies they take the first step in establishing such a dialogue.\n This film delves into the hostile fissures that separate nationalities within the modern People’s Republic of China. Most poignantly it includes footage of Uyghur scholar and human rights advocate Ilham Tohti discussing that divide. Appointed a visiting scholar at Indiana University in 2013\, Ilham was seized at the Bejing airport before departure and forbidden to leave China. He was subjected to periods of house arrest and harassment until his re-arrest on January 15\, 2014. He is accused of separatism and support for terrorism. The charges and ensuing trial are meant to silence him\, making his appearance in The Dialogue that much more significant and wrenching.\nElliot Sperling will introduce the film and conduct a Q & A afterwards.\n\n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/the-dialogue-one-night-only/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140215T194500
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140215T211500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140209T215922Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3545-1392493500-1392498900@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Oscar Short Film Festival / Documentary (Program B)
DESCRIPTION:pictured above: Karama Has No Walls \n \nFeb 14 – March 2  (scroll to the bottom for a full schedule)\n \nShort films\, like short stories\, are often overlooked. The best short subjects have all of the power\, scope and resonance of a feature-length film. We are screening the best of the best: 3 programs (one devoted to animation\, one to live-action and the third to documentaries) featuring all 15 Oscar nominees. This is your chance to see the films before the Awards show. \n \nEach program will be shown on campus at Fine Arts\, Woodburn Hall\, as well as at Bear’s Place and the Back Door.  At these venues\, each program is $5 but for $10 you can buy an Oscar Pass admitting you to all  three programs (on different nights\, on different weekends). The programs are not rated by if they were\, the Animation program would be rated PG – one of the animated films is a bit dark\, but certainly no darker than the average superhero movie.  It’s kid-friendly for most kids. And there are Saturday matinees for the Animation program.\nAT THE BUSKIRK CHUMLEY THEATER\nOn Sunday\, February 23rd the Live Action and Animation programs will be screened at the Buskirk Chumley Theater but with a different ticketing structure.  Tickets can be purchased at the BCT box office or online in advance. One program would be $7\, an Oscar Pass for both would be $10. Tickets at the door would be $8.50 and $12.50 respectively. You can purchase tickets in advance here . . . \nhttp://www.bctboxoffice.com/\n \nAt the screenings you can vote for your favorite film (or the film that you think will win the Oscar) – pick the winning film and  you will win a complimentary ticket to another Ryder movie. Eight of you will also win Dinner for Two at Farm or at the Uptown Cafe. \n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM A (90 min)\n\nThe five documentary nominees run a combined 3 hours and are divided into two 90 minute  programs. One $5 ticket admits you into both programs. \n“The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” (Directors:  Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed). Synopsis: At 109\, Alice Herz Sommer is the world’s oldest pianist…and its oldest Holocaust survivor. At the heart of her remarkable story of courage and endurance is her passion for music.\n “Karama Has No Walls” (Director: Sara Ishaq). Synopsis: When protesters in Yemen added their voices to those of other nations during the Arab Spring\, the government responded with an attack that left 53 people dead and inspired widespread sympathy throughout the country.\n “Facing Fear” (Director: Jason Cohen). Synopsis: As a gay 13-year-old\, Matthew Boger endured a savage beating at the hands of a group of neo-Nazis. Twenty-five years later\, he meets one of them again by chance.\n\n DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM B (90 min)\n“Cavedigger” (Director Jeffrey Karoff). Synopsis: New Mexico environmental sculptor Ra Paulette carves elaborately designed and painstakingly executed sandstone caves\, driven by an artistic vision that often brings him into conflict with his patrons.\n “Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall” (Director: Edgar Barens).  Synopsis: In a maximum security prison\, the terminally ill Jack Hall faces his final days with the assistance of hospice care provided by workers drawn from the prison population.\n\nLIVE ACTION PROGRAM (113 min)\n\n“Aquel No Era Yo (That Wasn’t Me)” (Director: Esteban Crespo). Synopsis: Paula\, a Spanish aid worker\, has an encounter with an African child soldier named Kaney.\n “Avant Que De Tout Perdre (Just before Losing Everything)” (Directors: Xavier Legrand and Alexandre Gavras). Synopsis: Miriam has left her abusive husband and taken refuge with her children in the local supermarket where she works.\n “Helium” (Directors Anders Walter and Kim Magnusson). Synopsis: A dying boy finds comfort in the tales of a magical land called HELIUM\, told to him by the hospital janitor.\n “Pitääkö Mun Kaikki Hoitaa? (Do I Have to Take Care of Everything?)” (Directors: Selma Vilhunen and Kirsikka Saari). Synopsis: Sini tries frantically to get her family ready to leave for a wedding\, but her husband and two children are interfering with her efforts.\n “The Voorman Problem” (Directors: Mark Gill and Baldwin Li). Synopsis: A psychiatrist is called to a prison to examine an inmate named Voorman\, who is convinced he is a god. Fans of Sherlock on PBS will recognize a familiar face.\n\n\nANIMATED PROGRAM (102 min)\n\n “Feral” (Directors Daniel Sousa and Dan Golden). Synopsis: A wild boy who has grown up in the woods is found by a hunter and returned to civilization.\n “Get a Horse!” (Directors: Lauren MacMullan and Dorothy McKim). Synopsis: Mickey Mouse and his friends are enjoying a wagon ride until Peg-Leg Pete shows up with plans to ruin their day.\n “Mr. Hublot” (Directors: Laurent Witz and Alexandre Espigares). Synopsis: The eccentric\, isolated Mr. Hublot finds his carefully ordered world disrupted by the arrival of Robot Pet.\n “Possessions” (Director: Shuhei Morita).  Synopsis: A man seeking shelter from a storm in a dilapidated shrine encounters a series of household objects inhabited by goblin spirits.\n “Room on the Broom” (Directors: Max Lang and Jan Lachauer). Synopsis: A genial witch and her cat are joined on their broom by several friends as they set off on an adventure.\n\n  \nOscar Shorts Schedule\nFeb 14 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\nFeb 15 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:00  Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary (Program B) 7:45  IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 16 at Bear’s Place\n Animation 5:30\n Live Action 7:45 \nFeb 19 at the Back Door\n Animation 7:00 \nFeb 21 on Campus\n Animation 6:30 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 6:45 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (A) 8:30 IU Fine Arts Up\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Woodburn Hall \nFeb 22 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 and 7:00  IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30  Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 IU Fine Arts Downstairs\n Documentary ( Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nFeb 23 at the Buskirk Chumley Theater\n Animation 2:30 & 7:30\n Live Action 5:00 \nFeb 22 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A 5:30\n Documentary Program B 7:30 \nFeb 26 at the Back Door\n Live Action 7:00 \nFeb 28 on Campus\n Animation 7:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs\n Live Action 7:30 IU Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (B) 9:00 IU Fine Arts Upstairs \nMarch 1 on Campus\n Animation 4:00 & 7:00 Fine Arts Upstairs\n Documentary (Program A) 6:30 Fine Arts Downstairs\n Live Action 7:30 Woodburn Hall\n Documentary (Program B) 8:15 IU Fine Arts Downstairs \nMarch 2 at Bear’s Place\n Documentary Program A  5:30\n Documentary Program B  7:30
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/oscar-shorts-documentary-program-b/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/karamahasnowalls.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140212T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140212T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140121T211137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3491-1392231600-1392231600@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Free the Mind
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 and 12 \nWhat is consciousness\, really? How does it manifest in the brain and body? And is it possible to physically change the brain solely through mental practices? By studying the practices of Tibetan monks and other meditative techniques\, Richard J. Davidson found that it is actually possible to rewire the brain through meditation and mental training exercises\, and he has dedicated himself to applying this discovery to improve the lives of people throughout the world. Dr. Davidson\, who was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in 2006\, did just that\, and the results of his studies at Madison\, Wisconsin’s Center for Investigating Healthy Minds are portrayed in this fascinating new doc. \nDr. Davidson recently has been working with young children dealing with ADHD and anxiety in school settings\, as well as American war veterans struggling with PTSD\, in an attempt to discover whether mind-focused techniques\, such as meditation and yoga\, can ease their pain\, relax their nervous systems\, improve their attention and help them become happier and more peaceful.\nCan Professor Richard Davidson make a difference? Can he free these people from their troubled existences and help them lead ordinary lives? Free the Mind follows three test subjects – one school-aged boy and two veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – on a daring journey into the deepest recesses of the human mind. (80 minutes)\n“Grips your heart from the first moment …a great and beautiful film. Visually Brilliant.”  — Film Comment\n“Artistically crafted. Riveting. Engrossing.” – Filmmaker Magazine\n“My main interest is promoting ethics without touching religion. Ethics are universal values. We must find a way to promote the basic human values in a secular way without touching religion. In order to do this\, the scientific findings are very\, very convincing and Richard’s work is very helpful in this field. Sometimes I call him guru of science! – His Holiness the Dalai Lama
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/free-the-mind-4/
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Free-the-Mind_5.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140209T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140209T214500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140122T214406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3504-1391974200-1391982300@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:A Pervert's Guide to Ideology
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 \nThe author of works on subjects as wide-ranging as Alfred Hitchcock\, 9/11\, opera\, Christianity\, Lenin and David Lynch\, Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek is one of the most important—and outrageous—cultural theorists working today. A Pervert’s Guide to Ideology is a wildly entertaining romp through the crossroads of cinema and philosophy. With infectious zeal and a voracious appetite for popular culture\, Zizek literally goes inside some truly epochal movies\, all the better to explore and expose how they reinforce prevailing ideologies. As the ideology that undergirds our cinematic fantasies is revealed\, striking associations emerge: What hidden Catholic teachings lurk at the heart of The Sound of Music? What are the fascist political dimensions of Jaws? Taxi Driver\, Zabriskie Point\, The Searchers\, The Dark Knight\, John Carpenter’s They Live (“one of the forgotten masterpieces of the Hollywood Left”)\, Titanic\, Kinder Eggs\, verite news footage\, Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” and propaganda epics from Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia all inform Zizek’s stimulating\, provocative and often hilarious psychoanalytic-cinematic rant. \nDirected by Sophie Fiennes\, who worked with Peter Greenaway on several of his seminal films including The Cook\, The Thief\, His Wife and her lover. And yes\, she is part of that Fiennes family. (136 min)\n \nEssential viewing for cinephiles. -Time Out\, London\n \nThe philosopher Slavoj Zizek is not allergic to the sound of his own heavily-accented voice. Fortunately\, he’s a bravura lecturer with a keen sense of what draws audiences to movies.  Film schools could use this guy\, yet it probably won’t get more than a fraction of the art-house and festival crowd. “The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology” walks through cinematic history to link mythic movies to the needs that Zizek says they satisfy– a two-hour one-man punchline that teaches you something. Heaps of psychoanalytic theory are delivered in a Bela Lugosi voice in locations that replicate those in the films under discussion\, with the poker-faced Slovenian-born narrator costumed for everything from “Taxi Driver” to “The Searchers.”– Indiewire  \nIt’s EXHILARATING STUFF. Fiennes lightens the weight of Zizek’s discourse with a welcome scattering of sight gags. He’s a man to be taken seriously\, but not averse to donning a nun’s habit — and for that we love him. – Time Out New York  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/a-perverts-guide-to-ideology-7/
LOCATION:Bear’s Place  – All Ages during Ryder Films\, 1316 East 3rd Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Perverts_banner_regular1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140209T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140209T173000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140121T210908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3490-1391967000-1391967000@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Free the Mind
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 and 12 \nWhat is consciousness\, really? How does it manifest in the brain and body? And is it possible to physically change the brain solely through mental practices? By studying the practices of Tibetan monks and other meditative techniques\, Richard J. Davidson found that it is actually possible to rewire the brain through meditation and mental training exercises\, and he has dedicated himself to applying this discovery to improve the lives of people throughout the world. Dr. Davidson\, who was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in 2006\, did just that\, and the results of his studies at Madison\, Wisconsin’s Center for Investigating Healthy Minds are portrayed in this fascinating new doc. \nDr. Davidson recently has been working with young children dealing with ADHD and anxiety in school settings\, as well as American war veterans struggling with PTSD\, in an attempt to discover whether mind-focused techniques\, such as meditation and yoga\, can ease their pain\, relax their nervous systems\, improve their attention and help them become happier and more peaceful.\nCan Professor Richard Davidson make a difference? Can he free these people from their troubled existences and help them lead ordinary lives? Free the Mind follows three test subjects – one school-aged boy and two veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – on a daring journey into the deepest recesses of the human mind. (80 minutes)\n“Grips your heart from the first moment …a great and beautiful film. Visually Brilliant.”  — Film Comment\n“Artistically crafted. Riveting. Engrossing.” – Filmmaker Magazine\n“My main interest is promoting ethics without touching religion. Ethics are universal values. We must find a way to promote the basic human values in a secular way without touching religion. In order to do this\, the scientific findings are very\, very convincing and Richard’s work is very helpful in this field. Sometimes I call him guru of science! – His Holiness the Dalai Lama
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/free-the-mind-3/
LOCATION:Bear’s Place  – All Ages during Ryder Films\, 1316 East 3rd Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Free-the-Mind_5.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140208T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140208T221500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140122T214204Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3503-1391889600-1391897700@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:A Pervert's Guide to Ideology
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 \nThe author of works on subjects as wide-ranging as Alfred Hitchcock\, 9/11\, opera\, Christianity\, Lenin and David Lynch\, Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek is one of the most important—and outrageous—cultural theorists working today. A Pervert’s Guide to Ideology is a wildly entertaining romp through the crossroads of cinema and philosophy. With infectious zeal and a voracious appetite for popular culture\, Zizek literally goes inside some truly epochal movies\, all the better to explore and expose how they reinforce prevailing ideologies. As the ideology that undergirds our cinematic fantasies is revealed\, striking associations emerge: What hidden Catholic teachings lurk at the heart of The Sound of Music? What are the fascist political dimensions of Jaws? Taxi Driver\, Zabriskie Point\, The Searchers\, The Dark Knight\, John Carpenter’s They Live (“one of the forgotten masterpieces of the Hollywood Left”)\, Titanic\, Kinder Eggs\, verite news footage\, Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” and propaganda epics from Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia all inform Zizek’s stimulating\, provocative and often hilarious psychoanalytic-cinematic rant. \nDirected by Sophie Fiennes\, who worked with Peter Greenaway on several of his seminal films including The Cook\, The Thief\, His Wife and her lover. And yes\, she is part of that Fiennes family. (136 min)\n \nEssential viewing for cinephiles. -Time Out\, London\n \nThe philosopher Slavoj Zizek is not allergic to the sound of his own heavily-accented voice. Fortunately\, he’s a bravura lecturer with a keen sense of what draws audiences to movies.  Film schools could use this guy\, yet it probably won’t get more than a fraction of the art-house and festival crowd. “The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology” walks through cinematic history to link mythic movies to the needs that Zizek says they satisfy– a two-hour one-man punchline that teaches you something. Heaps of psychoanalytic theory are delivered in a Bela Lugosi voice in locations that replicate those in the films under discussion\, with the poker-faced Slovenian-born narrator costumed for everything from “Taxi Driver” to “The Searchers.”– Indiewire  \nIt’s EXHILARATING STUFF. Fiennes lightens the weight of Zizek’s discourse with a welcome scattering of sight gags. He’s a man to be taken seriously\, but not averse to donning a nun’s habit — and for that we love him. – Time Out New York   \nTonight’s screening is at Woodburn Hall\, perhaps our most intimate screening room. And its easy to get to. If you are walking on 7th Street towards the IU Auditorium\, Woodburn is on your right just before you reach Showalter Fountain. Enter through the first set of doors that you see (on the west side of the building). You’ll see us on the first floor immediately on your right. \n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/a-perverts-guide-to-ideology-6/
LOCATION:IU Woodburn Hall Theater\, - next to the Lilly Library - 1100 E 7th St\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47404
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Perverts_banner_regular1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140208T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140208T190000
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140121T210717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3489-1391886000-1391886000@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Free the Mind
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 and 12 \nWhat is consciousness\, really? How does it manifest in the brain and body? And is it possible to physically change the brain solely through mental practices? By studying the practices of Tibetan monks and other meditative techniques\, Richard J. Davidson found that it is actually possible to rewire the brain through meditation and mental training exercises\, and he has dedicated himself to applying this discovery to improve the lives of people throughout the world. Dr. Davidson\, who was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in 2006\, did just that\, and the results of his studies at Madison\, Wisconsin’s Center for Investigating Healthy Minds are portrayed in this fascinating new doc. \nDr. Davidson recently has been working with young children dealing with ADHD and anxiety in school settings\, as well as American war veterans struggling with PTSD\, in an attempt to discover whether mind-focused techniques\, such as meditation and yoga\, can ease their pain\, relax their nervous systems\, improve their attention and help them become happier and more peaceful.\nCan Professor Richard Davidson make a difference? Can he free these people from their troubled existences and help them lead ordinary lives? Free the Mind follows three test subjects – one school-aged boy and two veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – on a daring journey into the deepest recesses of the human mind.\n“Grips your heart from the first moment …a great and beautiful film. Visually Brilliant.”  — Film Comment\n“Artistically crafted. Riveting. Engrossing.” – Filmmaker Magazine\n“My main interest is promoting ethics without touching religion. Ethics are universal values. We must find a way to promote the basic human values in a secular way without touching religion. In order to do this\, the scientific findings are very\, very convincing and Richard’s work is very helpful in this field. Sometimes I call him guru of science! – His Holiness the Dalai Lama
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/free-the-mind-2/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Free-the-Mind_5.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140207T210000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140207T224500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140122T212954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3493-1391806800-1391813100@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:Bettie Page Reveals All
DESCRIPTION:(Jan 24\, 25\, 26\, 29\, 31\, Feb 1\, 7\, 8) In 2013\, in the Western world\, at least\, it’s not such a big deal to own your sexuality. In the 1950s\, when Bettie Page’s career was flowering — and before she mysteriously walked away from that career in 1957 — owning your sexuality could get you arrested. Today\, Bettie Page is often referred to as a “cult” icon but that term does not do justice to her enduring legacy; in 2012 she was ranked by Forbes as one of the top ten posthumous celebrity earners – who knew?  In Mori’s alluring documentary\, the real Bettie Page emerges from the veil of myth and rumor via audio interviews taped a decade prior to her death in 2008.  With earthy\, razor sharp wit\, Bettie tells her life story — from humble beginnings as one of six children in an impoverished southern family\, to high school salutatorian\, to scandalous 50s pin-up model\, to sudden retirement in 1957 at the peak of her modeling career.   \nWith a stunning array of gorgeous photographs\, unusual archival material\, and playful movie footage\, BETTIE PAGE REVEALS ALL shows how Bettie’s unabashed sexual expression and provocative poses set the stage for the sexual revolution and ushered in a modern era in fashion.  For stars like Katy Perry and Beyonce\, as well as new generations of adoring fans around the world\, Bettie remains an irresistible style icon and an empowering role model. (101 min) \n Mark Mori’s coup was to get Bettie’s voice on audiotape not long before she died. In a throaty smoker’s growl that’s enchantingly at odds with the flirty-ingenue image she projected in her prime\, Page comes across as worldly\, direct\, and both amused and appreciative at having been anointed a heroine of the women’s movement. –NPR
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/bettie-page-reveals-all-9/
LOCATION:IU Fine Arts Theater – north side of Showalter Fountain\, 1201 E 7th Street\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47405\, United States
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/bettie-page-reveals-all1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder Film Series":MAILTO:editor(at)theryder.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140207T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20140207T221500
DTSTAMP:20260406T065046
CREATED:20140122T213936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200407T165008Z
UID:3502-1391803200-1391811300@www.theryder.com
SUMMARY:A Pervert's Guide to Ideology
DESCRIPTION:Feb 7\, 8\, 9 \nThe author of works on subjects as wide-ranging as Alfred Hitchcock\, 9/11\, opera\, Christianity\, Lenin and David Lynch\, Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek is one of the most important—and outrageous—cultural theorists working today. A Pervert’s Guide to Ideology is a wildly entertaining romp through the crossroads of cinema and philosophy. With infectious zeal and a voracious appetite for popular culture\, Zizek literally goes inside some truly epochal movies\, all the better to explore and expose how they reinforce prevailing ideologies. As the ideology that undergirds our cinematic fantasies is revealed\, striking associations emerge: What hidden Catholic teachings lurk at the heart of The Sound of Music? What are the fascist political dimensions of Jaws? Taxi Driver\, Zabriskie Point\, The Searchers\, The Dark Knight\, John Carpenter’s They Live (“one of the forgotten masterpieces of the Hollywood Left”)\, Titanic\, Kinder Eggs\, verite news footage\, Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” and propaganda epics from Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia all inform Zizek’s stimulating\, provocative and often hilarious psychoanalytic-cinematic rant. \nDirected by Sophie Fiennes\, who worked with Peter Greenaway on several of his seminal films including The Cook\, The Thief\, His Wife and her lover. And yes\, she is part of that Fiennes family. (136 min)\n \nEssential viewing for cinephiles. -Time Out\, London\n \nThe philosopher Slavoj Zizek is not allergic to the sound of his own heavily-accented voice. Fortunately\, he’s a bravura lecturer with a keen sense of what draws audiences to movies.  Film schools could use this guy\, yet it probably won’t get more than a fraction of the art-house and festival crowd. “The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology” walks through cinematic history to link mythic movies to the needs that Zizek says they satisfy– a two-hour one-man punchline that teaches you something. Heaps of psychoanalytic theory are delivered in a Bela Lugosi voice in locations that replicate those in the films under discussion\, with the poker-faced Slovenian-born narrator costumed for everything from “Taxi Driver” to “The Searchers.”– Indiewire  \nIt’s EXHILARATING STUFF. Fiennes lightens the weight of Zizek’s discourse with a welcome scattering of sight gags. He’s a man to be taken seriously\, but not averse to donning a nun’s habit — and for that we love him. – Time Out New York   \nTonight’s screening is at Woodburn Hall\, perhaps our most intimate screening room. And its easy to get to. If you are walking on 7th Street towards the IU Auditorium\, Woodburn is on your right just before you reach Showalter Fountain. Enter through the first set of doors that you see (on the west side of the building). You’ll see us on the first floor immediately on your right. \n 
URL:https://www.theryder.com/film/a-perverts-guide-to-ideology-5/
LOCATION:IU Woodburn Hall Theater\, - next to the Lilly Library - 1100 E 7th St\, Bloomington\, IN\, 47404
CATEGORIES:Film Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theryder.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Perverts_banner_regular1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Ryder ":MAILTO:editor@theryder.com
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR