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Alternative
film scene has great presence in Bloomington
By Jeffrey
Brandt
(Jeffrey's bio)
With a freshly pressed
juice in her hand, Madeline Leung sits on the hard wooden benches outside
the Laughing Planet Café. She loves perfect nights like this. Sitting
outside at night, in the warm weather…watching a movie.
The sound quality
isn’t the best, and the cars driving by can be a bother. But for
Leung, and others, it’s worth it to put up with all of these things
for a night of rest and relaxation with a good independent flick.
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Photo
by Jeffery Brandt |
| Madeline
Leung enjoys independent films. She wants to see a independent film
festival come to Bloomington. |
Dark rooms, uncomfortable
seats, and less-than-perfect film projection may not seem too inviting.
But on almost any given night there are rooms all across Bloomington filled
with independent film buffs. They watch the unusual, bizarre, different,
and familiar films of the past. They know that there are other films to
be found, not just the popular films playing at the commercial movie theater.
“Kerasotes isn’t
the only place to see a great film playing,” said Lauren Weinberg,
an IU junior. Foreign films, new artistic releases, Blaxploitation films,
old Hollywood, and even independent films by IU students can bee seen
in several places throughout town.
Often times students
and Bloomington residents who like independent films don’t know
where to find them, especially if they are new to Bloomington. Leung is
an IU junior who has been watching independent films since her senior
year of high school in Detroit.
Leung said that there
are many different independent movie venues available in Detroit. When
she came to IU, she wasn’t sure if she would be able to find the
movies she really likes. To her surprise she found out early that Bloomington
has many opportunities to see an independent film.
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Films
bring community and students together
The first film Leung
watched in Bloomington was in the fall of her freshman year. It was Nude
Girls Unite, a film about women in the sex industry unionizing. Since then she has
been a regular at the many film venues in Bloomington.
She often attends
the Ryder Film Series in the Fine Arts Building and at the Laughing Planet.
The Ryder shows films at the Fine Arts Building, Bear’s, and during the summer
at Bryan Park and at the Laughing Planet.
Leung doesn’t
limit herself to only the Ryder. She also attends the East Asian Cultural
film series, and other films sponsored by the different academic departments
on campus.
She finds that Bloomington
is a melting pot for the independent and alternative film scene. “Bloomington
is a great example for independent films,” said Leung. “A
lot of times when I go to independent films there are community members
there, not just students,” said Leung. “The town is accommodating
to students.”
Leung would love to
see an independent film festival come to Bloomington. She feels that it
would fare well with the community and with students. She also feels that
an independent movie theater would do well in Bloomington. “It’s
a shame the Von Lee Theater closed,” said Leung. “I can see
it being a flourishing business…it would be a shame to leave it
as it is now.”
Leung still likes
to visit familiar independent film venues in Detroit whenever she goes
home. “The Detroit Institute of Art shows foreign films…Royal
Oak shows independent films,” says Leung. But the independent film
scene in Bloomington has become a part of her life now.
Leung is only one
of many members in Bloomington who drive the arts. A study commissioned
by the American for the Arts organization found that nonprofit arts organizations
and audiences in Bloomington generate $44.5 million in economic activity.
This proves that even nonprofit art groups are significant parts of the
Bloomington business life.
The study found that
for its population group, Bloomington ranks above Boulder, Lawrence and
Springfield, Ohio. However, it ranks below Santa Fe, Asheville, N.C.,
and Niagara Falls, N.Y.
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Bringing
an alternative film venue to Bloomington
Peter Lopilato is
the editor of The Ryder. The Ryder hosts most of the independent films shown in Bloomington. It sponsors
the films at the Fine Arts Building, Bear’s, The Laughing Planet
Café, and co-sponsors the Bryan Park films with the Bloomington
Parks and Recreation department.
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Logo
courtesy of Bear's Web site |
Bear's
is more than just a bar. Bear's is one of the handful of Bloomington
venues that host showings of independent films. |
Lopilato has been
a driving force in the Bloomington art economy since he started The
Ryder in 1979. Although he may have
never written, directed or produced his own film, he knows a good independent
when he sees one.
He became interested
in independent films in the early '80s. One of his favorite early independents
is Sex, Lies, and Videotape, a
film he has shown at the Ryder films. He showed the early independent
movies when the commercial theaters didn’t. He has been a fan of
independent films from the beginning. He said that the popularity of independent
films usually goes in two- or three-year cycles. “The last 18 months
have been a good stretch, but I can’t say if it will be permanent,”
he said.
Lopilato has seen
numerous alternative film venues close and open throughout his time in
Bloomington. He has seen the closing of the Von Lee theatre, as well as
the closing and reopening of the Buskirk-Chumley Theatre (BCT).
The BCT was donated
to the Bloomington Area Arts Council in 1995, after being owned and closed
by the Kerasotes theater chain. Kerasotes insisted in the donation agreement
that the BCT not show any films so business at other Bloomington Kerasotes
theaters wouldn’t suffer.
Managers of the BCT
and the Kerasotes theater chain recently reached an agreement that the
BCT may show theatrical films that have been released for at least a year.
The agreement was
reached so that the BCT could earn some extra revenue and help alleviate
some of the debts the theater currently has without harming the profits
of the Kerasotes film theatres in Bloomington.
Through it all the
Ryder films have continued to be a success. “Success is when people
come and they enjoy the film, and talk about it afterwards, and I think
that happens,” said Lopilato of the Ryder films.
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Marketing
for a different group of movie fans
Paul Heyde is another
film organizer in Bloomington. He is the only full-time staff member of
the Black Film Center Archive (BFCA), yet he still has enough time to
organize at least a few film events on campus. He has recently been working
with the Black Graduate Students Association to promote black films and
discussion groups.
"It's
a different kind of marketing...people are becoming more interested
in other movie opportunties..."
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Paul Heyde
Black Film Center Archive |
These films expose
IU students and Bloomington residents to other movie opportunities. Heyde
said that he feels that Bloomington has been going through a change. As
the Ryder and other independent film showings are becoming more popular,
students and Bloomington residents are going to these venues instead of
Kerasotes.
The films shown by
the BFCA are usually small. Mostly students come to see the films. “It’s
different marketing,” said Heyde. He also said that Bloomington
is going through a change. “People are becoming more interested
in other movie opportunities, not just those films offered by Kerasotes,”
said Heyde.
Leung said that if
Bloomington continues to attract people to bring alternative film venues,
then diverse films will continue to be available. However, without the
independent filmmakers, independent films wouldn’t exist.
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Making
independent films with little money
Matthew Weinberg is
a graduate student at Harvard. He is an independent filmmaker who recently
made his first movie with his brother, called Mower, Blower, Whacker.
Weinberg recently
completed the editing for the film. It is a comedy about a landscaper in Kansas City who
is a musician by night. It has been released at a limited number of venues.
With the advancement
of technology making it cheaper for everyday people to produce films,
more and more independent filmmakers are surfacing. Now the territory
of feature filmmaking is open to anybody, and not just to those who could
afford all of the expensive equipment.
Weinberg decided to
shoot in a digital format instead of film because it is inexpensive and
is fast and easy to edit. “Money is hard to come by,” said
Weinberg. “You have to know your limits…but if you have a
good story, why not give it a try.”
He has been to Bloomington
on several occasions, and said he enjoys Ryder’s
films at the Fine Arts Building. “Bloomington is fertile ground
for great independent film makers,” said Weinberg. Bloomington has
big-city resources, but a small town community that loves to help. He
also said that any college town has a great base for crew and actors because
many students have time.
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by: D'Eant'e Tolliver
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