SCREENING
Twentieth-Century City: Chapbook of the Non-Eminent and Communion Los Angeles
Ongoing
Location: Bartos Screening Room
With director Adam Levine in person
Chapbook of the Non-Eminent (Dir. Elizabeth Wiatr. 1993, 20 mins. 16mm.)
Communion Los Angeles (Dirs. Peter Po Rappmund, Adam Levine. 2018, 68 mins. Digital projection.)
A cinema of details, the late Elizabeth Wiatr’s Chapbook of the Non-Eminent sifts through city signage, animatronic fortune-tellers, and Hellenic facades, as though the whole city may be an apparatus for fortune telling. The film is, in her own words, “a bittersweet love poem to Los Angeles, a city of tremendous contradictions, where appearances and actuality are often at odds.” In Peter Bo Rappmund and Adam Levine’s Communion Los Angeles, the beloved Pasadena / Arroyo Seco Freeway (“The 110”) is the main character. Reyner Banham called the Los Angeles freeway system one of the “greater works of man,” is it now already a ruin of the twentieth century? The film follows the meandering freeway as it conveys its way through art nouveau tunnels and alongside grassy hills, connecting many disparate and rapidly shifting Los Angeles neighborhoods.—Courtney Stephens
Tickets: $15 ($11 seniors and students / $9 youth (ages 3–17) / free for children under 3 and Museum members at the Film Lover and Kids Premium levels and above). Order tickets online.(Members may contact [email protected] with questions regarding online reservations.)
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