twi-ny recommended events

WORD FOR WORD: AUTHOR APPEARANCES

ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK creator Piper Kerman will be at Bryant Park to discuss second season on (photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images)

ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’s Piper Kerman will be at Bryant Park on July 23 to discuss second season of hit Netflix show about her life in prison (photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images)

Bryant Park Reading Room
42nd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Wednesdays through August 20 at 12:30 & 7:00, free
(Other literary events held Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays)
www.bryantpark.org

Bryant Park’s popular Word for Word series continues through the summer in the outdoor Reading Room, a re-creation of the New York Public Library’s Open Air Library, which was started in August 1935 to give jobless New Yorkers somewhere to go and to experience lively culture during otherwise depressing days. There are book clubs, poetry readings, and storytelling for kids on Tuesday Thursdays, and Saturdays, but Wednesdays at 12:30 are reserved for author appearances, with readings, discussions, interviews, anecdotes, and Q&As, followed by signings. (In addition, beginning June 29, Wednesday evenings will feature authors promoting books on American historical political figures.) Below are only some of the highlights of this season’s schedule.

Wednesday, June 18
Jenny Mollen, I Like You Just the Way I Am: Stories About Me and Some Other People, with special guest Jason Biggs (American Pie, Orange Is the New Black), 12:30

Wednesday, July 16
Debut Novelists, with Mira Jacob (The Sleepwalker’s Guide to Dancing), Courtney Maum (I Am Having So Much Fun Here Without You), Ted Thompson (The Land of Steady Habits), and Tiphanie Yanique (Land of Love and Drowning), hosted by Sackett Street Writers’ Workshop founder Julia Fierro, 12:30

Wednesday, July 23
Piper Kerman, Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women’s Prison, 12:30

Wednesday, July 30
Kevin Smith & Jason Mewes, Jay & Silent Bob’s Blueprints for Destroying Everything, 12:30

Wednesday, August 20
“Taste Talks” with April Bloomfield of the Spotted Pig, A Girl and Her Pig: Recipes and Stories, moderated by Daniel Stedman, 12:30

DAYLIFE 2014

DayLife block party on Lower East Side welcomes summer season

DayLife block party on Lower East Side welcomes summer season

Orchard St. between East Houston and Delancey Sts.
Sunday, June 1, free, 12 noon – 5:00 pm
www.lowereastsideny.com

The Lower East Side BID welcomes the summer season with a block party on June 1 featuring food, fashion, live music, food, sports, and other activities. Covering three blocks of Orchard St. between East Houston and Delancey, DayLife will include bocce ball, a dance tent (with Scratch DJ Academy and DJ Hurrikeen), fashion booths (Urban Cricket, the Hoodie Shop, Yaf Sparkle, and others), face painting, pet portraits, yoga, live performances (Alcala, Bruce Tantum, Ellen Kaye), and more. Among the more than two dozen food vendors will be Brooklyn Taco, Georgia’s Eastside BBQ, Goodfella’s Pizza, Khao Man Gai NY, Korilla Korean BBQ, the Meatball Shop, Melt Bakery, Mission Cantina, Moscow 57, the Roasting Plant, and Sweet Buttons.

CELEBRATE ISRAEL PARADE: 50 REASONS TO CELEBRATE ISRAEL

The Mideast comes to Midtown as Israel will celebrate its sixty-sixth birthday with a parade up Fifth Ave. on June 1 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The Mideast comes to Manhattan as Israel will celebrate its sixty-sixth birthday with a parade up Fifth Ave. on June 1 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

57th to 74th St. up Fifth Ave.
Sunday, June 1, free, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
celebrateisraelny.org
2013 parade slideshow

On May 14, 1948, “The Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel” proclaimed, “The State of Israel will be open for Jewish immigration and for the Ingathering of the Exiles; it will foster the development of the country for the benefit of all its inhabitants; it will be based on freedom, justice, and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel; it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion, race, or sex; it will guarantee freedom of religion, conscience, language, education, and culture; it will safeguard the Holy Places of all religions; and it will be faithful to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations.” Israel’s existence has been fraught with controversy since the very beginning, but the nation perseveres, and on June 1 its sixty-sixth birthday will be honored with the annual Celebrate Israel Parade. This year’s theme is “50 Reasons to Celebrate Israel,” a tribute to the parade’s golden anniversary, as some thirty thousand marchers are expected to make their way from Fifty-Seventh to Seventy-Fourth St. up Fifth Ave. Among the performers will be Hagit Yaso, Chen Aharoni, Howard Leshaw Klezmer & Yiddish Soul, Donny Baitner & the BaRock Orchestra, DJ Mr. Black, the Ramaz Band, and Sandy Shmuely. The grand marshal is Robert Benrimon, with such special guests as Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Ernie Anastos, Becky Griffin, SOULFARM, Ambassadors Ido Aharoni and Sofa Landver, and members of the Israeli Knesset. The day begins with the 4K Celebrate Israel Run through Central Park and concludes with the unaffiliated Israel Day Concert in the Park, a free show in Rumsey Playfield (2:30 – 7:30) featuring Gad Elbaz, Lipa, Edon, Benny Friedman, Ari Lesser, the Shloime Dachs Orchestra, and others participating in what is being billed as “The Concert with a Message” and “The Concert of the Century.”

SORCERER

Roy Scheider goes on an existential voyage of the soul in William Friedkin’s SORCERER

Roy Scheider goes on an existential voyage of the soul in William Friedkin’s SORCERER

SORCERER (William Friedkin, 1977)
Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
May 30 – June 5
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

In the mid-1970s, Chicago-born director William Friedkin was riding high, earning an Oscar for The French Connection and another nomination for The Exorcist, two huge critical and box-office successes. For his next film, he decided to reimagine a seminal work that had had a profound influence on him, Henri-Georges Clouzot’s haunting 1953 suspense thriller, The Wages of Fear. “It turned out to be the most difficult, frustrating, and dangerous film I’ve ever made, and it took a toll on my health as well as my reputation,” Friedkin wrote in his 2013 memoir, The Friedkin Connection. Friedkin’s adaptation of Clouzut’s classic, itself based on a novel by Georges Arnaud, follows four unlikable men — a thief (Roy Scheider), a hit man (Francisco Rabal), an embezzler (Bruno Cremer), and a terrorist (Amidou) — hiding out under fake identities in a depressed, nowhere village in South America. When a nearby oil well catches fire, the company needs four men to drive two rickety trucks more than two hundred miles over treacherous terrain to deliver cases of rotting, highly unstable dynamite that will be used to blow the whole thing up and put out the fire. Oil man Corlette (Ramon Bieri) is sending two trucks — dubbed “Lazaro” and “Sorcerer” — because he thinks only one, if any, will make it through. The journey includes a harrowing twelve-minute scene as the men try to navigate a dilapidated rope bridge in a rainstorm as well as a psychedelic trip through a fantastical landscape (shot in the Bisti Badlands in New Mexico).

SORCERER

Harrowing bridge crossing is one of the most suspenseful scenes ever caught on film

What began as a dream project — Friedkin was pretty much given carte blanche by the studio, and he initially had his ideal cast lined up, consisting of Steve McQueen, Marcello Mastroianni, Lino Ventura, and Amidou — quickly turned into a nightmare as the cast changed, location problems flared up, a cinematographer had to be fired because of improper lighting, a narc forced Friedkin to get rid of some drug-using crew members, “Marvin the Torch” had to be called in to help with an explosion, and malaria ran rampant, as did the budget. When the film was finally released in June 1977, it got lost in all the Star Wars hoopla, resulting in a critical and box-office failure that shattered Friedkin, whose next three films were The Brink’s Job, Cruising, and Deal of the Century. But Friedkin has always stood behind Sorcerer: “I had persevered to make a film that I would want to see,” he wrote in his memoir, “a relentless existential voyage that would become my legacy.” After fighting for the rights to the film, he supervised a digital restoration that confirms the film as a towering achievement, a gripping, intense work of suspense that digs deep into the soul. Scheider, who was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for The French Connection and then was extremely upset when Friedkin refused to cast him as Father Damien in The Exorcist, gives an extraordinary performance as Jackie Scanlon, a New Jersey Irish gang member now going by the name Juan Dominguez, ready to do whatever it takes to get out of the hell he is in. Friedkin and editor Bud Smith cut the film to match Tangerine Dream’s electronic score — the German group wrote the music to the script, without seeing a single frame of the finished product — creating an intense pace that never lets up. The digital restoration, which premiered at the Venice International Film Festival, was just released on Blu-ray and DVD, and is currently playing at Film Forum, restores Friedkin’s Sorcerer legacy, as critics and audiences reevaluate it as a remarkable triumph after all these years. The title is still terrible and the final scene highly questionable, but Sorcerer is an unforgettable, powerfully realistic work of magic.

WE ARE THE BEST!

WE ARE THE BEST!

Hedvig (Liv LeMoyne), Bobo (Mira Barkhammar), and Klara (Mira Grosin) form a punk band in WE ARE THE BEST!

WE ARE THE BEST (VI ÄR BÄST) (Lukas Moodysson, 2013)
Lincoln Plaza Cinema, 1886 Broadway at 63rd St., 212-757-2280
Angelika Film Center, 18 West Houston St. at Mercer St., 212-995-2570
Opens Friday, May 30
www.magpictures.com

Thank goodness Lukas Moodysson changed his mind. After his 2009 film, Mammoth, and the death of his father, the Swedish director of such indie faves as Show Me Love, Together, and Lilya 4-ever was extremely depressed and considering quitting the movie business. But he was eventually inspired to make a happy film, and the result is the absolutely delightful We Are the Best! A liberal adaptation of his wife Coco’s semiautobiographical graphic novel Never Goodnight, the film, set in 1982 Sweden, follows the adventures of thirteen-year-old best friends Bobo (Mira Barkhammar) and Klara (Mira Grosin), a pair of outsiders who think they are rebellious punk rockers, making statements by running down the up escalator at the mall and writing an anti-sports song. Joined by fourteen-year-old Christian classical guitarist Hedvig (Liv LeMoyne), they form a punk band to rival middle school heavy metalers Iron Fist. Determined to show that punk is not dead, they futz with their hair, attempt to bond with a teen-boy punk trio, and try their darnedest to gel as a band, even though drummer Bobo and bassist Klara don’t really know how to play their instruments. All the adults in the film, primarily Klara’s parents (Lena Carlsson and David Dencik), Bobo’s mother (Anna Rydgren) and her strange friends, and the two youth recreation leaders (Matte Wiberg and Johan Liljemark, real-life members of the band Sabotage), are pretty goofy themselves, not exactly your prototypical role models, so silliness pervades in wonderfully funny ways. Writer-director Moodysson celebrates the sheer joy and utter ridiculousness of childhood throughout We Are the Best!, never getting overly serious and allowing his three young stars to improvise, which makes their characters that much more honest and endearing, both in small moments and within the overall narrative, which concentrates on having fun. And indeed, We Are the Best! is nothing if not a whole lot of fun.

A MILLION WAYS TO DIE IN THE WEST

Anna (Charlize Theron) struts her stuff in Seth MacFarlane’s low-down, dirty Western farce, A MILLION WAYS TO DIE

Anna (Charlize Theron) struts her stuff in Seth MacFarlane’s low-down, dirty Western farce, A MILLION WAYS TO DIE

A MILLION WAYS TO DIE IN THE WEST (Seth MacFarlane, 2014)
Opens Friday, May 30
www.amillionways.com

Seth MacFarlane stars as an anachronistic twenty-first-century wimp in 1882 Arizona in the raunchy, rowdy, lewd, and crude spoof A Million Ways to Die in the West. MacFarlane, who wrote the script — which never met a fart joke it didn’t like — with Family Guy writers and producers Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild, stars as Albert Stark, a meek, clueless sheep farmer who gets dumped by his girlfriend, Louise (Amanda Seyfried), after he chickens out of a duel in their bare bones town of Old Stump. Determined to win her back, especially after she takes up with mustachioed mustache maven Foy (a villainous Neil Patrick Harris), Albert, who hates just about everything about the West and is constantly complaining about it, is befriended by Anna (Charlize Theron), a stranger who decides to help him win back Louise. But little does Albert know that Anna is actually the wife of vicious killer Clinch Leatherwood (Liam Neeson), who is on his way to Old Stump, violent jealousy at the ready. Meanwhile, Albert’s virgin bestie, the even meeker and milder milquetoast Edward (Giovanni Ribisi), is planning on marrying his girlfriend, Ruth (Sarah Silverman), a Christian prostitute who does dirty deeds with just about every other guy around. MacFarlane, who did such an outstanding job with his feature directorial debut, Ted, bites off way more than he can chew in A Million Ways to Die in the West, but his innate charm and genuine goodwill manage to shine through, even as the poop jokes turn grosser and grosser. (There’s a whole lotta “Oh, no he won’t,” followed by “Oh, yes he did.”) He and Theron have a warm chemistry that not even sheep piss can wash away. The movie is plenty stupid, with tons of overheated, repetitive jokes (mostly about farts), one-offs that go nowhere, and various scenes that are about as flat as Neeson’s ass, which does indeed make a flowery appearance. The film is also chock-full of cameos from celebrities both big and small, some that work great, and others that are just plain head-scratchingly weird, but at least MacFarlane saves the best for last (the very last, at the end of the credits). Now, A Million Ways to Die in the West is certainly no Blazing Saddles (everybody, bow silently, then release) — much of it is more like an extended, expanded version of the beans scene — but at its very center, it has a great big heart, allowing you to forgive MacFarlane his myriad overindulgences and just have a rootin’, tootin’, dirty good time.

ELENA

Petra Costa goes searching for her older sister in intimate, mesmerizing documentary

Petra Costa goes searching for her older sister in intimate, mesmerizing documentary

ELENA (Pera Costa, 2013)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Friday, May 30
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.elenafilme.com

Brazilian actress and filmmaker Petra Costa searches for her older sister, as well as herself, in the beautifully poetic, hypnotic and intimate Elena. “Today I walked through the city, listening to your voice, and I identify so much with your words that I start losing myself in you,” Petra says over footage of her walking through modern-day New York. In the 1980s, Elena, seven years older than Elena, moved to New York to study to become an actress. Things didn’t go quite as planned as she became overwhelmed by severe depression. Using home movies, video footage, and audiotapes, Petra follows in her sister’s footsteps, both figuratively and literally, as she tries to understand what Elena was going through. Carrying a pair of cameras — a Super 8 and a Canon 5D — Petra travels to New York City with her mother, visiting the apartment building where they briefly lived and meeting with some of Elena’s old acquaintances. Petra adds captivating dreamlike imagery that equates her sister with Shakespeare’s Ophelia, along with a wide-ranging soundtrack of Brazilian music in addition to Maggie Hastings Clifford’s mesmerizing “I Turn to Water” (cowritten by Petra) and “Sister of the Sea” and the Mamas and the Papas’ “Dedicated to the One I Love.” Reminiscent of C. Scott Willis’s 2010 documentary The Woodmans, about artist Francesca Woodman and her artist parents, Elena is a haunting exploration of family, mental illness, creative expression, and dealing with tragedy. The film, which was executive produced by Tim Robbins and Fernando Meirelles and has won awards at festivals around the world, opens May 30 at the IFC Center; the opening night screening will be followed by a Q&A on “Boundaries on the Self” with Jonathan Caouette, Alan Berliner, and Petra Costa, moderated by Sarah Salovaara.