About this Event
The Stranger (1946)
Immediately following World War II, ex-Nazi Franz Kindler (Orson Welles) is living under a false identity as a teacher in a small Connecticut town, and has even married the headmaster's daughter (Loretta Young) as part of his cover. But when one of Kindler's old German associates (Konstantin Shayne) arrives unexpectedly in town, bringing in his wake a sly federal investigator (Edward G. Robinson), Kindler resorts to desperate measures to preserve his secret.
97% Rotten Tomatoes!
This is something new for many of us so please review the instructions below carefully.
1. Sign up HERE to register for live talk back / discussion about the 1946 film The Stranger
Zoom log in information will be sent 2 days prior to the discussion, 2 hours prior to the discussion and 10 minutes prior to the discussion..
We will use Zoom technology so that we can discuss the film and answer your questions. We will send you the log in information once you have signed up here - so we can keep it safe and secure for you.
If you want to join the discussion, you MUST sign up using this EventBrite invitation so that we can send you a secure link to the live discussion event on May 19th.
2. IMPORTANT!! Make sure that you watch the movie between now and the discussion event on May 19th at 4:00 p.m. eastern time. (We will NOT be watching the movie together. You watch it on your own any time and then join the discussion)
Where to watch The Stranger
Apple TV - Subscription
Amazon Prime - $2.99 to rent
3. Then, on May 19th at 4:00 pm Eastern Time - log into the New Plaza Cinema Zoom meeting link that we will send you in a separate email.
The program is as follows: We will watch a short film trailer, Max Alvarez and Dan Cahill will enlighten us on the history, virtues and issues with this film, followed by a short Q&A.
We look forward to seeing you again on May 19th at 4:00 pm ET.
Author, film historian, and public speaker Max Alvarez is a former visiting scholar and guest lecturer for The Smithsonian Institution and previously film curator at National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. His partnerships have included University of California, Los Angeles and Berkeley; Museum of the Moving Image, New Plaza Cinema, Library of Congress, and the National Gallery of Art in D.C. Alvarez’s lecture topics range from the Cold War and political blacklisting to depictions of elections and the US presidency in Hollywood movies, immigration on film, China during the 20th Century, European women artists, censorship history, 20th century Jewish culture, and the British and American theater. Author of The Crime Films of Anthony Mann (University Press of Mississippi) and a major contributor to Thornton Wilder/New Perspectives (Northwestern University Press), his latest book is The Cinéphile’s Guide to the Great Age of Cinema (released June 2020). www.maxjalvarez.com
Dan Cahill is an award-winning filmmaker with a Master’s degree in Film and TV Production from NYU. He has decades of experience in Screenwriting, Directing, Editing and Cinematography. He is a member of the Writers Guild of America. He has taught Directing at New York Film Academy, and conducted a filmmaking workshop in Rabat, Morocco.
Event Venue
Online
USD 0.00