solar one
Solar Powered Arts Festival - Film

The Solar Power Film SeriesTM is the first film festival in New York City to use the power of the sun and a metal parking garage to construct an outdoor "eco-theater" like no other. Our independent film venue integrates natural and human-made components of our urban environment creating the city's "greenest" motion picture showcase.

Suggested donation: $6 >directions to Solar 1

Rain Date: August 4th

This Land is Your Land Still

June 23, 2005: OPENING NIGHT - 8:45pm

This Land is Your Land

(2004, 82 mins)
With a presentation by the directors Lori Cheatle & Daisy Wright

Directors:

Lori Cheatle

Daisy Wright

This Land Is Your Land is a thoroughly entertaining and enlightening survey of corporate influence on American politics and the citizens who are fighting back. Contributors include Marc Kasky, whose lawsuit over truth in advertising made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, Father Tryphon, a Russian orthodox monk, who fought a coffee giant to keep the name "Christmas Blend" on his monastery coffee, Doris Haddock, the 89 year old who walked across the country to get corporate money out of politics, cultural critic Naomi Klein and LIFF favourite The Reverend Billy.

Screen Door Jesus Still

June 30, 2005 - 8:45pm

Screen Door Jesus

(2004, 118 mins) With a presentation from director Kirk Davis

Director:

Kirk Davis

When Jesus appears on Old Mother Harper's screen door, it's time to take sides. After a violent storm leaves what appears to be an image of Jesus himself on a screen door in Bethlehem, TX (pop. 2,378), media and crowds gather around the phenomenon, setting in motion an Altman-esque series of interrelated dramas that try the ideals, principles and stamina of a cast of eclectic characters colliding around themes of race, religion and faith.

Awards: Best Feature, Best Cinematography, Best Score, Hamptons International Film Festival; Best Drama, New York International Film & Video Festival; Best Emerging Talent (Eugene Williams), St. Louis International Film Festival; Best Texas Film, Deep Ellum Film Festival.

Grey Gardens Still

July 7, 2005 - 8:45pm

Grey Gardens

(1976, 94 mins) With a presentation from director Albert Maysles

Directors:

Albert Maysles

David Maysles

Ellen Hovde

Muffie Meyer

Meet Big and Little Edie Beale — high society dropouts, mother and daughter, reclusive cousins of Jackie O. — thriving together amid the decay and disorder of their ramshackle East Hampton mansion. Five years after Gimme Shelter, the Maysles unveiled this impossibly intimate portrait of the unexpected, an eerie echo of the Kennedy Camelot, which has since become a cult classic and established Little Edie as fashion icon and philosopher queen.

Rode Still

July 14, 2005 - 8:45pm

Road

(2005, 92 mins) With a presentation from director Leslie McCleave

Director:

Leslie McCleave

Margaret (Catherine Kellner), a freelance photographer on her first big job, uses the latest government-supplied technology to survey environmental disaster areas. But the real toxicity in her life is her unresolved feelings for Jay (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), her unemployed ex-boyfriend, who has tagged along for the ride. When the trip goes off course, the couple is forced to confront their relationships: to the environment, the world at large and, finally, to each other.

Gotham Fish Tales Still

July 21, 2005 - 8:45pm

Gotham Fish Tales

(2005, 70 mins) With a presentation from director Robert Maass

Director:

Robert Maass

A hopeful, inspiring story of the dogged fishermen who ply New York City waters, from Hell's Gate to the shadow of the Statue of Liberty. Flying against the conventional wisdom, Gotham Fish Tales is a portrait of a highly utilized marine ecosystem pressed against the density of America's largest city and its vibrant, varied fishery. As professional fishermen struggle to hang on, recreational anglers catch and eat fish of surprising abundance and variety. Genuine fish tales entertain, provoke and reflect the city's buoyant character.

Gotham Fish Tales Still

July 28, 2005: Closing Night - 8:45pm

Mana — Beyond Belief

(2004, 92 mins) With a presentation from director Peter Friedman

Director:

Peter ("Silverlake Life") Friedman

Roger Manley

"Mana" is the Polynesian word for the power that resides in things. A Maori priest filmed in a New Zealand rainforest sets the stage for a trip around the world, from the sacred to the absurd. From a Navaho medicine man's mud-covered hogan to the eternity of space -- with stops along the way at nuclear reactors, art museums, Burmese temples, Elvisland, relic smugglers, voodoo ceremonies and the halls of Congress -- "MANA-Beyond Belief" is an adventure spanning the concrete world of objects and the projected world of values. It takes us across the globe and into the human psyche, from the individual's attempt to comprehend the secret powers surrounding him to the power our own minds give us to shape our experiences.

Directions to Solar One

To reach Solar One, take the 6 train to 23rd St, the L train to 1st Ave, or the M23 cross-town bus to Ave C. Continue east, crossing Ave C at 18th St. 20th, or 23rd Sts, and walk under the FDR Dr into Stuyvesant Cove Park.

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