Friday, July 1511 a.m. "Amazing Tales from the Archives: Archivist as Detective," followed by an invitational archivist's lunch.
2 p.m.Huckleberry Finn (1920, USA)
, William Desmond Taylor's critically acclaimed take on Mark Twain's 1884 novel, accompanied by Donald Sosin on piano.
4:15 p.m.I Was Born, But... (1932,
Japan), Ozu's bittersweet story of brothers who begin to question their father's integrity, accompanied by Stephen Horne on piano.
7 p.m.The Great White Silence (1924, UK), Herbert Ponting's stunning account of the British Antarctic Expedition's ill-fated race to the South Pole,
accompanied by the Matti Bye Ensemble.
9:30 p.m.Il Fuoco (1915, Italy), about a predatory femme fatale (Pina Minchelli) who chews up and spits out an unassuming painter (Febo Mari), accompanied by Stephen Horne on piano and introduced by Modern Lovers founder Jonathan Richman.
Saturday, July 1610 a.m. Walt Disney’s "
Laugh-O-Grams,"
accompanied by Donald Sosin on piano and hosted by film critic Leonard Maltin and historian J.B. Kaufman.
12 p.m. "Variations on a Theme," featuring the festival's musicians on stage.
2 p.m.The Blizzard (1923, Sweden), the tale of a deluded young man (Einar Hanson) restored to sanity by love and music, accompanied by Matti Bye Ensemble.
4 p.m.The Goose Woman (1925, USA), Clarence Brown's story of an alcoholic ex-star whose last-ditch attempt to grab the headlines lands her son in the thick of a murder investigation, accompanied by Stephen Horne on piano.
6:30 p.m.Mr. Fix-It (1918, USA), a breezy romantic caper starring a young Douglas Fairbanks, accompanied by Dennis James on the Mighty Wurlitzer.
8:30 p.m.The Woman Men Yearn For (1929, Germany) finds Marlene Dietrich catching the wandering eye of a marrying man (Uno Henning) and leaving him understandably smitten. Accompanied by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra.
Sunday, July 17
10 a.m. "Amazing Tales from the Archives," featuring film historian and Academy Award honoree Kevin Brownlow (1975's
Winstanley) on 50 years of restoration.
12 p.m.Shoes (1916, USA), Lois Weber's drama about a working girl (Mary MacLaren) who sells her body for a pair of shoes, accompanied by Dennis James on the Mighty Wurlitzer.
2 p.m. "Wild and Weird," short-film favorites (including
Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend,
Red Spectre,
The Acrobatic Fly and
Princess Nicotine)
, accompanied by the Alloy Orchestra.
4 p.m.The Nail in the Boot (1931, USSR) and
Chess Fever (1925, USSR),
accompanied by Stephen Horne on piano.
Boot, Mikhail Kalatozov's propaganda piece about the dangers of careless workers, was roundly critized at the time of its release by Communists who dismissed the film as an empty spectacle informed by half-baked ideology.
7:30 p.m.He Who Gets Slapped (
1924, USA), Sjöströ's compelling tragedy, accompanied by the Matti Bye Ensemble.