If you can find a more challenging film festival for the head, the heart, and the soul anywhere in the country, tell me about it.
Festival director Mike Hertenstein has just unveiled the screening schedule for FLICKERINGS, the out-of-the-way film program that is part of the Cornerstone Festival.
I was there in 2003 and a time so rich and memorable that it feels like it happened yesterday. And Hertenstein’s lineups of movies have improved each year.
I wish I could make it this year, but deadlines are prohibiting that. The lucky moviegoers will get to spend time with some of cinephiles I admire most, learning about some of the best movies you’ve never seen.
Get thee to the Cornerstone festival for music, food, and this sensational film program!
for ten dollars an issue (which i’d only get on a quarterly basis), an journal so Northwest-centric. and no real previews on the web…
i don’t know. i’m thinking of hoppin’ back to Books & Culture’s high-falutin’ readins. puts me in a different mood after arguing w/ 15 yr olds about the act of reading.
I don’t see how Image is “North-West centric.” It hasn’t always been in the northwest and covers artists, writers, etc. from all over…even places as far afield from Seattle as Australia and Iran.
Jeff,
I’m really looking forward to seeing you again and workshopping! It should be a great week.
Mike Harris-Stone
While I’m a big, BIG fan of Books & Culture, I’d have to say I’d put my money on Image at that arm wrestline match. Image has muscle. It’s a quarterly journal, true, but it takes about that long to upack the articles and poems in those pages.