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American
Homes (Chicago Premiere
) 2010 / 12 minutes /
USA This animated
history, presenting 1,800 years of
residential architecture in North
America, unfolds along a simple timeline,
while notable figures in the world of
design and architecture weigh in on what
a house is, and can be.
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Architect of
Dreams (Chicago
Premiere ) 2009 / 52 minutes /
New Zealand Ian Athfield's
architectural designs dot the New Zealand
landscape and are keenly sought after by
home owners. Intelligent, outspoken,
amusing, opinionated and passionate,
Athfield, considered by many to be a
maverick, is one of New Zealand’s most
influential creative figures who bring a
unique vision in his practice of almost
40 years.
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ARCHITECT: A Chamber
Opera in Six Scenes
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2012 / 63 minutes /
USA ARCHITECT was
inspired by the work of Louis I. Kahn
(1902-1974), a major figure in
twentieth-century
architecture. ARCHITECT is
a meditation on creativity and the inner
life of the creator. Events are set in
motion by the Trickster god, Momus. The
council of gods has expelled this impish
minor deity down to earth, where he seeks
to inspire mortals to create
buildings
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Biophilic Design: The
Architecture of Life
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2011 / 60 minutes /
USA Biophilic design is
an innovative way of designing places. We
need nature in a deep and fundamental
fashion, but we have often designed in
ways that both degrade the environment
and alienate us from
nature.
WATCH
TRAILER
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Concrete
Coast (Chicago Premiere
) 2009 / 26 minutes /
Spain Concrete
Coast is
about the social, cultural and
environmental effects of the last bit of
un-urbanized Spanish Mediterranean coast
being built for residential tourism in
the Region of Murcia.
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Detroit Wild
City 2010 / 80 minutes /
France Florent Tillon's film
begins with familiar but inevitably
arresting images of Detroit's decay into
post-apocalyptic pastoralism, but doesn't
end there. While most cinematic pilgrims
have portrayed the Motor City as a giant
canvas onto which they project their
outsider fantasies, A minimalist
but intelligent travelogue that resists
sensationalism, Detroit Wild City focuses
on people rather than ruins. It suggests
that while macronarratives may help us
understand the past, micronarratives will
describe the future, and Detroit's
destiny will be the product of many
individual, small-group and localized
efforts.
WATCH TRAILER
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EAMES: The Architect
and the
Painter 2011/ 82 minutes /
USA The Architect and the
Painter is
the first film about Charles and Ray
Eames since their deaths and the only
film to peer inside their collaboration,
their marriage and the "Renaissance
studio" they created in a gritty
warehouse in Venice, CA. Narrated by
James Franco, the film draws from a trove
of archival material, primarily the
stunning films and photographs produced
in mind-boggling volume by Charles, Ray,
and their staff during the hyper-creative
forty years of the Eames
Office.
WATCH
TRAILER
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Gather Give
Grow 2010 / 3 minutes /
USA Gather Give
Grow depicts
Archeworks’ Mobile Food Collective(MFC) –
an innovative traveling educational and
cultural center that promotes the local
food movement.
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The Gruen Effect:
Victor Gruen and the Shopping
Mall (Chicago
Premiere 2009/ 50 minutes /
Austria In The
Gruen Effect, an architect's
life, work, and critical humor become a
means to make sense of the cities we live
in today. The Viennese architect Victor
Gruen is considered the father of the
shopping mall. His ideas about urban
planning, both influential and abused,
have led to cities that serve the new
gods of consumption. By tracing Gruen’s
path from prewar Vienna to 1950s' America
and back to Europe in 1968, the
documentary explores the themes and
mistranslations that have come to define
urban life.
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High Line Phase
2 (Chicago Premiere
) 2011 / 6 minutes /
USA The film captures
perspectives of both design firms, Ric
Scofidio from Diller, Scofidio and
Renfro, and James Corner.
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Lioness Among Lions
–The Architect Zaha Hadid
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2010 / 52 minutes /
Germany Winner of the
prestigious Pritzker prize in 2004 and
the Praemium Imperiale in 2009, the
English-Iraqi architect and designer Zaha
Hadid (born in 1950) has long been
controversial. This film spotlights a
leading figure in deconstructivism and
her visionary achievements around the
world.
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Louis LeRoy – Endless
Work in Time and Space
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2009 / 14 minutes /
Netherlands A short portrait of
the Dutch artist Louis LeRoy and his work
the Ecokathedraal in Mildam in the North
of Holland.
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Mendelsohn's
Incessant Visions (Chicago Premiere
) 2012 / 71 minutes /
Israel This film is a
cinematic meditation about the untold
story of Erich Mendelsohn whose life and
career were as enigmatic and tragic as
the path of the century. Erich and Louise
Mendelsohn have wondered between
continents, between world wars, between
success and failure. Award-winning
filmmaker, Duki Dror (The Journey of Vaan
Nguyen, Raging Dove) has created a
spectacular interpretation based on Erich
and Louise's relationship, for one of the
most captivating chapters in the
development of modern art.
WATCH
TRAILER
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The Man Who Built My
Childhood (Chicago Premiere
) 2008 / 4 minutes /
Canada Jospeh Pettick
designed a staggering 500 buildings in
the Canadian province of Saskatchewan,
and his impact on filmmaker Brian
Stockton was profound.
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Minka
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2011 / 16 minutes /
Japan Minka is
a short documentary about a remarkable
Japanese farmhouse and the memories it
contains.
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Mission
Statements (U.S. Premiere
) 2011 / 77 minutes /
Netherlands In 1991 the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in the Netherlands
decided to promote national architecture
abroad. All over the world new embassies
were realised by prominent Dutch
architects. Mission
Statements shows
the background of the buildings and
presents a stunning view behind the
curtains of daily life in the embassies.
Did the architecture really add to the
diplomacy the Netherlands stand
for? Mission
Statements unveils
the underestimated cultural aspect in
international diplomacy and the
misunderstanding that comes with
it.
WATCH
TRAILER
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Mudgee
Tower (Chicago Premiere
) 2010 / 3 minutes /
Australia This film looks at
the inspiration, design and construction
of this unique and totally sustainable
shelter.
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Passive
Passion (Chicago Premiere
) 2011 / 21 minutes /
USA Twenty years ago,
physicists synthesized a package of
design principles that reduces a
dwelling’s energy use by 90%. Over 20,000
buildings in Europe have been built to
the Passive House standard, enthusiasts
in the U.S. actively work to spread the
concept.
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Pool Party
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2010 / 75 minutes /
USA Pool
Party is
the surprising story of an abandoned
swimming pool, the largest in New York
City that became the most significant
music venue since CBGB's. Both an indie
music showcase and an urban history
lesson, Pool Party traces the process of
gentrification of Williamsburg, Brooklyn
through the story of McCarren
Pool.
WATCH
TRAILER
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The Pruitt-Igoe
Myth 2011 / 83 minutes /
USA The Pruitt-Igoe
Myth tells the story of the
transformation of the American city in
the decades after World War II, through
the lens of the infamous Pruitt-Igoe
housing development and the St. Louis
residents who called it
home.The Pruitt-Igoe Myth
seeks to set the historical record
straight. To examine the interests
involved in Pruitt-Igoe's creation. To
re-evaluate the rumors and the stigma. To
implode the myth.
WATCH TRAILER
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Public Farm
1 (Chicago Premiere
) 2010 / 18 minutes /
USA Public Farm
1 is
about the building of a sustainable,
biodegradable, cardboard farm in the
unlikely location of New York City. For
WorkAC, winning MoMA PS1’s prestigious
Young Architects Program competition was
their first big break.
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Robert A.M. Stern: 15
Central Park West and the History of the
New York Apartment House
(Chicago
Premiere) 2011 / 24 minutes /
USA Even during the Great
Recession of 2008, one new apartment
house in New York City continued to set
the bar for real-estate prices: 15
Central Park West. Designed by Robert A.
M. Stern Architects, the lavish,
limestone-clad structure from 61st to
62nd streets is arguably one of the most
luxurious residential buildings to rise
in the city in decades. Stern
deliberately evokes the grand era of New
York apartments designed in the 1920s and
1930s, especially the intricately planned
architecture of Rosario Candela. Rounding
out this exploration of the New York City
apartment house are brief glimpses of
certain modern residential towers in
lower Manhattan designed by today's
vanguard architects.
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School #9 Coop
Himmelb(l)au (Chicago Premiere
) 2011 / 9 minutes /
Austria Wolf Prix, principal
architect of Coop Himmelb(l)au discusses
the firm’s projects School #9, a complex
of buildings on a campus in downtown Los
Angeles devoted to the performing
arts.
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South Pond
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2010 / 4 minutes /
USA Spirit of Space has
captured the pavilion designed by Studio
Gang Architects as it took
shape.
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Studio Gang
Architects: Columbia College Chicago
MPC 2010 / 3 minutes /
USA Hedrich Blessing
Photographers and Thirst Design join to
create a visual interpretation of Studio
Gang Architects project to build a film
school in the south loop of
Chicago.
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Three
Walls (Chicago Premiere
) 2011 / 26 minutes /
USA Capturing the
melancholic absurdity and shifting nature
of the modern day
office, Three
Walls traces
the development of the office cubicle
from its inception in the late 1960s to
its current status as the dominant form
of office furniture in North
America.
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Up to the Sky –
Hearst Tower, New York
(Chicago
Premiere ) 2009 / 26 minutes /
Germany In the midst of this
skyline one new tower is creating a
furore. It is the Hearst Tower, built by
the British architect Norman Foster.
Norman Foster’s high-rise has been
standing on the edge of Central Park
since the end of 2006. The Hearst Tower
rises 182 meters into the sky. A rather
modest height. And soon this small-scale
skyscraper may be overlooked on the dense
New York skyline. The Hearst Tower is New
York's first green skyscraper. The
structure is efficient - and it is also
extremely elegant. "The most beautiful
new skyscraper in Manhattan since 1967",
praised him the "New
Yorker".
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Unfinished
Spaces (Chicago Premiere
) 2011 / 86 minutes /
USA Cuba's ambitious
National Art Schools project, designed by
three young artists in the wake of
Castro's Revolution, is neglected, nearly
forgotten, then ultimately rediscovered
as a visionary architectural masterpiece.
In 1961, three young, visionary
architects were commissioned by Fidel
Castro and Che Guevara to create Cuba's
National Art Schools on the grounds of a
former golf course in Havana, Cuba.
Construction of their radical designs
began immediately and the school's first
classes soon followed. Unfinished Spaces
features intimate footage of Fidel
Castro, showing his devotion to creating
a worldwide showcase for art, and it also
documents the struggle and passion of
three revolutionary artists
. WATCH
TRAILER
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Volume Zero: The Work
of Charles
Correa (Chicago Premiere
) 2009/ 59 minutes /
India Having built
prolifically in India, architect Charles
Correa is less known in the west, but
nevertheless has received the highest
awards worldwide for his work. Born in
India and trained in the United States,
Correa’s architecture incorporates the
philosophies of both traditions. Although
often austere and modern, Correa’s work is
never cold or alienating; it is based in
the concerns of daily life, culture, and
climate.
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