Oddball Films and guest
curator Lynn Cursaro present Money Manners and Capital Games: Asset-kicking
Edu-tainment. Money, moolah, cabbage, readies, dough. It wouldn’t have so
many names if it wasn’t so important! From the most basic history and functions
of money in grade-school gem Money, Money, Money (1972) to a
savvy car dealer’s wild sales methods in Charles Braverman’s brilliant Trader
Vic’s Used Cars (1975), money is one subject that can always generate
interest. Painless penny-watching is the aim of both the anarchic consumer
education work of Marshall Efron Brand Names and Labeling Games, (1973) and Magical Disappearing Money (1972). Vegas yields hilarity, riches and ladies in Brooklyn Goes to Las Vegas (1953). The fine print of
monthly bills gets a surprisingly entertaining treatment in Credit Card
Bouquet (1973). The emotion spending vs. saving issues kids face in
Learning to Use Money (1973) are the kind that last a lifetime. Dark
impulses are afoot in puppetland when the Great Piggy Bank Raid
(1974) goes down. Porky Pig learns that 10 cents a night is no bargain when the
innkeeper is Daffy Duck in Dime to Retire (1955). Plus! Ginger Rogers sings "We're in the Money" from an excerpt of Gold Diggers of 1933 and some sound advice about investment and horses from Oscar-winning director Mike Nichols in a snippet of Nichols and Dimes (1982), directed by Ellen Hovde and Muffie Meyer, the editors/co-directors of Grey Gardens. But the
entertainment value doesn’t stop there: Not only will there be super-rich
home-baked goodies from the kurator’s kitchen, but all films will be presented
in 16mm.
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Driven to Sell |
Date: Friday, September 27th, 2013 at 8:00PM.
Venue: Oddball Films, 275 Capp Street, San Francisco
Admission: $10.00, Limited Seating, RSVP to:
415-558-8117 or
programming@oddballfilm.com