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April 3 to 6, 2008

Events By Title - Detail View

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M
Mad City Chickens
Directed By: Tashai Lovington,
Robert Lughai
(USA, 2008, 81 mins)
Wisconsin's Own
Thursday, April 3rd 9:00pm
Monona Terrace Convention Center
$7.00

Behold, the chicken. Treasured in households all over the world; legal to raise in U.S. residences until the rise of the suburbs and the factory egg farm. In May of 2004, the citizens of Madison decided More...
Made In Japan
Directed By: Ciro Altabás
(Spain, 2007, 6 mins)
Focus on Spain
plays in Short Films From Spain
Saturday, April 5th 3:00pm
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

Madison
Directed By: Brent Notbohm
(USA, 2008, 90 mins)
Wisconsin's Own
Saturday, April 5th 8:30pm
Chazen Museum of Art 1
$7.00

It’s Christmas time in Madison. The students have gone home, and a snow-covered State Street is vacant. Michael, an emotionally damaged war correspondent, returns to his college town in search of More...
Maine Story
Directed By: Nina Chernik
(USA, 2007, 24 mins)
Wisconsin's Own
plays in Short Films: The Saturday Morning Program
Saturday, April 5th 11:00am
Chazen Museum of Art 1
$7.00

Maine Story tells the tale of Shelly, a small town woman working in the local factory and going through the motions as if her life hasn’t yet started. When Alex, her high-school sweetheart, More...
Man of the Century
Directed By: Adam Abraham
(USA, 1999, 77 mins)
Restorations and Revivals
Thursday, April 3rd 10:15pm
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

Celebrate the Festival’s tenth year by watching the opening night film of the 1999 [Great] Wisconsin Film Festival. Man of the Century is a fast-paced, fast talking, farcical comedy starring More...
Man's Job
Directed By: Aleksi Salmenperä
(Finland, 2007, 100 mins)
Focus on Scandinavia
Friday, April 4th 9:00pm
Union Theater
$7.00

Director Aleksi Salmenperä (Producing Adults) says this film, which nicely balances comedy and drama, is about shame, and about being liberated from it. Juha has been laid-off from his factory More...
Margot and Henry Have an Adventure
Directed By: Rachel Wolther
(USA, 2007, 10 mins)

plays in Short Films: The Sunday Afternoon Program
Sunday, April 6th 4:00pm
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

The Meaning of Tea
Directed By: Scott Chamberlin Hoyt
(USA, 2007, 74 mins)

Saturday, April 5th 1:00pm
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

Sunday, April 6th 1:30pm
Bartell Theater
$7.00

The Meaning of Tea, gorgeously filmed by Gordon Arkenberg, explores the romance and complexities surrounding tea, a universally beloved and widely consumed beverage. The film travels through More...
Mensajes de Voz
Directed By: Fernando Franco
(Spain, 2007, 13 mins)
Focus on Spain
plays in Short Films From Spain
Saturday, April 5th 3:00pm
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

A woman returns to stay with her boyfriend, and the little dramas that follow are revealed through answering-machine messages left for her at the apartment. An inventive and confident film with beautiful More...
Mongol
Directed By: Sergei Bodrov
(Kazakhstan, Russia, Mongolia, Germany, 2007, 120 mins)

Saturday, April 5th 8:00pm
Orpheum Main Theater
$7.00

Award-winning Russian filmmaker Sergei Bodrov (Prisoner of the Mountains) illuminates the life and legend of Genghis Khan in this stunning historical epic. As it follows the young Khan, known More...
The Moral
Directed By: John Soat
(USA, 2007, 1 mins)
Wisconsin's Own
plays in Wisconsin Student Short Films
Saturday, April 5th 2:00pm
Monona Terrace Convention Center
$7.00

Mr. Foe
Directed By: David Mackenzie
(United Kingdom, 2007, 95 mins)

Saturday, April 5th 9:30pm
Union Theater
$7.00

Jamie Bell plays Hallam Foe, a troubled young man whose knack for voyeurism reveals his darkest fears and desires. He’s almost over the sudden death of his mother when he begins to suspect that More...
Mr. Positive
(USA, 2007, 28 mins)

plays with Next Exit, Main Street
Friday, April 4th 5:30pm
Bartell Theater
$7.00

Both disabled and a vital force in his neighborhood, Carl is an example of how positive engagement with your community creates good citizens. More...
My Brother is an Only Child
Directed By: Daniele Luchetti
(Italy, 2007, 100 mins)

Saturday, April 5th 6:00pm
Majestic Theater
$7.00

Sunday, April 6th 1:00pm
Majestic Theater
$7.00

Set in a small Italian town in the 1960s, the film tells the story of two brothers who want to change the world — but in completely different ways. The elder, Manrico, is a handsome, charismatic More...
My Man Godfrey
Directed By: Gregory La Cava
(USA, 1936, 94 mins)
Restorations and Revivals
Saturday, April 5th 11:00am
UW Cinematheque
$7.00

William Powell plays up his trademark suave, Metropolitan sophistication when he’s hired out of the bread line and into a butler’s uniform by Carole Lombard, the ditzy socialite who eventually falls for Godfrey’s charms. More...
My Winnipeg
Directed By: Guy Maddin
(Canada, 2007, 80 mins)

Thursday, April 3rd 5:15pm
Madison Museum of Contemporary Art
$7.00

Sunday, April 6th 3:15pm
Madison Museum of Contemporary Art
$7.00

Todd Brown of Twitch says it best: “This isn’t just a story about Winnipeg, this is a story about Canuck auteur Guy Maddin’s Winnipeg, his own very personal recollections and More...

For ticketing information please phone (608) 265-2933 or email boxoffice@wifilmfest.org

 

total number of tickets general, per ticket student, per ticket
1 to 4 $7.00 $4.00
5 to 8 $6.00 $3.75
9 to 12 $5.50 $3.50
13 to 16 $5.25 $3.25
Young Visions program on Sunday free, no ticket required
Service fee for phone, fax, online, and mail orders $4 per order
There is an 8-ticket limit per film, per order.


download the schedule grid as a PDF file
(updated 5 pm, Tuesday, April 1)


download the complete printed film guide (it’s big!)

WHAT’S A VOUCHER?
A voucher is like a coupon that can be exchanged for a film ticket. No refunds are given for vouchers, but you may give them to family and friends!

Vouchers can be exchanged for “real” tickets, printed for a specific date and time of a film program. You can make an exchange at the Festival Box Office through Wednesday, April 2, or the box offices of the Festival theaters during the Festival (April 3 to 6). Vouchers themselves are not good for entry into a theater, nor do they guarantee you a seat – you must first exchange them for a real ticket.

If you want to add vouchers to your order, go to the film guide under “V” and find the listing among the film titles.

DAY-OF-SHOW TICKET SALES
Yes! You can get tickets to films on the day of the show! (Usually.) During the Festival, tickets are only sold at the individual theaters, not at the Festival Box Office in the Memorial Union (which is open for Will Call pick-ups only). Tickets are available at the theater where the film will be shown, only on the day of the show. For example, if you want a ticket to a Saturday night film at the Bartell Theatre, you can buy that ticket at the Bartell only, on Saturday only (not at the Orpheum, and not on Friday). The individual theater box offices open an hour before the first film of the day at that theater.

Cash or vouchers are accepted for at-the-door ticket sales (sorry, no checks or credit cards). Quantity depends on availability.

RUSH TICKETS
Want to see a sold-out show? You can! (Usually.) A film is sold out when all of the tickets allotted for advance purchase have sold. We set aside a few tickets for filmmakers and these might not all get used. Many people buy tickets and may be unable to come to the show. This means an open seat that can be filled right before the start of the film. (This is why ticket-holders must arrive at least 15 minutes before a show to have a guaranteed seat.)

Each theater has a rush-ticket line that is separate from the ticket-holders line. If you would like to see a film and no tickets are available at that theater’s box office, join the rush-ticket line (ask a volunteer where to stand). It’s wise to come about a half-hour before the start of the show, but it depends on how popular that film is. When all the ticket holders have been seated, we’ll count up how many empty seats there are in the theater, and start selling last-minute seats to those people waiting in the rush-ticket line.

Cash or vouchers may be used to buy rush tickets. Having a voucher is not a guarantee of a seat or preference in line; it’s just used in lieu of cash. The number of rush tickets available depends on the number of empty seats for that show. Limit two tickets per patron. First come, first seated.

All tickets sold at the individual theater box offices, including rush tickets, are $7 general and $4 student. Students should bring their school ID.

THE FINE PRINT

  • To guarantee admittance, ticket holders must arrive 15 minutes prior to show. Available seats will be filled at curtain time. Latecomers with tickets are not guaranteed admittance.
  • All tickets sales are final. No refunds or replacements for lost tickets. No refunds for vouchers.
  • Specific film tickets can be exchanged in person only through April 2 at the Festival Box Office at the Wisconsin Union. Absolutely no film ticket exchanges after April 2.
  • Many festival films are not rated. Viewer and parental discretion advised.
  • Schedule subject to change.
 
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