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Moe's Books
2476 Telegraph Ave.
Berkeley CA 94704
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Open 10 to 10 daily
Phone: (510) 849-2087
Fax: (510) 849-9938

More Moe's
Art & Antiquarian Shop
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Open noon to 6 daily
Phone: (510) 849-2133

 

101027 - Left in the Dark

Authors Elizabeth Houseman, Joshua Grannell and Laura Horak will read and discuss their respective chapters on midnight movies, live performances and Photographer R.A. McBride will show slides. Accordion accompaniment by Stas Feldman.

Julie Lindow is a writer and editor. She earned an MA in English Literature with an emphasis in cultural theory from San Francisco State University, and worked for ten years in environmental and cultural preservation at the Foundation for Deep Ecology, International Forum on Globalization, and Headlands Center for the Arts. Most importantly, she spent her youth slinging popcorn and candy at the Castro Theatre, where her relationship with San Francisco's vibrant film exhibition community began.

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About the book...

Left in the Dark: Portraits of San Francisco Movie Theatres celebrates twentieth century movie theatres and moviegoing through lush full-color fine art photographs, and personal essays that offer both scholarly and literary appeal. R.A. McBride's vivid portraits of San Francisco movie theatres, including the Castro, New Mission, and Balboa to name a few, illuminate the role of the movie house as a great social nexus. McBride has gained rare access to the interiors of closed theatres, picturing them empty and allowing the grandeur of the architecture to take center stage. Casting the theatres as characters within the city's cultural landscape, scholars and film exhibitors such as Rebecca Solnit, Eddie Muller, Chi-hui Yang, and Gary Meyer, among others, uncover a spectacular variety of forgotten or never-before revealed histories. As society retreats from public life into the anonymity of multiplexes and personal entertainment technologies our moviegoing heritage becomes an ever more significant and inspiring source of ideas for new communal cinematic experiences. San Francisco is particularly fortunate to be one of the world's most vital moviegoing cities and to still have so many of its historic movie theatres. By drawing a continuum from past to present, Left in the Dark offers hope that even as these gorgeous historic theatres crumble, the spirit of Cinema thrives.

Coming Soon

May 17th
Nathalie Handal
Deena K. Shehabi

May 24th
Elisabeth Frost
Amanda Nadelberg
Mira Rosenthal

May 31st
Carol V. Davis
Grace Marie Grafton

June 4th
Barry Gifford

June 6th
David Stark Wilson

June 7th
Celebrating Turning a Train Upside Down: An Anthology of Women's Poetry

June 14th
Jessica Fisher
Margaret Ronda

June 19th
Noel Anderson Black
Brian Lucas
Cralen Kelder

June 21st
David Alpaugh
Kathleen Lynch

July 18th
Jerry Mander


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