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Troop Zero

You will be instantly enchanted by this quirky and delightful tale about the power of dreaming and the triumph of the underdog. Nine-year-old Christmas Flint (played with panache by Mckenna Grace) is a girl who revels in her nerdy love for all things space and alien related. When she discovers the prize for the 1977 Birdie Jamboree is getting to be a part of a voice recording that will be sent to space as part of NASA's Golden Record initiative, she sets her sights on winning that intergalactic immortality. The problem is there’s no way the Birdie leader at her school, Miss Massey (Oscar-winner Allison Janney), would let her join the annoyingly perfect troop. With the help of her dad (Jim Gaffigan) and his assistant (Oscar-winner Viola Davis), Christmas forms her own misfit troop of outcasts who’ll stop at nothing to be the best Birdies they can be. With a screenplay by Lucy Alibar (Beasts of the Southern Wild) and direction by the dynamic duo Bert & Bertie, you’ll want to grab
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Untouchable

“Don’t you know who I am?” It’s a cliche line of dialogue in countless movies, but for the victims of powerful Hollywood abuser Harvey Weinstein it was a chilling threat that still acts as a trigger. This arresting and hard-hitting documentary gives ample voice to many of those victims, as well as interviews with former colleagues, painting the most complete portrait to date of a man who represents a toxic system still being dismantled. Following his rising career championing independent and foreign films, filmmaker Ursula Macfarlane traces how Weinstein became so “untouchable,” explores how others were complicit in hiding his horrendous acts, and, most affectingly, highlights the remarkable women who bravely reported the truth, helping to galvanize the #MeToo movement. The sad truth is that the work is nowhere near done, but this impressive film helps to shed some light on why we must topple the Harvey Weinsteins of the world.
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Villains

In this inventive take on the home-invasion horror subgenre, it’s the invaders who find themselves endangered. Mickey and Jules, played by millennial horror mainstays Bill Skarsgård (Pennywise of It) and Maika Monroe (It Follows), are Bonnie and Clyde wannabes who make their “living" sporting animal masks and robbing convenience stores. After forgetting to fill the tank at their gas station mark, their car stalls in the middle of nowhere, leading them to decide to steal a car from up the road. Breaking into the home in search of keys, they instead find something much more sinister. And things get seriously demented with the return of the sweet-as-pie homeowners–Jeffrey Donovan (Burn Notice) and Kyra Sedgwick (Brooklyn Nine-Nine)–in this deliriously fun, darkly comedic, and perversely twisted thriller.
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The Waldheim Waltz (Waldheims Walzer)

Don’t let the title fool you: this unsettling documentary may be as gracefully crafted as an elegant dance, but the story is a dark descent into a nation’s gruesome history and a warning of the dangers of nationalism. Following the controversial 1986 Austrian presidential campaign of Kurt Waldheim, the film explores the growing revelations not only of his Nazi past but of the country’s disturbing revisionist history and the rising anti-semitism that led to his election. Documentarian and activist Ruth Beckermann deftly weaves together archival materials along with her own footage from her time protesting his candidacy, delivering a deeply personal and frightening narrative that is as relevant today as it was then. A gripping and important film that is essential viewing for anyone that cares about the direction of our nation and the world.Screen reader support enabled.
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Walking on Water

After the passing of his wife and collaborator Jean-Claude, inimitable environmental artist Christo (he of The Gates in Central Park) finally commences work on a long-gestating project that will invite visitors to Italy's picturesque Lake Iseo to experience the sensation of walking on water. An epic undertaking that involves building floating walkways spanning over 1.9 miles, the process of bringing this magnificent vision to life is chronicled in director Andrey Paounov's documentary that delightfully reveals an irascible genius at work—tantrums and all. Taking you behind the scenes of this daunting feat of logistics and planning, you'll enjoy a taste of what it was like to see this impermanent artwork in person—to not only behold the surreal and transfixing beauty of this remarkable achievement, but to also feel a bit of the joy. And it is the joy that will most stay with you—the joy of creation, of artistic expression, and of a dream realized.
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We Are the Radical Monarchs

Finding a vacuum in traditional girls' leadership-development organizations (Brownies, Girl Scouts, etc.), a group of women in the Bay Area took matters into their own hands, founding a troop that addressed the interests and needs of their community. What they established became the Radical Monarchs, reaching out to young girls of color to learn about self-acceptance, body positivity, inclusion, intersectionality, and more. Together they instill urgency for activism and social justice and provide a safe space for these often overlooked young women to come together. Not without some growing pains (and unkind words from trolls) the film follows the Radical Monarchs as they fight the power and inspire us all. In Person: Director Linda Goldstein Knowlton; subjects Anayvette and Lupita Martinez.
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Woman at War (Kona fer í stríð)

In a near flawless followup to the sensational Of Horses and Men, Benedikt Erlingsson gives us a truly crowdpleasing, supremely satisfying, and wonderfully unexpected environmental fable. Halla (Halldóra Geirharðsdóttir) is a beloved choir director by day, but in her free time she's the "Mountain Woman," an eco warrior who—with almost a Tom Cruise level of actioneering—employs guerrilla tactics to halt plans for a new aluminum smelter. And this unassuming middle-aged woman has been pretty effective at thwarting efforts to destroy her beautiful homeland, so much so that authorities are closing in, just as it looks like her long wait to adopt a Ukrainian child has come to end. A black comedy of untold warmth and whimsy, who knew climate change could be so rousing? All hail, Halla!
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Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music

Fifty years ago this summer nearly half a million people attended the Woodstock Music and Art Fair. The fair became rock and roll’s most famous event, an iconic representation of a generation’s ideals. We’ll recreate this seminal time and place with a special outdoor screening (note the early start time!) of Michael Wadleigh's Oscar-winning rock doc that completely and poignantly captured this now mythic music celebration. So let your inner flower child out and dance and sway and sing to the performances of Crosby, Stills & Nash; The Who; Joan Baez; Jimi Hendrix; Jefferson Airplane, and many more. It may not be a field in upstate New York, but it's the Open Space, a place where you can feel the power of music in the freedom of the open air, surrounded by friends and neighbors. Note: This film will start at 9:15 pm to accommodate the substantial runtime.
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Woodstock: Three Days that Defined a Generation

Released in time for the 50th anniversary of the event, Barak Goodman and Jamila Ephron's new documentary looks back at the legendary music festival with a fresh perspective. Rather than focusing on the footage we’ve seen again and again, the film leans on striking clips of regular people. Our attention is turned to concert-goers lined up to buy supplies at the only grocer, and the kids stuck in stand-still traffic, eventually abandoning their VWs, and the thousands of strangers turned instant friends, who shared a hopeful view of a peaceful future. In August of 1969 —against the backdrop of a nation in turmoil—half a million people came together to experience the concert of a lifetime, and this film gives us a never-before-seen look into this still powerful moment.
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The Wretched

Filmmaking brothers Brett and Drew Pierce return to the festival (their last film, Deadheads, was a TCFF sellout sensation) with their latest macabre occult thrill ride. Shot mostly in Northern Michigan and featuring many familiar locations such as the Sunset Lodge in Omena and the G. Marsten Dame Marina in Northport, The Wretched tells the story of a teenager who discovers that he’s living next door to a thousand-year-old witch. The film is a dead serious new spin on witchcraft cinema, with a fresh set of rules, relatable teen characters, surprising scares, comic touches, and a cauldron of gruesomely imaginative special effects makeup. Starring John-Paul Howard (Hell or High Water), Piper Curda (Disney Channel’s I Didn't Do It), and Azie Tesfai (Jane the Virgin), don't miss this premier midnight event!
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XY Chelsea

This poignant vérité-style documentary goes beyond the clickbait headlines to reveal an intimate look at Chelsea Manning, the former soldier who in 2010 uploaded thousands of documents to WikiLeaks, disclosing to the world that war crime atrocities were occurring in Iraq. The film picks up Manning's story just as she’s been pardoned by President Obama, having served seven of her thirty-five year prison sentence. Considering her roles as whistleblower, trans woman, and activist, the film follows her for two years, unravelling her complicated and sometimes harrowing history and wondering what's next in her uncertain future. As layered as the person it examines, this fascinating doc delivers a tense and emotional perspective of a public figure who has been revered, reviled, and most especially misunderstood.
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Youth Uprising Shorts

This collection of shorts shines a light on young people who are on their way to changing the world. In Lowland Kids, the last two teenagers on a drowning island off the coast of Louisiana hope their story will wake others up to the imminent dangers of climate change. Sweetheart Dancers is the story of a Two-Spirit couple determined to erase the underlying homophobia still present in Native American culture by being the first gay couple to participate in a nationwide “Sweetheart Dance." Female sumo wrestling champion Hiyori attempts to change the sport forever by simply beating men at their own game in Little Miss Sumo. Learning To Skateboard In A Warzone (If You’re A Girl) is a story of young Afghan girls learning to read, write, and skateboard in a part of the world where many young women are not allowed outside. Follow the teen journalists at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas school newspaper as they battle their grief while writing a memorial issue in the weeks after a mass shooting in
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Movie Vouchers

Vouchers cost $15 and are good for any regularly priced movie at the TCFF. Voucher holders can present their voucher at a box office and exchange for a ticket to any regularly priced film, if that film is not sold out. They also can get in the standby line for a show without any available tickets and wait to see if seats become available. Voucher holders go to the front of the standby line. You do not need a voucher to stand in the standby line. Vouchers do not expire at the end of tjhe festival, they are good for two years. Vouchers purchsed in 2018 are good at this year's festival, and vouchers purchased at this year's festival will be valid through 2020. Unused tickets cannotbe traded in for vouchers - the festival observes a strict no refund, no exchange policy.
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