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- A feature length documentary about an extinct giant woodpecker, small town in Arkansas hoping to reverse it misfortunes, and the tireless odyssey of the bird-watchers and scientists searching for the Holy Grail of birds.
- "To be or not to be" takes on a new and dizzy meaning in this delightful tale of existential angst and mistaken identity. Sam Bennet may be a two-bit Shakespearean actor, but he at least respects the Bard's words; more than can be said for the hack who is truly masquerading as the doomed Prince of Denmark. Distraught over his non-existent thespian career, Sam trashes his apartment in order to start anew. In a failed attempt to symbolically bury his past by sinking his grandfather clock in San Francisco Bay, Sam is conked on the head and loses his memory. His unlikely rescuer is a looney Hungarian woman named Marta whose husband has a penchant for robbing banks; an occupation that does not endear him to the local law officers, not to mention the immigration authorities. Enter Ham, nee Sam, spouting his lines from the Elizabethan tragedy he never got to perform, to a couple of weird Hungarian immigrants adrift in the surreality of the American dream. After one too many robberies by her husband Arpad, Marta decides that it's time to abandon ship and get her citizenship by marrying the befuddled Ham. But with Ham being stuck in the Denmark of his mind and Marta being on another planet entirely, the marriage is seen by the authorities as the sham that it is and the newlyweds find themselves spending their "honeymoon" on the lam. Eventually Ham regains his memory, but can't for the life of him figure out how he got handcuffed to this strange Hungarian creature who the cops insist is his wife. . --P.D. Crane, Cinequest
- This highly original and thought-provoking film explores a rich vein of visual expression and American individuality through incisive portraits of five contemporary southern folk artists, four of whom are African-American. The film reveals art forms so radically different from familiar folk traditions that the artists -- "Tin Man" Charlie Lucas, Vollis Simpson, Thornton Dial, Bessie Harvey, and "Sandman" Lonnie Bradley Holley -- defy classification. Variously known as "outsider" or "visionary" artists, they create unique aesthetic forms that challenge traditional distinctions between "fine" and "folk" art.