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DTSTAMP:20260415T175833Z
DESCRIPTION:\n	With director Patrick Wang and critic Matt Zoller Seitz in p
 erson \n\nDir. Patrick Wang. 2018\, 242 mins. plus one intermission (with 
 free local bread). With Nana Visitor\, James Marsters\, Jessica Pimentel\,
  Tyne Daly\, Brian Murray. “Writer-director Patrick Wang's third film A Br
 ead Factory is his most ambitious work\, and the most unabashedly Robert A
 ltman–like American indie in recent memory. Designed to be screened in two
  parts with an intermission (in the spirit of Altman's never-released conc
 eption of Nashville as a diptych titled Nashville Red and Nashville Blue)\
 , it's set in and around a former bread factory in small-town upstate New 
 York that was converted into an arts center and managed by a lesbian coupl
 e (Tyne Daly and Elisabeth Henry-Macari) who give ceaselessly of themselve
 s. Wang's modest epic unfolds mostly in unbroken takes\, alternating conve
 rsations between the characters with glimpses of the art and entertainment
  being showcased in the facility as well as in a rival arts center nearby.
  Some sections are quietly dramatic\, others drily funny\, still others ch
 eerfully silly or brazenly fantastic (there are even musical numbers). The
  screenplay doles out juicy moments democratically\, letting relatively un
 known local actors share screen time with veterans like James Marsters and
  Janeane Garofalo and the great character actor Brian Murray. The result i
 s an original\, surprising\, at times confounding experience\, but ultimat
 ely an inspiring one. Wang presents theater\, dance\, film\, poetry\, visu
 al art\, and journalism as the foundation of relationships and careers\, a
 nd the glue that binds small communities together\, reminding citizens of 
 their connection to a deeper past and helping them understand their place 
 in the wider world. At a time when the creation of art is increasingly sla
 ndered as an elitist pursuit\, Wang presents it as an intellectual and mor
 al necessity\, as soul-nourishing as bread.'— Matt Zoller Seitz&nbsp\; \n
 \n	\n		Tickets: $15 ($11 seniors and students / $9 youth (ages 3–17) / fre
 e for children under 3 and Museum members at the Film Lover and Kids Premi
 um levels and above). Order tickets online.&nbsp\;(Members may contact mem
 bers@movingimage.us with questions regarding online reservations.) \n		\n	
 	\n		Ticket purchase includes same-day admission to the Museum (see galler
 y hours). View the Museum’s ticketing policy here. For more information on
  membership and to join online\, visit our membership page. \n		\n	\n
DTSTART:20181006T130000
DTEND:20181006T174500
LOCATION:Museum of the Moving Image - Redstone Theater
SUMMARY:A Bread Factory
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