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              For Further 
            Information Contact: Festival Coordinators Joel Silvers & 
            KristineTrever (313) 
            965-8189; joelsilvers-detroit@msn.com 
              
            
            Wayne
            
            
            State 
            hosts a celebration of 
            
            Detroit 
            film and media art 
            
            
              
            
            May 17th through 21st, 2005 
              
            This 
            year’s annual 
            Wayne
            
            State
            
            University 
            Film and Media Arts festival, MovingMedia, has widened its 
            scope and expanded into a five-day event with the theme “The Myth of
            
            Detroit.” 
            In addition to an evening showcasing the best film and video works 
            produced by WSU students, this year’s greatly expanded festival will 
            also feature screenings, guest filmmakers and panel discussions 
            focusing on a wide range of films either made in or about the city 
            of Detroit.      
            
              
            While 
            there is no doubt that this particular city has long engaged the 
            imaginations of its talented local artists, writers, photographers 
            and filmmakers, there is only an emerging appreciation of how the 
            city has achieved the special status of a “mythic space” within our 
            national culture. This year’s MovingMedia festival will 
            therefore explore the representation of 
            Detroit 
            in terms of our society’s “core cultural myths” through a series of 
            events that include screenings of rarely seen films, guest speakers 
            and forums composed of filmmakers. artists, scholars and community 
            activists, 
              
            Among the 
            highlights of this year’s festival will be opening night screenings 
            of two classic films about Detroit
            Finally Got the News and Poletown Lives! -- as well as 
            the thought-provoking recent film Detroit: Ruin of a City. 
            This event will be followed by an open forum that will include 
            filmmaker Rene Lichtman, activist 
            – 
            filmmaker George Corsetti, writer - scholar Jerry Herron, artist - 
            web designer Lowell Boileau, Detroit City Councilmember Sheila 
            Cockrel and others. 
            
              
            Wednesday 
            night screenings will feature a rich array of films about Detroit 
            made by independent filmmakers– 
            including the recently acclaimed film about the 1960s Detroit civil 
            rights martyr Viola Liuzzo Home of the Brave, Still the 
            Champ about Joe Louis, It’s in the Constitution! 
            about the late civil rights pioneer George Crockett and Taking 
            Back Detroit. The theme for Thursday night screenings will be
            
            Detroit’s 
            legendary music scene. Among the highlights of this evening will be
            20 to Life, a recent film about John Sinclair, the founder of 
            the Detroit Artists Workshop in the 1960s, as well as the winners of 
            this year’s Detroit Music Video Awards. 
            
              
            Friday 
            night events will focus on the city’s unique multi-ethnic cultural 
            life and celebrate the accomplishments of women filmmakers in the
            
            Detroit 
            area. The filmmakers will be present at this rare showcase of their 
            work, and 
            Detroit 
            performance artist Sue-Carman-Vian will premiere her latest work 
            Candy Store.  
            
              
            The 
            festival will culminate on May 21 with a Michael Moore 
            “retrospective” in the afternoon and then a gala showcase and awards 
            ceremony honoring 
            Wayne
            
            State
            
            University 
            student productions in Shaver Recital Hall beginning at 
            6 p.m. 
            The special guest of honor at this event will be Academy Award 
            winner Sue Marx. 
            
              
            All 
            screenings and events occur at Wayne
            
            State
            
            University, 
            and are free and open to the public. MovingMedia is funded, 
            in part, by the College of Fine, Performing and Communication Arts, 
            the Wayne State University Department of Communication, the Public 
            Benefit Corporation and the Detroit Film Center.  
            
              
            We 
            encourage the public to attend this rare five-day event celebrating 
            local film artists and exploring “the myth of Detroit.”  
             
            
              
            Please 
            see the calendar of events below for schedule details and a list of 
            our features, times and locations. For updates and a complete 
            schedule, please check the festival website:
            www.comm.wayne.edu/movingmedia
            
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