After the Miyazaki exhibit, the museum will present a comprehensive exhibit on Black Cinema.
The first North American exhibit and retrospective devoted to Miyazaki will present all the Japanese master’s features in both Japanese with English subtitles and with English dubbing.
When the museum opens, a series of screenings will be held in the museum’s two theaters, the 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater and 288-seat Ted Mann Theater, which include capability for nitrate, 35mm, 70mm and digital formats. Screenings and conversations will include Dee Rees’ “Pariah,” “Y tu mamá también,” a talk with Spike Lee about his personal collection and a conversation with composer Hildur Guðnadóttir and Academy Museum Exhibitions Curator Jenny He about designing the museum’s Composer’s Inspiration gallery.Įducation programs will include “How to Use Film as a Teaching Tool to Have Difficult Conversations,” “The Work of Black VFX Artists” and a Hayao Miyazaki Family Day. Starting on April 22, a “Breaking the Oscar Ceiling” conversation with Academy Museum trustee Diane von Furstenberg, moderated by Stewart, will include women who achieved Oscars milestones, including Sophia Loren, Whoopi Goldberg, Marlee Matlin and Buffy Sainte-Marie. The Academy Museum will launch a series of virtual conversations and screenings on its website starting around the April 25 Oscar date. “The programming we are rolling out for our opening are dynamic, diverse and deeply grounded in the history and artistry of filmmaking,” said Stewart. The long-in-the-works museum is located in the Saban Building at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles. setting and look at the careers of Bruce Lee, Thelma Schoonmaker, Emmanuel Lubezki and Oscar Micheaux. Other exhibits will feature “Real Women Have Curves” and its East L.A. Exhibits include one on “Citizen Kane” featuring the Rosebud sled, one on “The Wizard of Oz” with the ruby slippers, and one on Almodovar’s films. Carter, Guillermo del Toro and Rodrigo Prieto joined the virtual conference to describe the thinking behind the exhibitions. come directly from companies that have obtained licensing rights to sell these products.“This really is the time to address these questions,” said Jacqueline Stewart, chief artistic and programming officer, “It’s incredibly important that we are working with people who have contributed to filmmaking through so many different paths.”įilmmakers and craftspeople including Ruth E. The rest of our selection of officially licensed tees from the likes of Disney, Warner Brothers, Paramount Pictures, Universal Studios, etc. We have direct licenses for Hasbro properties such as GI JOE, Transformers, Dungeons and Dragons, Monopoly, My Little Pony, and more! We also have direct deals to make retro tees and products for Doritos and Mountain Dew. We’ve been around since the year 2000 and sold millions of t-shirts. We’ve seen a ton of fly by night t-shirt companies come along, and lots of them advertise on facebook, so it’s natural for you to feel this way about us.