Ann Arbor microcinema
So I’d been meaning to write a roundup of Ann Arbor microcinema offerings when I find out a few weeks ago that the Current has gone and done their own little “Cheap and Free Film” writeup. Well, turns out they missed a few things, and not just the Bluish Barn. (Actually, we’re trying not to promote our screenings much until the Summer, when we can handle more guests.) Anyway, here’s a slightly more exhaustive list of alternative movie options in and around Ann Arbor. All events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.
The Smithee Award Ceremony is held (semi-?)annually in Ann Arbor. The Smith-ka-teers present scenes from the year’s worst films and audience members vote for the winners in several hilarious categories. I went to the last one, and let me tell you, this is a rollicking good time, especially for dorks like me.
A few microcinema options might have been left out of the Current’s article because they don’t appear to be screening much at the present moment. But check the websites of Projectorhead and Cinema Guild for more information, because both of these student groups has been up to much good in the past.
Also not mentioned: WCBN hosts Free Movie Night on the second Tuesday of every month (this semester at least) at Live @ PJ’s.
Cinema Slam, in addition to screening mostly local short films at the Screening Room of the Michigan Theater the second Tuesday of each month (tickets are $5), also has some part in running the Microcinema Gallery in the lobby of the Michigan Theater. The Microcinema Gallery screens “work by visual artists working with moving pictures around the world”, especially work “which would be more appropriate in a gallery setting”. Local filmmakers are encouraged to submit your own work to both of these venues.
This one’s almost too obvious to mention, but the Ann Arbor Summer Festival’s screens big family-friendly Hollywood hits during Top of the Park from June 15 - July 8th outside at Ingalls Mall, in front of Rackham Auditoriium. Bands play before the films.
And here again are the rest of the offerings that the Current’s article did mention:
EMU Office of Campus Life screens “big movies before they’re on DVD” now through April at the EMU Student Center Auditorium Friday nights and Monday middays. FREE for EMU students, faculty, staff, and their family and friends all fall and winter semesters. Schedule.
M-Flicks, the U-M student group, screens anything “from special sneak previews to older (20+ year old) classics” during Fall and Winter semesters at various campus locations, usually Angell Hall and the Natty Sci.
The Center for Japanese Studies screens Japanese films well-curated into various Series during the U-M Fall semester at Askwith Auditorium in Lorch Hall.
The Center for Chinese Studies screens Chinese films occasional Saturdays 7pm at Angell Hall Auditorium A. Schedule.
The Center for Russian and Eastern European Studies sometimes has a Film Series as part of their department events. This term it’s three Wednesdays in March 7pm at Angell Hall Auditorium A.
And then there’s our house, which screens whatever the hell we feel like screening during 8-10-week programs each season, usually Thursdays 9pm.
Let me know if I’ve left anything out or gotten anything wrong.

February 12th, 2007 at 5:55 pm
i must second the recommendation of the smithee awards. truly amazing. my favorite part might have been the junk food to go with junk movies. (i can’t think of another time in my life when i heard the utterance “I’m so bummed they don’t have the Bacon Rice Crispie treats like last year!!”) imdb “zombie lake,” and you’ll get the picture - so badly awesome, we cried laughing - honestly, come with us next year.
also; please: can we not call it “natty sci?” that makes my nose wrinkle.
February 13th, 2007 at 12:41 am
really, it’s like calling the media union the “dude.”
February 13th, 2007 at 4:37 am
I’m glad to see “the dude” is catching on. I recall a conversation with big daddy Bluish himself a number of years back; we were sitting on the loading dock.
Some might say we channeled a bit of Nostradamus that day, predicting as we would the future nickname of the Duderstadt… But, then again, it is called the Duderstadt.
I guess what I’m saying is: Except it.
February 13th, 2007 at 8:20 pm
I signed up for, and quickly dropped a class with Mr. James Duderstadt himself. His nose wrankled at the comment that his building was called ‘the dude’ so I say dude - on.
Not so sure about natty-sci though. My first thought was a freshman using poor judgment in naming a character in her afro-futurist short story. Which is weird, I know.
(Also- can I just go on the record- James Duderstadt -total prick. He put up a slide of Frank Gehry’s MIT dorm and said ‘Looks like a marketplace in Baghdad’. He also put up a picture of a swiss inn and claimed ‘This is where me and 12 other people decide the future of the world.’ This might all be amusing if it wasn’t delivered with a total serious face, no irony involved. Ah, the world of Public Policy).
February 13th, 2007 at 9:52 pm
Best campus building nickname: The Pringle, named for the curious shape of the new Life Sciences Auditorium.
I cannot defend my use of “Natty Sci”, except to say that it’s a generational thing. When I was in college here, the kids said all sorts of things…
The Dude abides.
February 14th, 2007 at 1:45 pm
The Pringle? I don’t think I’ve ever seen it completed, but it must be referencing the oddly shaped building at the “BIG CURVE” on Huron, no?
Tim, your last comment makes us sound so old. Granted, we are talking about Mary Sue era vs. Lee Bollinger era–let us not forget that interim guy, umm… White?–but really, aren’t we all part of the same generation?
Besides, the only other nickname I can remember was calling Bollinger’s President’s House the Naughty Boy Punishment Room…
February 14th, 2007 at 8:22 pm
(you guys ARE old.)
May 2nd, 2007 at 1:53 pm
Re: The Dude
Because I had done a thorough job of background reading here at Bluish Barn, I had an extra topic of conversation for Peter Sparling, who I knew did a lot of work up in Duderstadt Center.
http://www.homelessdave.com/tt20070427petersparling.htm
Search there for ‘Dude’ to see how Peter weighs in on that topic. And to see how much he weighs, period.