Paris movie theater skirts lockdown with alfresco screening
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[April 25, 2020]
PARIS (Reuters) - The coronavirus
lockdown forced the team running Paris's La Clef cinema to close their
auditorium to moviegoers. So they hit on an alternative: projecting
movies onto the wall of an adjacent apartment building.
“We said to ourselves: ‘If we can no longer show films to an audience
inside a cinema, let’s take away the walls and show films outside’,”
organizer Derek Woolfenden told Reuters on Friday, shortly before the
screening of 1955 Western “Man Without a Star” starring Kirk Douglas.
Under the lockdown restrictions, Parisians are confined to their
apartments except for brief outings to shop for food and exercise. But
they can catch the movie by looking out or their windows or stepping out
onto their balcony.
“We could feel a desire in the neighborhood for some sort of event
because there’s nothing left, the streets are empty, it’s very sad,”
Woolfenden said.
The La Clef team took pains to engage the local community in its
initiative: the titles to be screened each week are chosen in
consultation with the neighbors.
"It’s great," said Christine Davenier, an illustrator, who was watching
the film from her balcony, where she sat propped up on pillows.
"It takes us back to before, to screenings when we watched films all
together."
The people behind the projections are used to adapting to changed
circumstances.
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Christine Davenier watches the film Man Without a Star by King Vidor
as it is projected by members of the Association Home Cinema, who
support La Clef historic cinema, on the wall of an apartments
building during a lockdown imposed to slow down the spread of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Paris, France, April 24, 2020.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
The La Clef officially closed its doors in April 2018, and the
owners plan to sell the property.
But since September 2019 the building has been occupied by an
association of cinephiles and independent movie makers, headed up by
Woolfenden, who oppose the sale and say they will stay put to ensure
the building continues to serve as a cinema.
The group has been ordered to pay a 4,000-euro fine for occupying
the site, but has lodged an appeal that will be heard in June.
(Reporting and writing by Johnny Cotton; editing by Christian Lowe
and Sonya Hepinstall)
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