Vino Vérité

Vino Vérité
June 8 @ 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm
$12 – $25
About the Series
Film. Wine. Truth. Vino Vérité presented by Bread Garden Market and Little Village is a series featuring talented new voices and established masters of vérité filmmaking in person to present their thought-provoking, chance-taking, and visually-arresting films.
The series title, “Vino Vérité” is a playful combination of the latin phrase “in vino veritas”—in wine there is truth—and the filmmaking term “cinema vérité,” a naturalistic approach to storytelling which seeks to observe truth through intimate, candid realism.
FILMMAKER Q&AS
Our Northland Films cohosts put together a short film following every screening. Check it out!
Presented by
Bread Garden Market and Little Village Magazine
Sunday, June 8, 7pm
DIALOGUE: Filmmaker Jeremy Workman in person
The Vino Vérité series features talented new voices and established filmmakers influenced by the vérité tradition in person to present their thought-provoking, chance-taking, and visually-arresting films. Each selection is paired with hand-selected wines from Bread Garden Market.
Tickets: $25 public / $20 members / $12 students. Includes wine tasting, film, hors d’oeuvres and filmmaker reception.
6:30 Hors d’oeuvres & wine tasting
7 Screening
8:45 Q&A + Reception with filmmaker, wine and dessert
“Delightful, thought-provoking… it’ll make you see the world with fresh eyes, and probably wonder why there isn’t more art in it.”—RogerEbert.com
“Remarkable… a dazzling doc that’s a kiss-off to gentrification… and affirms the power and necessity of art and those who create it.”—The Daily Beast
“Can an apartment be art? Yes, the movie suggests — if you understand art to be fused with life, a way of existing rather than just something you make and sell.”—The New York Times
ABOUT SECRET MALL APARTMENT
In 2003, eight Rhode Islanders created a secret apartment inside the busy Providence Place Mall and lived in it for four years. They snuck in furniture, tapped into the mall’s electricity, and even constructed a wall, smuggling in over 2 tons of cinderblock to create a home — not just for themselves but for their ire at the inhuman development they were reclaiming.