Smokescreens May 4th

SMOKESCREENS
Sunday May 4th, 2008

Bomb It clips play and Jon Reiss, director, in attendance in Northridge, CA

Hookah Source
9116 Reseda Blvd
Northridge, CA
91324

8pm to 1am/ 18+ with ID/ No cover

LIVE BROADCAST AT: www.myspace.com/hiphopsmoke

Posted in Events, Global Graffiti Documentary, Graffiti, Graffiti Films, Murals, Music, Northridge, CA, Post Graffiti, Public Space, Screenings, Stencil, Stickers, Street Art, Trains, Video, Wheat paste/ poster | Leave a comment

Albuquerque NM screening

Catch Bomb It in Albuquerque, New Mexico

APRIL 26 – 29 (SATURDAY through TUESDAY): 4:30pm, 6:30pm, 8:30pm

The Guild Cinema

3405 Central Ave NE Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505) 255-1848

www.guildcinema.com

Posted in Albuquerque, NM, Global Graffiti Documentary, Graffiti, Graffiti Films, Guild Cinema, Murals, Post Graffiti, Public Space, Stencil, Stickers, Street Art, Trains, Video, Wheat paste/ poster | Leave a comment

NY Daily News Interview & Chicago Reader Pick!

The NY Daily News did an interview with the director of BOMB IT. It also posted one of our fresh webisodes. Check ’em out!

Jon Reiss‘ latest documentary, “Bomb It,” explores the controversial subculture of graffiti through themes of public space, freedom of speech, corporate advertising, and social and political issues. The film visits cities from around the world – Los Angeles, Philadelphia, New York, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Hamburg, Barcelona, Cape Town, Sao Pãulo and Tokyo – and delves into how writers have incorporated graffiti into each of their varying cultures as a means of expression, protest, and beautification.

Read the NY DAILY NEWS interview with Jon Reiss here

Here’s the Daily News Review for BOMB IT

We also got the pick of the week in the Chicago Reader!

Genuinely global, multicultural, and multilingual in its urban perspectives, this lively documentary features graffiti artists talking about their work and illustrates their discourse with images shot in Philadelphia, New York, Los Angeles, Berlin, Hamburg, Amsterdam, Paris, Barcelona, Cape Town, Sao Paolo, Tijuana, and Tokyo. Filmmaker Jon Reiss also occasionally gives voice to people trying to eradicate graffiti. The relentless quick cutting and pop soundtrack are counterbalanced by the artists’ personalities and sociopolitical credos. Unlike Michael Glawogger’s more visionary Megacities (1998), this offers neither city symphonies nor overarching theses, but as the title suggests, the theme of rebellion predominates.

Check it out directly here

Don’t forget to check us out in NYC and Chicago! Here’s our screening info:

4/25-5/1 New York, NY Cinema Village www.cinemavillage.com

4/25-5/1 Chicago, IL Facets Cinematheque www.facets.org

We also got a Metromix review:
One subject points out that while we expose ourselves to commercials by turning on the TV, we don’t necessarily ask to see billboard advertising just by leaving the house. Raise your hand if you’ve never thought about it that way, but are kind of annoyed now that you have!

Read the rest of the review here

Posted in Chicago, Cinema Village, Facets Cinematheque, Global Graffiti Documentary, Graffiti, Graffiti Films, Interview, Murals, New York, News, Post Graffiti, Press, Public Space, Review, Screenings, Stencil, Stickers, Street Art, Trains, Video, Wheat paste/ poster | Leave a comment

SWEET CITY WOMAN Art Show

SWEET CITY WOMAN
Queen Andrea, gmo$, Toofly, Muck, Alice Mizrachi, Gillian Goldstein

Fuse Gallery
93 2nd Avenue, NYC
(between 5th and 6th streets)

May 3rd – May 31st, 2008
Opening reception: May 3rd, 7pm – 10pm

For more info click here

Posted in Art Show, Events, Graffiti, Muck, New York, Queen Andrea, Street Art, Toofly | Leave a comment

More NYC reviews

We got a few more reviews from our NYC screenings:

From This Week in New York:

“Reiss examines the never-ending debate over whether graf is vandalism, rebellion, art, “all-out destruction,” “urban intervention,” “visual pollution,” “typographic terrorism,” or the unstoppable expression of youth culture. The writers, some of whom keep their faces hidden, argue that graffiti is all about taking back public space, from buses to billboards and buildings to subway trains, asserting one’s identity and fighting the power; while one bomber states, “I tag, therefore I am,” another states that “art must serve a social cause”…

Read the full review here (search for Bomb It)

From the NYC Movie Guru:

“Regardless of where you stand on the issue of graffiti, you’ll be thoroughly entertained by Bomb It. Number of times I checked my watch: 0”

Read the rest of the review here

You can still catch a screening of Bomb It at the Cinema Village in New York until May 1st.

Visit here for more details

Posted in Cinema Village, Global Graffiti Documentary, Graffiti, Graffiti Films, Murals, New York, Post Graffiti, Press, Public Space, Review, Screenings, Stencil, Stickers, Street Art, Trains, Video, Wheat paste/ poster | Leave a comment