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is available at cityoftacoma.org/murals. 2 Catch a film screening at The Grand CinemaTacoma’s quaint little indie movie theater is consistently voted “Best Indie Movie Theater” in the Seattle-Tacoma area. It’s also home to the Tacoma Film Festival, tons of cool film events and weekly post-film discussions. Insider tip: bring your PLU ID card and you’ll get a $2.50 discount on your ticket. Then, spend that saved cash on The Grand Cinema’s famous popcorn. 3 Take a walk on Titlow BeachOnce home to
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October 25, 2010 Oil Literacy panel After the screening of “Oil Literacy” there will be a panel discussion with these guest panelists answering questions and talking about the literacy of oil. Diana Gibson, Research Director for the Parkland Institute Gibson is a Canadian researcher for a think-tank in Edmonton that seeks to study the economic and social implications surrounding oil sands development and production. She is featured in the film. Matthew Johnson, Media Education Specialist for
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is to make people aware of the stereotypes and negative body images issues that an alarming amount of people face due to pressure from the media to achieve the thin ideal (for women) or muscular ideal (for men),” Branch said. “It’s actually a growing issue for men and most people don’t realize that,” Pitassi said. So far, the response has been great, they said. “Everyone we have talked to has told us that this is very informative and influential,” Branch said. And it’s been like that from the
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Learn More: Mossi Mask 2This tall, thin mask consists of a white mask in 12” long; (30.5 cm), that match the length of the horns carved to resemble those of a gazelle and a plank 45.5” long (155.5 cm) that is covered in faded red and white pigment. The face is convex, halved by triangular notches, and has circular holes for eyes. The horns are also convex and have painted white tips. Triangles comprise most of the plank. The base and middle of the plank are rectangles and have carved triangles
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this desire to strengthen their relationship with a particular member of their community. Douglas McGrath’s 1996 film introduces what I am calling an oppositional binary. I am using this term to refer to how characters are positioned in relation to each other in a way that entrenches their contradictory natures. In McGrath’s film, it is Emma and Mr. Elton that are in this dynamic. Throughout the Christmas scene and the proposal, they operate as if they are mirror images. His continual and
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PLU Faculty Directs Local Documentary Posted by: Reesa Nelson / November 8, 2022 November 8, 2022 PLU Assistant Professor of Communication Dr. Kate Drazner Hoyt has directed a documentary which will premiere at the Grand Cinema in Tacoma on Monday, November 21. The film is one installment in the Chinese Reconciliation Project Foundation’s “Our Communities, Our Neighbors” film series. Funded by Tacoma Creates, CRPF is working with cultural communities in Tacoma to create short films that tell
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Ethnicity - IT, GE ENGL 397 Literatures of Genocide and the Holocaust - IT, GE FREN 203 Topics in French Literature - IT, GE FREN 204 Postcolonial Francophone Fictions and Criticism - IT, GE FREN 205 French/Francophone Film - IT, GE FREN 206 French/Francophone Feminisms - IT, GE FREN 305 French/Francophone Film - IT, GE FREN 403 Topics in French Literature - IT, GE FREN 404 Postcolonial Francophone Fictions and Criticism - IT, GE FREN 405 French/Francophone Film - IT, GE FREN 406 French/Francophone
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Save the date: Documentary ‘Namibia Nine’ to premiere in February Posted by: Todd / December 9, 2014 December 9, 2014 After a year and a half of planning, production and travel, Namibia Nine will premiere on February 28 at 6:30 p.m., to coincide with Black History Month celebrations, in the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Wash.The film, created by a team of PLU filmmakers, explores the impact that access to education can make in the
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By Dr. Rob Wells, Director of the Center for Media Studies and Associate Professor of Communication MediaLab, the applied research and multimedia program at Pacific Lutheran University, has won a 2017 Grand Prize Award from the National Broadcasting Society – Alpha Epsilon Rho, for the documentary film Changing Currents: Protecting North America’s Rivers. Changing Currents, which publicly premiered in Tacoma in November 2016, won in the “Video Documentary” category at the 2017 Annual National
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Nation share their stories of life under the watchful eye of surveillance and the U.S. Border Patrol. Students began principal photography in Arizona during January 2020 and collected additional footage and interviews in February before the COVID-19 pandemic forced much of the country into lockdown. The film was edited remotely by students during the summer and fall of 2020—a technological achievement the filmmakers are proud of. The film project was directed and produced by students Brennan LaBrie
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