Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The St. Louis International Film Festival (also known as SLIFF or Cinema St. Louis) is an annual film festival in St. Louis, Missouri, which has been running since 1992. The coordinating organization changed its name to "Cinema St. Louis" in 2003. The festival screens approximately 300 films over a period of 10 days during November. [1]
The deadCENTER Film Festival was founded in 2001 in Oklahoma City.The festival was named "deadCENTER" because it is located in the exact center of the United States. Although presenting over a hundred films, and an international assemblage of filmmakers, deadCENTER has remained focused on being open to independent local film
Kansas City: Memorial Hall: April 27, 2004 Des Moines: Val Air Ballroom April 28, 2004 St. Louis: The Pageant: April 30, 2004 Houston: Verizon Wireless Theater: May 1, 2004 Grand Prairie: NextStage at Grand Prairie: May 2, 2004 Oklahoma City: Bricktown Events Center May 4, 2004 Denver: The Fillmore: May 5, 2004 Salt Lake City: The Venue May 7 ...
The state's largest film festival, the 24th Annual deadCenter Film Festival is set for June 6-9 in downtown OKC. Oklahoma-made movie 'Cricket' to have world premiere at OKC's deadCenter Film ...
New York City Independent Film Festival: 2009: New York City: New York Film Festival: 1962: New York City: One of North America's oldest film festivals. [citation needed] New York International Children's Film Festival: 1997: New York City: Film festival for kids in North America, held annually from late-February to mid-March. New York Jewish ...
Apr. 27—Elvira Francis followed the sound of the drums, as she had for the past five decades. The 75-year-old from Window Rock has been going to powwows longer than she could remember.
Prairie Surf Studios (originally Myriad Convention Center and later Cox Convention Center) is a film production complex located in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. It was formerly a convention center and the home of several minor league teams.
First occurring from June 14–17 in 2012, the Oak Cliff Film Festival (OCFF) was founded by four independent filmmakers, Barak Epstein, Eric Steele, Adam Donaghey, and Jason Reimer, interested in fostering the film community in Dallas and the surrounding region.