April Thursday Night Movies
elena — Fri, 03/27/2009 - 11:49
Here's the lineup for next month's movies. Come join us for a great meal at a great deal! All movies start at 7:30pm. Reservations recommended (so we know to wait for you if you're late).
April 2nd - Super Size Me
Documentary filmmaker Morgan Spurlock makes himself a test subject of this documentary about the commercial food industry. Rigorously eating a diet of McDonald's fast food, three times a day for a month straight. Spurlock is out to prove the physical and mental effects of consuming fast food. While doing this, Spurlock also provides a look at the food culture in America through it's schools, corporations, and politics as seen through the eyes of regular people and health advocates. "Super Size Me" is a movie that sheds a new light on what has become one of our nation's biggest health problems: obesity.
April 9th - Babette's Feast - see if you can resist the sensuous deliciousness of a meal at Sea Rocket while you watch this film!
Some movies can only be described as delicious. In Babette's Feast, a woman flees the French civil war and lands in a small seacoast village in Denmark, where she comes to work for two spinsters, devout daughters of a puritan minister. After many years, Babette unexpectedly wins a lottery, and decides to create a real French dinner--which leads the sisters to fear for their souls. Joining them for the meal will be a Danish general who, as a young soldier, courted one of the sisters, but she turned him away because of her religion. The village elders all resolve not to enjoy the meal, but can their moral fiber resist the sensual pleasure of Babette's cooking? Babette's Feast deservedly won the 1987 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
April 16th - Back to the Future
Need I say more? It's my birthday and I'll pick whatever movie I want to! Who doesn't love this boy-lost-in-the-past stuff? Flux capacitors, Lybian terrorists, mothers falling in love with their own sons, lightning powered time-traveling Deloreans, and the perfectly obsessed Christopher Lloyd...this 80s flick has it all! "Where we're going, we don't need roads..." :-)
April 23rd - Captain's Courageous (1937 film starring Spencer Tracy)
Harvey Cheyne is the son of a wealthy railroad magnate raised (and quite thoroughly spoiled) by his over-indulgent parents. Washed overboard from a transatlantic steamship and rescued by fishermen on the Grand Banks, the young Harvey cannot persuade them to take him ashore, nor convince them of his wealth. However, the Captain of the We're Here, Disko Troop, offers him a job as part of the crew until they return to port. With no other choice, Harvey accepts.
There follows a series of trials and adventures where the boy learns to adjust to his rough new life, and with the help of his friend, the captain's son, Dan Troop, he makes fine progress. Eventually, the schooner returns to port and Harvey wires his parents. They rush to the fishing town (Gloucester, Massachusetts) and find to their amazement that their child has become an industrious, serious and considerate young man.
April 30th - The Sea is Watching
Based on a screenplay by the late filmmaking legend Akira Kurosawa, Kei Kumai's THE SEA IS WATCHING follows the lives of women residing and working at a brothel in Edo-era Japan. Amidst the daily rountines of tea and gossip, the ladies of the Ashi No Ya house, inevitably get emotionally involved with their clients. Young, naïve O-Shin (Nagiko Tohno) falls for an inexperienced samurai, even though he is from a higher social class. Meanwhile, her big-sister figure, Kikuno (Misa Shimizu), has both a thuggish boyfriend and a kind, older man vying for her affections. Eventually, Ryosuke (Masatoshi Nagase), a troubled wanderer, visits the brothel, and he forms an unlikely connection with O-Shin--one that may have a lasting effect on her life. Filmed entirely on a set that recreates pre-20th-century Japanese village life, THE SEA IS WATCHING focuses on the brothel and its denizens with a tight lens. Although the actors turn in fine performances, the real stars of the show are the costumes and sets, which recall an era of Japanese history that few contemporary films touch on. Surprisingly romantic, this tribute to Kurosawa is an enjoyable outing, strengthened by Kumai's vivid vision of the past.







Sorry about the earlier
Anonymous (not verified) — Sun, 03/29/2009 - 20:21Sorry about the earlier comment about posting the lobster video's. I am assuming its my computers fault that I can't view any youtube videos at the moment. I'm intrigued by the Sea rocket Bistro's message and purpose, and I can't help but notice how active you guys are within your community. Im not used to that... being a mainer and all.
Here are each of the
admin — Tue, 03/31/2009 - 14:00Here are each of the individual lobster videos on youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/v/LLqKm4Jcrjw&hl=en&fs=1
http://www.youtube.com/v/CQiQqTRfmiw&hl=en&fs=1
http://www.youtube.com/v/EJiw75Q2mpA&hl=en&fs=1
http://www.youtube.com/v/UPXhku0A71s&hl=en&fs=1
http://www.youtube.com/v/wRF3Q_4yv9o&hl=en&fs=1
http://www.youtube.com/v/iK-AwH5pFT4&hl=en&fs=1
Lobstering in San Diego Bay
Anonymous (not verified) — Sun, 03/29/2009 - 20:03Hi there,
I'm writing because I was I hoping you guys could post the videos of lobster trapping on youtube again. I know this is a random request, but I wanted to show some interested people. I live on the east coast and my family lobsters in Maine, so I guess the videos were interesting enough for me to address you about the situation. Anyway, if its a hassle don't bother. Thanks for your time. Cool site by the way. Take it easy.