Film: "Moonlight"

A timeless story of human connection and self-discovery, Barry Jenkins’s Best Picture-winning drama chronicles the life of a young black man growing up in Miami.

January 11, 2018
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm
Location
Visual Arts Center 104 Loew Auditorium
Sponsored by
Hopkins Center for the Arts
Audience
Public
More information
Hopkins Center Box Office
603-646-2422

Writer-director Barry Jenkins (Medicine for Melancholy) made headlines with his Best Picture-winning drama. Though his story is set in Miami, Jenkins shuns the familiar neon-lit aesthetic for a different portrait of life in an area hit by a crack epidemic. Bullied at school and beaten down by a harsh home life, young Chiron risks becoming a statistic: another black man dominated and ultimately destroyed by the system. As he grows, it becomes clear that his real battle is an internal one: reckoning with his complex love for his best friend.

Unfolding in three chapters, Moonlight plunges us into an impressionistic vision of Chiron’s psyche in which sensuality, pain and unhealed wounds take center stage. Anchored in an unforgettable performance by emerging talent Trevante Rhodes, Moonlight explores the human need to feel connected. But although its themes could be called “universal,” they are firmly grounded in a specific understanding of African American experience. This film was waiting to be made, and Jenkins was the one to make it. D: Barry Jenkins, US, 2016, Runtime: 1h55m

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Location
Visual Arts Center 104 Loew Auditorium
Sponsored by
Hopkins Center for the Arts
Audience
Public
More information
Hopkins Center Box Office
603-646-2422