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Weston Public Library News - January 3, 2023

Schools and Libraries

January 4, 2023

From: Weston Public Library

There is no excuse for being bored in 2023...
With so much going on at the Weston Public Library, there is undoubtedly something to tempt you to get out and join in. This week, we'll focus on some amazing and engaging events for adults coming in the next month or so. Tune in next week for the kids' edition.

Film club preview link
New York is the star of the show in this Film Club series
Join our resident film buff, Doc Crane, for weekly screenings of some of the best new and classic films at the Weston AIC. For a full preview of this month's upcoming films, check out Weston Media Center's newest show, "The Film Club" on Verizon channel 45 or Comcast Chanel 9 or on-demand online.

Moonstruck cover
Moonstruck
THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1:30-4:00 PM
1987, 102 minutes

With broad, vibrant brushstrokes, Norman Jewison directed this film starring Cher as an Italian-American widow faced with a second chance at love. Set in Brooklyn Heights amidst a tradition-bound family, Cher’s character is engaged to Danny Aiello but finds a soul-mate in his brother, Nicholas Cage and needless to say, complications arise on the road to Amore.

BE ADVISED–– This film is rated PG, with smoking, drinking, infidelity, mild profanity and lots of red sauce.

Thomas Crown Affair
The Thomas Crown Affair
THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1:30-4:00 PM
1999, 113 minutes

As cinematic confections go, the two Thomas Crown Affairs are notable in that they are windows into the times that made them. The first film, released in 1968 and set in Boston with Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway, is an exercise in mid-sixties cool. But in the story of a bored tycoon who stages a robbery for kicks, only to find himself falling for the investigator, there was a distinct sense ennui from that period.

In the 1999 remake with Pierce Brosnan and Rene Russo, there is no languor whatsoever, as the film embraces Giuliani’s New York in all its hubristic glory, with the city coming across as flush, fun, benign, and safe––an illusion that would be swept away two years later. But the film is undeniably buoyant, with Brosnan’s unflappable, unknowable billionaire meeting his match in Rene Russo’s insurance investigator. If Faye Dunaway played the role in 1968 as the embodiment of glam, Russo is a force of nature, determined to bring down Thomas Crown- all the while enjoying the chase until their affections catch up with them. The third star of the film is Dennis Leary, his acerbic persona in top form as a jaundiced but ethical police detective who provides a reality check as Brosnan and Russo’s cat-and-mouse romance grows ever more intense.

BE ADVISED–– This film is rated R, with smoking, drinking, profanity, sexuality, nudity, art theft, corporate leveraging, musical appropriation, getting tasered, and snagging a seat at Cipriani’s without a reservation.

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