Online Book Reader

Home Category

New York City (Fodor's, 2012) - Fodor's [99]

By Root 1726 0
said, walk, especially if you’re within 10 blocks of the theater. Otherwise, take the subway.

Dine off Broadway. Dining well on a budget and doing Broadway right are not mutually exclusive notions. Key is avoiding the temptation to eat in Times Square proper—even the national chains are overpriced. Consider instead supping in whatever neighborhood you’re touring that day. Or, if you’re already in Midtown, head west of the district to 9th Avenue. That’s where many actors and other theater folk actually live, and you never know who you’ll see on the street or at the next table. Prix-fixe deals and ethnic eateries are plentiful.

NEW YORK’S FILM FESTIVALS

New York’s extreme diversity is also what makes it a cinephile’s heaven: dozens of festivals for both niche interests and for those just wanting to be at the front end of what’s out there. New releases and premieres dominate the festival scene, but the city has its share of retrospective events, especially in summer.

The city’s preeminent film event is the annual New York Film Festival (www.filmlinc.com); sponsored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center, it runs annually from late September into October. Its screenings feature many U.S. premieres and are announced more than a month in advance to often-rapid sell-out. Film venues are usually Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and Walter Reade Theater. In January, the Film Society joins forces with the Jewish Museum to produce the New York Jewish Film Festival, in March it joins with MoMA to present New Directors/New Films, and June brings its collaboration with the Human Rights Watch Film Festival.

Another popular festival, the TriBeCa Film Festival (www.tribecafilmfestival.org)—was an immediate success when it launched in 2002 as a Robert De Niro–spearheaded community response to the events of 9/11. It takes place in mostly downtown venues for about two weeks starting in late April, and features mainstream premieres along with indie treasures, as well as a Family Festival, which attracts big crowds for its street fair and movies for ages eight and up.

Summer in New York sees a bonanza of alfresco film. Even better, it’s usually free (but arrive early to secure a space; screenings begin at dusk).

You’ll want to check out lovely Bryant Park (212/512–5700 | www.bryantpark.org) for the classic films—and the scene—at its Monday night HBO Bryant Park Summer Film Festival, June–August.

Hudson River Park (www.hudsonriverpark.org) runs its RiverFlicks series in July and August. Movies for “grown-ups” screen on Wednesday evening on Pier 54; RiverFlicks for kids are shown on Pier 46, on Friday.

Riverside Park South’s Summer on the Hudson (www.nycgovparks.org) offers Wednesday-night screenings on Pier 1, in this park along the Hudson on the Upper West Side.

Rooftop Films’ (www.rooftopfilms.com) Underground Movies Outdoors is N.Y.C.’s most eclectic film series, with shows outdoors in summer on rooftops in all five boroughs. Check their schedule for off-season screenings as well.

On Thursday night in summer, make your way over the Brooklyn Bridge to Movies with a View in Brooklyn Bridge Park (www.brooklynbridgepark.org). There’s a bike valet, and of course that competing waterfront view; this one has a lineup that alternates kid-pleasing shows with more strictly adult fare.

Previous Chapter | Beginning of Chapter | Next Chapter | Table of Contents

Previous Chapter | Next Chapter | Table of Contents

Lower Manhattan | TriBeCa | SoHo | The East Village | Lower East Side | Greenwich Village | West Village | Chelsea | Midtown | Upper East Side | Central Park | Upper West Side | Harlem

LOWER MANHATTAN

Music

Count on the WFC Winter Garden (World Financial Center, West St., between Vesey and Liberty Sts., Lower Manhattan | 10281 | 212/945–0505 | www.artsworldfinancialcenter.com | Subway: E to World Trade Center; 1 to Rector St.) for an inspired array of musical events from gospel to site-specific sonic installations—and a little theater, dance, and film as well—all presented within its spectacular crystal-encased atrium or on

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader