New York has Greenwich Village for weird, farout movies and revivals, Cambridge has the Orson Welles, and Harvard has, well, its house film societies. From Mather House to North House, the popcorn flows and the movie shows almost every weekend night.
At the beginning of the year, the movie moguls in each house hold meetings to decide the coming year's schedule. Then, Hollywood Harvard-style meets in full, and the film societies lottery to determine which house gets which weekend slot in the Science Center.
And in the cutthroat world of film societies--where groups must struggle to break even at the end of the year--which weekend a film society draws can make a big difference. "The secret is a good film date," says John B. Mathers, who coordinates weekend use of Science Center lecture halls. "Yale Weekend is not a good weekend."
Running a film society is not a cheap proposition. A typical Science Center weekend alone runs an average of $80 for security and $150 for hired projectionists and up to $1000 for popular films. Even showing devo films in house dining halls can cost up to $300.
High Society
Since the competition can be fierce, film societies often tailor their approaches to correspond to a particular house's stereotype. Adams and Dunster Houses, for example, tend to show artsy and foreign films. "We don't show regular movies like The Graduate because we don't see the point of showing accessible movies," says Dunster film society President Mark Csikszentmihalyi '86.
Eliot House, on the other hand, tends to show "good old movies like Thin Man and Holiday Inn," says Clark Brown '86, president.
The Quincy House film society is unabashedly biased toward the blockbusters. "We avoid French and Italian movies that nobody's every heard of," says Trip A. Switzer '86. "We play the hits."
But Winthrop and Leverett House film societies go for the diversity. "We show the whole gamut of films, like Cary Grant and Walt Disney," says Thomas D. Young '86, president of Winthrop's film society.
This year the Kirkland House film society has decided to tackle its stereotype. "We are no longer stooping to bad Clint Eastwood movies," says film society organizer Geoffrey S. Gage '87.
The Oscars
The Mather and Kirkland mini-MGM's tie in the prize for the most embarrasing movie moment. Paul C. Gallagher '86, president of the Mather film society, recalls the group's most traumatic experience--spending $300 to show a Jack Nicholson film, The Passenger. Only four or five people showed up to see the movie and the society suffered a loss of $290 for that night.
And during reading period over at Kirkland Pictures, that house's film society beat Mather's for lowest attendance one night. "I remember one night we were showing The Blob" says Gage. "We went to set up and show the film. But nobody came, and five people were studying in the dining hall, so we left."
Audience-Grabbers
Perhaps the Oscar for the most sensational in film goes to Quincy's society for its 1980 season. During the showing of Animal House there, several students threw beer cans at the screen and damaged it. To raise money for repairs, the society decided to bring back an old tradition of showing the X-rated film Deep Throat during exam period.
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