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Starting on April 11, the Milwaukee Film Festival is returning to local screens for its 16th year. It features 300 films from local, national, and international filmmakers that show off a wide array of topics and formats for 15 days.
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Before producer Josh Rosenberg embarked on his career in filmmaking, he studied broadcast journalism at UW-Milwaukee and even interned at WUWM.
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The consequences of climate change and the loss of cultural traditions often go hand-in-hand in places like the Bolivian highlands. The film “Utama” captures this by following the daily lives of an elderly Quechua couple. Director Alejandro Loayza Grisi joins Lake Effect's Audrey Nowakowski to share more about the film.
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The documentary argues the “David vs. Goliath” battle is only the latest chapter in the Band’s long fight for sovereignty.
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Milwaukee-area filmmakers Mike Cheslik and Ryland Brickson Cole Tews have been making videos together since they were 14-years-old. The pair joins Lake Effect's Audrey Nowakowski to talk about their most recent feature film “Hundreds of Beavers” — a modern silent, supernatural, winter epic of a slapstick comedy.
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The nearly century-old pipe organ brings back the original magic of 1920s movie palaces.
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A sound reminds one Milwaukee Film staffer of how special a trip to the Oriental Theatre can be.
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There are hundreds of zombie films and shows out there. So, what does our insistent fascination with zombies say about our society?
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Israeli conductor, Yaniv Dinur, leads Present Music in a live performance of a score for the film "The City Without Jews."
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Milwaukee Muslim Film Festival starts Thursday evening at the Oriental Theater with a free screening of "Wisconsin Life: The Wisconsin Muslim Project."