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 Stuck
Stuck

The 18th Woodstock Film Festival, will open with the East Coast premiere of Stuck, a musical narrative about a group of six strangers trapped together on a stalled New York City subway car. The characters confront their assumptions of one another under the scrutinizing eye of a mysterious homeless man played by Giancarlo Esposito. This kickoff event will begin at 7PM October 11 at the Woodstock Playhouse.

The Festival will present an outstanding lineup of films to be shown in Woodstock, Rhinebeck, Rosendale, Saugerties, and Kingston.

“This year’s lineup is one that challenges our creative and intellectual boundaries and brings important social issues into focus, both locally and globally” said Woodstock Film Festival’s co-founder and executive director Meira Blaustein. “In today’s political climate it is particularly important to celebrate our differences and find our commonalities. This year’s participating filmmakers have gone above and beyond in capturing diverse moments of humanity that personify fierce independence.”

NARRATIVE FEATURES

The Bachelors, directed by Kurt Voelker

The Ballad of Lefty Brown, directed by Jared Moshe

Beauty Mark, directed by Harris Doran

Becks, directed by Dan Powell and Elizabeth Rohrbaugh

Cold November, directed by Karl Jacob

Crash Pad, directed by Kevin Tent

Don’t Come Back From the Moon, directed by Bruce Thierry Cheung

Girl in Flight, directed by Sandra Vannucchi

Holden On, directed by Tamlin Hall

Infinity Baby, directed by Bob Byington

Last Flag Flying, directed by Richard Linklater

The Light of the Moon, directed by Jessica M. Thompson

A Real Vermeer, directed by Rudolf van den Berg

Revengeance, directed by Bill Plympton and Jim Lujan

The Song of Sway Lake, directed by Ari Gold

The Sounding, directed by Catherine Eaton

The Square, directed by Ruben Östlund

The Strange Ones, directed by Christopher Radcliff and Lauren Wolkstein

Stuck, directed by Michael Berry

Submission, directed by Richard Levine

They, directed by Anahita Ghazvinizadeh

Time Trap, directed by Mark Dennis and Ben Foster

The Traveller, directed by Hadi Ghandour

Us And Them, directed by Joe Martin

Waterboys, directed by Robert Jan Westdijk

What Children Do, directed by Dean Peterson

DOCUMENTARY FEATURES

32 Pills: My Sister’s Suicide, directed by Hope Litoff

40 Years in the Making: The Magic Music Movie,directed by Lee Aronsohn

Against All Odds – The Fight for a Black Middle Class with Bob Herbert, directed by Bob Herbert

Arthur Miller: Writer, directed by Rebecca Miller

Bean, directed by Emilie Bunnell

Becoming Who I was, directed by Moon Chang-Yong and Jeon Jin

Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story, directed by Alexandra Dean

The Chocolate Case, directed by Benthe Forrer

The Cycle (America Divided), directed by Solly Granatstein, Lucian Read and Richard Rowley

Happening: A Clean Energy Revolution, directed by Jamie Redford

Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold, directed by Griffin Dunne

La Chana, directed by Lucija Stojevic

The Last Pig, directed by Allison Argo

Mary Janes: The Women of Weed, directed by Windy Borman

My Name is Pedro, directed by Lillian LaSalle

Nat Bates for Mayor, directed by Bradley Berman and Eric Weiss

The Organizer, directed by Nick Taylor

The Rape of Recy Taylor, directed by Nancy Buirski

Roll With Me, directed by Lisa France

Sammy Davis, Jr.: I’ve Gotta Be Me, directed by Sam Pollard

Shingal, Where Are You?, directed by Angelos Rallis

Supermensch, directed by Mike Myers, Beth Aala

A Symphony of Hope, directed by Brian Weidling

Thank You For Coming, directed by Sara Lamm

This Is Everything: Gigi Gorgeous, directed by Barbara Kopple

To A More Perfect Union: U.S. v. Windsor, directed by Donna Zaccaro

To the Edge of the Sky, directed by Jedd Wider and Todd Wider

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