Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival 2008

Notice! Registration is not required to browse the site, track audience buzz, and learn about the festival. If you choose to register, you can create a personal festival calendar, rate and review films, and receive updates about upcoming screenings. Close
    • highlights
    • films
    • schedule
    • buzz
    • my festival
Featured Films
Notice! Check out these featured films playing at the festival. Close
previous film
Animated Short
An ancient allegory, ever increasingly more apropos to our times.
next film
show details Audience Buzz
Notice! The audience buzz provides you with details on the films people are looking forward to and talking about. For more buzz, click here. Close
rating Highest Rated Films
views Most Visited Films
adds Most Scheduled Films
entries read all from the blog
Welcome to the 2008 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival
The 10th annual Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, a celebration of new independent cinema in downtown Birmingham, is set to take place September 26-28, 2008. Since its debut in 1999, filmmakers from across the country and around the world have come to Birmingham to screen their work at Sidewalk and have been thrilled to discover fresh, enthusiastic crowds eager to devour new independent cinema.

With nine venues located within Birmingham’s historic Theatre District (featuring the newly restored Alabama Theatre, a 2,200 seat movie palace built by Paramount in 1927), spontaneity rules the schedule of Sidewalk attendees. Low-priced weekend passes provide easy access to Sidewalk venues, encouraging attendees to seek out new films and sample programming they may not otherwise see. The result is a crowd rich in diversity and united in a hunger for new film.

In 2006, the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival was honored to recognize writer/director John Sayles and producer Maggie Renzi for their more than two decades of collaboration in independent film, which includes such acclaimed indie classics as THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET, MATEWAN, PASSION FISH, LONE STAR, LIMBO and the Sidewalk 2004 Opening Night Film, SILVER CITY.

Other past attendees of the festival include: John C. Reilly (CHICAGO, MAGNOLIA, TALLADEGA NIGHTS), Peter Gilbert (HOOP DREAMS), Amber Benson (BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER), Mary Kay Place (THE BIG CHILL), Mary Lynn Rajbuski (24, PUNCH DRUNK LOVE, SWEET HOME ALABAMA), Dash Mihok (THE THIN RED LINE, ROMEO + JULIET), Dan Myrick (BLAIR WITCH PROJECT), Vincent Kartheiser (ER, ANOTHER DAY IN PARADISE, ANGEL), Chris Gore (IFC, FilmThreat.com), Daniel Wallace (BIG FISH), Gill Holland (HURRICANE STREETS), Adrian Grenier (HBOs ENTOURAGE, Woody Allens CELEBRITY), Louise Fletcher (ONE FLEW OVER THE CUKOOS NEST), David Keith (AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMEN), Chris Mulkey (TWIN PEAKS) and many more up and coming award winning filmmakers and stars.

From the Filmmakers’ Reception and the Filmmakers’ Retreat to a myriad of breakfasts, field trips, parties and galas, Sidewalk connects filmmakers. The atmosphere at Sidewalk is electric with creativity and collaboration as filmmakers and film-lovers mix and mingle between screenings, participate in panel discussions, grab a bite to eat at the Sidewalk Café, or simply enjoy a brew at the Sidewalk Music Café @ Speakeasy 1920.


• One of TIME magazine’s FILM FESTIVALS FOR THE REST OF US.

• One of Chris Gore’s BEST VACATION FILM FESTIVALS in the Ultimate Film Festival Survival Guide.

• "BEST KEPT SECRET" in MovieMaker Magazine.
Welcome to the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival!
The 9th annual Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, a celebration of new independent cinema in downtown Birmingham, is set to take place September 28-30. Since its debut in 1999, filmmakers from across the country and around the world have come to Birmingham to screen their work at Sidewalk and have been thrilled to discover fresh, enthusiastic crowds eager to devour new independent cinema.

With nine venues located within Birmingham’s historic Theatre District (featuring the newly restored Alabama Theatre, a 2,200 seat movie palace built by Paramount in 1927), spontaneity rules the schedule of Sidewalk attendees. Low-priced weekend passes provide easy access to Sidewalk venues, encouraging attendees to seek out new films and sample programming they may not otherwise see. The result is a crowd rich in diversity and united in a hunger for new film.

From the Filmmakers’ Reception and the Filmmakers’ Retreat to a myriad of breakfasts, field trips, parties and galas, Sidewalk connects filmmakers. The atmosphere at Sidewalk is electric with creativity and collaboration as filmmakers and film-lovers mix and mingle between screenings, participate in panel discussions, grab a bite to eat at the Sidewalk Café, or simply enjoy a brew at the Sidewalk Music Café @ Speakeasy 1920.
What can I do?
Log in to add movies to your personal calendar, rate and review movies, and receive festival updates.
Use the tell-a-friend box to let others know about your favorite movies and share your personal calendar.
Add movies to your personal calendar, rate and review movies, and receive festival updates.
Share
Recent Activity
Number of calendar adds walking_tall added Digital City (screening: 9/27/08 10:00 AM) to the calendar
on: 10/30/09 1:29 AM
Number of calendar adds stomptokyo added Flow (screening: 9/28/08 1:45 PM) to the calendar
on: 5/21/09 2:28 PM
Number of calendar adds stomptokyo added Timecrimes (Los Cronocrímenes) (screening: 9/28/08 1:30 PM) to the calendar
on: 5/21/09 2:28 PM
Rated 5.0/5 Stars
elzzil rated Chickamauga
on: 10/22/08 10:11 PM
chrisj91 reviewed Make-Out With Violence
on: 10/8/08 9:25 PM
saying: "Weird movie... throughly unimpressed..."
chrisj91 reviewed Make-Out With Violence
on: 10/8/08 9:24 PM
saying: "Weird movie... throughly unimpressed..."
Rated 1.0/5 Stars
chrisj91 rated Make-Out With Violence
on: 10/8/08 9:22 PM
Rated 1.0/5 Stars
chrisj91 rated Make-Out With Violence
on: 10/8/08 9:22 PM
Rated 2.0/5 Stars
Laminin3 rated Medicine for Melancholy
on: 10/8/08 7:28 AM
Laminin3 reviewed I Think We're Alone Now
on: 10/8/08 7:24 AM
saying: "I Think We're Alone Now was a very interesting documentary. It was filled with all sorts of emotion..."