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Save Me a Seat!: A Life with Movies (2023)

di Rick Winston

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13101,529,187 (4.39)Nessuno
"Rick Winston's lifelong love of movies led to the creation of one of Vermont's leading cultural institutions, the Savoy Theater. With humor and heart, he takes us behind the scenes of the hard and rewarding work of building a film culture over decades in a grateful community" -- Publisher.
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Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Even for a casual movie buff like me, this is an entertaining and very informative book about someone who grew up loving movies and later spent much of his life building a movie culture in Vermont. First a film series, then the Savoy Theater, an arts theater that is a cultural institution, then a film festival.

I especially enjoyed all the movies, well known or not, that he discussed throughout the book. You'll want to keep a pad of paper and a pen handy to jot them down.

An interesting, fast-paced look at a life with the movies.

Highly recommended, even for casual movie fans!! ( )
  lindapanzo | Mar 28, 2024 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
"Save Me A Seat!: A Life With Movies by Rick Winston published in 2023 by Rootstock Publishing. This is a marvelous memoir as Rick serves as a genial guide across his lifetime journey from nascent film fan, to a deepening passion for movies fueled by trips to legendary New York revival theaters, to starting and running a film society in Vermont, to founding the independent Savoy cinema in Montpelier, adding a video store, helping to start and run the Green Mountain Film Festival, and continuing his journey as film educator throughout the state of Vermont. In addition to covering Rick's personal history the book parallel's the rise of Film Culture in the 60s alongside shifts in technology that brought VHS, DVD, Digital Projection, and streaming. Reading this book is a wonderful antidote to the frequent sharp elbowed cynicism of Hollywood as Rick continually credits the support of family, friends, and community in making him a film fan and film professional through an ongoing circle of generosity. Best of all thanks to Rick's infectious enthusiasm I finally watched the tremendous Les Enfants du Paradis aka Children of Paradise. Highly recommended! ( )
  ralphcoviello | Dec 15, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A very entertaining book to read. Winston's love of movies comes through in this book, his struggles to open and run both a theater and a rental store are interesting as his experience running the Green Mountain Film Festival. Winston also talks a lot about foreign films and older films and not necessarily the blockbusters that most know a lot about. A good read and opportunity to finds some new films to watch. ( )
  foof2you | Aug 12, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A very entertaining story about the founding and running of an independent movie theater in Vermont.
The author tells of his early life and how he became a film lover, and the path that led to his founding the Savoy Theater, along with the Green Mountain Film Festival, both of which have become cultural institutions.
Along the way, he shares movies that have made a particular impact on him.
The book is replete with anecdotes about his trials, tribulations and triumphs. ( )
  Bythepond88 | Jul 24, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Rick Winston grew up in suburban New York, the son of art teachers with a penchant for movies, and they inculcated him early. In his memoir, Save Me a Seat!: A Life With Movies, he recalls seeing Rear Window and his first foreign film, Mr. Hulot’s Holiday, at age 7.

His life course was pretty much set right there, along with help from Channel 9—WOR-TV—which broadcast “Million Dollar Movie,” a show which programmed the same movie twice a night for a week and three times on the weekends, as best as I recall.

Like Winston, I grew up in suburban New York about the same time, and “Million Dollar Movie” was a godsend for burgeoning film buffs. We could hone our teeth on the original King Kong or its knockoff, Mighty Joe Young (starring Robert Armstrong from Kong and a young Ben Johnson).

With so many repeated showings some of the films became embedded deep into the old brainpan (I have a sudden urge to re-watch William Powell and Ann Blyth in Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid). It certainly made it easy to remember every song from Yankee Doodle Dandy or The Jolson Story, weep at the end of Gunga Din and begin to appreciate tougher war film fare like The Purple Heart, A Walk in the Sun or Home of the Brave. It may be why some of us of a certain age still appreciate a good black and white film, too.

Winston managed to turn it all into a career, if somewhat haphazardly at first after moving to Vermont in the early ‘70s. He began by helping to select films for Sunday night showings at Goddard College, though the only title he now remembers is East of Eden with James Dean: “I recall wondering as [it] unspooled if its long-ago setting (Salinas, California, in 1915) and its heart-on-the-sleeve emotionality made it a wise choice for (I’m guessing) a predominantly stoned audience.”

But it was an urge to see some of Stanley Kubrick’s early works (Lolita, Paths of Glory, Dr. Strangelove…) that led Winston into creating the Lightning Ridge Film Society, which began in 1973 at the Montpelier Pavilion Auditorium with a showing of the British horror thriller Dead of Night (and later in the season, Kubrick’s The Killing).

The Society lasted for eight years, giving way to a more ambitious venture, the Savoy Theater on Main Street in Montpelier, Vermont’s capitol city. With a partner, Gary Ireland, Winston opened the theater in January of 1981, showing Casablanca, which it would often run, for free, in subsequent anniversary years.

Ireland departed in 1999, and Winston’s wife, Andrea Serota, came on as a full partner in the theater and what had become a spin-off venture, Downstairs Video (unsurprisingly, in the basement below the theater). They kept at it until selling in 2009, and the Savoy Theater is still up and running today, with its mix of independent films and international fare, and the annual Green Mountain Film Festival, which the Savoy began sponsoring in 1999.

Not to say it was all an uphill climb. There were plenty of vicissitudes along the way (if not a fire, a flood), and Winston details it all in a genial tone, with a dozen chapter breaks he calls “trailers” that highlight some of the pertinent films in his life, the theater’s life, the festival’s life. Scores of film personalities (directors, critics, musicians) also make cameos in the plethora of anecdotes to feast on here.

Now 76, Winston is still at it, in terms of classes and talks he leads, in person and on the internet. Clearly, he found it at the movies, and he makes it all sound like he’s really had a wonderful life.

[A version of this review, with illustration, is at: http://theaposition.com/tombedell/golf/lifestyle/9409/reel-life-in-vermont]

  tombedell | Jun 20, 2023 |
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"Rick Winston's lifelong love of movies led to the creation of one of Vermont's leading cultural institutions, the Savoy Theater. With humor and heart, he takes us behind the scenes of the hard and rewarding work of building a film culture over decades in a grateful community" -- Publisher.

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