To Thank The Room
Event description
Final screening tonight, 30 Sept at 6pm. might be room at the door?
TO THANK THE ROOM
Winner Best Melbourne Documentary at the Melbourne Documentary Film Festival 2024.
'So few films try to capture everyday life... I enjoyed it so much. Just beautiful' - John Flaus - Australian screen and broadcasting legend.
Sessions expected to sell out, so please book early!
Maggie Fooke set up the 10 room Brooklyn Arts Hotel in downtown Fitzroy as a guest accommodation for 'artists and lovers of the arts of all kinds - including conversation, activism and philosophy' to stay, when visiting Melbourne.It was rather a well-kept secret, but Maggie and Brooklyn clocked up 25,000 guests stays over 13 years of operation - many of those return visits. In late 2019, Maggie emailed her regulars that she had reached the decision to sell the building and close the hotel. And that there would be a film. Join in and help me document Brooklyn's last 100 days, she wrote. TO THANK THE ROOM is that film:
Documenting the courageous and compelling Maggie Fooke, along with her soft-voiced housekeeper Helen MacKay and Maggie's feisty also-arts-focussed daughter Aphrodite through the final days of this beloved and 'quirky' institution. Maggie joins others in filming ad hoc, engages guests in conversation and the filmmaking process and we the audience are alongside her intimately as she, in her original wild way, is determined - at any cost - to enjoy and share her creation to the last drop.
Length: 90 minutes. 20m Q&A post-film.
Feature Documentary Directed By Belinda Lloyd.
Featuring: Maggie Fooke, Helen Mackay, Aphrodite Feros-Fooke, and Bajjah [the dog]
Executive Producer: Maggie Fooke, Editor: Larry Lawson Original Score By Emily-Rose Sarkov
A KIND WORLD FILMS PRODUCTION
Sunday 22 and 29 September| Doors Open at 2pm | Screening 2.30pm
STOP PRESS: PLEASURE DOMES TO BE SCREENED AT EACH SHOW
Maggie Fooke is also showing her rarely shown 8min Animation Short Pleasure Domes an introspective response on the nature of landscape and the human response to it. Pleasure Domes was the first Australian Animation invited in competition to the Cannes Film Festival in 1988.
Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity