maryland film festival
- Organizers have obtained promises for $13.5 million of the $17 million needed to refurbish the 1915 movie palace.
- Filmmaker Margaret Rorison will be giving a lecture at McDaniel College Thursday, Oct. 2.
- Latest opening means nearly 60 screens just within Beltway
- We welcome Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake's Anchor strategy initiative, to be announced Wednesday. It includes partnership agreements between major Baltimore higher education and medical institutions and the city government to advance economic development in various communities through increased cooperation relating to the four priority areas of public safety, local hiring, local purchasing, and quality of life issues that affect us all. . It is everyone's responsibility to actively and
- Grumblings seemed few as the 16th Maryland Film Festival wrapped Sunday having weathered a forced relocation to North Avenue and other nearby areas.
- Shuttle system gets off to late start at Maryland Film Festival.
- The 16th Maryland Film Festival kicked off Wednesday night with a roster of happy filmmakers and a crowd of optimistic film fans.
- Station North hopes for business boost as Maryland Film Festival moves to seven sites.
- Towson native Martha Shane may live in Brooklyn, N.Y., but the filmmaker and Maryland Film Festival co-host can always call the Baltimore area home.
- With a third of feature films directed by women, fest reflects the greater diversity on display in independent cinema
- Buses to run every 10 minutes between Station North Arts District, MICA, the University of Baltimore and the Walters Art Museum
- The 2014 Maryland Film Festival takes place May 7-11 around the Station North Arts District and other Baltimore area locations.
- "Abuse of Weakness," the latest work from controversial French filmmaker Catherine Breillat, will get its Maryland premiere at the 2014 Maryland Film Festival
- The first list of 10 films scheduled for the 16th annual Maryland Film Festival includes the Ocean City-set "Ping Pong Summer."