Cinemania
Directed byAngela Christlieb
Stephen Kijak
Produced byGunter Hanfgarn
Stephen Kijak
Avi Weider
StarringJack Angstreich
Eric Chadbourne
Bill Heidbreder
Roberta Hill
Harvey Schwartz
CinematographyAngela Christlieb
Stephen Kijak
Edited byAngela Christlieb
Music byStereo Total
Robert Drasnin
Distributed byLOOP Filmworks
Release date
  • 2002 (2002)
Running time
83 minutes
CountriesGermany
United States
LanguageEnglish

Cinemania is a 2002 German/American documentary about five obsessed cinephiles, who, throughout the year, each see two to five films a day and work out a daily schedule to see them in theatres across New York City.[1][2]

Cast

Roberta Hill

Roberta Hill
Born(1936-06-18)June 18, 1936
DiedJuly 18, 2009(2009-07-18) (aged 73)

Hill was born June 18, 1936, in Washington, D.C., a daughter of Robert L. and Dorothy (née Dyar) Hill, and a granddaughter of Harrison Gray Dyar Jr.[4] She lived for most of her life in Washington, D.C., moving in 1983 to New York City, where she died on July 18, 2009. An obsessive-compulsive woman who, according to Jack, "is so far in the prison [of cinephilia], that to me, it's just a hopeless, Sisyphean lifestyle." Has kept every piece of film-memorabilia she's got her hands on for what appears to be the last five decades, including ticket-stubs, programs, fliers, a promotional bottle of water from an independent film called Water, and promotional plastic cups from Last Action Hero and Jurassic Park. Roberta has been banned from many theaters for her rude and uncouth behavior, which has included attacking ushers who have torn too much paper off her ticket-stubs.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. ^ FilmAffinity
  2. ^ Sidewalk Film Center & Cinema
  3. ^ The 10 Best Movies About Cinephiles — Page 2 — Taste of Cinema
  4. ^ "Dyar Family Oral History Interviews, 1993, 1999". Smithsonian Institution Archives Local Number: SIA RU009570. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  5. ^ "Roberta Hill (Obituary)". The New York Times. August 2, 2009. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  6. ^ "FILM IN REVIEW; 'Cinemania' (Published 2003)". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2017-12-29.