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Philly weekender: 4th of July celebrations and FIFA Club World Cup

Philly weekender: 4th of July celebrations and FIFA Club World Cup

Axiosa day ago
🏛️ Beat the heat at free museum days as part of Wawa Welcome American. Participating museums include the Academy of Fine Arts and Fireman's Hall.
🎹 Philly Pops and singer Ben Folds take the stage today at 7pm for a concert at the Independence National Historical Park.
Don't forget to bring your own chair or blanket.
🏰 Kickoff the long weekend at the South Street Night Market tonight from 5-9pm. Plan for line dancing, karaoke, food trucks and a bounce house between 8th and 3rd Streets.
🐶 Let your patriotic pooch strut his stuff for the top prize at the Betsy Ross House's pet costume contest. Friday, 10:30am.
🇺🇸 The Salute to Independence Parade steps off at 11am from 5th and Chestnut Streets.
Enjoy floats, entertainers and marching musical groups.
🎇 The Wawa Welcome America Festival takes over the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Friday at 7pm (gates open at 4pm) with a concert featuring LL Cool J and Jazmine Sullivan.
Count on a beer garden, food trucks, interactive activities and a big fireworks display (9:30pm).
⚽ Philly's last FIFA Club World Cup match is Friday. Brazilian powerhouse Palmeiras will take on English giant Chelsea in this 9pm quarterfinal match at Lincoln Financial Field. Tickets: $45+
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LL Cool J says he won't perform at Philadelphia's July Fourth festival in support of workers strike
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LL Cool J says he won't perform at Philadelphia's July Fourth festival in support of workers strike

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‘The Blue Trail' Director on His 'Boat Movie' About a Rebellious Granny That Is an 'Ode to Freedom'
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The Blue Trail, the latest movie from Brazilian filmmaker Gabriel Mascaro (Neon Bull, Divine Love, August Winds), takes viewers into a magical but also political Amazon in a near-future dystopia. The film, which won the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize at Berlin this year, is one of the highlights from the recent festival circuit that is screening in the Horizons program of the 59th edition of the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (KVIFF), starting on Friday. 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THR asked Mascaro about his inspirations for The Blue Trail, what went into creating an autocratic state and its slogans, the movie's religious and sexual undertones and what's next for me a bit about why you set the film in a dystopian near-future Brazil? And how universal are the themes of the film in your view? In every family, we have an aging relative, so it has been very special to see the film resonate so strongly at all the festivals where it has screened. There are very few films with elderly protagonists. The movies we see in general often focus on older characters left behind in a world that is moving on without them, portraying aging as a period of painful isolation or physical decline. In many cases, the past becomes a driving force in these stories, motivating the protagonist to seek a final purpose, perhaps to allow them to die in peace. These stories often carry an undercurrent of nostalgia and inevitability, where death unconsciously shapes the narrative's tension. Growing up, I lived in a house with many people, and my grandparents were always in my life. My grandmother learned to paint at 80 years old, after my grandfather's death, and seeing things like this changed my perspective on aging. It showed me how the elderly can become protagonists of their own self-discovery and make significant changes, even impressive or astonishing ones. In my film, I wanted to explore a different perspective. My approach proposes a journey, with elements of adventure and fantasy, and reconnecting with one's desire to be free. It's a 'boat movie' about aging and dreaming, with older women taking center stage. The Blue Trail is a film about the right to dream, featuring an older protagonist who decides not to accept the fate that someone else, in this case, the state, has traced for her. 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I think The Blue Trail indirectly addresses a lot of serious and delicate contemporary issues, especially related to the forced displacement of people, groups, or ethnicities from their homes in the name of a state project. It's about the elderly being removed from society, but it also resonates with so many other groups of people. From gentrification, to the removal of indigenous communities from their lands for economic exploitation, to wars waged for territorial gain while wealthy countries profit from arms sales, the treatment of refugees and immigrants forced to leave their countries due to conflicts or oppression. Above all, I wanted to make a film that was passionate about the presence and the possibilities of our drive for life. A film about the character of a woman — a mother, grandmother, older, yet still not confined to a fixed identity. Tereza embodies the desire to live out this journey, the willingness to try on new identities and experience new things in a unique, original, and undogmatic way. I find that it is unusual to see elderly protagonists in cinema, especially in dystopias, fantasies and also in anything resembling a 'coming-of-age' drama. Genre conventions in cinema are powerful tools for storytelling, but they can be oppressive to storytellers as well. It often seems as though rebellion against the system is something reserved for the young. Like the quest for maturity, understanding and finding your place in the world, should be rites of passage meant only for high school students or people not much older. I hope it is a film that plays with genres in a fun way. Instead of adhering to a single genre, I wanted to create an interaction between the lyrical and the playful in a sort of post-tropical delirium that challenges some of these rigid lines. 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I have a special affection for cinema that makes speculations of reality from fantastical notions, but that could still be real. How did you come up with the funny but at the same time scary word 'wrinkle wagon' that we hear in the film? I did iconographic research on vehicles used to collect stray dogs. These vehicles marked the imagination of generations. So I tried to reframe this idea into a vehicle dedicated to collecting dissident elderly people on the streets. People popularly call the vehicle the 'wrinkle wagon,' although its official name is 'Citizen Police.' Having an alternative nickname adds a special flavor to the world-building, giving the film additional layers. I told someone that I just saw a movie about an older woman who goes on an epic journey in a country focused on economic growth.' His reaction was: 'Which country?!' When I said Brazil, he seemed surprised… It's curious that the Amazon, as consumed in cinema and TV outside of Brazil, is still so idealized. I wanted to challenge this romanticized, skewed representation we often see when it's about conservation. The film takes us into an Amazon that is simultaneously magical and industrial, almost surreal, and deeply political. The story speculates about a political system marked by tropical populist, developmental fascism, placing the Amazon not in the idealized space of 'the lungs of the world,' but as the region at the heart of the planet's contradictions. I see the Amazon as a character with its own life, laden with its own complexities. I faced the challenge of redefining the idealization of Amazonian fauna. Thus, the viewer will be confronted with an unusual industrial-scale meat-processing factory for alligator meat and a betting house featuring fish fighting rings. The premise was to accentuate how large-scale capital and pop culture have appropriated the imagery of the region where the film is set. The film also dedicates a special place to an enchanted snail that emits a blue slime with magical powers to open paths and see the future. The snail signals a poetic contradiction that can be associated with old age as well: slow in movement but infinite in possibilities. The blue slime snail leaves a blue trail wherever it goes, as if planting a seed for a new future. What's next for you? Any new projects? I'm beginning to develop some new ideas while also staying open to falling in love with a screenplay that someone who admires my work might bring to me. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts

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