PHOTO GALLERY: True/False festival
Saturday, February 27, 2010 | 10:35 p.m. CST;
updated 11:43 a.m. CST, Sunday, February 28, 2010
True/False attendees Matt Dreier(left) and Whitney Spivey wait for a showing of the The Invention of Dr. Nakamats at The Blue Note on Saturday. Crowds packed The Blue Note for the afternoon showing, with many viewers settling for cramped standing room.
¦ Brenden Neville
BY
*CORRECTION: A photo caption in an earlier version of this gallery incorrectly identified Steve Robertson.
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The True/False film festival featured a walking tour of Broadway for
filmgoers in addition to the documentaries played over the four-day
period.
Audience members Justin Gregory (left), Pat Barnes, and Steve Robertson* yell their responses to whether a film is true or false at the Gimme Truth! game show, held at the Blue Note on Saturday.
¦ BRENDEN NEVILLE
Host Johnny St. John explains the rules of the Gimme Truth! game show at the Blue Note on the Saturday.
¦ BRENDEN NEVILLE
Timothy Speed Levitch leads his tour up Ninth Street towards Broadway while Gabriel Williams carries Levitch’s folding stool during the True/False walking tour of Columbia on Friday. Walking from the Box Office at Ninth Street and Cherry Street to Broadway and Eighth Street and back, the tour was short but covered landmarks such as an alley, a building and artwork.
¦ William Lounsbury
Timothy Speed Levitch talks about the architecture of the new City Hall and the contrast between it and the old building while Alexis Bloom and Jasmine Dellal listen at the corner of Broadway and Eighth Street during the True/False walking tour of Columbia, on Friday. Levitch focused the majority of his lecture on the contrast between the old and new architecture on Broadway and, mainly, the new government building.
¦ William Lounsbury
AV equipment sits ready for a showing of The Invention of Dr. Nakamats at the Blue Note on Saturday. The film takes a documentary look at the life of the man who invented the floppy disk.
¦ Brenden Neville
Timothy Speed Levitch explains the History of Alley A and its informal former name "Historic Clown Alley" during his walking tour of Broadway on Saturday. The tour, part of the True/False Film Fest, focused on little known facts about downtown Columbia and personal stories from Levitch.
¦ WILLIAM LOUNSBURY
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