Jan 21 - 22 2022
St. Augustine Film Festival at the Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center

St. Augustine Film Festival at the Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center

Presented by Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center and Saint Augustine Film Festival at Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center

This year, the Saint Augustine Film Festival is partnering with the Lincolnville Museum & Cultural Center for exclusive film screenings. Don't miss these must-see films on Black history and culture!

Masks are strongly encouraged when not eating or drinking. Refreshments will be available for purchase.

Schedule:

SHOWING 1 - Friday, January 21st at 6 PM:

Wade In The Water: Drowning In Racism 

Director: Cathleen Deen

From seaweed to lost beach balls, sun-seekers bump into all sorts of surprises swimming along Florida’s iconic beaches. For Black swimmers, however, there’s a complex history floating off Florida’s blue waters—one of segregation and violence, but also one of protest and resistance.

The Conversation Remix: For Our Girls, A Conversation with Black Women 

Director: Michèle Stephenson & Imani Dennison

For Our Girls is a love letter to Black daughters -- acknowledging the sacred, and at times, tense relationship mothers and daughters share as they face challenges and accept each other’s flaws.

Fireburn The Documentary

Director: Joel Fendelman

Although the Fireburn took place in the 1800s, on a Caribbean Island, it is relevant today. The film addresses the heart of humanity and shows us what happens when people are robbed of their inalienable rights.

 

SHOWING 2- Friday, January 21st at 7:20 PM:

GO-GO CITY: Displacement & Protest in D.C.

Director: Samuel George

For decades, Washington DC has stood as a beacon for Black culture and community. Yet a breakneck wave of gentrification threatens to erase this history.

Go-Go City dives into this rich tapestry, exploring the culture and sound of Washington, DC, as well as the forces of economic and cultural gentrification that stand to mute them. The film interweaves scenes of massive 2020 protests against racial inequality that filled the streets of the nation’s capital for weeks. Follow along as displaced communities rally around the city’s beloved Go-Go music to retake the streets.

Director: Samuel George is a documentary filmmaker and analyst for the Bertelsmann Foundation, focusing on the intersection of economics, politics, the digital revolution, and daily life.

 

SHOWING 3: Saturday, January 22nd at 2:00 PM.

Fireburn The Documentary

Director: Joel Fendelman

2. Wade In The Water: Drowning In Racism 

Director: Cathleen Deen

3. Rest Area

Director: Rhythum

A family of four on their way to a family reunion, stop at a rest area. An unfortunate event will change their lives forever.

4. The Conversation Remix: For Our Girls, A Conversation with Black Women 

Director: Michèle Stephenson & Imani Dennison

SHOWING 4- Saturday, January 22nd at 6:00 PM:

Join Lincolnville Museum for a special showing of One Pint at a Time, followed by a Q&A with the filmmaker, Aaron Hosé, and producer, Brigitte Hosé.

Craft beer generates tens of billions of dollars annually for the US economy. Despite beer’s Egyptian and African heritage, these traditions have been mostly forgotten and are rarely found in American brewing culture. Today, Black-owned breweries make up less than 1% of the nearly 9,000 breweries in operation. Eager to shift the historical perception of who makes and drinks beer, Black brewers, brand owners and influencers across the country are reshaping the craft beer industry and the future of America’s favorite adult beverage.

Admission Info

Tickets are currently on sale for $15 per showing, and can be purchased via Eventbrite. Click here to purchase tickets!

Phone: 904-824-1191

Email: lmccstaug@gmail.com

Dates & Times

2022/01/21 - 2022/01/22

Location Info

Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center

102 Martin Luther King Ave, St. Augustine, FL 32084

Parking Info

Parking is available for museum guests along either side the museum building, behind the building (Via Pomar St), and across from the building (grass lot).