<font size="4">Cinematic Disobedience presents... Potluck + screening of Mission Hill and the Miracle of Boston (1978)</font><br>
<br>Thursday, March 1st, at Spectacle (128 Brookside Ave in JP, right near the Green St. T)<br>Free!<br>Potluck at 7pm - bring a dish or a beverage, if you can! Screening at 8pm.<br>Future
events: <a href="http://cinematicdisobedience.com/">http://cinematicdisobedience.com/</a>. Events will take place on
the first of every month in different locations around Boston.<br>Facebook RSVP: <a href="http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/259557250791940/">http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/259557250791940/</a><br><br><br>Join
us for the kick-off of an indefinite occupation of Boston screens!
Inspired by the Occupy movement, Cinematic Disobedience aims to bring
people together for food and discussion and to present films that
reflect in one way or another on the state of our economy, our public
space and our society.<br><br>Mission Hill and the Miracle of Boston (1978) by Richard Broadman<br><br>"The
story of what happened to Mission Hill is the story of many of
America's older ethnic neighborhoods. Seventy years ago, Mission Hill
was an Irish neighborhood of homes and small stores in which people
lived near their schools, their church, and their shopping area. But
between 1940 and 1980 it changed: thousands of units of public housing
were built and decayed there. Nearby hospitals expanded, displacing
people from their homes. Developers and speculators bought and sold
property and built twenty-story apartment houses. A new, poor population
and an affluent professional population arrived to compete for parts of
the old neighborhood.<br><br>Mission Hill and the Miracle of Boston is
the story of urban renewal, racial conflict, and the struggle of a
neighborhood to survive these changing times. Spokespeople include real
estate developers, community activists, workers, and residents." -DER<br><br>Big thanks to Documentary Educational Resources for assistance with this screening!