Day five of the Woods Hole Film Festival starts off with a Quick Stop musical performance by Mike Bernier, at 4 p.m. at Quicks Hole.
At 5 p.m., Redfield Auditorium offers the chance to catch a film you might have missed the first time it showed. For the Love of the Music: The Club 47 Folk Revival examines the Cambridge, Massachusetts club's history, including its role in the folk music revival of the late 50s and 60s. The film includes interviews with Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and many other artists, plus previously unreleased recordings and photographs of Bob Dylan, Baez, and Eric Von Schmidt.
At 7 p.m., at the Old Woods Hole Fire Station, the narrative feature Future Weather looks at the intertwining of global issues and personal struggles, as a troubled teenager becomes obsessed with environmental catastrophe amidst her own familial turmoil.
Also at 7, back at Redfield, it's Words of Witness, a documentary following one young female reporter's quest to chronicle the historic events rocking her home country of Egypt. For Heba Afify, covering the Egypt uprisings means not just putting her life in danger, but also defying cultural norms and family expectations.
At 8 p.m. at the MBL's Lillie Auditorium, don't miss a special festival event, combining film and music. What is a Heart examines Christopher Janney's performance piece HeartBeat, which has been performed by a diverse assortment of artists since it was created 25 years ago. The film will be kicked off by a live performance by a capella group The Persuasions.
At 9 p.m., at the Fire Station, check out Nothing Like Chocolate, a documentary highlighting anarchist chocolate maker Mott Green's Grenada Chocolate Company. Narrated by Susan Sarandon, the film examines the makeshift system created by Mott and his independent cocoa suppliers in order to remain outside the system. Also included in the screening is the documentary short Practice: Change, which tells the story of one woman's quest to bring yoga to some of Africa's poorest slums.
Also at 9, at Redfield, it's the festival's fifth lineup of shorts, Agree to Disagree. The mix of seven narrative and animated shorts examine conflict and reconciliation from every angle and at every stage of life, and beyond.