Moldflow Monday Blog

Kinozapasmy Free May 2026

Learn about 2023 Features and their Improvements in Moldflow!

Did you know that Moldflow Adviser and Moldflow Synergy/Insight 2023 are available?
 
In 2023, we introduced the concept of a Named User model for all Moldflow products.
 
With Adviser 2023, we have made some improvements to the solve times when using a Level 3 Accuracy. This was achieved by making some modifications to how the part meshes behind the scenes.
 
With Synergy/Insight 2023, we have made improvements with Midplane Injection Compression, 3D Fiber Orientation Predictions, 3D Sink Mark predictions, Cool(BEM) solver, Shrinkage Compensation per Cavity, and introduced 3D Grill Elements.
 
What is your favorite 2023 feature?

You can see a simplified model and a full model.

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Kinozapasmy Free May 2026

Kinozapasmy Free means admission is by donation, intentionally low-barrier. The goal isn’t ticket sales but community. Local filmmakers are invited to test rough cuts; the audience gives feedback over tea and cigarettes—sometimes tender, sometimes blunt. Workshops follow weekend screenings: how to splice film safely, how to translate idioms without killing rhythm, how to curate a program that tells a story across time and geography.

What makes Kinozapasmy stick in the memory is its contradictions. It’s nostalgic and forward-looking; DIY yet meticulously paced; small-scale and infinitely expansive. It treats cinema as a living thing—one you can touch, argue with, and nurture. In a city that values the polished and the new, Kinozapasmy is an emissary for the imperfect, the overlooked, and the heartfully made. kinozapasmy free

Kinozapasmy—an invented festival name that crackles like electricity—feels like the secret handshake of cinephiles who prefer midnight screenings, scratched film reels, and subtitles that look hand-lettered. Picture a reclaimed warehouse by the river where rows of mismatched chairs face an aging 35mm projector. The air tastes faintly of coffee and vinyl; outside, neon flickers over wet cobblestones. Inside, strangers become conspirators for two hours, sharing laughs, sighs, and the small, sacred ritual of dimming lights. Workshops follow weekend screenings: how to splice film

Kinozapasmy Free

The program is fearless. A 1920s Soviet montage rubs shoulders with a post-internet short made on a phone; a grainy Polish melodrama slides into an experimental animation stitched from scanned family photos. Kinozapasmy’s curators treasure imperfection: the occasional jump in frame, audio hiss, and shuttered corners are not flaws but fingerprints—proof the film has lived. Between features, a local artist steps up to play an improvised score on a battered keyboard; a poet reads an interlude that turns a fleeting image into a lifetime. It treats cinema as a living thing—one you

Audience interaction at Kinozapasmy is gentle, not performative. After a screening, conversations spill into alcoves and the courtyard—questions about color grading mix with recommendations for obscure directors. Someone passes around a zine with hand-collaged stills and liner notes; another offers slices of cold pizza wrapped in wax paper. There’s an earnestness here: people who love cinema not as background but as a map to feeling and memory.

If you stumble across a poster for Kinozapasmy Free—typewritten letters, coffee rings, a hand-drawn projector—take the leap. Bring a sweater; stay for the discussion; leave with a new favorite film and a fresh zine tucked under your arm.

Check out our training offerings ranging from interpretation
to software skills in Moldflow & Fusion 360

Get to know the Plastic Engineering Group
– our engineering company for injection molding and mechanical simulations

PEG-Logo-2019_weiss

Kinozapasmy Free means admission is by donation, intentionally low-barrier. The goal isn’t ticket sales but community. Local filmmakers are invited to test rough cuts; the audience gives feedback over tea and cigarettes—sometimes tender, sometimes blunt. Workshops follow weekend screenings: how to splice film safely, how to translate idioms without killing rhythm, how to curate a program that tells a story across time and geography.

What makes Kinozapasmy stick in the memory is its contradictions. It’s nostalgic and forward-looking; DIY yet meticulously paced; small-scale and infinitely expansive. It treats cinema as a living thing—one you can touch, argue with, and nurture. In a city that values the polished and the new, Kinozapasmy is an emissary for the imperfect, the overlooked, and the heartfully made.

Kinozapasmy—an invented festival name that crackles like electricity—feels like the secret handshake of cinephiles who prefer midnight screenings, scratched film reels, and subtitles that look hand-lettered. Picture a reclaimed warehouse by the river where rows of mismatched chairs face an aging 35mm projector. The air tastes faintly of coffee and vinyl; outside, neon flickers over wet cobblestones. Inside, strangers become conspirators for two hours, sharing laughs, sighs, and the small, sacred ritual of dimming lights.

Kinozapasmy Free

The program is fearless. A 1920s Soviet montage rubs shoulders with a post-internet short made on a phone; a grainy Polish melodrama slides into an experimental animation stitched from scanned family photos. Kinozapasmy’s curators treasure imperfection: the occasional jump in frame, audio hiss, and shuttered corners are not flaws but fingerprints—proof the film has lived. Between features, a local artist steps up to play an improvised score on a battered keyboard; a poet reads an interlude that turns a fleeting image into a lifetime.

Audience interaction at Kinozapasmy is gentle, not performative. After a screening, conversations spill into alcoves and the courtyard—questions about color grading mix with recommendations for obscure directors. Someone passes around a zine with hand-collaged stills and liner notes; another offers slices of cold pizza wrapped in wax paper. There’s an earnestness here: people who love cinema not as background but as a map to feeling and memory.

If you stumble across a poster for Kinozapasmy Free—typewritten letters, coffee rings, a hand-drawn projector—take the leap. Bring a sweater; stay for the discussion; leave with a new favorite film and a fresh zine tucked under your arm.