NOW PLAYING IN THEATER
Four Adventures of Reinette and Mirabelle
Tuesday May 21
4:00pmDirector: Éric Rohmer
1987 / 99min / DCP
Shot quickly in and around Paris during a production break on Rohmer’s Le Rayon Vert, this breezy, witty film traces the exploits of two young women
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Fallen Angels
Director: Wong Kar-wai
1995 / 99min / DCP
Part hard-boiled crime thriller and part soft, featherweight giddiness, Fallen Angels was first conceived as a segment of Wong’s Chungking Express, then developed into a darker companion piece to his glistening pop-romantic masterpiece, the story of a…
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Members Only: Le Dépays
Tuesday May 21
7:00pmDirector: Chris Marker
2024 / 60min / DCP
A unique Member’s Only Event celebrating the release of the first English-language edition of Le Dépays, Chris Marker’s 1982 photo-essay book, assembled during the same years that Marker was realizing his film Sans Soleil and, like that superlative…
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Members Only: Level Five
Tuesday May 21
8:15pmDirector: Chris Marker
1997 / 106min / Digital
Introduced by actress Catherine Belkhodja on Tuesday, May 21st
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Members Only: Kim's Video
Director: David Redmon, Ashley Sabin
2023 / 85min / DCP
A paean to a vanished New York and endangered video store culture, part-documentary and part-heist drama, Redmon and Sabin’s film tells the story of the rise and fall of Korean immigrant Youngman Kim’s fabled video store empire—and that’s just the…
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Paprika
Tuesday May 21
10:30pmDirector: Satoshi Kon
2006 / 90min / 35mm
The fourth and final film by Kon takes place in a not-too-distant future in which therapists, using a new technology called DC Mini, are able to record the dreams of psychiatric patients. All well and good, until a raid on the lab leads to the loss of the…
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3 Women
Wednesday May 22
4:00pmDirector: Robert Altman
1977 / 124min / DCP
Alongside his more touted multi-character panoramas, Altman also had a fondness for small-scale dramas investigating the complexities of female psychology, and of these none is greater than the ineffable 3 Women, which finds Shelley Duvall, Sissy Spacek,…
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Through a Glass Darkly
Wednesday May 22
4:30pmDirector: Ingmar Bergman
1961 / 90min / DCP
Harriet Andersson gives an arresting performance of the tragic cycles of sedation and mania as Karin, a schizophrenic woman on 24-hour leave from institutional oversight who, while visiting a remote island retreat with her novelist father (Gunnar…
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Le Cercle Rouge
Wednesday May 22
6:30pmDirector: Jean-Pierre Melville
1970 / 140min / DCP
Maybe the most Melvillian movie that Melville ever made, Le Cercle Rouge is an exhaustive catalog of the stylistic fetishes observed throughout its director’s body of work, a supremely controlled, precision engineered thriller about three taciturn tough…
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Meek's Cutoff
Wednesday May 22
6:45pmDirector: Kelly Reichardt
2010 / 104min / 35mm
In 1845 Oregon, a group of pioneers looking for a new life find themselves instead wandering the wastes, with wary, hard-assed frontierswoman Michelle Williams having to forebear the incompetence of Bruce Greenwood’s windbag wagonmaster. Appropriately…
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The Master
Wednesday May 22
9:15pmDirector: Paul Thomas Anderson
2012 / 138min / 35mm
Anderson’s aching, ambitious, and deeply ambiguous psychodrama pairs alcoholic ex-serviceman Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix) and messianic flimflam man Lancaster Dodd (Philip Seymour Hoffman) in a cage match bromance that doubles as a meditation on the…
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Goodbye, Dragon Inn
Thursday May 23
3:30pmDirector: Tsai Ming-liang
2003 / 82min / DCP
The Fu-Ho Grand, a movie palace in Taipei, is closing its doors. Its valedictory screening: King …
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Mirror
Thursday May 23
4:30pmDirector: Andrei Tarkovsky
1975 / 108min / DCP
Integrating original footage shot in both color and black and white, shard-like splinters of scenes whose significance isn’t always immediately evident, cryptically oneiric images, and even historical documentary footage, Tarkovsky’s transcendent epic…
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Art College 1994
Thursday May 23
5:15pmDirector: Liu Jian
2023 / 118min / DCP
Based on its director’s own experiences on the campus of the Chinese Southern Academy of Arts in the mid-1990s, Art College 1994, which returns to the meticulous hand-drawn 2D animation style of predecessor Have a Nice Day, is Liu’s affectionate,…
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Akira Kurosawa's Dreams
Thursday May 23
6:45pmDirector: Akira Kurosawa
1990 / 119min / 35mm
Fresh off two late-career megaproductions, Kagemusha and Ran, Kurosawa made an unexpected turn to short-form with his omnibus film Dreams. The director’s stock of recurring dreams became the raw material for the eight magical realist vignettes…
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Purple Noon
Director: René Clément
1960 / 118min / 35mm
“I chose Purple Noon for its sublime aesthetics, both the scenery, and the characters, who are living the decadent life in Southern Italy. An age-old yet compelling story of intrigue and deception, set against the backdrop of old-world Italian beauty,…
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The Italian Job
Friday May 24
2:30pmDirector: Peter Collinson
1969 / 99min / DCP
No sooner is ace criminal Charlie Croker (Michael Caine) out of the slammer and back on the streets than he’s planning his biggest heist yet, plotting with Noël Coward’s criminal mastermind to snap up a $4,000,000 gold shipment from the streets of…
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Some Like It Hot
Director: Billy Wilder
1959 / 121min / DCP
Few works in film history have earned so many horselaughs through the years as has Wilder’s relentlessly zany gender-bender, featuring two of the most famous (even if fake!) beauty marks in Hollywood, courtesy Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe. Joe and…
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Europe '51
Friday May 24
4:40pmDirector: Roberto Rossellini
1952 / 109min / DCP
The second collaboration between Rossellini and admirer-turned-wife Ingrid Bergman features La Bergman as Irene Girard, the fashionable wife of an affluent American industrialist living in Rome whose life is upended when her young son, after complaining…
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First Cow
Friday May 24
7:00pmDirector: Kelly Reichardt
2019 / 122min / DCP
Tight-lipped cook John Magaro joins with a party of Oregon Territory fur trappers while heading west, then finds friendship—and a lucrative business partnership—with entrepreneurial Chinese immigrant Orion Lee in Reichardt’s patiently observed…
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Melancholia
Friday May 24
7:10pmDirector: Lars Von Trier
2011 / 135min / 35mm
The possibilities for ecological apocalypse extend beyond the bounds of even our own solar system in von Trier’s cosmic-view diptych drama, which begins with a wedding party gone awry and ends in the shadow of an incoming extinction-level event. Shot…
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Pulp Fiction [35mm]
Director: Quentin Tarantino
1994 / 154min / 35mm
There are indie sleeper hits, and then there’s Pulp Fiction, Tarantino’s audaciously structured, deliciously hep, endlessly quotable Los Angeles-set crime picture featuring the criss-crossing stories of two philosophical hitmen (John Travolta and…
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Possession
Friday May 24
10:00pmDirector: Andrzej Żuławski
1981 / 124min / DCP
Żuławski’s one-of-a-kind genre pastiche has spy Sam Neill returning to his Berlin home from a mission abroad to discover that wife Isabelle Adjani wants suddenly to split up. Presented in 4K Restoration
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The Ladykillers
Saturday May 25
11:45amDirector: Alexander Mackendrick
1955 / 91min / DCP
Introduction from Jason Simos of the Peter Sellers Appreciation Society on Saturday, May 25th and Sunday, May 26th
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Breaking the Waves
Saturday May 25
12:00pmDirector: Lars Von Trier
1996 / 159min / 35mm
Von Trier’s international breakthrough gave Emily Watson the role of a lifetime as Bess, a deeply religious newlywed living in the Scottish Highlands faced with an impossible decision when her husband, paralyzed in a work-related accident, asks her to…
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Reservoir Dogs [DCP]
Saturday May 25
5:50pmDirector: Quentin Tarantino
1992 / 99min / DCP
Six stylish hoods with colorful sobriquets, all strangers, come together for a heist and then, scattered following a shoot-out with the cops, reconvene in an abandoned warehouse to flush out the undercover cop in their midst in Tarantino’s feature…
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Sans Soleil [35mm]
Saturday May 25
6:20pmDirector: Chris Marker
1983 / 103min / 35mm
Introduction by series curator Sadie Starnes on Saturday, May 25th
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Totally F***ed Up
Director: Gregg Araki
1993 / 78min / DCP
Described by its director as a “kinda twisted cross between avant-garde experimental cinema and queer John Hughes flick,” Totally F***ed Up, the opening salvo of Araki’s Teen Apocalypse Trilogy, introduces viewers to six co-habiting queer Los…
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Val preceded by Catherine and The Amateurist
Saturday May 25
8:30pmDirector: Dean Fleischer Camp, Miranda July, Mara Mckevitt
2023 / 43min / DCP
Post-screening salon featuring Whitney Mallett, Mara Mckevitt, and actors Emily Allan and Alicia Novella Vasquez on Saturday, May 25th
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Pulp Fiction [DCP]
Saturday May 25
9:45pmDirector: Quentin Tarantino
1994 / 154min / DCP
There are indie sleeper hits, and then there’s Pulp Fiction, Tarantino’s audaciously structured, deliciously hep, endlessly quotable Los Angeles-set crime picture featuring the criss-crossing stories of two philosophical hitmen (John Travolta and…
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The Holy Mountain
Director: Alejandro Jodorowsky
1973 / 114min / 35mm
Jodorowsky’s follow-up to his mother of all midnight movies, El Topo, is even wilder and more extravagantly imaginative that its predecessor, a surreal, sacrilegious allegory in which the writer-director stars as a mysterious figure called “The…
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Three Sisters
Director: Wang Bing
2012 / 153min / DCP
Where Wang’s earlier Bitter Money sees the migrant worker experience through the lens of those who travel for work, the sorrowful, piercing Three Sisters looks at those who remain to subsist in the old, worn-out villages—in this case a trio of…
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Downtown 81
Sunday May 26
12:20pmDirector: Edo Bertoglio
2000 / 75min / DCP
In 1980, writer and Warhol associate Glenn O’Brien, Swiss photographer Edo Bertoglio, and Jean-Michel Basquiat, a graffiti innovator and noise music artist who’d just begun to exhibit his paintings, hit the streets of lower Manhattan to make a movie…
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Showing Up
Director: Kelly Reichardt
2022 / 107min / DCP
Reichardt’s fourth film with crucial collaborator Michelle Williams has the star playing Lizzy, a Portland sculptor balancing the demands of her art school teaching gig, the stresses of a forthcoming gallery show, the problems of her fractured family,…
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Reservoir Dogs [35mm]
Sunday May 26
11:15pmDirector: Quentin Tarantino
1992 / 99min / 35mm
Six stylish hoods with colorful sobriquets, all strangers, come together for a heist and then, scattered following a shoot-out with the cops, reconvene in an abandoned warehouse to flush out the undercover cop in their midst in Tarantino’s feature…
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Sans Soleil [DCP]
Monday May 27
2:20pmDirector: Chris Marker
1983 / 103min / DCP
Marker's voyage through memory, history, and video games is a free-flow of images shot largely in Japan (a cat temple, sacred phalluses, horror movies, sleeping subway riders, an animatronic JFK), with detours to Guinea-Bissau, Iceland, and, for an…
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Orpheus
Tuesday May 28
4:15pmDirector: Jean Cocteau
1950 / 95min / 35mm
Cocteau’s lushly lyric, allegorical update of the Orpheus myth, based on his play of the same title, depicts a famous poet (Jean Marais) who’s scorned by the Left Bank youth, torn between his love for his wife, Eurydice (Marie Déa), and a mysterious,…
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Nobody Knows
Friday May 31
1:45pmDirector: Hirokazu Kore-eda
2004 / 141min / DCP
Kore-eda’s masterful, heart-wrenching family drama, inspired by an actual 1988 incident of child abandonment, observes what happens to four young siblings when their single mother disappears in pursuit of a new romance, leaving the eldest, 12-year-old…
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Three Days of the Condor
Friday May 31
2:00pmDirector: Sydney Pollack
1975 / 117min / 35mm
Joe Turner (Robert Redford), a quiet, bookish CIA codebreaker, returns to his clandestine field office one day to find his co-workers murdered. Discovering that somebody out there is desperate to see him discredited or dead, a scrambling Turner must keep…
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Samsara
Friday May 31
4:30pmDirector: Lois Patiño
2023 / 113min / DCP
An immersive, absorbing, and wildly original journey of death and rebirth, Patiño’s film begins in Laos, observing the lives of a young man, the local monks he befriends, and an elderly woman at the end of her life, then picks up after the woman’s…
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Miller's Crossing
Friday May 31
4:30pmDirector: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
1990 / 115min / DCP
Irish and Italian gangs trade bullets in this twist-filled, densely plotted Prohibition-era noir, featuring an icy Gabriel Byrne
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Mother
Friday May 31
6:50pmDirector: Bong Joon Ho
2009 / 129min / 35mm
A magnificent Kim Hye-ja plays the title role in Bong’s noir-tinged thriller, the impoverished widowed mother of a quiet, mentally disabled 27-year-old (Won Bin) living in a village in rural South Korea who is forced to spring into action when her boy…
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Blow For Blow
Friday May 31
7:00pmDirector: Marin Karmitz
1972 / 89min / DCP
Introduction by The New Yorker film critic Richard Brody on Friday, May 31st
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Suture
Friday May 31
9:20pmDirector: Scott McGehee, David Siegel
1993 / 96min / DCP
Lumped in with the then-contemporary “neo-noir” cycle but actually quite unlike anything else on the scene, Siegel and McGehee’s brain-twisting murder mystery in sordid black-and-white widescreen has Dennis Haysbert as the classic fall guy, stricken…
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Code Unknown
Friday May 31
9:30pmDirector: Michael Haneke
2000 / 117min / 35mm
A hostile encounter on the streets of Paris sends ripples running through the various vignettes that comprise Haneke’s first French-language film, a study in simmering rage, racial inequality, migrant displacement, and failures of communication that’s…
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Kashima Paradise
Saturday June 1
12:10pmDirector: Yann Le Masson, Benie Deswarte
1973 / 110min / DCP
Introduced by writer Ethan Spigland on Saturday, June 1st
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The Mole People
Saturday June 1
12:45pmDirector: Virgil W. Vogel
1956 / 77min / 16mm
A trim, fleet Universal-International sci-fi thriller from the ’50s heyday of drive-in creature features, Vogel’s film follows two archaeologists played by John Agar and Hugh Beaumont on their discovery of a hollow world beneath the Earth’s…
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A Season in France
Saturday June 1
2:30pmDirector: Mahamet-Saleh Haroun
2017 / 100min / DCP
Chadean filmmaker Haroun’s first film set in his long-time adoptive home of France is an understated but enormously affecting depiction of the travails faced by undocumented African immigrants in Europe, starring Eriq Ebouaney as a stubbornly prideful,…
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Chris Marker Shorts
Saturday June 1
2:30pmDirector: Chris Marker
1988 / 73min / Digital
Introduction and Q&A featuring artist and writer Paul Chan and filmmaker and poet Lynne Sachs, moderated by Sadie Starnes
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Certified Copy
Saturday June 1
4:45pmDirector: Abbas Kiarostami
2010 / 106min / DCP
Returning to shot-on-film narrative cinema after a decade of video experiments to make his first film outside of Iran, Kiarostami traveled to Tuscany to team with Juliette Binoche, who gives a disarmingly raw performance as an antiques dealer whose path…
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The Oak
Saturday June 1
7:15pmDirector: Lucian Pintillie
1992 / 105min / DCP
The first film made by the late Pintilie in his native Romania after a two-decade-long Parisian exile, The Oak is regarded as one of the key works in the country’s post-communist cinema, a fierce, full-throttle road movie/apocalyptic farce in which…
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Lost Highway
Saturday June 1
9:40pmDirector: David Lynch
1997 / 134min / DCP
Few filmmakers have shown themselves so adept at plumbing the depths of the subconscious without coming up for air as Lynch, whose Lost Highway—inspired loosely by still-fresh coverage of the O. J. Simpson trial—begins as a dark domestic drama…
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Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
Saturday June 1
9:45pmDirector: Guy Ritchie
1998 / 107min / 35mm
The movie that made stars of ex-footballer Vinnie Jones and former Commonwealth Games diver Jason Statham while making director Ritchie’s blend of high-octane, post-Tarantino pulp fiction, Cockney swagger, and coal-black comedy into a name brand,…
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Paranoid Park
Friday June 7
2:30pmDirector: Gus Van Sant
2007 / 85min / DCP
Adapting Blake Nelson’s Y.A. novel of the same name, Van Sant renders the youth gathering place of the skate park a voluptuous dreamscape with the help of cinematographers Chris Doyle and Rain Kathy Li. Teenaged skate rat Alex—Gabe Nevins, leading a…
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Clockers
Friday June 7
3:00pmDirector: Spike Lee
1995 / 128min / 35mm
Based on the 1992 novel of the same name by Bronx-born novelist Richard Price, who co-wrote the screenplay with Lee, the harrowing police procedural Clockers starts with the murder of a street-level pusher in the Brooklyn housing projects, then follows…
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Topkapi
Friday June 7
4:30pmDirector: Jules Dassin
1964 / 120min / 35mm
After practically defining the modern heist film with his Paris-set Rififi, American expat Dassin set out to one-up—and make light of—his own triumph, adapting an Eric Ambler novel (The Light of Day) into a spoof suspenser about a crack team of…
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Fast, Cheap & Out of Control
Friday June 7
5:40pmDirector: Errol Morris
1997 / 80min / 35mm
A singular entry in Morris’s already singularly unusual career, Fast, Cheap & Out of Control focuses on four men with uncommon occupations: a topiary gardener, a wild animal tamer, an MIT scientist specializing in robotics, and an expert in naked…
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Beijing Watermelon
Director: Nobuhiko Obayashi
1989 / 135min / DCP
Obayashi’s warm, bustling, slice-of-life picture, based on the real-life story of a Tokyo greengrocer who put his own livelihood at risk to extend help to a succession of poor Chinese exchange students in Japan, tapped into widespread feelings of…
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Mélo
Friday June 7
7:30pmDirector: Alain Resnais
1986 / 112min / DCP
Resnais blurs the line between cinematic technique and theatrical artifice in his acclaimed adaptation of Henri Bernstein’s classic play about a doomed love triangle in 1920s Paris. Celebrated concert violinists Pierre (Pierre Arditi) and Marcel (André…
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House
Director: Nobuhiko Ôbayashi
1977 / 88min / 35mm
A demonic house cat is only one of the cast of outlandish characters in Ôbayashi’s psychedelic ghost story in which a schoolgirl and six of her teen classmates go on a trip to her ailing aunt’s mist-wreathed country house and find themselves caught…
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Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive
Friday June 7
9:50pmDirector: Wayne Wang, Spencer Nakasako
1989 / 83min / DCP
Wang’s wildly experimental, Nouvelle vague, punk rock, and hardboiled fiction-inspired indie noir follows a young man (Spencer Nakasako) who’s been hired to accompany a silver briefcase—its contents unknown—from the United States to Hong Kong, the…
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Downstream to Kinshasa
Saturday June 8
2:15pmDirector: Dieudo Hamadi
2020 / 90min / DCP
The first Congolese film to be made an Official Selection at the Cannes Film Festival, Hamadi’s morally urgent documentary follows a journey undertaken by victims of the Six-Day War of 2000 waged between the Ugandan and Rwandan armies in the city of…
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Suburban Birds
Saturday June 8
4:00pmDirector: Qiu Sheng
2019 / 118min / DCP
Qui’s feature debut is a bold and beguiling opening salvo from a singular talent, twining together two distinct narrative strands—one involving land surveyors preparing for the laying of subway tracks investigating a strange phenomenon in the sinking…
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National Diploma
Saturday June 8
4:15pmDirector: Dieudo Hamadi
2014 / 90min / DCP
Expelled from high school for unpaid tuition fees, a group of young men and women in the city of Kisangani attempt to prepare on their own to take the national exam, which they must pass in order to have any hope of post-secondary education. A sharply…
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Labyrinth of Cinema
Saturday June 8
9:00pm2019 / 179min / DCP
A breathless cinematic journey through Japan’s past, Labyrinth of Cinema finds Obayashi using every trick in his book to create an awe-inspiring, visually resplendent anti-war epic that urges us to consider cinema as a means to change history.
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Sibyl
Sunday June 9
2:30pmDirector: Justine Triet
2019 / 101min / DCP
Four years before her Palme d’Or triumph with Anatomy of a Fall, Triet produced this comic thriller starring Virginie Efira in the title role as a psychotherapist who, fed up with her métier, decides to return to writing fiction—and, in the person of…
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Mama Colonel preceded by Zero Tolerance
Sunday June 9
5:30pmDirector: Dieudo Hamadi
2010 / 90min / DCP
The title of Hamadi’s film comes from the nickname of its subject, Honorine Manyole, a colonel in the Congolese police force heading a unit specializing in the protection of minors and the prevention and prosecution of sexual violence, seen as she…
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The Departed
Friday June 14
2:00pmDirector: Martin Scorsese
2006 / 151min / 35mm
Wall-to-wall with ball-busting by Jack Nicholson, Alec Baldwin, and Mark Wahlberg, Scorsese’s darkly comic Boston-set remake of 2002 Hong Kong actioner Infernal Affairs is hands down one of the funniest movies ever to take the Academy Award for Best…
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La Cérémonie
Friday June 14
2:45pmDirector: Claude Chabrol
1995 / 111min / DCP
Coyly referred to by its director as “the last Marxist film,” Chabrol’s mid-career tour-de-force is a work of gelid precision and slow, suffocating rage, its action set in motion when bourgeois homemaker Jacqueline Bisset brings home a new maid,…
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The Apple
Friday June 14
5:00pmDirector: Samira Makhmalbaf
1998 / 86min / DCP
At only 17 years of age Makhmalbaf, the daughter of legendary Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf, produced this, her debut feature, a docufiction work of extraordinary sensitivity and maturity concerning a social worker’s investigation into the case of…
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Le Bonheur
Friday June 14
5:00pmDirector: Agnès Varda
1965 / 79min / DCP
Perhaps Varda’s most purely beautiful movie, calling into question the price of beauty, further exploring themes developed in her 1962 breakthrough Cléo from 5 to 7. Carpenter François (Jean-Claude Drouot) loves his wife (Claire Drouot) and he loves…
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Room 999
Friday June 14
6:45pmDirector: Wim Wenders
2022 / 85min / DCP
In 1982, at the Cannes Film Festival, Wim Wenders invited various luminaries to come to a room in the Hotel Martinez and, in front of a static camera, answer the question: “Is cinema a language about to get lost, an art about to die?” Some 40 years…
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Every Man for Himself
Friday June 14
7:00pmDirector: Jean-Luc Godard
1980 / 87min / DCP
After a decade spent away from character-oriented narrative cinema, making experimental, politically radical video work, Godard picked up the 35mm camera again to produce this, an intoxicating study in aimlessness and alienated labor that he called his…
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Hôtel du Nord
Friday June 14
9:00pmDirector: Marcel Carné
1938 / 83min / DCP
One of the high watermarks of so-called “poetic realism,” Carné’s sublimely seedy drama takes place in the precincts of the eponymous boarding house where two couples—sex worker Arletty and pimp Louis Jouvet; star-crossed lovers Annabella and…
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Decasia preceded by Light is Calling
Friday June 14
9:15pmDirector: Bill Morrison
2002 / 70min / 35mm
“Swimming symphonies of baroque beauty emerge from corrosive nitrate disintegration as rockets of annihilation demolish cathedrals of reality.” Thusly was Decasia described by no less a figure than Kenneth Anger, one of countless viewers bowled over…
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Saturday Afternoon Cartoons: Down on the Farm
Saturday June 15
12:00pmDirector: Multiple Dirs
2024 / 60min / 16mm
Saturday Afternoon Cartoons is New York City’s prime theatrical showcase of early and classic animated cartoons, shown in vintage 16mm film prints from the personal archives of historian Tommy José Stathes. Beginning over 20 years ago as a casual…
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Bill Morrison Shorts Program
Saturday June 15
1:40pmDirector: Bill Morrison
2007 / 90min / DCP
Bringing together works produced over a span of more than 15 years, this program sheds light on a lesser-known aspect of Morrison’s practice, his mastery of short-form filmmaking. Featuring The Letter, a story of overlapping love triangles told through…
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Dawson City: Frozen Time
Saturday June 15
3:45pmDirector: Bill Morrison
2016 / 120min / 35mm
In 1978, in Canada’s sparsely populated Yukon Territory, a backhoe digging around in a former swimming pool unearthed a treasure trove of 533 volatile nitrate film reels dating from the silent era, among them Hollywood films, newsreels, and locally…
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Kinshasa Makambo
Saturday June 15
4:00pmDirector: Dieudo Hamadi
2018 / 74min / DCP
Hamadi’s utterly compelling, fervid film focuses on three young activists—Jean-Marie, Christian, and Ben—who’ve dedicated themselves completely to freeing the Democratic Republic of Congo from the junta of strongman President Joseph Kabila,…
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Atalaku preceded by Ladies in Waiting
Saturday June 15
5:45pmDirector: Dieudo Hamadi, Divita Wa Lusala
2013 / 90min / DCP
Hamadi’s impassioned debut documentary feature, Atalaku, which took home the Joris Ivens Award at Cinéma du Réel, examines the routine bribery, fraud, and corruption at play in the 2012 elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo—allegedly the…
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Something Wild
Saturday June 15
6:40pmDirector: Jonathan Demme
1986 / 114min / 35mm
Introduction and Q&A with Sound Engineer and Re-Recording Mixer Tom Fleischman, moderated by Music Editor Missy Cohen, on Saturday, June 15th
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Ruben Brandt, Collector
Saturday June 15
7:40pmDirector: Milorad Krstic
2018 / 96min / DCP
Chockablock with references to art and cinema history, Krstić’s extravagantly detailed, dazzlingly designed, noir-inspired 2D animated thriller follows a psychotherapist, the Brandt of the title, who is so tormented by nightmares in which he’s…
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Eat Drink Man Woman
Saturday June 15
9:45pmDirector: Ang Lee
1994 / 124min / 35mm
Lee’s gently comic family fable about a semi-retired master chef and his three daughters, the director’s only film shot entirely in his native Taiwan, is arguably the best movie about how food can connect generations ever made. The cooking scenes,…
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Captain Fantastic
Sunday June 16
2:10pmDirector: Matt Ross
2016 / 118min / DCP
Deep in the forests of the Pacific Northwest, isolated from society, a devoted father (Viggo Mortensen) dedicates his life to transforming his six young children into extraordinary adults. But when a tragedy strikes the family, they are forced to leave…
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Barry Lyndon
Sunday June 16
5:20pmDirector: Stanley Kubrick
1975 / 184min / 35mm
Introduction by Sound Engineer and Re-Recording Mixer Tom Fleischman on Sunday, June 16th
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No. 7 Ludlow
NYC, NY
10002