Array ( )

La Dolce Vita

One Show Only! It’s become a shorthand reference for swinging Rome and the louche early ‘60s, but then Moby Dick isn’t really about a whale. Marcello Mastroianni’s playboy journalist cavorts through the city, chasing celebrities and women and eroding his soul in the process. Speaking of shorthand, this is where the full floweri more »

Early Spring

Yasujirō Ozu gets a bit soapy here, albeit in an Ozu kind of way. A bored salaryman (Ryō Ikebe) feeling distanced from his wife (Chikage Awashima) starts an affair with a young colleague (Keiko Kishi). Really, just admiring the director’s trademark three-or-four-shot transitions is almost worth the price of admission alone. -Lee more »

Soundtrack to a Coup D’Etat

The United States’ involvement in the 1960 assassination of Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba and the country’s subsequent decline into decades of dictatorship and ongoing instability is well-established. Filmmaker John Grimonprez creates a stylish and verve-y account of that history by infusing his 2024 documentary with the musi more »

Sinners

Trying to leave their troubled lives behind, twin brothers return to their hometown to start again, only to discover that an even greater evil is waiting to welcome them back. more »

Mildred Pierce

Michael Curtiz out-pulps James M. Cain’s original novel, staging a murder in the very first scene and streamlining the melodrama. The resulting adaptation not only brings the noir, it amps up the class division and the mother/daughter love/hate. If you ever wondered why Joan Crawford was a big deal, this is an excellent way to f more »

Heavy Metal

For 13-year-old boys of all ages. Back in the day, the titular comic brought European artists like Jean “Moebius” Giraud and “adult” themes to newstands. The titular film brings a brace of the comic’s stories to life through budget animation and a soundtrack crammed with bespoke tunes from classic rockers. Content warning: many, more »

Let’s Get Lost

It’s a genuine shock when Chet Baker cops to being 57 in this biodoc—he looks 30 years older. The contrast between his heartthrob younger days as the Great White Hope of jazz trumpet and the withered, scuffling addict of his final year on earth fuels fashion photographer Bruce Weber’s suitably elegant film. Despite the ad-campai more »

The Magnificent Ambersons

The fact that RKO cut nearly an hour out of Orson Welles’ follow-up to Citizen Kane and it still stands as one of the greatest films ever made has inspired decades of pained what-ifs. Welles shadows the title Midwestern clan as their 19th-century wealth and influence succumbs to onrushing modernity and simple hubris. Every scene more »

Friendship

A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor. more »

River’s Edge

Every generation seems to have their coming-of-age film that Gets It. For the ‘80s kids, it was River’s Edge. A suburban hesher kills his girlfriend and shows his friends (including Keanu Reeves and Crispin Glover) her discarded body. Poorly equipped to deal by their ‘70s-hangover upbringings, they react mostly by not reacting a more »

Jane Austen Wrecked My Life

A desperately single bookseller, lost in a fantasy world, finds herself forced to fulfil her dreams of becoming a writer in order to stop messing up her love life. more »

Last Year at Marienbad

The Nouveau Roman’s big-screen bow remains baffling and entrancing. Alain Renais’ camera prowls the Baroque halls and grounds of a luxe resort and occasionally alights on the dispassionate constituents of a love triangle as screenwriter Alain Robbe-Grillet’s narration goes on about its own elliptical business. An indelible cinem more »

Bring Her Back

A brother and sister uncover a terrifying ritual at the secluded home of their new foster mother. more »

All About My Mother

As usual for a Pedro Almodóvar film, the plot here is so kinked and outrageous as to defy encapsulation. But wellspring performances from Cecelia Roth, Marisa Paredes, and Penélope Cruz wow. The director’s exploration of motherhood, sisterhood, and chosen family beguiles. And it looks like a billion pesetas. -LeeGardner more »

Two by Herzog

A pair of Werner Herzog’s underseen documentary shorts. God’s Angry Man focuses on Gene Scott, an old-school televangelist with a combative style—Herzog finds him glowering silently into a live television camera until the donations flow. High-speed cameras catch champion ski jumper Steiner flying high over spectators on his way more »

Tenebrae

Dario Argento’s black-gloved hands strike again, this time racking up gruesome killings that mirror the ones Tony Franciosa’s novelist invented for his books. Can the scribbler figure out who’s taking his work as bloody inspiration before he falls victim? Crazy stalkers! Axe murders! Lesbians! Insane twists! C-movie bellwether J more »

Pavements

Documentary about the American indie band Pavement, which combines scripts with documentary images of the band and a musical mise-en-scene composed of songs from their discography. more »

The Wages of Fear

What was the first action movie? One could make an argument for Henri-George Clouzot’s hot-sweat epic. There are only a few fights or firearms involved as desperate men (led by Yves Montand) stranded in a jungle hellhole seize a shot at trucking volatile nitroglycerin over hundreds of miles of gnarly road, but the two-fisted plo more »

Life of Chuck

A life-affirming, genre-bending story based on Stephen King's novella about three chapters in the life of an ordinary man named Charles Krantz. more »

Materialists

A matchmaker's lucrative business is complicated when she falls into a toxic love triangle that threatens her clients. more »

Latcho Drom

What a treasure. Roma filmmaker Tony Gatlif uses his camera to track a real-life odyssey—the migration of Roma people and their musical culture from their roots in Rajasthan, in India, along the Mediterranean to Spain. No interviews, no title cards, no context. Just intimate, vibrant music and dance performances, almost any of w more »

Lifeboat

Even “minor” Hitchcock looms tall over most directors’ peaks. Here he crams the title vessel with survivors from a WWII U-boat attack and wrests a world of drama, suspense, and intrigue from the cramped space between the gunwales. Tallulah Bankhead toplines a sterling cast. -Lee Gardner more »

28 Years Later

A group of survivors of the rage virus lives on a small island. When one of the group leaves the island on a mission into the mainland, he discovers secrets, wonders, and horrors that have mutated not only the infected but other survivors. more »

Showgirls

Paul Verhoeven’s polarizing cinema punchline has aged well in the sense that it hasn’t gotten any worse. Screenwriter Joe Eszterhaz’s script about a frequently nude naif dancing her way to the top in Las Vegas remains a ridiculous line-o-rama, but the real reason the film inspires lols is poor Elizabeth Berkley, whose too-much p more »

F1

A Formula One driver comes out of retirement to mentor and team with a younger driver. more »

The Elephant Man

David Lynch followed up the mold-breaking Eraserhead with perhaps his most classically Hollywood feature, and his most deeply affecting. John Hurt’s embodiment of the title character astonishes, but the film is really about how the other characters see and react to him. Anthony Hopkins, for one, reacts exquisitely. -Lee Gardner more »

A Tale of Summer

Melvil Poupaud’s feckless young man heads for a beach town solo to mope, play guitar, and wait for his on/off girlfriend to arrive. He soon finds himself unsuccessfully juggling several young women, including anthropologist/waitress Amanda Langlet. One of Éric Rohmer’s most charming and amusing chatfests, enhanced by the sun-bak more »

Jurassic World Rebirth

Five years post-Jurassic World Dominion, an expedition braves isolated equatorial regions to extract DNA from three massive prehistoric creatures for a groundbreaking medical breakthrough. more »

Crash

Sex. Death. Sex and death. David Cronenberg plays all the hits in his adaptation of J.G. Ballard’s novel about a group of turned-on car-crash enthusiasts who go further and further in their pursuit of souped-up kicks. James Spader, Deborah Kara Unger, Elias Koteas, and Holly Hunter kink up the screen, despite Spader’s character’ more »

Journey to Italy

George Sanders plays a man who is somehow tired of being married to Ingrid Bergman, who plays his similarly ennui-laden spouse. A trip to Italy exposes the faults in their relationship. That’s pretty much it, but Roberto Rosselini’s direction and the lovely performances make it feel like grand drama. -Lee Gardner more »

Superman

Superman must reconcile his alien Kryptonian heritage with his human upbringing as reporter Clark Kent. As the embodiment of truth, justice and the human way he soon finds himself in a world that views these as old-fashioned. more »

Wild at Heart

David Lynch dips into Southern Gothic and hardboiled noir for his lurid yet sweet adaptation of Barry Gifford’s novel. Nicolas Cage and Laura Dern star as lovers on the run, abetted and thwarted by a cast of Lynch regulars and the occasional ‘90s indie staple (e.g. Willem Dafoe). Once again, Dern is the secret MVP. -Lee Gardner more »

Hot Spring Shark Attack

This “unhinged” deep-sea nightmare follows a sleepy hot spring town in Japan that gets a rude awakening when an ancient, bloodthirsty shark resurfaces to terrorize the local bathhouses. The townspeople must band together to save their steamy paradise, leading to a battle for the ages. After winning the Audience Award at the 202 more »

Act of Violence

Ex-G.I. Robert Ryan is bent on revenge against his former best friend and Army buddy Van Helfin, who sold out their comrades to the Nazis. Phyllis Thaxter and a young Janet Leigh play the women caught between them. Journeyman director Fred Zinneman’s inky-black noir wows with its inexorable story and grim fatalism. Fantastic e more »

Eddington

In May of 2020, a standoff between a small-town sheriff and mayor sparks a powder keg as neighbor is pitted against neighbor in Eddington, New Mexico. more »

Idiocracy

Mike Judge followed up Office Space with a vicious satire about our increasingly enshittified society. It made nary a peep in theaters but now scans like Nostradamus. Luke Wilson plays a regular bro who, hundreds of years in the future, stands as the de facto smartest man in America. The whole thing runs out of gas before the en more »

Sorry, Baby

Something bad happened to Agnes. But life goes on - for everyone around her, at least. more »

The Gang’s All Here

Brazilian icon Carmen Miranda gets second billing but mainly serves as wacky “ethnic” comic relief. The real star, of course, is director Busby Berkeley’s trademark elaborate musical numbers, especially the Miranda-sung “The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat” and the completely insane finale. As corny as Kansas but a visual and music more »

Hackers

There’s nothing quite as ridiculous as a past vision of the future, especially one as Hollywood try-hard as this. Jonny Lee Miller and a baby Angelina Jolie lead a team of techie teens out to fight The Man, embodied by Fisher Stevens. Everyone spouts goofy jargon and would-be zingers, rollerblades everywhere, and tries their bes more »

Oh, Hi!

Iris has met her perfect guy, Isaac, and is enjoying their first romantic getaway together -- what could go wrong? This clever and charmingly odd dark comedy takes on the highs and lows of modern dating and the ways it makes us all a little crazy. more »

The Empire Strikes Back

For many years, the second Star Wars film was considered The Good One—darker, more complex, romantic. Whatever the current rankings, it’s still pretty good. Great set pieces, interesting character stuff, Billy Dee Williams, and no Ewoks. -Lee Gardner more »

The Thin Red Line

Terrence Malick’s return to filmmaking after a 20-year hiatus combined the poetic spirit and visual sumptuousness of Badlands and Days of Heaven with a new break from Hollywood formalism—cue the cryptic voiceovers. He applied his new method to the venerable war-movie genre but found moving and richly rewarding new life in it. Hi more »

TOGETHER

Years into their relationship, Tim and Millie (Dave Franco and Alison Brie) find themselves at a crossroads as they move to the country, abandoning all that is familiar in their lives except each other. With tensions already flaring, a nightmarish encounter with a mysterious, unnatural force threatens to corrupt their lives, the more »

Commando

There are certainly better ‘80s action movies, but Commando is the most ‘80s-action-movie ‘80s action movie, and probably the most fun to watch with an audience. Arnold Schwarzenegger plays the titular badass, who’s lured out of retirement to rescue his tween daughter from some grudge-holding bad guys and a literal army of squib more »

ÉL

A dark gem from Luis Bunuel’s Mexican period. Arturo de Córdova’s suave gentleman sweeps Delia Garcés off her feet, but soon after wedding bells ring, she discovers he’s a paranoid creep. His madness and violence soon escalate. An incisive portrait of domestic abuse heightened by the director’s skill and audacity. -Lee Gardner more »

IT’S NEVER OVER, JEFF BUCKLEY

Jeff Buckley, a rising star with an otherworldly voice, left the '90s music world reeling when he died suddenly after the release of his debut album. Told through never-before-seen footage and intimate accounts from the three women who knew him best, the film illuminates one of modern music's most influential and enigmatic figur more »

The Fly

David Cronenberg wastes not a second in putting Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis together onscreen, because that’s the whole movie—their exquisite chemistry fuels what ends up as much a tragic romance as a sci-fi remake. Arguably the pinnacle of Cronenberg’s “body horror” period, and it’s paced like a drag race. more »

WEAPONS

When all but one child from the same class mysteriously vanish on the same night at exactly the same time, a community is left questioning who or what is behind their disappearance. more »

Picnic at Hanging Rock

Today the disappearance of three schoolgirls and their minder would be a lurid true-crime tale or fodder for drawn-out “limited series” dramatic peekaboo. But Peter Weir’s breakout concocts a hypnotic haze of innocence, ardor, repression, suggestion, and emotional weight that utterly beguiles. A perfect cinema enigma. -Lee Gardn more »

The Hills Have Eyes

In the ‘70s, few things scared moviegoers more than deranged rural people. Wes Craven cemented his budding horror career with this Texas Chainsaw Massacre homage that pits a roadtripping whitebread family (Dee Wallace makes clear why she’s the only one who had a bigger career) against mutant desert cannibals (ditto for Michael B more »

CatVideoFest 2025

The world's #1 cat video festival is back with screenings in theaters across the USA and around the world starting August 2025! Oscilloscope Laboratories presents CatVideoFest 2025, a compilation of the latest and best cat videos culled from countless hours of unique submissions and sourced animations, music videos, and class more »

Highest 2 Lowest

When a titan music mogul (Denzel Washington), widely known as having the "best ears in the business", is targeted with a ransom plot, he is jammed up in a life-or-death moral dilemma. Brothers Denzel Washington and Spike Lee reunite for the 5th in their long working relationship for a reinterpretation of the great filmmaker Akir more »

Yojimbo

Toshiro Mifune invented the modern action hero in Akira Kurosawa’s classic. The former’s grungy ronin wanders into a village and right into the middle of a gang war, only to turn the factions' venality and dim wits to his advantage. Tatsuya Nakadai co-stars as a bonus badass. Fantastic score, too. -Lee Gardner more »

Honey Don’t!

Honey Don't! is a dark comedy about Honey O'Donahue, a small-town private investigator, who delves into a series of strange deaths tied to a mysterious church. more »

NE ZHA 2

After a great catastrophe, the souls of Nezha and Ao Bing are saved, but their bodies face ruin. To give them new life, Taiyi Zhenren turns to the mystical seven-colored lotus in a daring bid to rebuild them and change their fate. more »

Relay

In RELAY, Riz Ahmed plays a world class "fixer" who specializes in brokering lucrative payoffs between corrupt corporations and the individuals who threaten their ruin. He keeps his identity a secret through meticulous planning and always follows an exacting set of rules. But when a message arrives one day from a potential clien more »

True Romance

Tony Scott applied his visual verve and blockbuster sensibilities to one of Quentin Tarantino’s early scripts and delivered an instructive contrast to the latter’s style. Scott is less wink-y and puts real muscle behind the beats of this love-on-the-run/crime-flick/Hollywood-sendup mashup. He also knows how to shoot dialogue wit more »

The Jungle Book

A bunch of cartoon predators adopt a defenseless human infant instead of eating it. Comedy hijinks with a mid-century hepcat bias and some pretty decent songs ensue. Disney’s adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s India-set stories is charming and surprisingly unproblematic for being nearly 60 years old. -Lee Gardner more »

Short Cuts

Robert Altman adapts a clutch of Raymond Carver short stories and, in the process, kinda invents Paul Thomas Anderson. An enormous cast plays a host of Angelenos whose lives intersect in humorous and tragic ways over the course of a few days. Also a very effective nostalgia prompt. Medflies! Cell phones the size of bricks! -Lee more »

CAUGHT STEALING

Hank Thompson (Austin Butler) was a high-school baseball phenom who can't play anymore, but everything else is going okay. He's got a great girl (Zoë Kravitz), tends bar at a New York dive, and his favorite team is making an underdog run at the pennant. When his punk-rock neighbor Russ (Matt Smith) asks him to take care of his c more »

Polyester

Poor, poor Francine. Divine stars as a smell-sensitive Severna Park hausfrau beset by a porn-peddling husband, delinquent children, and demon booze. Can Tab Hunter’s hunk offer her a new life? John Waters spans the crack between his early outrages and the mainstream appeal of Hairspray with this loving Douglas Sirk pastiche. “Od more »

The Roses

Life seems easy for picture-perfect couple Ivy (Olivia Colman) and Theo (Benedict Cumberbatch): successful careers, a loving marriage, great kids. But beneath the façade of their supposed ideal life, a storm is brewing -- as Theo's career nosedives while Ivy's own ambitions take off, a tinderbox of fierce competition and hidden more »

Don’t Look Now

Haunted by the death of their young daughter, Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie thread the streets of Venice and catch glimpses of what might be ghosts. Nicolas Roeg continued his incredible ’70s run (Performance, Walkabout) with a film that’s both a piercing meditation on grief and the greatest giallo ever. -Lee Gardner more »

2001: A Space Odyssey

It probably shouldn’t work at this point, but it totally does. Stanley Kubrick’s audacious sci-fi epic still dazzles with its chutzpah, invention, visual sense, and intelligence. And the scenes aboard the spaceship form one of the great pocket thrillers ever made. -Lee Gardner more »

SPLITSVILLE

When Ashley asks for a divorce, the good-natured Carey runs to his friends, Julie and Paul, for support. Their secret to happiness is an open marriage; that is, until Carey crosses the line and throws all of their relationships into chaos. more »

A Man and a Woman

In 1966, Claude Lelouch’s melancholy melodrama borrowed just enough New Wave flavor to cause a middlebrow sensation, and its Francis Lai-penned theme tune has haunted cocktail lounges ever since. In 2025, it’s still a treat to watch Anouk Aimée and Jean-Louis Trintignant brood and sigh amid Lelouch’s clever filmmaking. -Lee Gard more »

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale

DOWNTON ABBEY: THE GRAND FINALE, the cinematic return of the global phenomenon, follows the Crawley family and their staff as they enter the 1930s. When Mary finds herself at the center of a public scandal and the family faces financial trouble, the entire household grapples with the threat of social disgrace. The Crawleys must more »

Mean Streets

Scorsese ground zero. The director had already made features, but this deeply personal knockaround slice of NYC street life in the early ‘60 cemented everything about his world-conquering style. Harvey Keitel’s Mob bagman and Robert De Niro’s anarchic ne'er-do-well form the foreground, but everything onscreen is worth your atten more »

Spinal Tap 2: The End Continues

Forty-one years after the release of the groundbreaking mockumentary This Is Spinal Tap, the now estranged bandmates David St. Hubbins, Nigel Tufnel, and Derek Smalls (Michael McKean, Christopher Guest, and Harry Shearer) are forced to reunite for one final concert. Spinal Tap II: The End Continues also marks the resurrection of more »

Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle (Dubbed)

The Demon Slayer Corps are drawn into the Infinity Castle, where Tanjiro, Nezuko, and the Hashira face terrifying Upper Rank demons in a desperate fight as the final battle against Muzan Kibutsuji begins. more »

Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle (Subbed)

The Demon Slayer Corps are drawn into the Infinity Castle, where Tanjiro, Nezuko, and the Hashira face terrifying Upper Rank demons in a desperate fight as the final battle against Muzan Kibutsuji begins. more »

The Color of Pomegranates

Talk about an art film. Soviet director Sergei Parajanov’s account of the life of Armenian poet Sayat-Nova slips narrative convention for a string of lavish, ravishing tableaux vivant, all crammed with inscrutable symbolism and visual piquancy. You could spend a lifetime revisiting it and not get it all. -Lee Gardner more »

A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

Some doors bring you to your past. Some doors lead you to your future. And some doors change everything. Sarah (Margot Robbie) and David (Colin Farrell) are single strangers who meet at a mutual friend's wedding and soon, through a surprising twist of fate, find themselves on A Big Bold Beautiful Journey -- a funny, fantastical, more »

Persepolis

Marjane Satrapi’s screen adaptation of her graphic memoir animates its spartan monochrome illustrations to the screen for a tale of a young girl coming of age in revolutionary Iran, as the country pivots from rule by a US puppet to an even more repressive fundamentalist state. A geopolitical history lesson and a piercing account more »

Withnail and I

Writer/director Bruce Robinson’s script is one of the best ever put onscreen. Richard E. Grant and Paul McGann’s title unemployed actors booze and quip their way through sozzled adventures en route to personal reckonings with the end of the ‘60s and their aimless youth. Richard Griffiths and Ralph Brown deliver supporting perfor more »

Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror

A London theater play evolves into a groundbreaking cult phenomenon, featuring iconic songs and performances that celebrate individuality. The legacy lives on through midnight screenings and a devoted following that spans generations. more »

The French Connection

The central car chase and NYC street grit made it famous, but William Friedkin’s breakout film endures for its watchfulness. A pair of rough detectives (Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider) stumble onto what they believe is a major heroin ring. As they shadow the suspects, block after block, mostly on foot, the tension and pressure bu more »

Eleanor the Great

After seventy years with best friend, Eleanor moves to New York City for a fresh start. Making new friends at ninety proves difficult. Longing for connection, she befriends a 19-year-old student. more »

SANJURO

Akira Kurosawa not only helped create the modern cinema antihero with 1961’s Yojimbo, he became an early adopter of the tentpole sequel a year later with Sanjuro. Toshiro Mifune’s scruffy ronin literally wakes up in the midst of a deadly rift between two halves of a samurai clan and, once again, outwits and outfights all. The en more »

The Last Class

The Last Class is a nuanced and deeply personal portrait of master educator Robert Reich teaching his final course and reflecting on a period of immense transformation, personally and globally. It is a love letter to education. more »

HAZBIN HOTEL SING-ALONG

Join us for a hellish sing-along.  The official Hazbin Hotel Season One Sing-Along is coming to The Charles on October 1st!  Watch the first four episodes of Season One on the big screen and sing-along with karaoke subtitles for every song.  Each sing-along attendee will receive an exclusive, limited-edition promo card for Hazbi more »

NEW/NEXT FILM FEST 2025

New/Next returns to The Charles Oct. 2-5, 2025 with activations planned for independently run venues in the area including Baltimore Improv Group, Metro Gallery and others. New/Next was co-founded by Sam Sessa and Eric Hatch, with Sessa serving as Producer and Hatch as Programmer. Other key members include Associate Produ more »

HEAT

Much is made of the pair of acting silverbacks at the center of Michael Mann’s magnum-opus crime flick, and rightly so, but one of the undersung pleasures here is the deep bench of character actors absolutely killing smaller parts: Jon Voight, Tom Noonan, Mykelti Williamson, Ted Levine, William Fichtner, the more »

Vermeer: The Greatest Exhibition

With loans from across the world, this major retrospective will bring together Vermeer’s most famous masterpieces including Girl with a Pearl Earring, The Geographer, The Milkmaid, The Little Street, Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid, and Woman Holding a Balance. more »

Kiss of the Spider Woman

Valentín, a political prisoner, shares a cell with Molina, convicted for public indecency. An unlikely bond forms as Molina recounts a Hollywood musical plot starring Ingrid Luna. more »

Good Boy

A loyal dog moves to a rural family home with his owner, only to discover supernatural forces lurking in the shadows. As dark entities threaten his human companion, the brave pup must fight to protect the one he loves most. more »

One Battle After Another

When their evil enemy resurfaces after 16 years, a group of ex-revolutionaries reunite to rescue one of their own's daughter. more »

All That Heaven Allows

The pinnacle of screen melodrama. Douglas Sirk’s work is perhaps better known today through homages/sendups from the likes of John Waters, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and Todd Haynes, but there’s no true substitute for his Technicolor fantasies of real life. Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson dare to cross age and class boundaries with th more »

After the Hunt

A gripping psychological drama about a college professor (Julia Roberts) who finds herself at a personal and professional crossroads when a star student (Ayo Edebiri) levels an accusation against one of her colleagues (Andrew Garfield), and a dark secret from her own past threatens to come into the light. more »

Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion

Mira Sorvino and Lisa Kudrow’s title characters don’t get that they’re a little dumb. And furthermore, they wouldn’t really care. They have each other (platonically) to face life and their judgy ex-classmates. There’s no good reason this Gen X catnip should be as smart, original, and hilarious as it is—the di more »

The Devil, Probably

Robert Bresson’s penultimate film captures the post-’68 generation of Parisian youth on the comedown. Antoinne Monier’s protagonist is past thinking that revolution is at hand, the environment can be saved, or anything much matters. The director’s trademark use of a deliberately inert nonprofessional cast i more »

Nevermore: The Raven Effect

“Wrestling is such a brutal business… But why did it attract an artist [like Raven]?” asks Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins. That’s the mystery at the heart of Nevermore: The Raven Effect — a hard-hitting, wild ride through one of wrestling’s most chaotic eras. Raven wasn’t just another wrestler. He was a grunge prophet in more »

Cracking the Code: Phil Sharp and the Biotech Revolution

Cracking the Code, narrated by Mark Ruffalo, is an inspiring story of vision, perseverance, and the power of science to change the world. Phil Sharp’s journey from a Kentucky farm boy to Nobel laureate embodies the American Dream and the triumph of entrepreneurial spirit. His 1977 groundbreaking discovery of RNA splicing rewrote more »

Vampire’s Kiss

Nicolas Cage’s outré acting style first fully flowered in his portrayal of an effete New York literary agent who, when not chasing one-night-stands or terrorizing a demure coworker (Maria Conchita Alonso), comes to believe he’s a vampire. The film is a fairly standard ‘80s indie, but Cage does something coc more »

Blue Moon

Tells the story of Lorenz Hart's struggles with alcoholism and mental health as he tries to save face during the opening of "Oklahoma!". more »

The Black Cat

Satanism rears its horned head in Hollywood for the first time in this vintage spooky story starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff. The “ordinary” honeymooners that set the story in motion are duds throughout, but the two stars bring the first-class creeps and scenery gnawing as they spar over deadly old gr more »

A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS

Freddy Krueger creator Wes Craven rejoined the franchise as a screenwriter for the second sequel, and the quality jumps. Patricia Arquette and her top-drawer scream make their screen debuts among a group of troubled teens in a mental hospital who are being run through the wringer of the horror series’ oneiric logic and spectacul more »

Bugonia

Two conspiracy obsessed young men kidnap the high-powered CEO of a major company, convinced that she is an alien intent on destroying planet Earth. more »

If I Had Legs I’d Kick You

With her life crashing down around her, Linda (Rose Byrne) attempts to navigate her child's mysterious illness, her absent husband, a missing person, and an increasingly hostile relationship with her therapist. more »

Pinocchio

The young special-needs son of a single father gets in trouble thanks to his pathological lies and trusting nature—he’s soon being trafficked, falling into substance abuse, and unhoused. Perhaps the most grim and yet most beautiful of the early Disney features. -Lee Gardner more »

Barry Lyndon

Stanley Kubrick’s masterpiece isn’t just a film—it’s a device that resets your internal sense of time, its deliberate pace bringing you back to 18th-century Europe more effectively than any periwig. Ryan O’Neal’s character offers a lesson for us all as he grasps and elbows his way up the ladder of society only to hit most of the more »

THE CURIOUS WORLD OF HIERONYMUS BOSCH

After 500 years Bosch’s paintings still shock and fascinate us. Delve into the vivid imagination of this true visionary. Who was Hieronymus Bosch? Why do his strange and fantastical paintings resonate with people now more than ever? How does he bridge the medieval and Renaissance worlds? Where did his unconventional and timele more »

Die My Love

Grace, a writer and young mother, is slowly slipping into madness. Locked away in an old house in and around Montana, we see her acting increasingly agitated and erratic, leaving her companion, Jackson, increasingly worried and helpless. more »

Nuremberg

A WWII psychiatrist evaluates Nazi leaders before the Nuremberg trials, growing increasingly obsessed with understanding evil as he forms a disturbing bond with Hermann Göring. more »

Performance

Fleeing both the cops and the crooks, James Fox’s cocky Cockney gangster stumbles into a den of hippies, who dose him, ball him, and mess with his mind. Not all of the far-out ‘60s editing tricks have aged well, but watching Fox’s character’s psyche dissolve around Swinging London royalty Mick Jagger and Anita Pallenberg (playin more »

Scarface (1932)

From the dawn of talkies comes one of the greatest crime films ever made. Paul Muni’s performance as the scuffling street guy who shoots and schemes his way to the top of the rackets lacks contemporary subtlety, shall we say, but Howard Hawks’ direction dazzles with its skill and vision, and the whole thing moves like a scalded more »

Scarface (1983)

Screenwriter Oliver Stone and director Brian De Palma faithfully transposed Howard Hawks’ gangster classic 50 years forward to the ‘80s coke boom, inspiring a generation of rap tropes and kindling the conflagration of Al Pacino’s “Big Al” late acting style in the process. Pacino is still arguably great here, but the secret sauce more »

Return of the Jedi

This is the end—or so it was understood at the time, before original IP became a value proposition for shareholders. Pros: George Lucas upped the ante on set pieces and the three leads remain magnetic. Con: The first recurring use of blowing up the doomsday thingy as a stock climax and, of course, Ewoks. more »

Andrei Rublev

Andrei Tarkovsky’s unconventional account of the life of a 15th-century Russian painter is likely to live on as long as its subject’s icons. Tarkovsky muse Anatoly Solonitsyn never paints a stroke as Andrei. The film instead shadows his episodic struggles with making art in light of the cruelty and venality of the muddy world. A more »

BRAZIL

Smart move on Terry Gilliam’s part adopting a cockeyed steampunk aesthetic here. It places the film slightly outside the typical pop-culture timescale and keeps a fable-like veneer slapped on top of what is, at root, a dystopian tale of repression, stupidity, and cruelty. Jonathan Pryce stars as the most everyman Everyman ever. more »

Wicked: For Good

Elphaba, the future Wicked Witch of the West and her relationship with Glinda, the Good Witch of the North. The second of a two-part feature film adaptation of the Broadway musical. more »

Rental Family

An American actor in Tokyo struggling to find purpose lands an unusual gig: working for a Japanese "rental family" agency, playing stand-in roles for strangers. He rediscovers purpose, belonging, and the beauty of human connection. more »

Sentimental Value

An intimate exploration of family, memories, and the reconciliatory power of art. more »

The Metropolitan Opera: Arabella

On November 22, Strauss’s elegant romance brings the glamour and enchantment of 19th-century Vienna to cinemas worldwide in a sumptuous production by legendary director Otto Schenk that “is as beautiful as one could hope” (The New York Times). Soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen stars as the title heroine, a young noblewoman in searc more »

Marathon Man

One of the great ‘70s paranoid thrillers rests on the narrow shoulders of Dustin Hoffman. Working his annoying-kid vibe to his advantage, Hoffman’s everydork seems suitably overwhelmed when he’s dragged into an international conspiracy involving shadowy government agents and Nazi war criminals (e.g. a delicious Laurence Olivier) more »

Eternity

In an afterlife where souls have one week to decide where to spend eternity, Joan is faced with the impossible choice between the man she spent her life with and her first love, who died young and has waited decades for her to arrive. more »

Hamnet

A powerful story of love and loss that inspired the creation of Shakespeare's timeless masterpiece, Hamlet. more »

The Last Waltz

Peer around Robbie Robertson’s ego to locate a top-five greatest concert film. Not only does the Band tear through a heap of their Americana-ground-zero hits like it was the last time, but the murderer’s row of special guests can’t be topped: Muddy Waters, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, and more. Boomer heav more »

Stray Dog

Toshiro Mifune in a crisp white suit and cap presents one of the underrated iconic looks in cinema. His rookie detective loses his pistol to a pickpocket in a heat wave and leads the audience on a tour of postwar Japan’s sweaty mean streets as he tries to get it back before it’s used in more crimes. This is where Akira Kurosawa’ more »

Lifeforce

Naked space vampires! If that logline doesn’t sell you, please note that Tobe Hooper (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Poltergeist) directs and duly manages to squeeze considerable mileage out of some cool production design, coulda-been-worse practical effects, and C-list actors like Steve Railsback and Peter Firth. Not to mention n more »

CARAVAGGIO

Mystery, intrigue, beauty, passion, murder – shine a new light on Caravaggio in this dramatic biography… Five years in production, this is the most extensive film ever made about one of the greatest artists of all time – Caravaggio. Featuring masterpiece after masterpiece and with first-hand testimony from the artist himself on more »

Ball of Fire

Barbara Stanwyck’s nightclub-singer moll lams it from the cops and hides out amid a clutch of milquetoast encyclopedia researchers led by hunky grammarian Gary Cooper. Cooper’s character finds her slangy argot fascinating, then falls for the rest of the package. With Howard Hawks directing and Billy Wilder co-writing the script, more »

CURE

Random people keep turning up gruesomely murdered, their placid killers unaware of having done the deed. The unrelated victims sport an “x” carved deep into their throats. From that premise, Japanese dread master Kiyoshi Kurosawa weaves one of the great modern psychological thrillers and perhaps his deepest meditation on the lon more »

Dust Bunny

Ten-year-old Aurora asks a hit man to kill the monster she believes ate her entire family. To protect her, he'll need to battle an onslaught of assassins while accepting the fact that some monsters are real. more »

Fackham Hall

A new porter forms an odd bond with the youngest daughter of a well-known UK family. As the Davenport family, headed by Lord and Lady Davenport, deals with the epic disaster of the wedding of their eldest daughter to her caddish cousin. more »

The Metropolitan Opera: Andrea Chénier

Giordano’s passionate tragedy stars tenor Piotr Beczała as the virtuous poet who falls victim to the intrigue and violence of the French Revolution. Following their celebrated recent partnership in Giordano’s Fedora in the 2022–23 Live in HD season, Beczała reunites with soprano Sonya Yoncheva as Chénier’s aristocratic lover, Ma more »

In Bruges

Playwright Martin McDonagh first flashed his potential staying power as a filmmaker with this crime-flick pass on Waiting for Godot. Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell play two hitmen hiding out in the title Belgian tourist burg after a botched job and sightseeing until fate reveals itself. One expects depth and delight from Glee more »

Black Christmas

Canadian filmmaker Bob Clark’s oeuvre somehow spans A Christmas Story, Porky’s, and this proto-slasher classic. A bunch of college girls played by pushing-30 actresses (headlined by Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder) are stalked by an obscene-phone-calling psycho as Yuletide draws near. Clark’s use of POV killer-cam broke ground a more »

The Secret Agent

In 1977, a technology expert flees from a mysterious past and returns to his hometown of Recife in search of peace. He soon realizes that the city is far from being the refuge he seeks. more »

The Muppet Christmas Carol

Michael Caine tears into the role of the miserable Ebenezer Scrooge as if he never noticed that most of his co-stars were made of felt—sneering, glowering, and groveling like an Oscar was on the line. As such, the Muppets’ version of Dickens’ classic tale is no joke, though, of course, there are plenty of jokes. 1992 Brian Hens more »

Female Trouble

A feminist treatise and a crime yarn and a Christmas movie and a John Waters film? Yes, it’s everything we always wanted all in one untidy package. Divine’s troubled teen goes astray, gives birth, goes mad, goes showbiz, and gets the chair. Even with all that, Waters regular Mink Stole nearly steals every scene she’s in. -Lee Ga more »

Marty Supreme

Marty Mauser, a young man with a dream no one respects, goes to hell and back in pursuit of greatness. more »

Song Sung Blue

Lightning and Thunder, a Milwaukee husband and wife Neil Diamond tribute act, experience soaring success and devastating heartbreak in their musical journey together. more »

The Baltimorons

On Christmas Eve, Cliff, a newly sober improv comedian, cracks a tooth and lands in the emergency care of Didi, an older no-nonsense dentist. What begins as a routine check-up sparks an unpredictable evening of misadventures. Together, Cliff and Didi fight to overcome being shut out by their families, face their biggest fears, a more »

My Man Godfrey

William Powell ditches his usual urbane trappings to play an unhoused man who meets a family of ritzy ditzes and lands a job as their new butler. Will he and most adorable ditz Carole Lombard fall for each other despite the apparent class chasm? Have you ever seen a screwball comedy before? The plot stretches credulity like taff more »

Throne of Blood

Arguably the best Shakespeare adaptation ever put onscreen. Akira Kurosawa couldn’t rely on the Bard’s iambs when transposing Macbeth to feudal Japan, but he created visuals of competing richness—blanketing mists, lunar plains, tangled thickets, a Noh witch, flights of fateful arrows. Toshiro Mifune’s intensity embodies the usur more »

Stop Making Sense

One of the great live bands of the late 20th century hit the stage with a show designed to make the most of their prowess, add to the impact of the performance, and distract the least from the musicians and songs. They got one of the best and most adaptable directors of the era to film it. Together, they created one of the top f more »

Annie Hall

Woody Allen’s Woody Allen shtick hasn’t aged well, to say the least, but you’re really here for the late Diane Keaton, right? In truth, she only embodies the title caricature—big hat, menswear, gawky demeanor, bad driver—for a few minutes here. Otherwise, she’s a remarkably three-dimensional character who, as more »

MATISSE FROM MoMA AND TATE MODERN

Hailed as the most successful exhibition in Tate Modern’s history, and equally popular at MoMA New York, audiences are invited to enjoy an intimate, behind-the-scenes documentary about this once-in-a-lifetime blockbuster exhibition with expert contributions from those that knew Matisse as well as curators, historians, Tate direc more »

Is This Thing On?

As their marriage unravels, Alex faces middle age and divorce, seeking new purpose in the New York comedy scene. Meanwhile, his wife Tess confronts sacrifices made for their family, forcing them to navigate co-parenting and identities. more »

The Last Days of Disco

A slice of life about the courtship rituals of young white affluent Manhattanites about 5 seconds before AIDS changed everything and 10 years before the entire island began bending to their will. Whit Stillman’s comedies of the mannered retain their droll charm, and sharp turns from Chloë Sevigny, Kate Beckinsale, and Stillman s more »

The Metropolitan Opera: I Puritani

For gorgeous melody, spellbinding coloratura, and virtuoso vocal fireworks, I Puritani has few equals. On January 10, the first new Met production of Bellini’s final masterpiece in nearly 50 years—a striking staging by Charles Edwards, who makes his company directorial debut after many successes as a set designer—arrives in cine more »

Crumb

You think your family is odd? Meet the Crumbs. Charles is a mentally ill shut-in. Maxon is an ascetic mendicant. Robert is celebrated as one of the 20th century’s great artists and damned for the sexism and racism in his work. Terry Zwigoff’s engrossing documentary not only lays bare R. Crumb’s life, it gets at something deep an more »

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple

As Spike is inducted into Jimmy Crystal's gang on the mainland, Dr. Kelson makes a discovery that could alter the world. A sequel to 2025's 28 Years Later. more »

Best in Show

Who doesn’t love dogs? Who doesn’t love Christopher Guest’s improvised comedies? A cast of Guest regulars (including Eugene Levy, Catherine O’Hara, Michael McKean, John Michael Higgins, Parker Posey, Jane Lynch, and Jennifer Coolidge) embody obsessive dog-show types angling for blue ribbons. Fred Willard arrives late and puts th more »

No Other Choice

After being unemployed for several years, a man devises a unique plan to secure a new job: eliminate his competition. more »

Playtime

True story: Jacques Tati shot his wry comedy epic on 70 mm in order to capture every purpose-built mid-century architectural detail, every bit of odd background business, and every sight gag, no matter how broad or subtle. The film’s loving sendup of the modern world still works a half century later because of Tati’s read on peo more »

Safe

Todd Haynes’ astonishing second feature has aged a bit, but it’s also deepened and gained in its disturbing power. Julianne Moore’s suburban lady who lunches is such a virtuoso blank that her descent into inexplicable illness and malaise functions as a kind of skeleton-key metaphor, fitting a dozen social ills over the past 30 y more »

The Testament of Ann Lee

Ann Lee, the founding leader of the Shaker Movement, proclaimed as the female Christ by her followers. Depicts her establishment of a utopian society and the Shakers' worship through song and dance, based on real events. more »

The Lovers on the Bridge

Leos Carax faced two nearly insurmountable challenges here: shooting on the Pont Neuf bridge, one of Paris’ major thoroughfares, and making Juliette Binoche look haggard. He rose to the occasion for his breakout, combining documentary grit with classic melodramatic amour as Binoche and the great Denis Lavant play two star-crosse more »

Arco

In 2075, a girl witnesses a mysterious boy in a rainbow suit fall from the sky. He comes from an idyllic far future where time travel is possible. She shelters him and will do whatever it takes to help him return to his time. more »

Iron Lung

In a post-apocalyptic future after "The Quiet Rapture" event, a convict explores a blood ocean on a desolate moon using a submarine called the "Iron Lung" to search for missing stars/planets. more »

Jacob’s Ladder

Tim Robbins delivers mail in gritty old NYC, but visions of demons and literal Vietnam flashbacks interrupt his shackup bliss with girlfriend Elizabeth Peña.The this-is-a-true-ish-story frame is kinda dumb, but class-trash peddler Adrian Lyne plays way over his head here and makes no errors as the dread creeps. Endlessly ripped- more »

The Voice of Hind Rajab

Red Crescent volunteers receive an emergency call. A 6-year old girl is trapped in a car under IDF fire in Gaza, pleading for rescue. While trying to keep her on the line, they do everything they can to get an ambulance to her. more »

Cinderella

Yes, it’s a fairytale princess story, but the venerable Disney adaptation also resembles a Tom and Jerry cartoon for a good chunk of runtime as a cartoon cat and a gang of mice wage goofy war. There’s also female undermining and patriarchal machinations. And some stunning hand-drawn animation, of course. -Lee Gardner more »

L’Avventura

A woman disappears on a barren Mediterranean islet during a yachting jaunt. Her fiance (Gabriele Ferzetti) and her best friend (Monica Vitti) search for her. The mystery lies not in the disappearance, but in what happens to those left behind, as director/co-writer Michelangelo Antonioni crafts one of the richest texts of mid-cen more »

THE IMPRESSIONISTS AND THE MAN WHO MADE THEM

From the Director: I think it’s fair to say that the group of artists working in late 19th-century Paris and that we call ‘the Impressionists’ are the most popular group in art history. Monet, Degas, Renoir, Cezanne, Cassatt, Manet, Morisot, Pissarro, Caillebotte and others. Yet in their own lifetimes they knew poverty and reje more »

Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai

Jim Jarmusch transposes Jean-Pierre Melville’s Le Samouraï to urban East Coast America for this genre gem. Forest Whitaker tools up as a taciturn hitman who follows the ancient honor code of feudal Japan, bringing him into conflict with his employers, the local Mob. Isaach de Bankolé’s ice cream man and the RZA’s bumping score b more »

The Moment

A rising pop star (Charli XCX) navigates the complexities of fame and industry pressure while preparing for her arena tour debut. more »

Viridiana

How does that saying go about good deeds? Silvia Pinal’s nun-to-be loathes her creepy old uncle (Fernando Rey) but nonetheless consents to visit him one last time before she takes her final vows. What ensues represents one of Luis Buñuel’s most thoroughgoing savagings of the Catholic Church, and that’s saying something. -Lee Gar more »

Angel’s Egg

A boy shouldering a cross-shaped weapon wanders a war–ravaged waste. A young girl cradles a round belly — in fact, it’s a large egg hidden under her dress, an egg she’s convinced is special. Writer/ director Mamuro Oshii (Ghost in the Shell) and illustrator Yoshitaka Amano (Final Fantasy) teamed up for this terse mindblower, nev more »

Wuthering Heights

A passionate and tumultuous love story set against the backdrop of the Yorkshire moors, exploring the intense and destructive relationship between Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw. more »

Cabaret

Everybody’s broke, people are being rounded up on the streets, and Nazis are on the rise. Yes, it’s Germany between the world wars, the setting of Bob Fosse’s screen adaptation of the Broadway smash. The ambisexual bed-hopping at the heart of the plot is au courant, too, though the film is at its louche best on the grotty stage more »

DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN

Madonna was never going to be a great actress, but she’s undeniable as a screen presence. She shot to stardom while Susan Seidelman was shooting this downtown romp with Rosanna Arquette as a Jersey housewife whose amnesia leads to her swapping lives with the Material Girl’s title wastrel. Lots of fun, not least for Manhattan pre more »

Midwinter Break

A longtime couple take a life-changing trip to Amsterdam. more »

Pillion

A directionless man is swept off his feet when an enigmatic, impossibly handsome biker takes him on as his submissive. more »

2026 Oscar Nominated Shorts (ANIMATION)

This Oscar® Nominated Shorts Program offers audiences a rare opportunity to experience these celebrated works on the big screen ahead of the Oscars®. Animated Shorts: 82 minutes more »

2026 Oscar Nominated Shorts (DOCUMENTARY)

This Oscar® Nominated Shorts Program offers audiences a rare opportunity to experience these celebrated works on the big screen ahead of the Oscars®. Documentary Shorts: 157 Minutes more »

2026 Oscar Nominated Shorts (LIVE ACTION)

This Oscar® Nominated Shorts Program offers audiences a rare opportunity to experience these celebrated works on the big screen ahead of the Oscars®. Live Action Shorts: 119 minutes more »

Dark Passage

Humphrey Bogart stars, though you don’t see his face for a third of the film. Delmer Daves shot the early reels from Bogart’s character’s POV—a bold gambit/ gimmick that helps enliven this solid noir. After plastic surgery, Bogart tries to prove his innocence with the help of Lauren Bacall. Several tense sequences and a kindly c more »

EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert

Never-before-seen footage and recordings feature Elvis Presley in concert at his Las Vegas residency during the later stage of his career. more »

Naked Lunch

Turns out you can film pretty much any novel, though apparently there are limits to how queer you make it. David Cronenberg’s take on William S. Burroughs’ subterranean classic leans into surrealism, squalor, and ick as Peter Weller’s authorial stand-in infiltrates a nightmare demimonde undercover as a straight guy. If nothing e more »

NIRVANNA THE BAND THE SHOW THE MOVIE

When their plan to book a show at the Rivoli goes horribly wrong, Matt and Jay accidentally travel back to the year 2008. more »

All That Jazz

Womanizing workaholic substance-abusing chainsmoking Bob Fosse transformed his decline into one of the great American films, as clear-eyed about death, creativity, and denial as any movie ever made. You might not imagine Roy Scheider as the star of a musical, but then it’s tough to imagine a director making a film about his own more »

PISSARRO: FATHER OF IMPRESSIONISM

Without Camille Pissarro, there is no Impressionist movement. He is rightfully known as the father of Impressionism. It was a dramatic path that Pissarro followed, and throughout it all he wrote extensively to his family. It is through these intimate and revealing letters that this gripping film reveals Pissarro’s life and work. more »

Dolly

Macy, a young woman, is abducted by a monstrous figure intent on raising her as their own child. more »

La Haine

It’s reductive to call it the French Do the Right Thing, but not inaccurate. Vincent Cassel, Saȉd Taghmaoui, and Hubert Koundé star as three young men living in a Parisian slum in the wake of an uprising. A friend lying near death after a beating by police and a cop’s lost gun complicate matters. Director Mathieu Kassovitz’s sil more »

Sirat

A father (Sergi López) and his son arrive at a rave deep in the mountains of southern Morocco. They are searching for Mar -- daughter and sister -- who vanished months ago at one of these endless, sleepless parties. Surrounded by electronic music and a raw, unfamiliar sense of freedom, they hand out her photo again and again. Ho more »

The Bride!

In 1930s Chicago, Frankenstein asks Dr. Euphronius to help create a companion. They give life to a murdered woman as the Bride, sparking romance, police interest, and radical social change. more »

The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her lover

Peter Greenaway’s prickly cinema finally hit big with arthouse audiences here. Food and sex will do that. Everybody despises Michael Gambon’s vile gangster, but he holds money and violence over restaurateur Richard Bohringer, just violence over wife Helen Mirren. That doesn’t prevent her from pursuing an affair in the restaurant more »

Predator

There’s so much testosterone sluicing through this movie that the print probably needs a shave. And that’s part of why it’s so much fun—big dudes with big guns meeting their otherworldly match in the sweaty jungles. That and spotting all the memes. -Lee Gardner more »

Undertone

The host of a popular paranormal podcast becomes haunted by terrifying recordings mysteriously sent her way. more »

The Verdict

Lumetland is full of courthouses and bars and unappealing apartments, with the occasional posh paneled room just to make the regular Joes feel inferior. Paul Newman is a serious Lumet guy, a clay-footed lawyer with scotch for blood who gets a chance to turn it all around and blows nearly every shot at it. You’ve seen it all befo more »

Adaptation

That this movie ever existed, much less continues to, seems like some fake Wikipedia entry that will get taken down any minute. Nicolas Cage plays screenwriter/director Charlie Kaufman, who was hired to adapt Susan Orlean’s book The Orchid Thief. He did. That’s the film you’re watching. But it’s mostly about Kaufman’s inability more »

Project Hail Mary

Science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) wakes up on a spaceship light years from home with no recollection of who he is or how he got there. As his memory returns, he begins to uncover his mission: solve the riddle of the mysterious substance causing the sun to die out. He must call on his scientific knowledge and unorthodox more »

Ready or Not 2: Here I Come

After surviving one deadly game, Grace and her sister Faith must now outrun four rival families competing for a powerful throne - winner takes all. more »

Destroy All Monsters

Godzilla returns! As do Rodan, Mothra, Baragon, and a host of other kaiju in the film series’ grand battle royale. Invading mind-controlling aliens unleash the pacified monsters on Earth’s capitals, and it’s up to a cadre of plucky astronauts to battle the aliens and free Godzilla and his friends to fight the real enemy. The mid more »

The Metropolitan Opera: Tristan und Isolde

After years of anticipation, a truly unmissable event arrives in cinemas worldwide on March 21 as the electrifying Lise Davidsen tackles one of the ultimate roles for dramatic soprano: the Irish princess Isolde in Wagner’s transcendent meditation on love and death. Heroic tenor Michael Spyres stars opposite Davidsen as the love- more »

Eno

In the first career-spanning documentary of the legendary and prolific artist and the world’s first generative feature film, Hustwit set out to decode Eno's creative strategies and examine his lifelong search for the meaning of music. Defying the hagiographic impulses of the music doc genre, Eno draws from original interviews an more »

Alpha

Alpha, a troubled 13-year-old lives with her single mom. Their world collapses the day she returns from school with a tattoo on her arm. more »

The AI Doc: Or How I Became An Apocaloptimist

From the Academy Award®-winning filmmakers behind Everything Everywhere All at Once and Navalny; a father-to-be tries to figure out what is happening with all this AI insanity. The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist is a hand-made, eye-opening documentary about the most powerful technology humanity has ever created... and more »

THE BROOD

David Cronenberg’s last low-budget Canadian film before Scanners blew him up remains one of his most psychologically fraught and visceral. Good-looking blank Art Hindle tries to raise his daughter while estranged wife Samantha Eggar undergoes intensive therapy with radical psychiatrist Oliver Reed. But the subjects of her therap more »

André Is an Idiot

André is a brilliant idiot. He is dying because he didn’t get a colonoscopy. His sobering diagnosis, complete irreverence, and insatiable curiosity, send him on an unexpected journey learning how to die happily and ridiculously without losing his sense of humor. more »

Catch 22

It’s always worth remembering that war is a brutal and often cynical affair. Mike Nichol’s prestige project drew from a canonical source and features an all-star cast but has gone down in history as a bomb. Perhaps audiences weren’t ready for a film as assured yet caustically absurd as this. Allan Arkin’s terrified bombardier pl more »

TURNER & CONSTABLE: THE DEFINITIVE EXHIBITION

Celebrating the 250th anniversary of their births, this unmissable new documentary explores Turner and Constable’s intertwined lives and legacies alongside the groundbreaking Tate exhibition. Two of Britain’s greatest painters, J.M.W. Turner and John Constable were also the greatest of rivals. Born within a year of each other, more »

Belly

Super-saturated color, wide-angle lenses, endless filters, oddball angles—music-video auteur Hype Williams only made one standalone feature film, but it still stands out. DMX and Nas star as the kind of around-the-way gangstas they rapped about, the former escalating into the drug game, the latter turning to Self-Improvement. Su more »

The Drama

A happily engaged couple is put to the test when an unexpected turn sends their wedding week off the rails. more »

Fantasy Life

An actress (Amanda Peet) falls for the anxious law school dropout (Matthew Shear) babysitting her kids in this smart, New York-set romantic comedy. more »

Miroirs No. 3

After a car crash kills her boyfriend, piano student Laura is taken in by Betty, who witnessed the accident. Living with Betty's family brings comfort, but Laura starts questioning their intentions as time passes. more »

ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1951)

Despite the patently surreal tale, Disney’s take on Lewis Carroll’s novel isn’t one of those old-school animated films that tempts the viewer to quip that the animators must have been on drugs. The colors are vibrant, and characters like the Cheshire Cat and Caterpillar seem like they should be stoner icons, but Alice’s romp is more »

Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair

Normalize releasing four-hour films theatrically! If Brady “The Brutalist” Corbet can do it, there’s no reason why Quentin Tarantino, near the peak of his Hollywood heat, should have been forced to split his globe-spanning action opus in half, especially when it plays so well welded back together. more »

Exit 8

A man becomes increasingly desperate when he realizes he is trapped in a subway station, needing to complete a mission to get out. more »

Faces of Death

A woman, employed as a website content moderator, comes across a series of violent videos reproducing death scenes from a film. more »

Point Blank

John Boorman was left out of Peter Biskind’s canon-setting book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, but there’s an argument to be made that the New Hollywood began here. Boorman’s adaptation of Richard Stark’s hardboiled fiction infuses a classic noir tale with existential fatalism and downright experimental techniques. Oh, and many beli more »

The Stranger

In 1930s Algeria, the daily life of an indifferent Frenchman is shaken by the death of his mother and a fateful encounter on a beach. more »

Sunset Boulevard

If you know the name Gloria Swanson, this film is probably why, and that is perhaps as it should be. A darling of the silent cinema, she was brought out of retirement by Billy Wilder to play the reclusive bygone star at the center of his Hollywood-insider masterpiece. It’s thus easy to mistake her for her character, which unders more »

Lorne

Lorne Michaels, creator of Saturday Night Live (1975), offers unprecedented access to the man who built and sustained the institution for five decades. more »

The Christophers

The children of a once famous artist hire a forger to complete some unfinished, long ago abandoned canvases so they'll have an inheritance when he dies. more »

Zodiac

Humans evolved to make meaning, but what if they can’t? That’s the question that lies at the heart of the greatest true-crime film of them all. Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo, and an exquisite supporting cast chase after the serial killer who slew five in the Bay Area in the late 1960s. David Fincher’s maniacal more »

Queen Kelly

For most filmgoers, Gloria Swanson = Nora Desmond. But she filled those slippers thanks to silent classics such as Erich von Stroheim’s Queen Kelly. Swanson plays a convent lass who catches the eye of a rakish baron, propelling our flirty ingénue on a fateful course. Queen Kelly is an unfinished film, technically, but there’s no more »

Deliverance

Let’s face it: John Boorman’s ‘70s succès de scandal put the image of Appalachian people back 50, maybe 100 years. Viewed more than 50 years on, however, the entitled proto-bro hubris of Burt Reynolds’ would-be Natural Man and his crew of Atlanta slickers (Jon Voight, Ronnie Cox, and Ned Beatty) makes their brutal fates seem eve more »

I Swear

I SWEAR is the inspiring, extraordinary life story of notable Tourette Syndrome campaigner, John Davidson, MBE. Kirk Jones’ emotionally engaging, funny and compelling film charts John Davidson’s Tourette's diagnosis at the age of 15 years old. Set within 1980s Britain, the story follows him throughout his troubled teens and earl more »

Michael

The story of the famous musician Michael Jackson, known as the King of Pop. more »

Mother Mary

Long-buried wounds rise to the surface when iconic pop star Mother Mary reunites with her estranged best friend and former costume designer, Sam Anselm, on the eve of her comeback performance. more »

The Tall T

Budd Boetticher’s archetypal Westerns with Randolph Scott are finally getting their dusty, parched flowers, and it’s about time. Scott plays his usual lone, upright cowboy, this time tangled up with three murderous thugs and frontier damsel Maureen O’Sullivan. The motor driving the plot is that Scott is more admirable than every more »

Red Beard

Akira Kurosawa’s final collaboration with Toshiro Mifune features the topknots and kimonos of Seven Samurai and Yojimbo and embodies an ethic of stoic service. But this time Mifune plays a doctor running a ramshackle clinic in a poor neighborhood of Tokyo who has to teach a social-climbing young physician (Yūzō Kayama) how to ca more »

Boogie Nights

Paul Thomas Anderson’s golden-age porn-biz epic isn’t really about porn, or even sex. It’s about family. None of PTA’s flash one-ers or dead-on needle drops would matter if it weren’t for the keen insight of his script or the performances of his killer cast: Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore, John C. Reilly, Burt Reynolds, Heather G more »

The Devil Wears Prada 2

Follows Miranda Priestly's struggle against Emily Charlton, her former assistant turned rival executive, as they compete for advertising revenue amidst declining print media while Miranda nears retirement. more »

STEAL THIS STORY, PLEASE!

Steal This Story, Please! tells the story of iconic independent journalist Amy Goodman, who’s personal story, warm and radical spirit, and utterly fearless work as a journalist are interwoven with the monumental events she has covered over the years. The film highlights the critical role of journalism in shaping our understandin more »

The Metropolitan Opera: Eugene Onegin

Following her acclaimed 2024 company debut in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, soprano Asmik Grigorian returns to the Met as Tatiana, the lovestruck young heroine in this ardent operatic adaptation of Pushkin, which will be transmitted live from the Metropolitan Opera stage to cinemas worldwide on May 2. Baritone Igor Golovatenko is more »

Wuthering Heights (1939)

Emily Bronte doesn't need pomo frippery or textual hair-splitting to work. William Wyler's 1939 adaptation cast Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon as Heathcliff and Cathy and shot the outdoor scenes in Southern California. It'll still clutch your heart and tweak your ducts. - Lee Gardner more »

Alien

Ridley Scott's breakout is so well made that, except for the computer displays, you could release it new tomorrow and it would still look fresh. Its sci-fi/horror mashup still gets ripped off on the regular more than 40 years later. When Scott revisited it for a pointless "director's cut," he barely touched it. It is that good. more »

The 400 Blows

Francois Truffaut ranks as perhaps the most overrated Nouvelle Vague director, but his semi-autobiographical debut feature will live forever. Fourteen-year-old Jean-Pierre Leaud's extraordinary performance as an urban adolescent let down by his loser parents, school, and society and running out of good options channels an more »

Obsession

After breaking the mysterious "One Wish Willow" to win his crush's heart, a hopeless romantic finds himself getting exactly what he asked for but soon discovers that some desires come at a dark, sinister price. more »

Speed

The premise was going to work almost no matter what: Dennis Hopper's mad bomber has rigged a city bus to blow if it drops below 50 mph as it careens through bottlenecked LA. But director Jan De Bont, editor Jon Wright, and athletic young star Keanu Reeves create kinetic cinema magic here. more »

Rope

Minor Hitchcock once best known for having been shot as a series of long oners, Rope now fascinates more for gay subtext that is just barely "sub." John Dall and Farley Granger play adult roommates who murder a pal to see if they can get away with it, then serve a light supper on the chest containing the corpse. Jimmy Stewart pl more »

FRIDA KAHLO

Frida Kahlo is a phenomenon. She is arguably the world’s favorite female artist – beloved by young and old. Exhibition On Screen’s award-winning film – first released during covid to a restricted audience - is back by popular demand with an exciting new addition from the blockbuster transatlantic exhibition from Tate Britain and more »

Dogtooth

Yorgos Lanthimos enjoys the awards and the stars and the big budgets now, but nothing he's done lately is as original, shrewd, outrageous, or deadpan hilarious as his second feature. A Greek family man and his wife have decided to protect their children from isolating them from it. That's already telling you too much. Just see i more »

Late Spring

The first of Yasujiro Ozu's classic collaborations with Setsuko Hara amply demonstrates why he cast her five more times. She plays the adult daughter of fellow Ozu stalwart Chishu Ryu. They have become comfortable with her tending him, but as they both age, he knows she must start her own life. Ozu and Ryu work their usual minim more »

Backrooms

A strange doorway appears in the basement of a furniture showroom. more »

Coffy

The film that made Pam Grier a star. Nurse by day, badass by night, she's out for revenge against the pusher who hooked her sister. But as she kicks ass up the ladder toward Mr. Big, she runs into more than she bargained for. Grier easily handles the sex and violence inherent in classic Blaxploitation, but it's the vulnerability more »

Tuner

A talented piano tuner's meticulous skills for tuning pianos lead him to discover an unexpected aptitude for cracking safes, turning his life upside down. more »

Bitter Rice

Every year hundreds of women flock to temporary harvesting jobs in the rice paddies of Northern Italy, a perfect setting for working-class drama and romance. Doris Dowling is soaking in it - on the lam from the law, torn between a crook boyfriend and an upright soldier, trying to get on with her fellow workers. Giuseppe De Santi more »

The Metropolitan Opera: El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego

On May 30, the Metropolitan Opera’s 2025–26 Live in HD season comes to a close with a live transmission of American composer Gabriela Lena Frank’s first opera, a magical-realist portrait of Mexico’s painterly power couple Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, with libretto by Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Nilo Cruz. Fashioned as a r more »

A Better Tomorrow

John Woo was just another struggling Hong Kong filmmaker before this story of brotherhood, sacrifice, and many, many round of 9mm ammunition rebooted his career. Ti Lung and the uber-charismatic Chow Yun-fat star as down-and-out gangsters dragged back into the life. Woo himself plays a small role as well as choreographing the pi more »

8 1/2

Marcello Mastroianni stands in for director Federico Fellini as a celebrated cinema auteur besieged by the demands of his life and career and blocked over the creation of his next film (which you are currently watching). But no capsule logline captures the mindmeld effect of Fellini's mix of reality, memory, dreams, and fantasy, more »

Clueless

Amy Heckerling transposes Jane Austen's Emma to Southern California mall culture with Alicia Silverstone as the contemporary stand-in for Austen's title busybody, matchmaking and Pygmalioning it up even as her own life gets a bit random. Even laden with 30-year speech and standards, the director's script sparkles. A perfect film more »

Close-Up

Is Close-Up a documentary? An Iranian man who pretended to be a famous Iranian director appears as himself, as does the family he hoaxed and the journalist who broke the story. Filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami secured permission to film the man's trial, and asks questions of the defendant on camera during the proceedings. Issues of pe more »

Tombstone

Thank god for Val Kilmer. Even Kurt Russell and his vigorous mustache can't quite save this epic Western saga from its self-seriousness and open-range sprawl. But Kilmer's Doc Holiday - a consumptive dandy and cardsharp quick with a pistol and a withering quip - makes every scene he's in a hoot and sticking around well worth it. more »