Revival Series

Every Saturday at 11:30am, Monday at 7pm and Thursday at 9pm, the Charles presents repertory films in DCP format (and from time to time on 35mm film) in The Charles’ original 360 seat theatre.

VIEW CALENDAR

Showtimes are only for today,

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Destroy All Monsters
Eno Monday, March 23
THE BROOD Thursday, March 26
Catch 22 Saturday, March 28
Belly Thursday, April 2
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (1951) Saturday, April 4
Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair Monday, April 6
Point Blank Thursday, April 9
Sunset Boulevard Saturday, April 11
Zodiac Thursday, April 16
Queen Kelly Saturday, April 18
Deliverance Thursday, April 23
The Tall T Saturday, April 25
Red Beard Monday, April 27
Boogie Nights Thursday, April 30
Alien Thursday, May 7
The 400 Blows Saturday, May 9
Speed Thursday, May 14
Rope Saturday, May 16
Dogtooth Thursday, May 21
Late Spring Saturday, May 23
Coffy Thursday, May 28
Bitter Rice Saturday, May 30
A Better Tomorrow Thursday, June 4
8 1/2 Saturday, June 6
Clueless Thursday, June 11
Close-Up Saturday, June 13
Tombstone Thursday, June 18

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 »

Tickets
1/29

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 »

2/29

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 »

3/29

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 »

4/29

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 »

5/29

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 »

6/29

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 »

7/29

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 »

8/29

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 »

9/29

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 »

10/29

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 »

11/29

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 »

12/29

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 »

13/29

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 »

14/29

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 »

15/29

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 »

16/29

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 »

17/29

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 »

18/29

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 »

19/29

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 »

20/29

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 »

21/29

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 »

22/29

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 »

23/29

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 »

24/29

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 »

25/29

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 »

26/29

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 »

27/29

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 »

28/29

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 »

29/29