John Singleton’s quintessential chronicle of three friends growing up in an economically depressed South Central Los Angeles neighborhood in the early ‘90s. Featuring outstanding performances by Ice Cube, Cuba Gooding Jr., Morris Chestnut and Lawrence Fishburne. Pizza and a Movie, co-presented with Slim & Husky’s Pizza Beeria.
A teenage cartoonist rejects the comforts of his suburban life and leaves home, finding an unwilling teacher and unwitting friend in Wallace, a former low-level comic artist.
In the first film of the Three Colors trilogy, Juliette Binoche gives a tour de force performance as Julie, a woman reeling from the tragic death of her husband and young daughter. Shot in sapphire tones and set to an extraordinary operatic score, BLUE is an overwhelming sensory experience.
Having tasked the “notoriously shy” Australian musician Courtney Barnett with maintaining an audio diary through a never-ending tour, friend/filmmaker Danny Cohen focuses inward in this meditative 16mm antidote to the myth of a rock star on the rise.
Albert is employed to look after Mia, a girl with teeth of ice in an apartment where the shutters are always closed — until the day Albert is instructed that he must prepare the child to leave. Lucile Hadžihalilović creates complete worlds that are haunting, beautiful, and strange. EARWIG is no exception.
Clint Eastwood returns as the The Man With No Name, who teams up with equally lethal Colonel Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef) in pursuit of a sadistic killer and his band of desperadoes.
Sixty years since its first release, David Lean's splendid biography of the enigmatic T.E. Lawrence paints a complex portrait of the desert-loving Englishman who united Arab tribes in a battle against the Ottoman Turks during World War I.
Initially misunderstood and largely dismissed by critics, this satirical rom-com about a high school cheerleader sent to conversion therapy, has stretched beyond its cult classic status over the past 20 years to become part of the canon in New Queer Cinema.
A Beverly Hills teenager discovers a stomach-churning truth about his family and their wealthy community. One of the most original body horror shockers out there, this thought-provoking horror satire culminates in one of the most gag-inducing "climaxes"' in all of horror history.