Friday | 19.04.24

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Monthly Screenings

Cult Wednesdays

The Silence of the Lambs

Dir.: Jonathan Demme
| 118 minutes

A young FBI agent is sent to convince a serial killer to assist the Bureau with an investigation. The relationship between the Agent and murderer will challenge everything they know. The Silence of the Lambs is a classic that should not be missed. 

The Big Lebowski

Dir.: Joel Coen
| 127 minutes

A laid-back Los Angeles hippie is mistaken for a millionaire from Pasadena and finds himself trapped in a web of intrigue, conflicting interests, angry gangsters, and all the other elements that are part of the Coen Brothers' trademark.

Mean Girls

Dir.: Mark S. Waters
| 97 minutes

A charming description of the clichés of adolescence and the sociological reality of the American high school. The plot follows a young girl who has returned from long years of homeschooling in Africa to discover the jungle of girl's cliques in a Chicago high school.

Little Miss Sunshine

Dir.: Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris
| 101 minutes

"Little Miss Sunshine" is the name of a little girls' beauty pageant somewhere in California. 7-year-old Olive wants to win the competition more than anything and her father decides to help her realize her dream. The film combines the sentimental with the ridiculous and provides an acute look at the American Dream.

Psycho

Dir.: Alfred Hitchcock
| 109 minutes

A peculiar young man and his crotchety "mother" run a desolate motel with horrifying results. In Hitchcock's most macabre classic, the director's rare talent and perfect control of cinematic syntax create one of the key films in cinema.

The Iron Giant

Dir.: Brad Bird
| 86 minutes

A curious and clever boy meets an iron giant who landed from space. The friendship between the two is tested when government agents chase the giant. This is the perfect film that cleverly appeals to all ages with its combination of humor and sentiment.

Shrek

Dir.: Andrew Adamson, Vicky Jenson
| 98 minutes

A road movie through fairy tale land starring a big green ogre, a soft-hearted donkey, and a beautiful princess with a terrible secret. A sophisticated, naughty, and dynamic animated film with numerous cinematic homages and references.

The Thing

Dir.: John Carpenter
| 109 minutes

As scientists in Antarctica discover the remains of a spacecraft, their dog transforms into a mysterious creature that kills them and takes on the form of its victim. Russell's charismatic performance, Ennio Morricone's soundtrack, and Carpenter's talent make The Thing a pinnacle of the genre.

The Blues Brothers

Dir.: John Landis
| 133 minutes

A couple of wild brothers do everything in their power to put their band together after one is released from prison. Mayhem, chaos and wholesale destruction are the immediate results. The Blues Brothers is one of the coolest films ever made.

Back to the Future

Dir.: Robert Zemeckis
| 115 minutes

America, 1985. Marty McFly takes the Delorean, Doc Brown's time machine car, for a ride, landing 30 years earlier. Unintentionally, he disrupts the meeting of his parents, and now he must reinitiate their romance. Back to the Future is Hollywood at its best.

Superbad

Dir.: Greg Mottola
| 120 minutes

Three high school graduates all too consumed with the topic of sexuality, are about to go off to college and are desperate to lose their virginity. Being a group of socially inept teens, all they can expect is to be someone’s “late night mistake.” Another hilarious and all too human comedy by Judd Apatow.

Trainspotting

Dir.: Danny Boyle
| 94 minutes

The story of four friends, heroin addicts, from Edinburgh who have difficulty adjusting to the realities of the nineties. Danny Boyle created this cult film that defined a historic moment, and cinema was never the same after.

And Your Mother Too

Dir.: Alfonso Cuaron
| 105 minutes

Two friends fall for an older woman creating tension that follows them on a road trip through the wild landscapes of Mexico toward the sea. All of Cuarón's cinematic wisdom is present here, allowing him to maneuver with a combination of empathy and irony, mockery and compassion.

The Devil Wears Prada

Dir.: David Frankel
| 109 minutes

A year in the life of a recent college-graduate who ends up in New York working for a ruthless fashion magazine editor and manages to get ahead in the professional ranks of the journalism world. The Devil Wears Prada is entertaining, heartwarming, and clever.

Inglourious Basterds

Dir.: Quentin Tarantino
| 153 minutes

Shoshana escapes by the skin of her teeth from the hands of a Nazi colonel. When her paths cross with the "Bastards" - American avengers sent to terrorize the German army - the film reaches its climax. A perfectly executed film packed with witty dialogue and thrilling action.

O Brother, Where Art Thou?

Dir.: Ethan Coen
| 106 minutes

Based on Homer's "Odyssey", this Coen Brothers film is a funny, well crafted comedy which tells the story of Everett Ulysses McGill and his companions Delmar and Pete in 1930s Mississippi. Having escaped from the chain gang,  they encounter a series of strange characters.

The Royal Tenenbaums

Dir.: Wes Anderson
| 109 minutes

Twenty years after abandoning his wife and three precocious children, Royal Tenenbaum decides to return home and is willing to do whatever it takes to win them back. An intelligent, witty, and enjoyable comedy.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Dir.: Sergio Leone
| 179 minutes

Set during the time of the American Civil War, the three men of the film's title search for a hidden treasure. Leone's classic masterpiece western combines action and violence with small and delicate humane stories.

RoboCop

Dir.: Paul Verhoeven
| 103 minutes

The setting: Detroit, in the near future. A cop who dies in the line of duty is transformed into an ultrasophisticated cyborg by the corporation which now runs the police department. Only hitch: this "perfect" cop still seeks revenge on the creeps who killed him. 

Men in Black

Dir.: Barry Sonnenefeld
| 98 minutes

Men in Black is a witty and stylish sci-fi comedy about aliens who live on Earth. The creatures look just like us and live among us; their activities are monitored by MIB - a secret service unit known as Men in Black.

Borat

Dir.: Larry Charles
| 82 minutes

Borat Sagdiev, a Kazakh television reporter, sets out for the USA. With an innocent face and "third-world manners," he unveils what is hidden behind America's shiny exterior. A winning combination of physical humor and absurd documentary-like moments turn Borat into one of the best comedies of the 21st century.

Garden State

Dir.: Zach Braff
| 102 minutes

Andrew has to return home for his mother's funeral. He stops taking the drugs his psychiatrist father prescribes and meets Sam, who has her own collection of personal problems. This tender romantic comedy is a singular work that is a perfect capsule for a lost moment.