Friday | 22.11.24

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Monthly Screenings

Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: Part 1

Bonnie and Clyde

Dir.: Arthur Penn
| 111 minutes

The life and times of the infamous gangster couple Bonnie and Clyde. With a touch of brilliance, Bonnie and Clyde is a cinematic milestone that takes the audience on an unforgettable roller-coaster ride.

Midnight Cowboy

Dir.: John Schlesinger
| 113 minutes

A young and silly dishwasher aspires to conquer the big city, only to sink into degenerated loneliness. His only hope is a sickly and wretched young man. This is an excellent portrait of a time and place that brilliantly captures the essence of the late 1960s.

Easy Rider

Dir.: Dennis Hopper
| 95 minutes

Easy Rider, about two hippies crossing America on Harleys, is one of the key films of the 1960s. Through a series of encounters across the land, Denis Hopper articulated in cinematic means the credo of a whole generation. The result is a masterpiece that should not be missed.

Five Easy Pieces

Dir.: Bob Rafelson
| 98 minutes

Jack Nicholson's breakout performance is this exceptional drama that follows a young man who sets out on a journey across the States to see his dying father. Five Easy Pieces is charged with a tough energy and bitter melancholy, and at its heart stands Nicholson's astonishing and stirring performance.

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

Dir.: Sydney Pollack
| 129 minutes

On the backdrop of a dance-to-death contest during the Great Depression, Sidney Pollack presents one of his best films. It focuses on Gloria and Robert (the exceptional Fonda and Sarrazin) - she's tough and he's naive - and how they face the physical and mental challenges of the competition.

Klute

Dir.: Alan J. Pakula
| 114 minutes

Klute is a small-town policeman who arrives in NYC to solve a missing person case. His only lead is a neurotic escort. Alan J. Pakula transforms the detective genre into something completely different – a somewhat romantic drama about the relationship between two strangers in the big city.

The French Connection

Dir.: William Friedkin
| 104 minutes

Two narcotic detectives set out to thwart a cocaine shipment from Europe, and try to seize the substance and capture the perpetrators. The French Connection presents some of the most iconic scenes in film history, moral ambiguity, coarse cinematography, and a dazzling performance by Gene Hackman.