
Mr. Jones
Set on the eve of world WWII, Agnieszka Holland’s thriller concerns Hitler’s rise to power and Stalin’s Soviet propaganda machine pushing their “utopia” to the Western world.
You can buy admission tickets online. Pick a date and time to visit the Museum. Timed-entry slots are released generally one-month prior. All sales are final and payments cannot be refunded.
Set on the eve of world WWII, Agnieszka Holland’s thriller concerns Hitler’s rise to power and Stalin’s Soviet propaganda machine pushing their “utopia” to the Western world.
This sweeping, feverish epic adapted loosely from James Fenimore Cooper's 1826 novel features some of Michael Mann's most hypnotic vistas and kinetic sequences.
Jan Mikolášek won fame and fortune treating celebrities of the interwar, Nazi, and Communist eras with his uncanny knack for “urinary diagnosis.” But his passion for healing came from the same source as a lust for cruelty, sadism, and an incapacity for love.
Eastwood’s astonishingly beautiful adaptation of the best-selling novel by Robert James Waller, starring a magnificent Meryl Streep, screens on 35mm on 6/15 and 6/16.
The latest film from the director of the Oscar-winning The Favorite and Poor Things, Kinds of Kindness is a triptych fable, following a man without choice who tries to take control of his own life.
In celebration of the Juneteenth holiday and Black Music Appreciation Month, we are featuring an array of activities and screenings.
Named for a tavern or roadhouse with music for Black people, 1947's Juke Joint was the ninth feature directed by Spencer Williams, who also starred in the film.
This is the first feature film directed by pioneering filmmaker Spencer Williams, whose screenplay was inspired by a Langston Hughes poem. Followed by a panel discussion featuring Dr. Michele Prettyman and Dr. David Bering-Porter.
Agnieszka Holland received an Academy Award nomination for this account of the real-life experiences of a German Jew who, at 16, concealed his Jewishness during WWII. Holland in person on 6/20!
Frances Hodgson Burnett’s classic children’s novel comes to precious life in Holland’s exquisitely mounted gothic adaptation, one of the finest live-action family films of the nineties. Agnieszka Holland will appear in person at the 6/21 screening!
Set in 1953 at a psychiatric clinic in Blida, Algeria, and shot on location, the film follows Frantz Fanon (Alexandre Desane) as he is appointed head doctor. With filmmakers Abdenour Zahzah and François Pain in person.
Jane Schoenbrun’s follow-up to the visionary We’re All Going to the World’s Fair ups the ante on suburban angst, creating an eerily beautiful metaphorical evocation of the trans experience and the ways in which popular culture and media both comfort and betray us. Screening 6/21–6/30.