
Dune: Part Two (in 70mm)
The spectacular and sleekly streamlined second part of Villeneuve’s Dune surpasses its exposition-laden introductory chapter both visually and dramatically.
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.
The spectacular and sleekly streamlined second part of Villeneuve’s Dune surpasses its exposition-laden introductory chapter both visually and dramatically.
Exhilarating and monumental in scope, Lisandro Alonso’s film finds inventive new ways to ask about the nature and persistence of colonialism across the contemporary globe.
This sequel to Donner’s 1978 comic-book smash deepened both the human drama and the humor for a tour de force that outmatched the original.
This sequel to Donner’s 1978 comic-book smash deepened both the human drama and the humor for a tour de force that outmatched the original.
Flaherty’s groundbreaking documentary, which intimately hunkers down with an Inuit family, headed by Nanook, as they live and survive the harsh winters of Canada’s Hudson Bay, was so popular it became a cultural phenomenon.
Elliot’s Oscar-winning short film Harvie Krumpet presents the odd biography of a man who has Tourette Syndrome, chronic bad luck, menial jobs, nudist tendencies, and a book of “fakts” hung around his neck—but still optimistically lives own way.
This program presents a range of video essays that inquire into the place of film in today’s world and media landscape, including desktop screens, online forums, production lots, and the streets of Hollywood.
Academy Award–winning writer and director Elliot’s Memoir of a Snail is a heartfelt and hilarious chronicle of the life of an outsider finding her confidence and silver linings amongst the clutter of everyday life. Director Adam Elliot in person, followed by reception! Free with RSVP!
A tale of friendship between two unlikely pen pals—Mary, a lonely, eight-year-old girl living in the suburbs of Melbourne, and Max, a severely obese 44-year-old man living in New York—blossoms in this beautifully animated, acclaimed comic drama. With director Adam Elliot in person!
Evil Does Not Exist slowly but surely transforms into a fable on man’s uneasy, symbiotic relationship to nature, buoyed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s singularly patient yet lucid storytelling.