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The Brood

Starring: Oliver Reed, Samantha Eggar, Art Hindle, Henry Beckman

Nola Carveth (Samantha Eggar) is finally getting help. After spending years trying to overcome a childhood of abuse, Nola begins seeing Dr. Hal Raglan (Oliver Reed) after her husband, Frank, threatens to take away custody of her daughter. Raglan practices an unconventional therapy method where mental disturbances are released through physical changes in the body. The therapy isn’t perfect, for starters, anyone who crosses Nola meets a grizzly end at the hands of a seemingly endless stream of angry, toothless, asexual murder-happy children. As the bodies begin piling up, Frank begins investigating the source of these kill-crazy kiddies and all signs point to trouble brewing between Nola and Dr. Raglan.

Starship Troopers

Starring: Casper Van Dien, Dina Meyer, Denise Richards, Jake Busey, Neil Patrick Harris, Clancy Brown

Flipping the script on its pseudo-fascist source material, director Paul Verhoeven’s (Robocop, Total Recall) blood-and-guts space age war film Starship Troopers cranks up the ra-ra militarism and heavy-handed propaganda of Robert Heinlein’s novel to frenzied, farcical levels. Taking place in the distant future where only military service earns a person citizenship, the Earthbound Terran Federation comes under attack by a distant race of evil, sentient bugs out to squash humanity. Seeking retribution, the Terrans send off their best, brightest and most Aryan looking to take on the bugs in an epic interstellar meat grinder.

Every bit as funny, smart and exciting as Verhoeven’s best work, Starship Troopers works as both an eye-popping, FX driven cornball action flick and a send-up of eye-popping, FX driven cornball action flicks.

Scanners

Starring: Stephen Lack, Jennifer O’Neill, Patrick McGoohan, Lawrence Dane, Adam Ludwig, Michael Ironside

In Scanners, David Cronenberg introduces a new advancement in human evolution: a race of telepaths with the ability to ‘scan’ other humans, reading their thoughts, controlling their movement and even taking over their consciousness. Most Scanners are harmless, purposefully withdrawn from society, driven to the brink of insanity because of the constant stream of outside thoughts streaming through their minds. However, there’s one Scanner who’s none too nice, and becomes hellbent on building a psychic army to take over the world. The fate of the world rests on the powerful mind of a Scanner on the fringes, which kicks off a psychic battle of wills that will Blow. Your. Mind. (Get it? Because it’s Scanners.)

There Will Be Quiet: The Story of Judge

Music Driven teams up with Noisey for a special presentation of THE STORY OF JUDGE featuring Q&A with director Seth Lowery, and band members Sam Siegler, Mike Ferarro and John Porcell moderated by author Tony Rettman.

In 1991, at the height of its popularity, the New York hardcore band Judge broke up, leaving a long and storied career of incredible music and hyper-violent gigs for the history books. In the decades that followed, Judge’s meager output became hardcore punk 101 for much of the growing scene who built upon their metal-tinged riffs and attitude. While the legend grew, lead singer Mike Ferraro virtually disappeared, only to reemerge in 2013 at Webster Hall to headline one of the most respected hardcore punk festivals in the country, Black N’ Blue Bowl. Noisey caught up with the revered frontman during, before, and after his triumphant return to the stage in this theatrical screening of the four part series.

Part of Nitehawk Cinema’s MUSIC DRIVEN signature series. Presented with our media partner, Noisey.

The Wolfpack

Sundance Grand Jury Documentary winner, THE WOLFPACK, charts a fascinating coming-of-age story that serves as a true example of the power of movies to transform and save lives.

The Angulo brothers have spent their entire lives locked away from society in an apartment on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Nicknamed “The Wolfpack,” they’re home-schooled, exceedingly bright, have no acquaintances outside of their own family, and have practically never left the confines of their apartment. What they know of the outside world is gleaned from films they watch obsessively, which they meticulously recreate using elaborate homemade props and costumes. For years this has served as a productive, creative outlet to stave off loneliness, but after one of the brothers escapes the apartment (wearing a Michael Meyers mask for protection), their lives are transformed, and the boys begin to dream of exploring.

Armed with unprecedented access into the subjects’ world and a vast archive of home movies, first-time director Crystal Moselle crafts a fascinating portrait of an extraordinary family, capturing the thrill of the Wolfpack’s discoveries without skirting the darker questions of abuse and confinement that weigh upon all of them.

Tangerine

Shot entirely on iPhone 5s, TANGERINE follows a working girl tears through Hollywood searching for the pimp who broke her heart.

It’s Christmas Eve in Tinseltown and Sin-Dee is back on the block. Upon hearing that her pimp boyfriend hasn’t been faithful during the 28 days she was locked up, the working girl and her best friend, Alexandra, embark on a mission to get to the bottom of the scandalous rumor. Their rip-roaring odyssey leads them through various subcultures of Los Angeles, including an Armenian family dealing with their own repercussions of infidelity.

Slow West

In SLOW WEST, a young boy traverses across the 19th-century American frontier searching for the love of his life.

Jay is a lovelorn 17-year-old Scottish aristocrat who travels to the American West at the close of the nineteenth century to track down his former lover. Confronted with the harsh realities of the frontier, he falls in with a rough and mysterious traveler named Silas (Michael Fassbender), who soon discovers that the focus of Jay’s affection has a price on her head. Together, the two navigate a vast, untamed wilderness while attempting to stay one step ahead of a bloodthirsty posse and colorful bounty hunter. Their search leads to a bloody confrontation where Jay’s romanticism is the first of many casualties. — Sundance Institute

Wet Hot American Summer

Nitehawk’s teaming up with Allagash Brewing Company for a WET HOT AMERICAN SUMMER Film Feast, a night of high times, hard bodies and soft rock.

For our Wet Hot American Summer Film Feast, we have put together an unlikely team of misfits and we’ve been training like crazy all summer. Yeah, it’s a motley crew that you’d think would never be able to pull off a single dinner. We had a kooky training period where it seemed like, well, it seemed like nothing was going to go right — but guys! We’ve made it! So I say, when those anonymously evil brewers from Allagash get here, we give it our best shot, and we try to come from behind at the last minute with a weird trick dish that we made up and we win the game! Uh, Movie! What do you say?! No? Well, how about this…

The fridge humpers from the Nitehawk mess hall hooked up with Allagash Brewing Company for a multi-course beer dinner paired with scenes from David Wain’s cult comedy. Allagash owner and founder Rob Tod will be here to introduce and talk about the selection of specialty Allagash brews. So get that mustache into shape, put on your best shorty-shorts and crop tops and for God’s sake, take a shower. You’re covered in dirt.

Menu

Bonfire Drink: Allagash White with watermelon cubes

“WHAT’S YOUR GLITCH GENE?”
seared polenta cake, fois gras terrine, pistachio, blueberry gastrique
Bonfire Drink: Allagash Golden Brett

WATERVILLE, MAINE
Maine lobster roll, celery, tabasco, Old Bay potato gaufrette
Beer Pairing: Allagash Double Saison

IS THERE ANY MORE CORN?
smoked pork tenderloin, baked northern beans, peach and grain mustard vinaigrette
Beer Pairing: Allagash Farm to Face

“HIS NAME WAS UGG AND WALKED ON ALL FOURS!”
‘smores on graham cracker, marshmallow, rum chocolate sauce
Beer Pairing: Allagash Odyssey

Menu items subject to change, no substitutions.

allagash

I Am Curious (Yellow)

Vilgot Sjöman’s film about a young woman exploring 1960s Sweden and her sexual identity is considered one of the most controversial movies of all time.

Starring Sjöman and Lena Nyman, I Am Curious (Yellow) is a landmark film from and about Swedish society during the sexual revolution. It was seized by customs in the United States, igniting a heated court battle, influencing censorship laws while being banned in numerous cities. You may also remember the film from Don Draper being “scandalized” by it on Mad Men.

In his book, Scandinavian Blue, Jack Stevenson says, “…this film was about more than creative freedom or nudity. It was an experiment in form and content, an attempt to break down the barrier between reality and fiction and a bid to demystify the filmmaking process. It would be a lot of different things all at once; a rumination on modern youth, a take on the state of Swedish society and a check-list of Sjöman’s own personal hang-ups. And not least it was an occasionally poignant story about a confused and conflicted teenage girl who, armed with a tape recorder, youthful indignation and a yen to fantasize, goes out onto the streets to find answers.”

Part of the Nitehawk Naughties SCANDINAVIAN EROTIC CINEMA program.

Gringo Trails

GRINGO TRAILS takes on one of the most powerful globalizing forces of our time: tourism. On May 9, director Pegi Vail and Melvin Estrella will be in house for a Q&A; on May 10, they will be joined by travel writer Anja Mutic.

Spanning South America, Africa and Asia, the tourist pathway known as the “gringo trail” has facilitated both life-altering adventures and the despoiling of many once virgin environments. The film follows stories along the trail to reveal the complex relationships between colliding cultures: host countries hungry for financial security and the tourists who provide it in their quest for authentic experiences.