Starring: Kyle Gallner, Emily Skeggs, Pat Healy, Griffin Gluck, Mary Lynn Rajskub
An on-the-lam punk rocker and a young woman obsessed with his band embark on a series of misadventures through the decaying suburbs of the American Midwest.
Starring: Kyle Gallner, Emily Skeggs, Pat Healy, Griffin Gluck, Mary Lynn Rajskub
An on-the-lam punk rocker and a young woman obsessed with his band embark on a series of misadventures through the decaying suburbs of the American Midwest.
Starring: Angela Featherstone, Daniel Markel, Cristina Stoica, Charlotte Stewart
Ridiculous <> Sublime sets 2025 on fire right out of the gate with this fantastical depiction of hell and the demented world above it.
Veronica, a demoness in a surprisingly pious hell, is constantly at odds with those around her because of her rebellious spirit. Yearning to explore the world above, she challenges her elders who are all just trying to go about their duty of torturing landlords and bankers. When she does find her way to the surface, she is appalled to find it brimming with injustice, save for the handsome and kind-hearted doctor who takes her in. With the aid of her dog Hellraiser, she targets the evildoers, setting her sights ultimately on the mayor.
A Full Moon Entertainment production directed by a woman (Linda Hassani) and filmed in Romania, Dark Angel: The Ascent is better than it has any right to be, helped by an outrageous script by Matthew Bright (Forbidden Zone, Freeway) and (we kid you not) stunning cinematography.
Starring: Pamela Anderson, Jamie Lee Curtis, Dave Bautista, Billie Lourd, Kiernan Shipka, Brenda Song
A seasoned showgirl must plan for her future when her show abruptly closes after a 30-year run.
Starring: Rachel Zegler, Gal Gadot, Patrick Page, Andrew Burnap, Ansu Kabia, Colin Michael Carmichael
A live-action musical reimagining of the classic 1937 film. The magical music adventure journeys back to the timeless story with beloved characters Bashful, Doc, Dopey, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, and Sneezy.
Starring: Helena Zengel, Finn Wolfhard, Emily Watson, Willem Dafoe
A young girl learns to never go outside after dark because of reclusive forest creatures known as the ochi. However, when a baby ochi is left behind by its pack, she embarks on the adventure of a lifetime to reunite it with its family.
Starring: Theo James, Elijah Wood, Osgood Perkins, Tatiana Maslany
When twin brothers Hal and Bill discover their father’s old monkey toy in the attic, a series of gruesome deaths start occurring all around them.
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tim Allen, Don Rickles, Jim Varney, Wallace Shawn, John Ratzenberger, Annie Potts, John Morris
Woody (Tom Hanks), a good-hearted cowboy doll who belongs to a young boy named Andy (John Morris), sees his position as Andy’s favorite toy jeopardized when his parents buy him a Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) action figure. Even worse, the arrogant Buzz thinks he’s a real spaceman on a mission to return to his home planet. When Andy’s family moves to a new house, Woody and Buzz must escape the clutches of maladjusted neighbor Sid Phillips (Erik von Detten) and reunite with their boy.
Starring: Pia Zadora, Craig Sheffer, Tom Nolan, Ruth Gordon, Michael Berryman
Alien ABCD (Tom Nolan) and his band land in a guitar-shaped spaceship and give a beach girl (Pia Zadora) a chance to sing.
Join us as The Flushing Remonstrance perform their chilling and kaleidoscopic live scores to the 1927 silent horror classic The Unknown and the legendary surrealist film Un Chien Andalou.
The Unknown
Director: Tod Browning
Starring: Lon Chaney, Joan Crawford, Norman Kerry, Nick De Ruiz, John George
Starring Lon Chaney and Joan Crawford, and directed by Tod Browning (Dracula, Freaks), The Unknown is one of the great silent films, with a startling and intense performance by Chaney as Alonzo, on the run from the law and hiding out in the circus as The Armless Wonder – a performer who uses his feet to hurl knives. Against a background of circus life and the sinister shadow of the underworld, The Unknown is a psychosexual fever dream of love and revenge.
Un Chien Andalou
Director: Luis Buñuel
Starring: Pierre Batcheff, Simone Mareuil, Luis Buñuel, Salvador Dalí, Jaume Miravitlles, Fano Messan
Un Chien Andalou is Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dali’s groundbreaking depiction of fetish, religion, and obsessive sexuality that forever changed the aesthetics of film.
Starring: Elizabeth Hartman, Peter Kastner, Geraldine Page, Rip Torn, Karen Black, Tony Bill, Julie Harris
Come swoon with The Deuce on a riotously rollicking romp around 1966-ish NYC for a fun-filled amour-fou Valentine to the City of Dreams and Dreamers – where the follies and foibles of frisky youth are free to be… until that fateful day when (metaphorically speaking): YOU’RE A BIG BOY NOW!!
Rollerskating circulation-stackboy at NYPL ‘s Main Branch – bespectacled übernerd “Bernard Chanticleer” – leaves his overbearing/overprotective/over-the-bridge parents’ Great Neck nest to breathe deep of the (then more breathable) air of Fun City… and fumble his way along to “finding himself” while (and more desperately) hoping to find love amongst the fumbling… tubby-ish bumbling boy meets brazen Bad Girl… bumbling boy meets boring-ish Good Girl… bumbling boy bumbles both! Fumbling and tubby-ishly bumbling his way amongst Discotheque dancers! Experimental theater in the Village! Times Square peep-galleries! Boardinghouse-bound chickens! An albino hypnotherapist! With real-life husband and wife Rip Torn and Geraldine Page as the titular twerp’s taciturn parents – and set to a swinging stick-in-your-head soundtrack courtesy of Jonathan Sebastian & The Lovin’ Spoonful (netting them a bona fide Billboard hit with “Darling Be Home Soon”)… Having a melange of sensibilities ranging from the screwbally comedies of the past to the then-hipness of French New Wave, Coppola’s “calling card” film is both a referential frenetic reverie to the cliched growing-pain-hurdles on the way to “manhood” wrought gloriously ridiculous, and a fever-dream love-letter to the kaleidoscopic crazy-quilt cacophony of NYC!!
After a time under the tutelage of Roger Corman, for whom he wrote and directed DEMENTIA 13 and did other odds-and-ends duties – and before graduating from UCLA – the then 27-year-old Coppola was given “carte-blanche” for BIG BOY – his first solo feature AND his MFA thesis… the filming of which brought the Queens-bred kid back East where BIG BOY was a Big Deal here in The City… garnering constant updates in local NYC newspapers of its production progress and location shooting before having its big upper-brow premiere (’60s-swingingly heralded in ads as “Happens Today”) at 59th & 3rd Ave’s Baronet Theatre before bouncing over to Times Square’s Selwyn… So… is it a date?? XOXO from The Deuce!