Skip to content

Queen Kelly

Midnite weekend screenings happen on Friday & Saturday nights (meaning arrive on Friday and/or Saturday night by 11:45pm for seating, the movie starts after midnite)!

Director: Erich von Stroheim Run Time: 105 min. Format: DCP Rating: NR Release Year: 1929

Starring: Gloria Swanson, Walter Byron, Seena Owen, Tully Marshall

4K restoration

It should have been a dream collaboration: a glamorous world-famous movie star (Gloria Swanson) and her financier lover (Joseph P. Kennedy) hire a celebrated director (Erich von Stroheim) to make a groundbreaking masterpiece. Instead, Queen Kelly was canceled mid-production and became the most infamous unfinished film in cinema history. Von Stroheim’s baroque and obsessive drama opens in a European country ruled by a mad Queen (Seena Owen) obsessed with her feckless fiancé, “Wild” Prince Wolfram (Walter Byron). The dissolute prince falls for an innocent but flirtatious convent girl, Patricia Kelly (Swanson), kidnaps her, and brings her to his rooms. When the Queen discovers the lovers, she horsewhips the girl. Returning to the convent, Kelly receives a telegram, summoning her to German East Africa, where her dying aunt begs the girl to wed the syphilitic owner, Jan (Tully Marshall) of the seedy brothel. Basing his reconstruction on von Stroheim’s original scripts, Dennis Doros has employed multiple techniques to recreate the film’s lurid dénouement. Featuring a new orchestral score by Eli Denson.

Trailer

UPCOMING SPECIAL SCREENINGS

SEE ALL
Poster for NoBudge Live #50
May 18

NoBudge Live #50

NoBudge is happy to present a program of ten short films from a group of emerging indie filmmakers based in New York

details
Poster for Hangin’ with the Homeboys
May 27

Hangin’ with the Homeboys

Four Uptown friends head downtown for a night out

details
Poster for Communion
May 28

Communion

The true story of one man’s terrifying journey into the unknown

details
Poster for Sundays on Fire: Secret Hong Kong 35mm Feature
Jun 14

Sundays on Fire: Secret Hong Kong 35mm Feature

It’s a grindhouse ode to the good old days of analog action

details