Nitehawk and Noisey present a one night Music Driven screening of live performances by the legendary hardcore band THE BAD BRAINS. Featuring very special guest Darryl Jenifer for a Q&A with Sacha Jenkins!
The Bad Brains are one of the best punk/hardcore bands to emerge out of the United States (specifically Washington, D.C.) in the late 1970s. Charged with energy, political messages, and of course the PMA, they were pioneers in the punk/hardcore/reggae music scene. Don’t miss our screening of legendary New York performances by the band in the two films: My Picture in the Movies, Baby (1979) and Live at CBGB (1982). You’ll yearn for the days when music was this fantastic…and positive.
Music Driven is presented in partnership with Noisey. Featuring Absolut Vodka cocktails.
Nitehawk and Noisey present a special one night Music Driven screening of HATED: GG ALLIN AND THE MURDER JUNKIES. Q&A with director Todd Phillips following the screening.
Todd Phillips’ (Old School, Starsky & Hutch, The Hangover) debut film is a documentary about the notorious punk musician G.G. Allin. Allin, who died during post-production from a heroin overdose, was famous for his excessive and confrontational manner especially during his shows where he’d perform naked, defecate onstage, yell obscenity, and get physically assaultive/assaulted. You know, all the good stuff. Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies includes interviews with Allin, band members, fans and haters. It goes through his childhood, includes amazing footage of his legendary shows, insane party moments alongside quieter moments, and scenes from his funeral.
Music Driven is presented in partnership with Noisey. Featuring Absolut Vodka cocktails.
Part of Nitehawk’s SUMMER OF SURREALISM, LIVE SOUND CINEMA presents a program of traditional surrealist shorts with a live score by ALYSE LAMB (EULA and Parlor Walls).
Nitehawk presents a screening of short films that come from the original surrealist cannon to accompany the Summer of Surrealism program featuring contemporary surrealist cinema. Screening iconic silent films – Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dali’s Un Chien Andalou (1928), Man Ray’s L’Etoile de Mer (1928), Germaine Dulac’s La coquille et le clergyman (1928) and Maya Deren’s Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) – we cover the beginning of surrealism in cinema up to the beginnings of its influence in other styles of filmmaking.
Providing the live score to our Surrealist Shorts program is Alyse Lamb (EULA and Parlor Walls). You can usually hear Alyse Lamb’s voice cutting through waves of feedback as front lady for the noise trio EULA. You can also find Alyse warping her guitar into a bass computer in experimental duo Parlor Walls. With a degree in classical composition she enjoys making her own leotards.
Part of Nitehawk’s upcoming SUMMER OF SURREALISM program. Featuring Absolut Vodka Cocktails.

Northside Film screens the Brooklyn Premiere of SUMMER OF BLOOD, presented by Factory 25.
Introduction by Factory 25 and Q&A with director Onur Tukel
Graying, paunchy, cynical, underemployed—the aging Brooklyn hipster Eric Sparrow (Onur Tukel) is lucky in love with Jodi (Anna Margaret Hollyman), a sensible and sensitive young lawyer. But after rejecting her marriage proposal, Eric is out on his ear; in his downward spiral of sexual frustration and bewildered vanity, he meets a vampire—an encounter that changes everything. – Richard Brody, The New Yorker
Starring: Takashi Shimura, Akihiko Hirata, Akira Takarada
There is no better allegory for the grim implications of the atom bomb in post-WWII Japan (nor the modern day nuclear disasters) than Godzilla. Godzilla (aka Gojira) is the beginning of the longest running film series in history, the grandfather Godzilla if you will, and we’re darn happy to be showing the new restoration. It all begins with nuclear testing in the Pacific spawning a 150 foot tall monster that goes on a destructive rampage. Will man be able to destroy its own creation before it destroys us all?