New York’s leading movie house for independent premieres and repertory programming
A nonprofit cinema since 1970
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
![]() |
|||
| This series is dedicated to the memory of Jules Dassin (1911-2008) |
|||
|
ProgramMed by Bruce Goldstein “IF YOU ONLY DO 1 THING THIS WEEK... Film Forum's sprawling five-week primer mixes well-known entries with more obscure, but no less twisted, picks. Gallic gangsters, hard-boiled hit men and cops with chips on their shoulders are all accounted for. All the tough guy postures you can handle!” |
“The ultimate genre lead may well be Alain Delon, whose acting method boiled down to a kind of aloof, opaque narcissism that read as dangerous. Delon wasn’t likable, even when he was playing a good guy; he was something even better—magnetic.” |
||||
| “[An] ambitious, entertaining, blood-and-doom-soaked series!” – Terrence Rafferty, The New York Times Click here to read full article on the series “WHAT MORE DELICIOUS WAY TO PASS THE DOG DAYS OF A NYC SUMMER THAN BY TAKING A VICARIOUS PLUNGE INTO THE FRENCH UNDERWORLD from the safe comfort of an air-conditioned cinema? French film directors refashioned the tropes of American B-movies to create ENDURING MASTERPIECES OF GOOD AND EVIL. And if not all 38 noir films and thrillers in Film Forum's series are rave-worthy, each is rich in defining the moments and ironies of our ongoing struggle against those terrifying yet fascinating unseen forces that bat us about.” – Elena Oumano, Village Voice. Click here to read full article on the series “These films are some of the most stylish ever made!” – Men’s Vogue. Click here to read the Men's Vogue feature on the series “Film Forum's series includes thrillers, slashers, courtroom dramas, and whodunits… These criminals may be marching to their doom, but they're determined to look good on the way.” – Grady Hendrix, The New York Sun Click here to read full article on the series Click here to read V.A. Musetto's series recommendations in the New York Post |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
AUGUST 8/9/10 FRI/SAT/SUN (1955, Jules Dassin) Back from the pen after taking the rap for a pal, homme dur Jean Servais rejoins his cohorts for what proves to be a classic heist - a 30-minute sequence sans dialogue or music – that provided a usable blueprint for both real-life crooks and thriller directors. The late Jules Dassin, then a blacklisted Hollywood exile, turned a potboiler by milieu specialist Auguste Le Breton into an existential thriller that earned him Cannes' Best Director prize and set the gold standard for screen robberies, while raising eyebrows for its excessive gunplay, décolletage, and dope use - all of which led to its condemnation by the Legion of Decency. Approx. 135 min. Click here for more information about RIFIFI “A vivid exercise that more or less invented the idea of French Film Noir... For the French, Rififi had Hollywood pizzazz; for Americans, it had continental sophistication. For both, it seemed to possess an authoritative naturalism.” AUGUST 11 MON (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION)
(1979, Alain Corneau) Slang-slinging salesman Patrick Dewaere murders the aunt of his girlfriend (Jean-Louis’s doomed daughter, Marie Trintignant) to settle those pesky debts, but then itchily open-palmed Bernard Blier seems to know all too much about it. Adapted from Jim Thompson’s A Hell of a Woman by experimental novelist Georges Perec in a conversational style that mingles verlan (back slang), newly-liberated profanity, bits of English, and elements of almost too-classy French. Approx. 110 min. “Recommended! The chilling amoral landscapes of Jim Thomspon come to life… (1976, Alain Corneau) On the skids Orléans cop Yves Montand, wearing the same jacket as Dirty Harry and investigating the murder of a former love, finds himself rapidly becoming the prime suspect. Nerve-shredding suspense, with intense highlight Montand agreeing to help invalid Simone Signoret end it all—so intense that Signoret, Mme. Montand in private life, could only ad-lib her lines after a prolonged struggle. With Stefania Sandrelli. Approx. 125 min. “A grimly absorbing procedural.” – Time Out New York AUGUST 12 TUE (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) THE THIEF OF PARIS (1967, Louis Malle) Fin de siècle Paris: robbed by his sleazy uncle of his inheritance and the hand of beloved cousine Genevieve Bujold, orphan Jean-Paul Belmondo counterpunches by snatching Bujold’s intended’s family jewels. Then, after expert tutelage from underworld kingpin Julien Guiomar, finds that he’s got a taste for the “gentleman-burglar” life — but is it enough? Luscious Henri Decaë color photography amid careful period décor. Approx. 120 min. “Brilliantly composed… eye-filling richness. Mr. Malle stylishly evokes a stunningly beautiful and trenchant canvas of Europe before the turn of the century, centering in Paris. The color photography is wonderfully subdued and real.” BORSALINO
(1970, Jacques Deray) In 20s Marseilles, two-bit crooks Jean-Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon begin by brawling over golden-hearted-hooker Catherine Rouvel (Renoir’s Picnic on the Grass), but soon it’s a match made in gangster heaven, moving from fixing fights and races, to going independent, to ... a final showdown? Lavish period detail — It’s the hats! — and rollicking Claude Bolling score. Approx. 128 min. “Delon and Belmondo having fun with the genre. The sets evoke the fetishistically stylized sets of Jean-Pierre Melville, combined with 30s Warners-style fast-paced action and leavened with black comedy. It emerges more than anything like a comic strip set in some no man’s land of gangster-movie cliché.” AUGUST 13/14 WED/THU (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) “A CLEVERLY MATCHED DOUBLE BILL. Features a young, achingly gorgeous Delon. Both films are smorgasbords of desire - (1969, René Clément) As the sun beats down on a boat in the Mediterranean, two men loll back: scapegrace playboy Maurice Ronet and hanger-on Alain Delon, sent by Ronet's Dad to bring him back. Which one's going to leave that boat alive? And can he get away with pretending to be the other man? Tense, sun-splashed thriller, with music by Fellini's Nino Rota, and dazzling on-boat camerawork by Henri Decaë, in Delon's star-making thriller smash, adapted from Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley. Approx. 115 min. “Might have been pulled from an alternate universe in which Hitchcock was incarnated as a member of the French New Wave. A rarity: a genuinely unpredictable and suspenseful film. A can’t miss with moral ambiguity, a subtext that raises questions about the nature of identity, stunning cinematography, and a score by Nina Rota.” (1969, Jacques Deray) Lazy vacation beside the pool in St. Tropez for lovers Alain Delon and Romy Schneider (“two of the most preternaturally attractive people on the planet” – Dave Kehr) — but then Schneider’s ex-lover Maurice Ronet and daughter Jane Birkin suddenly drop in — and, as a former ménage à trois becomes a ménage à quatre, mortal consequences loom. Approx. 120 min. “Icily erotic. The setup manages to suggest both Jean Renoir’s dancing-on-the-precipice film The Rules of the Game and Godard’s consumerist death trip Weekend. An established favorite in France but remains essentially unknown here.” AUGUST 14 THU (Separate Admission) LES TONTONS FLINGUEURS (1963, Georges Lautner) Just when he thinks he’s stuck with fulfilling an old mob boss pal’s dying wish, ex-gangster Lino Ventura (Army of Shadows) has to clean up some loose ends, while watching out for the old man’s about-to-be-married daughter. But Bernard Blier takes violent exception to Ventura’s horning in. Often hilarious, still-quoted (in French) argot-heavy dialogue keeps the action both suspenseful and parodic. Based on a novel by Albert Simonin, author of Touchez Pas au Grisbi. Approx. 105 min. “This wittily cynical gangster comedy proves the laconic Ventura, AUGUST 15/16 FRI/SAT (1970, Jean-Pierre Melville) Impassive faces, snap-brim hats, dangling cigarettes, sunglasses after dark, raincoats without rain, nightclub floor shows, and a prologue quote from an ersatz Indian mystic. We’re unmistakably in the milieu of Melville (Army of Shadows), here bringing together four archetypal tough guys for their appointment with destiny: prisoner-in-transit Gian Maria Volontè; Bourvil’s relentless Inspector Mattei; DT-plagued ex-cop Yves Montand; and artfilm/action hero Alain Delon —on his first day out of the joint reclaiming gun and money, and shrugging off two murder attempts – joining forces for a meticulously-orchestrated jewel heist, “choreographed like a bullfight with Delon the matador in white gloves and full-face mask” (J. Hoberman). Approx. 150 min. Click here for more information about LE CERCLE ROUGE “A deluxe piece of heist film engineering. Melville provides a satisfying payoff for the audience, if not the characters—according to the hardboiled karma of the plot, everyone winds up philosophical or dead. A virtuoso display of the geometry of movie action, from the red circle of chalk Delon uses on a pool cue to the slashing lines he cuts in his blocky American car.” AUGUST 17/18 SUN/MON (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1954, Jacques Becker) Over-the-hill gangland buddies Jean Gabin and René Dary have just pulled the heist of a lifetime: enough grisbi (loot) to give them both a cushy retirement. But when Dary’s two-timing moll Jeanne Moreau spills the beans to drug-dealing bad guy Lino Ventura, it’s time for a showdown with guns and grenades on a deserted country road. Approx. 90 min. Click here for more information about TOUCHEZ PAS AU GRISBI “In Grisbi, real men eat paté. Consistently surprising.... as classic and as lived-in as Gabin’s impeccable double-breasted suits. The movie is, in every sense, a celebration of savoir-faire. I don’t know of [a gangster movie] with a more complex or a more delicate bouquet.” (1955, Jean-Pierre Melville) Silverhaired ex-gangster Bob Montagné (Roger Duchesne), a “flambeur” (high roller), moves from poker to craps to the track to roulette to baccarat and back, and one last heist: the casino at Deauville — but in an outrageous climax, it all hinges on one final, ironic deal of the cards. Approx. 100 min. Click here for more information about BOB LE FLAMBEUR “THE CINEMATIC BIRTH OF THE COOL! Melville’s drollest, most likable gangster movie. AUGUST 18 MON (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) RIPTIDE (1949, Yves Allégret) As guests gather in a dingy resort hotel in winter to twitter about the latest Parisian crime passionel, gloomy Gérard Philipe wanders among sodden dunes and cabañas of his childhood, finding temporary warmth with chambermaid Madeleine Robinson and dodging nosy proprietress Jane Marken and sinister stranger Jean Servais (Rififi). A throwback to pre-war poetic realism. Approx. 91 min. “The biggest revelation [of the series]! It rains all the time and the sense of hopeless social determinism is both poetic and oppressive. Madeleine Robinson gives a naturalistic, singularly modern performance. Mark your calendar!” WE ARE ALL MURDERERS (1952, André Cayatte) No-good punk Marcel Mouloudji moves from petty thievery in the slums to bloody intrigue in the Resistance to postwar cop-killing to the death cell. A grippingly horrific look at French penology, with Bresson’s “country priest” Claude Laydu as the rich boy lawyer turned crusader uttering the memorable final lines. Special Jury Prize, Cannes. Approx. 115 min. “As skillfully staged by Cayatte, this is realism and compassion that chills the marrow.” – The New York Times AUGUST 19 TUE (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1995, Claude Chabrol) Until the almost unsettlingly efficient Sandrine Bonnaire turns up, très bourgeois Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jacqueline Bisset just can’t seem to find the right housekeeper for their country chateau. But when Bonnaire strikes up a friendship with local loose cannon Isabelle Huppert (César winner for Best Actress), who’s still fighting the class wars, disturbing incidents begin. Chabrol’s adaptation of a novel by mystery titan Ruth Rendell (“whose view of human nature is every bit as big-hearted as Alfred Hitchcock's, and almost as fascinatingly macabre.” – The New York Times) exudes his patented atmosphere of psychological intrigue, sexual tension, and biting irony—and don’t skip the credits! National Society of Film Critics pick for Best Foreign Language Film. With then up-and-coming French femme Virginie Ledoyen. Approx. 112 min. “Macabre, mysterious... It's the perfect amuse-bouche!” – New York Magazine (2000, Jean-Pierre Denis) Le Mans, 1933, and M. Lancelin returns home to find his wife and daughter brutally murdered and mutilated — but unlike Lizzie Borden, sisters Sylvie Testud and Julie-Marie Parmentier use not an axe but a pewter jug. A Why-dunnit, since the Papin Sisters case remains one of France’s most puzzling and notorious. Approx. 94 min. “Testud’s towering depiction of madness evokes pity and terror on a scale to satisfy Artistotle’s definition of tragedy.” AUGUST 20 WED (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1959, Robert Bresson) A purse is moved almost immediately through three sets of hands; a wallet is taken, dropped in a passer-by's pocket, then finally taken again; a wallet is plucked, looted, then returned empty. A young man's rise and fall as a master pickpocket—although director Robert Bresson firmly declared it not a thriller. Acknowledged by Paul Schrader as an influence on his American Gigolo and Taxi Driver screenplays. Approx. 80 min. Click here for more information about PICKPOCKET “The nimble crime of the title, perfected by a fiercely philosophical outlaw, is itself a work of art, and Bresson reveals it, in all of its varieties, as a furtive street ballet.” (1956, Robert Bresson) Ultra-quiet but nerve-shredding adaptation of André Devigny’s account of his escape from a Lyons prison while awaiting a German death sentence, mostly filmed in the actual cell and given an unearthly transcendence by its Bressonian treatment. Best Director, Cannes. Approx. 102 min. “Simply put, one of the most riveting films ever made.” – Time Out New York AUGUST 21 THU
“Bardot gives her finest ever performance… compared to Clouzot, even Fassbinder seemed a romantic.” – Time Out (London) AUGUST 22/23 FRI/SAT (1965, Jean-Luc Godard) “The last romantic couple,” as Jean-Paul Belmondo, fed up with wife and Paris, heads for the south of France with old flame Anna Karina, a classic pulp fiction moll of a gang of crooks. Echt 60s Godard, with color & Scope photography by Raoul Coutard, a cameo by Sam Fuller, and an explosive finale. Approx. 110 min. View the Trailer: High | Low “May be the quintessential Godard picture: part road movie, part improvisational exercise, part genre deconstruction.”
AUGUST 24/25 SUN/MON (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1962, Jean-Pierre Melville) “One must choose: die... or lie?” Trench-coated Serge Reggiani is back from the slammer — but what to do now? First things first: there’s a debt to be paid and a piece-of-cake heist to be pulled — but why are those darn flics here already? Could there be a doulos? – “squealer” in French underworld argot. A-list gangster Jean-Paul Belmondo is a prime candidate for the title —with toothpick-chomping Inspector Jean Desailly providing an eight-minute grilling shot in a single, 360° panning take. But then the head-snapping plot twists start coming. Even Belmondo wasn’t clued into the ending. Approx. 108 min. “Melville’s brutal and subtly brilliant policier… underscores why the French put the name to film noir.” (1960, Claude Sautet) Neo-realism meets Film Noir, as tough guy Lino Ventura—going back to France with the wife and kids after a decade’s absence—plans a job for some startup money, but, as the mayhem mounts, realizes there may be another life beyond the milieu. First major feature for Sautet and first teaming of two French super-icons: former champion wrestler-turned-scene-stealer Ventura and New Wave wunderkind Jean-Paul Belmondo, coming to Risques straight from Breathless. Approx. 103 min. “The kind of movie that makes you want to throw on your trench coat, light up a cigarette, and shoot somebody. A tough and touching exploration of honor and friendship among thieves… A masterpiece of the French gangster genre.” AUGUST 25 MON (Separate Admission) (1981, Bertrand Tavernier) In a French West African colony in 1938, cop Philippe Noiret is nobody’s idea of Wyatt Earp, humiliated by wife Stéphane Audran and sneered at by pimp Jean-Pierre Marielle. But when the worm decides to turn, and the bodies start to pile up — isn’t he going just a bit too far? A blackly comic adaptation of Jim Thompson’s noirer-than-noir Pop. 1280. Approx. 128 min. “Tavernier's rowdy, broad, unsettling moral tale… follows screwball comedy out to its other side as madness: you're never sure whether what you're watching is high spirits or insanity, and the characters keep reversing themselves. Tavernier created one of the freshest French films in years—it has wit, dash, and fiber.” AUGUST 26 TUE (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) THE CLOCKMAKER (1974, Bertrand Tavernier) Bad news from Inspector Jean Rochefort for quiet Lyons clockmaker Philippe Noiret: the son who-lives-but-doesn’t-live-with-him has committed murder. In the course of the case, Noiret finds new understanding with the son he realizes he didn’t really know, and a new friendship with the understanding cop. Tavernier’s first feature, from a Simenon novel. Winner, Prix Louis Delluc and Silver Bear, Berlin Film Festival. Approx. 105 min. “Very moving. Tavernier’s initial effort is a work of assurance and ease. It is both complex and simple in the way of a film that knows exactly what it's about—which is fathers and sons and the respect that is possible between them under even the worst of circumstances.” (1981, Claude Miller) Tough New Year’s Eve for rich lawyer Michel Serrault (La Cage aux Folles): as top suspect in the rape and murder of two young girls, he’s spending it being grilled by formidable Inspector Lino Ventura — who then drags in Serrault’s estranged wife Romy Schneider to turn up the heat. Winner of four Césars for Best Actor (Serrault), Editing, Supporting Actor (Guy Marchand), and Writing. Approx runtime 86 min. “A fine psychological thriller… Miller's confidence in dialogue and an ever more tightly twisting plot is simply a gripping joy.” AUGUST 27 WED (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1955, Henri-Georges Clouzot) Downtrodden wife Vera Clouzot and no-nonsense mistress Simone Signoret team up to eliminate their perfect salaud husband/lover... and then la terreur commence. Dizzying plot twists lead to an eyeball-glazing dénouement in Clouzot’s suspense masterpiece. Scripters Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac wrote the novel basis for Hitchcock’s Vertigo. Approx. 114 min. “EXCRUCIATINGLY NERVE-WRECKING. Could serve as a primer for today's would-be horror meisters.” (1959, Georges Franju) The ethereal Edith Scob, in a simultaneously beautiful and creepy mask, floats through operating room and dog kennel in her high-collared, almost iridescent white coat as doves fly past. A distinguished surgeon lectures to a rapt audience on the “heterograft.” But who’s that facedown on her bed on the top floor of the doctor’s house? For his second feature, Franju invested a script by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac (authors of Diabolique AND Hitchcock’s Vertigo) with “exquisite, dread images . . . a vague, floating, almost lyric sense of horror” in “perhaps the most elegant horror movie ever made,” (Pauline Kael). Approx. 90 min. Click here for more information about EYES WITHOUT A FACE “The saddest, scariest French movie ever made.” – Time Out New York “Haunting... gorgeous, intensely disquieting black and white images. The unearthly beauty of Franju’s imagery is never merely decorative… but is the real substance of his terrible, gentle, poetic art... Franju shocks us by embracing and then transcending the grotesque.” AUGUST 28 THU (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION)
“Talk about a cast... IT'S LIKE WE'VE DIED AND GONE TO FRENCH CRIME HEAVEN!” – Time Out New York (1972, Jean-Pierre Melville) Nightclub owner Richard Crenna (who, while dubbed, acts in French) and piano-playing Alain Delon both love Catherine Deneuve— who doesn’t?—only trouble is, one’s a cop and the other’s bent on the heist of a lifetime. Melville’s final work features a rain-sodden bank robbery done in total silence and a drug deal that entails a helicopter to train transfer—and back again. Approx. 98 min. “An almost perfect last hurrah for manliness that kicks off with a bank heist that would make Michael Mann and Johnny To weep.” AUGUST 29/30 FRI/SAT (1957, Louis Malle) Scheming lovers Julien (Maurice Ronet) and Florence (Jeanne Moreau) engineer the “perfect murder” of her husband. But when Julien attempts to tie up one more loose end (literally… a rope dangling from the dead man’s office window), he becomes trapped between floors in the title conveyance, with precious minutes ticking away before the police discover the victim’s body. Complicating things are a teenaged greaser and his thrill-seeking girlfriend. A stunning debut that won the then 24-year-old director Louis Malle the prestigious Prix Delluc, France’s highest film award, Elevator ushered in the French New Wave and made an international super-star of cool beauty Moreau, here giving perhaps the most iconic performance of her career. As seminal as the film itself is its legendary Miles Davis music (largely improvised by Miles and his combo) —still the most famous of all jazz film scores. Approx. 89 min. Click here for more information about ELEVATOR TO THE GALLOWS “Unbearably poignant. Exquisite jazz.” – David Denby, The New Yorker AUGUST 31/SEPTEMBER 1 SUN/MON (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) "A can't-miss double feature! You could do much worse than devoting a day to the immensely influential Jean-Luc Godard."
(1959, Jean-Luc Godard) Lip-stroking pug Jean-Paul Belmondo on the run, shooting cops and stealing cars — and cash from the handbag of Herald Tribune-hawking girlfriend Jean Seberg; with the couple engaging in boudoir philosophy, staring contests, sous blanket tussles and plenty of le smoking. The start of JLG’s decade of supreme hipness and seemingly compulsive, often outrageous innovation. With a notable cameo by trademark-Stetson-wearing Jean-Pierre Melville (“in his full eccentric glory, grunting cryptic responses to grandiose questions.” – Dave Kehr). Approx. 90 min. Click here for more information about BREATHLESS “Dispensing with virtually every cinematic convention in the book, this dynamic debut served as both an ostentatious calling card for France’s burgeoning nouvelle vague and a much-needed wake-up call to a medium that had grown dangerously stodgy. A free-wheeling masterpiece.” (1964, Jean-Luc Godard) “All you need to make a movie is a girl and a gun.” – Godard. In the dreary suburb of Joinville, Claude Brasseur and Sami Frey (“Belmondo’s suburban cousins” – JLG), and mutual girlfriend Anna Karina, horse around with the idea of burglarizing the villa where she’s staying, but then things go memorably awry. A jeu d’esprit, with set pieces including the trio dancing “Le Madison” (“Probably the single most imitated sequence in art films.” – Phillip Lopate, NY Times) and then “doing” the Louvre in record time. Approx. 95 min. Click here for more information about BAND OF OUTSIDERS CLICK HERE FOR BAND OF OUTSIDERS PRESSBOOK “Godard's idea of a heist picture is like nothing that had ever been seen before. SEPTEMBER 2 TUE (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1952, Jacques Becker) Murder among the "apaches" in 1898 Paris: carpenter Serge Reggiani falls for cabaret enchantress Simone Signoret (“so intensely, ripely physical that she takes command of the screen” – Pauline Kael), takes on her lover, and then must face doom for a friend. Based on a an actual case, this is Becker's masterpiece, in its period details, the romanticism of the Reggiani/Signoret love idyll, and the most excitingly pure filmmaking of the cinema de qualité. Approx. 96 min. “Becker's masterpiece, ONE OF THE GREAT MOVIE ROMANCES.” GOUPI MAINS ROUGES (1943, Jacques Becker) Going hip deep in la France profonde, naïve Parisian clerk Georges Rollin watches the gargoyles come out of the woodwork—that is, gets to meet the provincial branch of his family. The Goupis have their own rules, don’t like strangers, are known by colorful nicknames, and then one of them gets murdered—but who needs the police? Atmospheric whodunit with crisply autumnal shooting. Approx. 104 min. “Suggests an air of corruption and menace beneath the folksy drama... Becker’s droll and meticulous observation of a wide range of characters reveals the country folk’s deep-rooted venality, violence, and tribalism, together with a code of secrecy that conveys the desperate wartime mood.” SEPTEMBER 3/4 WED/THU (2 FILMS FOR 1 ADMISSION) (1947, Henri-Georges Clouzot) Suzy Delair sings "avec son tra-la-la" in a smoky Ménilmontant boîte, while seedy Maigret-like detective Louis Jouvet must track down the murder of stage great Charles Dullin as "the dirtiest old man on celluloid” (David Shipman). Clouzot masterfully recreates his two worlds of police station and shabby music hall with typically nihilistic touches, cutting from Delair's romantic encounter with masochistic husband Bernard Blier to a pan of milk boiling over on a stove. Cannes Grand Prize. Approx. 105 min. “Recommended! Notable for its immersion in life's seamier elements. A corpse gets kicked by a blond in high heels... What more do you need?”
(1937, Julien Duvivier) Trapped by a police raid while slumming in Algiers’ Casbah, Mireille Balin encounters the caïd of the labyrinthine quarter, Jean Gabin’s impeccably-dressed French crook-on-the-run Pépé Le Moko. Then, as they share wistful memories of the Paris Métro, it’s clear that if les flics can’t get Pépé, l’amour can. Approx. 94 min. Click here for more information about PÉPÉ LE MOKO
“Before Casablanca, there was Pépé. One of the most exciting and moving films I can remember seeing... SEPTEMBER 4 THU (Separate Admission) (1952, Henri-Georges Clouzot) Bottom of the bottle denizens of a nameless Central American fleapit sign up to drive trucks loaded with nitroglycerine over hair-raising mountain switchbacks and bottomless jungle tracks to put out an oil field fire; their reward: the price of a ticket out. Clouzot’s masterpiece is both the epitome of the nerve-shredding suspense melodrama and existential art film. Best Picture, Cannes and Berlin festivals. Approx. 140 min. “Seldom have the exquisite pain and pleasure of motion picture suspense been mixed with quite its intoxicating effects.” FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 - THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 • ONE WEEK SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER Click here for more information. 1:00, 2:40, 4:20, 6:00, 7:45, 9:30 |
|||||
SPECIAL THANKS TO: |
|||||