NYC Weekend Preview: Nadja, Seoul After Dark, Tenement Tales & More
NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly compilation of repertory screenings.
BAM - Michael Almereyda's vampire film Nadja premieres in a long-awaited 4K restoration that is showing daily. Check out an exclusive clip below:
Museum of Modern Art - Seoul After Dark showcases lesser-known Korean films, featuring works by Bong Joon-ho and Im Kwon-taek among others.
Film Forum - Films by Coppola, Scorsese, King Vidor, Chaplin, Keaton, Sergio Leone, and others are highlighted in Tenement Stories; a 4K restoration of Bitter Rice is still running; and The Kid is set to screen on Sunday.
Museum of the Moving Image - Bride of Frankenstein will be shown early on Saturday and Sunday.
Roxy Cinema - The Mirror Has Two Faces is screening on 35mm, with Ivans XTC showing on Saturday.
Paris Theater - Blade II will be featured on Saturday, followed by Laura Poitras shorts and Kathryn Bigelow’s The Loveless on Sunday.
IFC Center - Cassavetes’ The Killing of a Chinese Bookie is screening in both its theatrical and director’s cuts; late-night screenings include Dune, Climax, a print of Silent Hill, The World of Kanako, and The Brood.
Anthology Film Archives - 9 Evenings is commencing, alongside an ongoing series on Konrad Wolf.
Nitehawk Cinema - A print of Jurassic Park will show early on Sunday.
Metrograph - Memoria, Caché, Libelei, Letter from an Unknown Woman, The Straight Story, and Terminator 2 are playing on 35mm; Currents of Southeast Asian Cinema and Orangey are beginning, while a series on Maggie Cheung, a spotlight on Bahram Beyzaie / Amir Naderi, the Max Ophuls retrospective, along with Fugitive Days, The Year Begins in Silence, and Touch Me with Your Eyes continue.
Other articles
NYC Weekend Preview: Nadja, Seoul After Dark, Tenement Tales & More
NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly roundup of repertory events. BAM will showcase Michael Almereyda's vampire movie Nadja, which is making its long-awaited debut in a 4K restoration that screens daily. Check out an exclusive clip below: Museum of Modern Art's Seoul After Dark focuses on underappreciated Korean films, featuring works by Bong Joon-ho and Im Kwon-taek as well. Film Forum presents movies by Coppola, Scorsese, and King.
