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Monthly Screenings

International Competition

The Brutalist

Dir.: Brady Corbet
| 215 minutes

The journey of a Hungarian-born Jewish architect who immigrates to the US after the war with nothing, and lands a massive architectural project that transforms his life. Winner of the Best Director Award at the Venice Film Festival, The Brutalist is a monumental historical epic.

From Darkness to Light

Dir.: Eric Friedler, Michael Lurie
| 108 minutes

A documentary exploring Jerry Lewis's unreleased 1972 film, The Day the Clown Cried, its mysterious disappearance, and the search for its unreleased footage. Featuring exclusive interviews and previously unseen materials, the film uncovers the story of one of the most ambitious US-European co-production projects of its time.

Führer and Seducer

Dir.: Joachim A. Lang
| 123 minutes

A dramatic deconstruction of Joseph Goebbels’s deadly propaganda machine. While Hitler is at the height of his power, Joseph Goebbels serves as the mastermind behind the images, speeches, and films that prepared the German people for the mass murder of Jews.

The Future Awaits

Dir.: Nils Tavernier
| 91 minutes

Paris, 1942. Thirteen-year-old Tova and her parents are expelled from their home and are forced to hide in a tiny room, relying on the mercy of neighbors. Tova refuses to succumb to the harsh reality and manages to harness her imagination to bring hope to her family. 

Marco, The Invented Truth

Dir.: Aitor Arregi, Jon Garaño
| 101 minutes

Based on true events, the film explores the story of a concentration camp deportee from Spain who turned out to be fictitious. Filmmakers Aitor Arregi and Jon Garaño present a film that is fearless in exploring how truth is deployed in both life and cinema.

Most People Die on Sundays

Dir.: Iair Said
| 75 minutes

David returns to Buenos Aires from Europe for his uncle's funeral. Once there, he learns that his mother has decided to pull the plug on his comatose father. David oscillates between his past and present, as he tries to find his own place.

September 5

Dir.: Tim Fehlbaum
| 94 minutes

An acclaimed gripping and suspenseful drama about the 1972 Munich Olympics terror attack and the drama that ensued in the news studio broadcasting the live events to the world.  

Unspoken

Dir.: Jeremy Borison
| 91 minutes

When Noam, a closeted, religious teenager finds a love letter written to his grandfather by another man before the Holocaust, he discovers that he might not be alone. Struggling with his own identity and hoping to find validation in his grandfather’s history, he sets out on an odyssey to discover the truth.