Screening from Series Spotlights
Rope in 35mm nitrate
In person: Conversation with Michael Koresky - Author, Critic, and Senior Curator of Film at New York’s Museum of the Moving Image.
Starts at $5
Fri, May 30, 2025

Know Before You Go
Plan your Visit
Accessibility

Screenings
Celebrating the World of Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer with Barbie
In person: Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer
DCP

Conversations
The Sugarland Express with Goldie Hawn
The Academy Museum welcomes Academy Award winning actress Goldie Hawn to our David Geffen Theater for a conversation and screening of The Sugarland Express (1974) in Dolby Vision
Dolby Vision

Screenings
The Virgin Suicides with Sofia Coppola and Kirsten Dunst
In person: filmmaker Sofia Coppola, actor Kirsten Dunst

Screenings
Les vampires (The Vampires)
A form most popular in the early 20th century, a film serial is a story told over a sequence of short episodes, with each piece intended to be viewed before a feature-length film. These bite-size programs were presented weekly in chronological order, addingentertainment and value to a program, and were a common component of the filmgoing experience through the 1940s.
DCP

Screenings
Les vampires (The Vampires)
A form most popular in the early 20th century, a film serial is a story told over a sequence of short episodes, with each piece intended to be viewed before a feature-length film. These bite-size programs were presented weekly in chronological order, addingentertainment and value to a program, and were a common component of the filmgoing experience through the 1940s.
DCP

Screenings
Cluny Brown in 35mm nitrate
“If it makes you happy to feed squirrels to the nuts, who am I to say ‘nuts to the squirrels?’”
Set in London’s high society just before World War II, this effervescent comedy of manners features Oscar-winner Jennifer Jones (The Song of Bernadette) as the uninhibited Cluny Brown, an orphan whose guardian, Uncle Arn, is training her to become a plumber. When she arrives to fix a clogged sink before a cocktail party, philosopher Adam Belinski (Charles Boyer), a noted enemy of the Third Reich, becomes smitten by her unrepressed nature and a game of will-they-or-won’t-they unfolds. Deemed a “masterwork” by comedy aficionado and filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich, this was the last film director Ernst Lubitsch completed during his lifetime, as well as Jones’s first comedic role. Offering the pinnacle of the “Lubitsch touch” through well-appointed sets, farcical misunderstandings, and delightful tête-à-têtes, Cluny Brown skewers high-brow culture with the beloved director’s signature charming wink.
Programmed and note by K.J. Relth-Miller.
35mm Nitrate

Screenings
40th Anniversary of Pee-wee’s Big Adventure in 35mm
Inspired to become a performer by his childhood trips to the circus, the comedic actor Paul Reubens (1952–2023) is most remembered for his beloved role as Pee-wee Herman, an intentionally oblivious, wide-eyed, bow tie–wearing jester first developed at the Los Angeles–based improv and sketch comedy troupe the Groundlings. After a series of stage shows in the early 1980s and a celebrated children’s television program on CBS, Reubens partnered with fellow Groundling Phil Hartman and screenwriter Michael Varholto bring Pee-wee to the big screen with first-time feature director Tim Burton.
In Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, the titular character’s most prized possession is his red bicycle; he refuses to sell it even to his wealthy neighbor, Francis. When the bike is suddenly stolen, Pee-wee is relentless in his search to get it back, even embarking on a road trip across the country after given a phony tip. This charmingly quirky film marked Burton’s first collaboration with composer Danny Elfman, then front man for the popular new wave band Oingo Boingo.
Programmed and note by K.J. Relth-Miller.
35mm