Screening from Series Marilyn Monroe: Hollywood Icon
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Starts at $5
Fri, Jun 26, 2026

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White Christmas in VistaVision
This popular musical comedy inspired by Irving Berlin’s Oscar-winning song from Holiday Inn (1942) was the first feature to be filmed and released in VistaVision. Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye star as war veterans and entertainers who become romantically involved with a sister act (Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen). Directed by Oscar winner Michael Curtiz (Casablanca, 1943), White Christmas features delightful musical numbers spotlighting more than a dozen Irving Berlin songs, including the nominated “Count Your Blessings (Instead of Sheep)”.
VistaVision

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Giant in 4K
George Stevens (A Place in the Sun, 1951) earned his second Directing Oscar for this epic yet character-centered adaptation of Edna Ferber’s 1952 bestseller about a wealthy Texan (Best Actor nominee Rock Hudson), his blueblood bride (Elizabeth Taylor), and an ambitious ranch hand (Best Actor nominee James Dean, in his final performance). The film received 10 nominations including Best Picture, Supporting Actress (Mercedes McCambridge) and for Dimitri Tiomkin’s original score. For his only collaboration with Stevens, the Ukraine-born Tiomkin contributed authentic musical Americana, including the memorable theme song “This Then Is Texas” (lyric by Paul Francis Webster).
4K DCP

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The Prince and the Showgirl in 35mm with Bus Stop
The Prince and the Showgirl in 35mm
In this sole collaboration between Warner Bros. and Marilyn Monroe Productions, Monroe plays Elsie Marina, a witty American showgirl who gets noticed by the eccentric Prince Regent Charles (Laurence Olivier). Set in Edwardian London and directed by Olivier, the film was a famously troubled production, with tension between co-stars and cinematographer Jack Cardiff. The film was shot at Pinewood Studios outside London; Monroe’s difficulties on and off set were adapted into Simon Curtis’s fictional My Week with Marilyn (2011), with Michelle Williams starring as Monroe.
DCP

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Let’s Make Love
Director George Cukor’s musical comedy was Monroe’s second-to-last completed film. She plays a bohemian off-Broadway actor who is in a show satirizing a French billionaire, Jean-Marc Clément (Yves Montand). While scoping out the production, Clément is cast in the play and the two fall in love, though deception threatens to ruin everything. Monroe worked closely with costume designer Dorothy Jeakins to draw inspiration from her personal style for the film’s looks.
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