NYC Happenings: Metrograph's First Calendar Is A Cinephile's Dream

Featured Critic; New York City, New York

New York's Lower East Side has been the city's cultural center for many decades now. But when it comes to art movie theaters, you had to go across Manhattan to Film Forum or schlep all the way up to Lincoln Center to catch a Lav Diaz or Frederick Wiseman or Sammo Hung film. It is only fitting then it's about time that LES deserves its own repertory movie theater.

Founded by designer Alexander Olch, Metrograph took over an old warehouse on 7 Ludlow Street. It's a state of the art movie theater playing mix of first-run independent & international films and old repertory films both on 35mm and DCP. Two reknowned film curators in this part of the woods -- Jacob Perlin, programmer-at-large at FSLC and associate programmer at BAM Cinematek and Aliza Ma from the Museum of the Moving Image and TIFF -- join the team to offer you a tantalizing progamming.

-- Introduction by Dustin Chang. Dustin is a freelance writer. His musings and opinions on the world, cinema and beyond can be found at www.dustinchang.com.


Dustin Chang contributed to this story.

March 4 - March 8

SURRENDER TO THE SCREEN

Metrograph's Sixteen-Film Debut Repertory Series

Takes Us into the Theater

One of the essential joys of going to the movies is ritual: the lights dimming, the first beam of light on the screen, the familiar fanfare or logo (the arrow and target to announce "A Production of the Archers"), sitting in the dark with a roomful of strangers, waiting to be transported. Susan Sontag wrote of "the experience of surrender to, of being transported by, what was on the screen." As we open Metrograph, we invite you to experience-or re-experience-films that bestow this singular magic, films that kidnap us into the theater and transport us to the world of filmgoing. In these movies, people watch and we watch them.

Titles include: The Long Day Closes (Terence Davies, 1992), Vivre sa vie (Jean-Luc Godard, 1962), Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai Ming-liang, 2003), Taxi Driver (Martin Scorsese, 1976), Matinee (Joe Dante, 1993), Desperately Seeking Susan (Susan Seidelman, 1985), Variety (Bette Gordon, 1983), Demons (Lamberto Bava, 1985), and more.

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