Screening 35mm & 16mm film prints from studio vaults, film archives, and private collections.

  • The Magnificent Ambersons

    Sunday, June 7 at 11:30 AM – Music Box Theatre – 3733 N Southport Ave
    Tickets: $13 at the door or purchase in advance

    THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS
    Directed by Orson Welles • 1942
    Back in those years when the 20th century was only a dim light on the horizon, the wealthy Amberson family reigned over the midland everytown they called home, the embodiment of opulence in an era when “all the women who wore silk or velvet knew all the other women who wore silk or velvet.” Such a dynasty, built on genteel custom and practical business sense, could never withstand the modern era’s hairpin shifts in culture and technology. As their friends and neighbors get used to calling the horseless carriage an “automobile,” the Ambersons face middle-class destitution. The tumultuous post-production of The Magnificent Ambersons has all but secured its own wing in the museum of Hollywood history: Orson Welles’s epochal follow-up to Citizen Kane, placed in the meddling hands of craven studio executives to mangle irreparably, its maker a continent away in Brazil, partying and directing yet another film he couldn’t see through to completion. There’s no doubt the original Ambersons cut was something to behold. The irretrievable Holy Grail of film culture, its totemic reputation alone is still enough to inspire sham investigative documentaries, costly A.I. reconstructions, and other episodes of desperate cinephilic madness. But even in its present, molested state, few films match it for technical bravura, caustic pathos, and sheer all-around magnificence. (CW)
    88 min • RKO Radio Pictures • 35mm from Park Circus

    Preceded by: “Wheeeels No. 2” (Stan VanDerBeek, 1958) – 5 min – 16mm from Canyon Cinema

    “It was a much better picture than Kane—if they’d just left it as it was” – Orson Welles

    “Welles so deftly manages rhythm and tone—a complex blend of irony and empathy—and the intertwining of aural and visual effects that, even as time rolls relentlessly on and bitter memories accumulate, we constantly feel the exhilaration of virtuoso storytelling.” – Molly Haskell, Criterion

    NEXT UP: I MARRIED A WITCH on Thursday, June 25 at the Gene Siskel Film Center

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Upcoming screenings:

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Saturday 5/30
Erica Sheu (徐璐) : Material LanguageRSVP

Sun 5/31 at 6 PM @ Film Center
Fly Away HomeAdvance Tickets

Sunday 6/7 at 11:30 AM @ Music Box
The Magnificent AmbersonsAdvance Tickets

Thursday 6/25 at 6:00 PM @ Film Center
I Married a Witch

Monday 6/29 at 7:00 PM @ Music Box
2 or 3 Things I Know About HerAdvance Tickets

Sunday 7/5 at 11:30 AM @ Music Box
You Never Know Women

Sunday 7/12 at 7:00 PM @ Music Box
A Matter of Life and Death

Sunday 7/19 at 5:00 PM @ Film Center
The Queen
+ Meet…Bradley Harrison Picklesimer

Thursday 7/23 at 8:00 PM @ Constellation
Two Films by Germaine DulacAdvance Tickets

Sunday 8/2 at 5:00 PM @ Film Center
I Am Cuba

Saturday 8/22 at 11:30 AM @ Music Box
A Page of Madness

Monday 8/31 at 7:00 PM @ Music Box
William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet

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