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| Angelika Film Center
18 West Houston St (@ Mercer)
212.995.2000 Are you itching with a craving for the latest trendy muffin and a glimpse at how Bill Murray stretches his thespian chops on low budgets? Head to the Angelika, located in the heart of SoHo. Find provocative film festival selections from Sundance to Venice, playing on six screens. As seating for various films is called out in the lobby, the adjoining café makes for one of the best casual meet and greets. No ordinary popcorn stand, the café features cappuccino, panini, gourmet cakes, and vegan cookies from Sacred Chow. | | Film Forum
209 West Houston St (Bedford & Varick)
212.727.8110 Film Forum opened in 1970 as an alternative screening space with fifty folding chairs, one projector, and a $19,000 annual budget. Fast forward to today, and the theater is the only autonomous non-profit cinema in New York City. Film Forum remains a hot button for cinema junkies and features an array of hard to find movies and genres: foreign and American classics, documentaries, directors’ retrospectives, and festivals. Expect to find everything from Hitchcock to Truffaut, African documentaries, Mick Jagger trying to act in a hot tub, and cultural explosions from all ends of the globe. | | IFC
323 Sixth Ave (@ W 3rd St)
212.924.7771 The IFC Center, NYC’s ultimate entertainment space for New Yorkers seeking out the best in independent film, opened in June 2005 in the historic Waverly Theater. After a four-year renovation, the new complex features three state-of–the-art cinemas with luxurious seating and high-definition digital 35mm projection. Expect an array of genres: new independent, foreign, and documentary features, weekend classics (every weekend at noon), Waverly Midnights (cult movies every Friday and Saturday night at midnight), and Short Attention Span Cinema (short films screening before every feature)—all with no commercials on the screens. The venue also features The Waverly at IFC Center (a Great Performances restaurant that serves lunch, dinner and snacks, and features a full bar) and Posteritati Gallery at IFC Center (exhibitions of vintage movie posters from around the globe). | | The Quad Cinema
34 West 13th St (5th & 6th Aves)
212.255.8800 Located on the edge of Greenwich Village, the Quad features some of the most obscure and interesting films to hit theaters—everything from Italian midget stalker flicks to French new wave, Middle Eastern films, novel adaptations, and documentaries. Henry Jaglom on shopper mania, anyone? | | Landmark's Sunshine Cinema
143 East Houston St (Eldridge & Forsyth)
212.358.7709 Sunshine Cinema has come a long way since Yiddish vaudeville—its main feature in 1909 when it originally opened as the Houston Hippodrome. In 1945, this home of shtick kicks closed down to become a warehouse until art collector/visionary Tim Nye spearheaded a $12 million renovation, renaming it “Sunshine” in 1996. Now after ten years, more than half of the five restored auditoriums feature stadium seating. It is the Lower East Side’s premier destination for both indie and art house films. | | Village East Cinemas
181 2nd Ave (@ 12th St)
212.529.6998 The Village East Cinemas is the sister theater of the Angelika Film Center. Village East opened as a Yiddish theater in 1926, and there are a few Moorish moldings still in tact. The theater serves up all the new guilty pleasure blockbusters with a smattering of indie flicks. So pack your oversized shades and head incognito to take in the latest Brad Pitt glam role. | | Performance Space 122
150 First Ave (8th & 9th Sts)
212.477.5829 Some theaters still promote groundbreaking performances. P.S. 122 can be considered a stalwart in the art of interpretation, whether the program features drama, dance, or interdisciplinary arts. We’re talking about a French satire (in French and English) that equates love with learning to fly, a dance troupe choreographed by a former general who depicts war and intimacy on stage, satirists, and readings of stories that incorporate computer blogs. |
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