Friday, April 24, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 17 April 2026 - 23 April 2026

Just living at IFFBoston this week, right?

  • Independent FIlm Festival Boston is at the Brattle & Somerville through Tuesday - centerpieces include Tuner and Remake at the Somerville Friday & Saturday - before decamping to the Coolidge for two screenings of The Invite with star/director Olivia Wilde in person (35mm w/ Q&A downstairs, DCP with intro upstairs)..
  • The big opening is Michael, an authorized biography of Michael Jackson with his nephew Jaafar in the title role plus Coleman Domingo & Nia Long as his parents. John Logan and Antoine Fuqua take checks for writing and directing a movie that is not only going to exclude the pedophilia accusations (and in fact, had to do reshoots for even getting near them). It's at the Capitol, Fresh Pond, The Embassy Cinema in Waltham, Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunday), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema & XL & Spanish subtitles), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Dolby Cinema & Imax Xenon), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill,

    Looks better to bet on a fictional musician, as Mother Mary has Anne Hathaway as the title character, a pop star reuniting with her longtime friend and costume designer (Michaela Coel) for a comeback, but the latter seems to believe there is something more sinister afoot on top of the difficult personal history. David Lowery writes and directs; it's at the Coolidge, Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Jason Segel & Samara Weaving star in Over Your Dead Body, a remake of a Norwegian film where both members of a married couple discovers that their spouse intends to murder them, which could put a real crimp in their plans to murder their spouse. It's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Historical adventure Desert Warrior features Anthony Mackie as the title character, a bandit who winds up protecting a princess and her father fleeing Emperor Kisra (Ben Kingsley); it plays Boston Common. Also at Boston Common is Fuze, in which the attempts to defuse an unexploded WWII bomb in the middle of London serve as cover for a daylight heist.

    Ukrainian/Latvian drama Two Prosecutors tells the tale of a USSR prosecutor in 1937 who receives one of the usually-burned letters from political prisoners professing their innocence, following it as far as he can. It's at Boston Common.

    The new 4K remaster of Fight Club opens for a regular run at Boston Common (and Monday/Tuesday shows at the Seaport); Silence of the Lambs has anniversary shows at Boston Common on Sunday & Wednesday. The Saturday morning Imax 3D doc at Boston Common is "The Blue Angels". Monday secret previews at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Music doc American Youngboy plays Boston Common on Saturday. Power to the People: John & Yoko Live in NYC, which reconfigures the two-screen presentation of their August 1972 concert into feature form, plays the Kendall and Boston Common on Wednesday. There are Early Access shows of Billie Eilish: Hit Me Hard and Soft at Boston Common and Assembly Row in Dolby Cinema 3D on Wednesday; ONE OK ROCK Detox Japan Tour plays Boston Common Thursday.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre gets documentary Everyone Is Lying to You for Money, with Ben McKenzie examining the cryptocurrency boom and similar scammy industries. It's limited shows mostly on screen #4 (the 14-seat "Goldscreen'), but McKenzie will be on-hand for an introduction & discussion when it plays on the main screen Friday night.

    I Swear, a biography of Tourette's Syndrome sufferer/campaigner John Davidson, opens at the Coolidge, Fresh Pond, the Lexington Venue, West Newton, Dedham Community Theatre, Boston Common, and the Seaport.

    The Coolidge still has the 35mm bug on their listings forThe Drama although only has dates through last Sunday. Midnight shows at the Coolidge this weekend are the Abel Ferrera Body Snatchers on 35mm Friday and both the director's cut of Aliens and a free screening of The Day of the Triffidson Saturday. Goethe-Institut teams with The National Center for Jewish FIlm's 2026 Festival for The Last Spy on Sunday morning. The Mel Brooks series continues with Young Frankenstein (including Andy Miara seminar) on Sunday afternoon and the original 1967 The Producers that evening, with Spaceballs on 35mm film Tuesday. Monday's Science on Screen presentation is Requiem for a Dream with BU's Dr. Zachariou. Thursday offers two "Panorama" screenings of Steal This Story with subject Amy Goodman & director Tia Lessin on-hand for both (Q&A at 7pm; intro at 9:55pm)... and also a "Rewind!" show of The Wedding Singer,
  • Landmark Kendall Square has Eagles of the Republic, the third of Swedish/MENA director Tarik Saleh's "Egyptian Movies", for one show a day through Tuesday; it stars Fares Fares and Egypt's most popular actor, pressured by people in power to star in a commissioned film by people in power.

    Keanu plays the Kendall Saturday & Tuesday; David Lowery's The Green Knight plays there Sunday & Wednesday.
  • The week's new South Asian movies at Apple Fresh Pond include Hindi-language comedy Ginny Wedss Sunny 2, Nepali thriller Ram Naam Satya, and Malayalam-language romantic comedy Madhuvidhu (through Sunday). Hindi-language horror/comedy Bhooth Bangla continues at Fresh Pond,and Boston Common; Dhurandhar The Revenge continues at Fresh Pond.

    Vietnamese action movie Tai plays South Bay (early and late).

    After its Imax preview, remastered Ghibli classic Whisper of the Heart begins a run at Boston Common. Japanese horror film Exit 8 continues at the Coolidge, Boston Common, and Assembly Row
  • The Capitol Theatre wraps the current "Capitol Classics" series with The Breakfast Club on Friday night and has the monthly Disasterpiece Theater event on Monday.

    The Somerville Theatre is full up with IFFBoston until Tuesday, so they've got a day or two to fill before new releases come. Wednesday features punk doc Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks and the new edition of Spike and Mike's Animation Extravaganza (which is apparently in Robert Kirkman's hands now?).
  • The Seaport Alamo has indie comedy Reveries: The Mind Prison late Friday, Terror of Mechagodzilla Saturday/Sunday/Wednesday; a Miss Congeniality movie party, Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror with director Linus O'Brien in person, and Girl Internet Show: A Kati Kelli Mixtape on Saturday; Celine and Julie Go Boating on Monday; Boys Go to Jupiter and a preview of Is God Is with livestreamed Q&A on Tuesday; and Tomorrow Never Dies on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive wraps the Béla Tarr/László Krasznahorkai series with Damnation on Friday and an all-day session of the 435-minute Sátántango on Saturday. There's also one last Masahiro Shinoda screening with the 35mm print of Assassination Friday night, and the Kubrick series ends with A.I.: Artificial Intelligence on 35mm Monday. Both the Saturday & Monday shows are sold out, but unclaimed tickets may be released at showtime.
  • The Boston Asian American Film Festival presents two by director Alice Wu on Friday, with her on-hand for a Q&A following The Half of It at 7pm and will introduce Saving Face on 9:30pm. Both are at ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theater on Thursday. Both are free, with tickets first-come, first serve.
  • The Regent Theatre has the "Mountains on Stage: Summer Edition" adventure film package on Tuesday and Jeff Rapsis accompanying The General for its 100th anniversary on Wednesday.
  • The Brattle Theatre is all IFFBoston all the time until Tuesday, and then celebrates "Halfway to Halloween" with the restored The House with Laughing Windows on Wednesday, a free Elements of Cinema screening of Alejandro Jodorowsky's Santa Sangre on 35mm Thursday evening, and then Lucio Fulci's Lizard in a Woman's Skin later Thursday night.
  • The Museum of Science has a sold-out show of The Wild Robot on the Omni screen Sunday evening to conclude Space Week.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Wednesday (though all matinees Monday to Thursday) with Lorne (no show Monday), I Swear, and Palestine '36. They play documentary Open Space: Life At Cambridge's Danehy Park at noon Saturday with director Federico Muchnik on hand for a Q&A

    The West Newton Cinema opens Michael and I Swear, holding over The Christophers, Fantasy Life, The Drama, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, and Project Hail Mary. A pair of short films by Bestor Cram, "How Far Home: Veterans after Vietnam" and "Camouflage: Vietnamese Brush Strokes with History", play Saturday afternoon with Cram and others on hand for discussion; The Natural plays Sunday afternoon. The Belmont World Film presentation on Monday is French/Greenlandic film The Incredible Snow Woman, with an introduction by critic Erin Trahah.

    The Dedham Community Theatre has The Christophers and I Swear.

    Cinema Salem plays The Mummy, Project Hail Mary, Michael, and Super Mario from Friday to Monday. Godzilla vs Hedorah is the Friday Night Light show; there's a day-long Cinema Obscura Salem even with shorts, American Rickshaw, Frankenstein '80, God of Vampires and The New York Ripper, plus an unconnected screening of Rocky Horror with Teseracte Saturday night (Full Body, as usual, is at Boston Common). The Wednesday Classic is East of Eden, with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall, and Thursday they host a Craft & Swap night with a lights-up screening of the live-action Scooby Doo.

    The AMC at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers has horror movie Broken Bird, as well as Speed Racer for a week on regular screens after its Imax shows and Sam Raimi's original The Evil Dead on Friday night..
Obviously, I'm at IFFBoston straight through Wednesday, and then on Thursday we'll see if there's anything that fits into what is, these days, an unlikely category: Gone or hard to see next week but still showing on Thursday evening. I'll try to blog, but also update my Letterboxd page.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Independent Film Festival Boston 2026.01: I Love Boosters

Let's kind of not mess around here, because the festival wasn't.

Boots Riley, on hand and talking with Brian Tamm about opening night film I Love Boosters. Interestingly, it was just the two of them for the most part - no Jon Bernhardt on the theremin as we waited for showtime, nor last year's Keytar Bear, and while the post-film discussion for some of these higher-profile movies would often be led from someone from WBUR or other local media, it was mostly Brian & Boots fielding the questions directly.

Which isn't bad; what we got was probably more interesting than a semi-scripted chat, especially because there were a couple times you could see Brian about to select another question before the director remembered something else. It worked out in large part because he had interesting answers to some of the more groan-worthy questions. For instance, "I'm a film student, what lenses did you use?", which often gets a bit of a groan because most folks in the audience aren't that technical, and unless the director has been a cinematographer (which Riley has not), he maybe doesn't have that much insight into the choices. He pointed that out while also saying "Technicolor 2" and one other, but also mentioning that those particular lenses can be difficult to get hold of, but the folks at Technicolor are big fans of cinematographer Natasha Braier, and not only rented her those, but also some custom lenses that they were saving for the right project. In addition, Braier did a custom attachment that Riley apparently couldn't describe too completely because she's patenting it that created some interesting effects when shooting the scenes with LaKeith Stanfield besotting Keke Palmer's Corvette, which replaced some things they were planning to do in color timing. It locked them into a certain look early, which they seemed cool with.

Interestingly, it tied into another regular question, the infamous "what are your influences?" He didn't give the exact answer I'd always be tempted to ("every movie I've ever seen"), but that was the gist, with him pointing out that everything had two or three contradictory impulses in them, to the point where you couldn't really separate what the original ingredients to the stew in his head were. The most direct influences were less inspirational than technical; there were apparently a number of scenes where they only built the back wall for budget reasons, and they showed the studios other movies where they did this to show it was viable.

The last question someone asked was about how he's a self-described communist but both of his movies have been these big productions for corporations, and how he felt about it. The answer kind of tied back to how, earlier, he talked about how the activist community he grew in treated the arts as something distracting from the real work of revolution, and how early in his career he actually stepped away from music because it didn't feel like something an adult did, getting back to it when he realized that a lot more people were getting his message through the music than specifically activist work. Sorry to Bother You started as a more conventional sort of radical/independent cinema, but like his music, it got weird as he kept writing, and eventually it just wasn't going to be made as a small independent collective, and if you're going to make something that requires people to work on it for four months, there's got be someone paying them. He'd like to do something small someday, but that's just not how his creativity fires right now.

Anyway, a lot of fun, even before he started directing the staff and audience to get a very specific audience selfie. Movie opens wide on 22 May, and as he pointed out, the 2,000 screen opening means you've got to find your large audience right away, where there wasn't so much pressure on Sorry to Bother You's platform.


I Love Boosters

* * * ½ (out of four)
Seen 22 April 2026 in Somerville Theatre #1 (Independent Film Festival Boston 2026, 4K laser DCP)
Where to stream it (when available), or Riley's original album at Amazon

The fun thing about Boots Riley's movies, at least for some of us, is that they start out as broad 2000AD-style satire of something fairly specific, and then launch into much weirder orbit as they go on. Sometimes, it can seem like he's got more ideas than he has time to make movies, but at other times, you wonder if it's the point: That this awful, ridiculous thing is intertwined with a number of things that are even more terrible and insane, and you can't tell the story you started from without exaggerating everything else the same way. The result is often so maximalist as to make a viewer's head spin, but also a good time.

It centers around Corvette (Keke Palmer), a would-be fashion designer who instead runs a booster ring with friends Sade (Naomi Ackie) and Mariah (Taylour Paige), shoplifting designer clothing in bulk and selling it at affordable prices in open-air pop-us. She's a huge fan of designer Christi Smith (Demi Moore), but takes a job in one of her Metro Design stores to case it, on the rumor of $100,000 suits, and plans something bigger when she realizes Christi has stolen one of her weird designs she posted online. That's before a worker from Christi's Chinese factory, Jiansu (Poppy Liu), shows up with even bigger ambitions, and not taking into consideration the peculiar staff at the shop (Will Pouler, Eiza González, Najah Bradley), a dizzingly handsome catalog model (LaKeith Stanfield), or a motivational speaker (Don Cheadle) recruiting for a pyramid scheme.

Boosters seems kind of overstuffed, but perhaps by less than one might think. Its bright colors and crazy costumes which get switched up repeatedly during montages increase the intensity of what the audience is seeing but it's not actually more than they can take in, and almost every crazy new element and twist Riley adds has a clear place; with even the headier science-fiction elements (which he does in fact slow down a little bit to explain) pretty directly talking about blurring the line between homage and appropriation and synthesis & deconstruction in art. It's loud and bizarre and one can maybe lose track of what the goals are by the end of the film because Poppy's story is clearly bigger than Corvette's even though the latter is obviously the main character, but it never gets truly out of hand.

It's hilarious from front to back, though, with Keke Palmer trying to get out of Christi's bizarrely canted apartment some of the best slapstick since Ryan Gosling stumbling around a bathroom stall in The Nice Guys as an example. The jokes and general strangeness come at a rapid pace, with recurring bits not quite in the background and an ability to do deadpan without necessarily slowing down and pausing. Riley has come up with a lot of gags that fit the setting and fits them into the script without necessarily twisting the story but letting them be weird enough that the audience can appreciate them individually. Similarly, there's a lot in the movie that is more tactile than it might be in others - the credits reference both miniature and stop-motion units - but without necessarily making a point of how practical effects are inherently better than digital ones; Riley has a good handle on how to have the medium enhance the material without itself taking the focus.

He's also assembled a cast that can work at his breakneck comedic pace but also give us some emotion under the frantic nature of it: Keke Palmer makes Corvette cool despite a lot of insecurity, and Demi Moore understands the assignment by making Christi the reverse, kind of a nervous dork under her brash entitlement (between this and The Substance, it's kind of odd seeing Moore committing to weird parts because she always seemed such a carefully mainstream movie star in her 1980s/1990s heyday). Eiza González and Poppy Liu are both firehoses of exposition and activity, while LaKeith Stanfield is almost soothing as he calmly delivers some of the movie's most bizarre material. Nobody here is being subtle, but they all feel human and kind of well-rounded in Riley's weird world.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 17 April 2026 - 23 April 2026

Festival time!
  • Independent FIlm Festival Boston begins on Wednesday, starting at the Somerville Theatre with Boots Riley's I Love Boosters, then expanding to the Brattle the next day with Aanikoobijigan and Maddie's Secret while three shorts packages, First They Came for My College and The Last Yztari play the Somerville, with the festival continuing until the 29th.
  • Much as I liked The Hole in the Ground and Evil Dead Rise, it's odd to see Lee Cronin's The Mummy named like the filmmaker's John Carpenter or something (honestly, it was weird for Carpenter); his mummy story has a family reuniting with their missing daughter who was found in a sealed crypt, wrapped in dressings. It opens at Fresh Pond, Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunda), CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), and Arsenal Yards (including CWX)

    The Christophers opens at the Coolidge, West Newton, Dedham Community Theatre, Boston Common, and Assembly Row, with Ian McKellan playing a washed-up artist whose children hire a reformed forger (Michaela Cole) to find and complete eight unfinished works. Very nifty creative team with Steven Soderbergh directing a script by Ed Solomon.

    BUFF opener Normal, an action movie directed by Ben Wheatley and starring Bob Odenkirk as a man filling in as sheriff for a small town with a big secret until its upcoming election, opens at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Kendall Square, the Seaport, and South Bay.

    Morgan Neville's new documentary, Lorne, which has him following Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels, plays West Newton, the Lexington Venue, Boston Common, and Assembly Row.

    Speaking of SNL, comedy Busboys stars co-writers David Spade and Theo Von as the morons of the title getting into misadventures as they strive to become waiters. David Spade, in 2026! It's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, and South Bay.

    French comedy A Little Something Extra, with father/son fugitives hiding out in a special-needs summer camp, plays Boston Common.

    Imax mini-feature 2DIE4, which do

    cuments the Le Mans endurance race through the eyes of driver Felipe Nasr, plays late afternoons at Boston Common through Monday. There's an anniversary re-release of Bridesmaids at Boston Common (Saturday/Sunday/Monday), Causeway Street (Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday), the Seaport (Sunday/Wednesday), Arsenal Yards (Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday). Ferris Bueller's Day Off also gets at Boston Common (all week but mostly matinees so folks can play hooky I guess) and the Seaport (Friday). Speed Racer's 4K upconversion plays Assembly Row and South Bay in Imax Monday/Tuesday. A 4K remaster of Fight Club plays Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row Wednesday.

    The BTS World Tour: Arirang concert film has encore presentations at Kendall Square, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Saturday; concert doc American Youngboy plays Boston Common on Wednesday. Stranger Things: Tales from '85 has theatrical previews at Boston Common on Saturday. There's mystery previews at Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday (the AMC ones specify horror). This week's Imax 3D doc at Boston Common is "A Beautiful Planet"; Cave of Forgotten Dreams has an Imax 3D encore at Boston Common and Assembly Row on Sunday morning; and "Under the Sea" plays Boston Common in Imax 3D Sunday afternoon. Greek historical feature Kapodistrias plays Boston Common on Wednesday. Michael has early access shows at Jordan's (Imax), Boston Common (Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), South Bay (Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), and Arsenal Yards (CWX) on Wednesday, before opening wide the next day.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre opens François Ozon's new adaptation of Albert Camus's The Stranger, which moves the action to colonial Algeria and shoots it in sharp black & white.

    The Coolidge also continues to show Project Hail Mary in 70mm through Sunday, with The Drama on 35mm those days. Midnight bio-horror shows at the Coolidge this weekend are The Thing from Another World on 35mm Friday and Annihilation on Saturday. Disney's animated Aladdin plays Saturday & Sunday mornings; Jackie Brown runs on 35mm Monday night with a seminar led by Mikal J. Gaines. The Mel Brooks centennial series continues with Vertigo on Tuesday and his spoof High Anxiety on Wedesday. Thursday's Cult Classic is presented by the Salem Horror Fest, pairing the 1932 Island of Lost Souls with The Leopard Man. The National Center for Jewish Film's 2026 Festival continues on Sunday, with Ada - My Mother the Architect at The Museum of Fine Arts in the afternoon (with director Yael Melamede) and Once Upon My Mother.
  • Canadian film Mile End Kicks opens at Landmark Kendall Square and the Seaport Alamo, featuring Barbie Ferreira as a music writer who moves to the Montreal neighborhood of the title, getting involved with two members of a local band. I'm not sure if I was in the neighborhood during the movie's 2011 time frame, but it's a cool place now.

    Gore Verbinski's animated adventure Rango plays the Kendall Saturday & Tuesday; David Lowery's A Ghost Story plays there Sunday & Wednesday.
  • The week's new South Asian movies at Apple Fresh Pond include Hindi-language horror/comedy Bhooth Bangla (also at boston Common), Nepali drama Pahaad, Malayalam-language caper Pallichattambi. Bengali-language thriller Rakkhosh and Bengali-language drama DOMM: Until the Last Breath play Saturday & Sunday, and short film program "The India Experience" plays daily beginning Saturday. Telugu-language action film Dacoit: A Love Story continues at Boston Common and Causeway Street and Dhurandhar The Revenge continues at Fresh Pond. Punjabi-language comedy Khushkhabri plays the AMC out in Burlington.

    The last Lunar New Year straggler, Panda Plan 2: The Magical Tribe, has Jackie Chan following the panda he rescued in the first into the jungle and meeting a lost clan, including comedy star Mary Ma Li. It's at Causeway Street for matinees.

    Anime feature That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime: Scarlet Bond plays Boston Common, the Seaport, Assembly Row on Monday; Ghibli classic Whisper of the Heart plays Boston Common (Imax), South Bay (Imax) Assembly Row (Imax) Tuesday. Japanese horror film Exit 8 continues at the Coolidge, Boston Common, the Seaport, and Assembly Row.
  • After kicking the weekend off with a Friday Film Feature of FernGully: The Last Rainforest on 35mm, The Brattle Theatre spends a good chunk of the run-up to IFFBoston with a standout from last year's Fall Focus as My Father's Shadow plays Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evening. They also celebrate Record Store Day with Born Innocent: The Redd Kross Story on Friday night and Pavements Saturday night. German feature Sound of Falling, featuring four teenage girls living in the same farmhouse over the course of generations, plays Saturday & Sunday afternoon.

    Massachusetts Space Week features include Pixar's Up at noon Saturday & Sunday, Galaxy Quest Monday evening, and a 35mm print of The Right Stuff on Wednesday. There's also an RPM Festival presentation of short films by Josh Weissbach, "For All Audiences", on Sunday afternoon. The Muppet Marathon Monday movies this year - The Muppet Movie, The Dark Crystal, and Labyrinth (first two on 35mm) also have encores Tuesday.
  • The Somerville Theatre has the last night of The Taiwan Film Festival of Boston's spring program on Friday, with drama A Foggy Tale. They fill out the extra screen with locally-shot film Watching Mr. Pearson from Sunday to Tuesday.

    The Capitol Theatre picks up The Drama ahead of their sister cinema in Somerville being taken over by the festival.
  • In addition to opening Mile End Kicks The Seaport Alamo has The Master and Johnnie To's >Romancing in Thin Air on Saturday, a The Big Lebowski movie party on Monday, an advance screening of Hokum and double feature of Fuck My Son & Dance Freak on Tuesday, Fantasia alum $Positions on Wednesday, and Face/Off on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive continues their Béla Tarr/László Krasznahorkai series with The Turin House on Friday and Wreckmeister Harmonies on Sunday. Saturday has two more Korean crime movies, with Lee Min-yong's A Hot Roof early in the evening and Kim Jee-woon's debut feature The Quiet Family later. And, by now, we know the drill with the Kurbrick series - Eyes Wide Shut plays Monday, it's sold out, but there may be seats if you're in line at showtime. Everything is on 35mm this weekend.
  • The Regent Theatre has school vacation sing-along shows for The Wizard of Oz on Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning, with a Wicked sing-along Thursday afternoon. And while it doesn't seem to be listed as part of the Mass Space Week festivities, they have astronaut Eileen Collins on-hand Wednesdayfor a post-film Q&A with Spacewoman, a documentary about her life.
  • The Museum of Science adds "Splash and Bubbles" to its 4D film rotation starting Saturday. They also have astronauts Cady Coleman and Al Sacco Jr. on-hand for a panel before their Massachusetts Space Week screening of Apollo 13 on Tuesday.
  • The Boston Asian American Film Festival presents Saving Face with director Alice Wu on-hand for a Q&A at ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theater on Thursday. It's a free show, and though ArtsEmerson's site says all tickets have been claimed, it also says to check back during the week and that they will have a rush line/waitlist starting an hour before showtime.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week with Lorne, Fantasy Life, and Hamlet.

    The West Newton Cinema opens The Christophers< Lorne, and Fantasy Life, keeping The Drama, The AI Doc, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, and Project Hail Mary. Documentary Bending the Arc: The Journey Continues plays Friday with post-film discussion, while another doc, Age Group Winner, plays Saturday evening with director Alexandra Helgerson and father/subject Jay on-hand for a post-film panel (the latter at least in two to run the Marathon on Monday). The Belmont World Film presentation on Monday is French/Armenian film In the Land of Arto, with an introduction by Harvard Professor Diana Hayrapetyan.

    The Dedham Community Theatre has The Christophers and Mirrors No. 3 (the latter marked "one week only!").

    Cinema Salem plays The Mummy, Project Hail Mary, The Drama, Super Mario, and Forbidden Fruits from Friday to Monday. Spooky Picture Show hosts the original Witchboard on Saturday and What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesday next door.
Pretty rigidly packed week, with A Foggy Tale on Friday, the Korean movies on Saturday, a Red Sox game on Tuesday, and IFFBoston after that. Maybe Panda Plan 2, Mile End Kicks, and The Christophers wind up in there, which doesn't leave much room for anything else. Follow along on my Letterboxd page!

Friday, April 10, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 10 April 2026 - 16 April 2026

Okay, I was going to link how much I liked ChaO at Fantasia last year and how annoying it was to see a trailer on Wednesday but not have it open here today, but my Letterboxd entry seems to have disappeared since this morning! I suppose it's possible I've deleted it since yesterday, but weird, and downloading my data suggests it wasn't there at all!

Sadly, you've got to head out to Methuen to see the movie (not even Danvers!), so onto what's playing within reach of the T.

  • The biggest release this week is an actual romantic comedy, with You, Me & Tuscany featuring Halle Bailey taking advantage of a villa in Italy that a friend told her was empty, only to be mistaken for his fiancée and subsequently falling for his hunky cousin Regé-Jean Page. It plays Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, Assembly Row, Arsenal Yards, and Chestnut Hill.

    Australian MMA movie Beast has co-writer Russell Crowe in a supporting role as main fighter Daniel MacPherson's trainer, with action specialist Bren Foster as the opponent and also handling fight choreography. It's at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    The new Faces of Death is apparently a meta-movie, with Barbie Ferreira as a website moderator coming across recreations of scenes from the infamous original. It's at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Hunting Matthew Nichols stars Miranda MacDougall as a filmmaker following the trail of the brother who vanished twenty years earlier, found-footage style; it's at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Arsenal Yards.

    Another horror-adjacent movie, Newborn, stars David Oyelowo as a recently-paroled prisoner having difficulty adjusting to the outside world, is released as an AMC exclusive at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row. Writer/director Nate Parker was expected to be a big thing ten years ago before a rape accusation resurfaced.

    Historical drama Palestine '36, the eponymous region's Oscar submission, mostly plays matinees at Boston Common.

    There's a BTS: World Tour Arirang "Live Viewing" at Kendall Square, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Saturday (well, with two showtimes, at least one must be on tape, right?). Mystery screenings at Causeway Street, Boston Common, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday; non-mystery previews of The Christophers at Boston Common (Dolby Cinema) on Sunday and Over Your Dead Body at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Wednesday. Jerry Maguire has anniversary shows at Boston Common Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday. Boston Common has Imax doc Space Station 3D on Saturday morning; Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams plays in Imax 3D on Wednesday at Boston Common and Assembly Row; Boston Common starts a limited run of Imax Le Mans doc 2DIE4 on Thursday.
  • A new version of Hamlet opens at The Coolidge Corner Theatre, the Lexington Venue, West Newton, Kendall Square, and Boston Common; it stars Riz Ahmed and also recasts many of the other characters as Desi and places the action in contemporary London.

    The Coolidge also continues to show Project Hail Mary in 70mm when it's on screen #1 are 70mm, while weekend shows of The Drama (on screen #2) are 35mm. Midnight bio-horror shows at the Coolidge this weekend are Godzilla vs. Biollante on Friday and Return of the Killer Tomatoes (with early-career George Clooney!) on Saturday, with The Room showing on another screen that day. Saturday afternoon features a Cinema Masala show of Silsila, a 1981 classic featuring superstars Amitabh Bachchan and Rekha; there's Open Screen on Tuesday; and History of the World: Part I as part of the Mel Brooks Centennial on Wednesday. The theater appears to be dark on Thursday.

    Sunday also has them segue from Wicked Queer to The National Center for Jewish FIlm's 2026 Festival, with The Burning Cross and Labors of Love: The Life and Legacy of Henrietta Szold on Sunday, I Have Sinned on Monday, All I Had Was Nothingness on Tuesday, and We Met at Grossinger's on Wednesday, with The Safe House at the MFA on Thursday.
  • Japanese film Exit 8 has the "8" doubling for an infinity sign, I bet; it's based on a video game where a lost commuter is trying to find his way out of a subway station that is seemingly hermetically sealed with mind-bending "anomalies" throughout. It's at the Coolidge, Boston Common, the Seaport, and Assembly Row.

    The week's new Indian movies at Apple Fresh Pond include Tamil fantasy romcom LIK: Love Insurance Kompany; Telugu-language action film Dacoit: A Love Story (also at Boston Common, Causeway Street); Malayalam-language Vaazha II: Biopic of a Billion Bros from Friday to Sunday (maybe the same four guys as in Biopic of a Billion Boys, maybe not). Dhurandhar The Revenge continues at Fresh Pond and Boston Common, for some reason almost always at times that see it end after midnight.

    Boston Common opens another fighter-returns-to-the-ring movie, Hong Kong's Golden Boy, with Louis Cheung as an ex-con meeting his son for the first time. Familiar faces Eric Tsang and Lam Suet are in supporting roles.

    Vietnamese thriller Bunny!! continues at South Bay.
  • Wicked Queer continues through Sunday, mostly at the Brattle but with other screenings at The Museum of Fine Arts (Friday/Saturday/Sunday), Coolidge (Saturday), and Somerville (Sunday).

    The Brattle Theatre also has Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze as the 35mm Friday Film Matinee (for International Brothers' Day), matinees of Singin' in the Rain Saturday & Sunday with a lights-up crafting show on Monday, a special premiere of John Lilly and the Earth Coincidence Control Office on Monday with co-director Courtney Stephens in person for a post-film Q&A, and opens My Father's Shadow on Thursday.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has Stuart Little Saturday & Tuesday for the animal movie Retro Replay and Good Time Sunday & Wednesday for the Robert Pattinson filmmaker focus.
  • The Capitol Theatre has Rear Window as part of "Capitol Classics" on Friday evening; the 4th Wall show with Circle Drive & FRND CRCL doesn't start until 9pm, so it shouldn't bleed over too much. They also pick up Project Hail Mary.

    The Somerville Theatre continues playing The Drama on 35mm film around live events Friday & Saturday and Wicked Queer on Sunday. They also have The Shawshank Redemption on 35mm Wednesday and a print of I Live Here Now, which I found interestingly surreal at Fantasia though I imagine it speaks more to women, on Thursday.
  • The Seaport Alamo has Ghost World late Friday; Something Wild Saturday afternoon; Fantasia/BUFF alum The Serpent's Skin Saturday night; Steve McQueen & Ali McGraw in The Getaway Sunday; a Pride & Prejudice movie party Monday; It Doesn't Get Any Better Than This for Terror Tuesday and HIgh Plains Drifter for regular Tuesday; City Wide Fever for Weird Wednesday; and Police Story, possibly Jackie Chan's best stunt spectacular, on Thursday.
  • The Harvard Film Archive surrounds the weekend with sold-out screenings (though you're welcome to try your luck in the rush line), as Park Chan-wook's Decision to Leave plays Friday night and Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket runs on film Monday. There's a "Student Cinematheque" double feature on Saturday afternoon pairing 35mm prints of Visions of Eight & The Suspended Step of the Stork; they also start their Béla Tarr/László Krasznahorkai series with Wreckmeister Harmonies on 35mm film Saturday evening and Damnation Sunday afternoon.
  • The Taiwan Film Festival of Boston is off at my alma mater WPI on Thursday for a screening of A Chip Odyssey.
  • The Lexington Venue is open Friday to Sunday and Thursday with Fantasy Life and Hamlet. New York Dog Film Festival has an encore Saturday afternoon.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Hamlet and holds over The Drama, The AI Doc, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, Project Hail Mary, and Pillion. The Belmont World Film presentation on Monday is Bolivian drama The Condor Daughter, with an introduction by linguist Susan Kalt.

    The Dedham Community Theatre has EPiC, Fantasy Life, and The AI Doc.

    Cinema Salem plays Project Hail Mary, The Drama, Super Mario, Forbidden Fruit, and Pillion from Friday to Monday. Friday's Night Light show is She-Devils on Wheels and The African Queen is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall.
Mostly "you really should see this while you can" on the agenda: Haven't seen The Drama (35mm or no), Hoppers (3D or no), or Dhurandhar The Revenge (intermission or no), and might also catch You Me & Tuscany, Beast, and Golden Boy (which I guess is a big deal because the HK Blu-ray is fancy/expensive). Updates, as usual, onmy Letterboxd page (unless they vanish, I guess).

Friday, April 03, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 3 April 2026 - 9 April 2026

Two big releases, so not a lot of room for other things!
  • The Super Mario Galaxy Movie movie opened Wednesday and this weekend plays The Capitol Theatre, Fresh Pond (including 3D), Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday/Saturday), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema & XL & RealD 3D & Spanish), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Kendall Square, South Bay (including Imax Xenon 2D & Dolby Cinema & RealD 3D), the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema & RealD 3D), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Also opening is The Drama, which looks a bit like a farce about a planned wedding starting to go off the rails when the principals (Zendaya & Robert Pattinson) start to really learn about each other. It's set/shot in Boston and Kristoffer Borgli directs; it seems like just a couple years ago he was playing BUFF rather than multiplexes. It plays the Somerville (35mm), the Cooldige (including 35mm), Fresh Pond, West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, South Bay, Assembly Row, Arsenal Yards, and Chestnut Hill.

    A Great Awakening has atheist Ben Franklin finding kinship with a preacher at Boston Common.

    Arsenal Yards plays Space Jam: A New Legacy Friday evening. Imax 3D documentary "Pandas" plays Boston Common Saturday morning; horror flick The Yeti plays Boston Common Saturday & Wednesday. John Woo's original The Killer with Chow Yun-fat plays Boston Common (Sunday/Monday/Wednesday) and the Seaport (Sunday to Wednesday). There's a mystery [horror] preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday.
  • The Coolidge Corner Theatre opens Fantasy Life, featuring writer/director Matthew Shear as a law-school dropout who winds up looking after his therapist's grandchildren only to fall for their (married) actress mother, in what's apparently one of Amanda Peet's best roles. It's also at the Capitol, the Dedham Community Theatre, and Boston Common.

    The Coolidge also opens a new 4K restoration of Satyajit Ray's Days and Nights in the Forest in the small rooms, with the larger ones mostly reserved for things on film (Project Hail Mary shows on screen #1 are 70mm, weekend shows of The Drama on screen #2 are 35mm).

    The Coolidge also has their monthly screening of Eraserhead at midnight Friday, and it's just hit me that I bet they sell a ton of "I Saw Eraserhead Here" t-shirts those nights. The other midnights this month are bio-horror, with a 35mm print of The Ruins on Friday and Creepshow on Saturay. There are kids' shows of Ratatouille Saturday and Sunday morning, and tickets are still available at the moment for this week's (final-for-now) Lord of the Rings marathon on Sunday. Monday's big-screen classic is La Strada, Tuesday's Mel Brooks show is Blazing Saddles, and Wednesday has author Emily Franklin there to discuss how her new book Love and Other Monsters relates to the night's movie The Bride of Frankenstein. There's another special event on Thursday, with Bob Dylan Center director Steven Jenkins showing a number of selections from their archives and Bill Janovitz playing Dylan covers afterward.
  • New Indian films opening at Apple Fresh Pond feature Telugu-language motocross film Biker and Telgugu-language comedy-adventure Raakaasaa (also at Causeway Street). Hindi-lagnuage action-sequel epic Dhurandhar The Revenge continues at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Causeway Street, and a 4K re-release of Race Gurram plays Fresh Pond for star Allu Arjun's birthday on Tuesday.

    Vietnamese thriller Bunny!! was booked at South Bay last week without a lot of lead time and continues this week; it features the host of a romantic advice podcast dealing with an obsessive, masked caller and her visiting sister.

    Korean film The King's Warden continues playing matinees at Causeway Street.
  • The Brattle Theatre is home base for Wicked Queer all the way through next Sunday, with other screenings at the Coolidge (Saturday to Monday).

    The Brattle also has Waiting for Guffman as the 35mm Friday Film Matinee, and Easter weekend shows of the original cut of Donnie Darko on Friday & Saturday.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has Babe Saturday & Tuesday for the animal movie Retro Replay and Maps to the Stars Sunday & Wednesday for the Robert Pattinson filmmaker focus.
  • The Taiwan Film Festival of Boston does a six-months-later check-in with Family Matters, a drama spanning 24 years and four "seasons" (which also double as the characters' names) in a Taiwanese family, plays ArtsEmerson's Paramount Theater on Saturday evening, with director Pan Ke-Yin on hand for a Q&A. The night before, Raoul Pecks Orwell: 2+2=5 plays that room with a post-film discussion with community leaders.
  • The Harvard Film Archive pays tribute to Bob Hoskins on Friday with prints of The Long Good Friday (obviously) and Mona Lisa. The Masahiro Shinoda series continues on Saturday with Assassination and Samruai Spy. There's more sold-out Kubrick with Barry Lyndon on Sunday and The Shining on Monday, but seats may be available at showtime if there are no-shows (I think this is in support of a course, so some are probably held back for students). It's another weekend where everything is on 35mm film, though Thursday's free (with registration) screening of The Dutchman with director Andre Gaines and actor André Holland on-hand is digital.
  • Jeff Rapsis visits the The Regent Theatre on Saturday evening to accompany Cecil B. DeMille's King of Kings.
  • A Magnificent Life plays one last show at The Somerville Theatre on Monday (note that it's in English; I'm guessing we won't get the original French-language version until home video). Repertory fare the rest of the week has an "International Beaver Day" screening of Hundreds of Beavers on Tuesday, The Commitments on 35mm for the Wednesday "Feel Good Films", and indie comedy-drama Lady Parts with post-film panel discussion on Thursday.
  • The Seaport Alamo doubles up on Chow Yun-Fat classics with Ringo Lam's City on Fire playing Monday/Tuesday/Thursday (they're also showing The Killer). A "Best of Betty Boop" collection plays Monday & Tuesday; Castration Movie Anthology I: Traps plays Tuesday, and there's an early-access screening of Faces of Death on Wednesday.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has the closing night of The Boston Turkish Film Festival with Apollon by Day Athena by Night on Friday and By Design, in which Juliette Lewis swaps bodies with a chair, on Saturday afternoon.

    (It's actually the Turkish Film & Music Festival, with the music program beginning Saturday the 11th and running through 22 May,
  • Movies at MIT lists Illusions Perdues as playing Friday night, but no further information on the site; it may be the star-studded 2021 adaptation of a novel by Honoré de Balzac.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with Fantasy Life, Tow (no show Sunday), and The AI Doc (no show Sunday). There's a free screening of The Long Good Friday on Friday afternoon, EPiC plays Saturday & Thursday, "Davey & Goliath: Happy Easter" shows for free on Saturday; the 2026 New York Cat FIlm Festival encores Saturday morning, with the complementary 2026 New York Dog Film Festival having its first show on Thursday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens The Drama and continues The AI Doc (Behind the Screen show on Wednesday), The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, Project Hail Mary, Hoppers, Pillion, and Hamnet. Grand Canyon-shot drama Granite Rapids Moon plays Saturday evening, followed by a remote Q&A with writer/director Kenneth Cran & producer John Charles Meyer. Abbas Kiarostami's Where Is the Friend's House plays Thursday for Ty Burr's Movie Club. The Belmont World Film presentation on Monday is French crime thriller Case 137.

    The Dedham Community Theatre brings back EPiC alongside Fantasy Life and The AI Doc.

    Cinema Salem plays Project Hail Mary, The Drama, Super Mario ("Reset Button" plays a set to open on Saturday afternoon!) and Hoppers from Friday to Monday. Chaplin's City Lights is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesday down the hall.

    Out in Danvers, the Liberty Tree Mall AMC has Tamera Hill thriller The Secret Between Us, starring Michael Jai White.
Might be a (relatively) slow week my Letterboxd page because I've got two Red Sox tickets this week, but in the meantime, I'll probably check out The Drama and Fantasy Life, maybe doing some catchup and checking out one or two things at Wicked Queer that look interesting.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 27 March 2026 - 2 April 2026

It's one of those weird post-blockbuster weeks with a bunch of docs and a lot of random-ish stuff at Boston Common!
  • Hey, the guy who made Why Don't You Just Die?, Kirill Sokolov, has his first English language feature, They Will Kill You. It stars Zazie Beetz as a young woman who gets a job as a housekeeper in an exclusive building, room and board included. What she doesn't know is that she's meant to be a sacrifice to some demon they worship, but what they don't know is that she's just out of prison, where she learned all sorts of martial arts. It's playing Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    As mentioned up top, two big-ish docs open this week. The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist has filmmakers Daniel Roher & Charlie Tyrell interviewing a whole bunch of people, although the title makes it sound like they're more worried about Terminator 2 than Billion Dollar Brain. It's at the Coolidge, the Capitol, the Lexington Venue, West Newton, Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport, and Assembly Row. The other is Marc by Sofia, with director Sofia Coppola doing a close-up profile of fashion designer Marc Jacobs. That's at the Coolidge, the Capitol, West Newton, Boston Common, and Kendall Square.

    Forbidden Fruits opens at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, and South Bay, featuring Lili Reinhart, Victoria Pedretty, and Alexandra Shipp as three witches working retail, with new co-worker/coven member Lola Tung looking to raise the bar.

    Comedy She Dances features co-writer Steve Zahn as a divorced dad chaperoning his daughter (real-life daughter Audrey) at a competition, with Ethan Hawke, Rosemarie DeWitt, and Sonequa Martin-Green also in the cast. It's at Boston Common. So is New Zealand comedy Holy Days, featuring Miriam Margolyes, Jacki Weaver, and Judy Davis as three eccentric nuns in a stolen car taking in a lost boy; it plays mostly/all matinees.

    There are two anniversary re-releases this week, with Stand by Me at Boston Common (Friday to Wednesday) and the Seaport (Friday/Saturday/Tuesday). The Mummy Returns is at Boston Common (Friday to Tuesday), the Seaport (Saturday/Monday), and Arsenal Yards (Saturday-Tuesday).

    On Wednesday, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie movie opens all over the place, including the Capitol, Fresh Pond (including 3D), Jordan's Furniture (opening in Imax Thursday), West Newton, Boston Common (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema & XL & RealD 3D & Spanish), Causeway Street (including RealD 3D), Kendall Square, South Bay (including Imax Xenon 2D & Dolby Cinema & RealD 3D), the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser 2D & Dolby Cinema & RealD 3D), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), Chestnut Hill - many of which have old-school 12am screenings rather than just opening mid-afternoon on Tuesday!

    "Superpower Dogs" plays in Imax 3D at Boston Common Saturday morning (as well as hanging around the Museum of Science). Concert film Bring Me the Horizon: L.I.V.E. in São Paulo plays Saturday afternoon at Boston Common. The 1959 Ben-Hur plays Boston Common Sunday/Wednesday/Thursday. There's a mystery (horror) preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday.
  • Alpha is the new film from Julia Ducournau, with Mélissa Boros as a French tween whose family begins to spiral after she gets a tattoo; given that she made Raw and Titane, I'm guessing it's not just her mother being uncomfortable with her independence. It's at Landmark Kendall Square, Boston Common, and the Seaport.

    Kendall Square starts having two shows of its rep movies, so the Robert Pattinson Filmmaker Focus for April kicks with Twilight on Sunday and Wednesday.
  • Sylvain Chomet's first animated film in a decade, A Magnificent Life (aka Marcel et Monsieur Pagnol) opens at The Somerville Theatre and Boston Common.

    The Somerville also has a live event in the big room on Saturday, but movies as well: There's the "Mellow Climbing" outdoor films package on Friday, a 35mm print of Buster Keaton in The Cameraman with Jeff Rapsis on the organ for "Silents Please!" Sunday afternoon, screenings of documentary The Tony Millionaire Show (whose subject was very reluctant!) on Monday & Tuesday, The Sandlot for "Feel Good Films" on Wednesday, and Skweezy Jibbs Makes a Movie, with Skweezy in person, on Thursday.

    The Capitol Theatre opens The Mountain, a New Zealand film about a Maori girl battling cancer who aims to climb Taranaki Maunga with two new friends (no show Saturday, afternoons only Monday & Wednesday). Marx Brothers movie The Cocoanuts is the Capitol Classic on Wednesday. The monthly Disasterpiece Theater night is Monday.
  • Oh, cool, Mirrors No. 3, the new Christian Petzold film that Goethe-Institut played on Sunday is getting a regular opening at The Coolidge Corner Theatre, with Paula Beer as a woman who survives a car crash and becomes attached to the family that took her in.

    They've still got the 70mm print of Project Hail Mary on screen 1, except Sunday when the sold-out Lord of the Rings marathon is there (tickets still available for next week). Midnight shows this weekend feature the Takashi Miike flicks that first put him on the radar for many of us - Ichi the Killer on Friday and Audition on Saturday. On Monday, they've got a "Sound of Silents" show with Jeff Rapsis accompanying Charlie Chaplin's The Kid; Tuesday wraps the Mira Nair series with The Namesake on 35mm film while Wednesday kicks off a Mel Brooks Month (ahead of his 100th birthday!) with The Producers. Wednesday also has "Calling the Shots" presentation Portrait of a Lady on Fire, while Thursday's Big Screen Classic is All That Jazz, with seminar by Andrea Meyer.
  • Indian films opening at Apple Fresh Pond include Malayalam-language thriller Prathichaya (through Sunday), Telugu-language romance Band Melam, and Tamil-language romance Happy Raj (through Sunday). Kannada-language romance Love Mocktail 3 plays Saturday & Sunday mornings. Dhurandhar The Revenge continues at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, Causeway Street.

    Comedy special Jimmy O. Yang: Finally Home, with Yang returning to his native Hong Kong for the first time in the 21st Century, opens at Boston Common and Causeway Street.

    Thai romantic comedy Food Truck: Stolen Love… and Moo Deng continues at Boston Common (through Tuesday); Korean film The King's Warden shows pretty remarkable matinee staying power at Causeway Street (also through Tuesday).
  • The Brattle Theatre has two art-house horror restorations this weekend, with Guillermo del Toro's Cronos playing Friday/Saturday/Sunday/Tuesay, and Michael Almereyda's Nadja playing Friday to Tuesday.

    On Saturday afternoon, Gerald Peary presents a double feature of Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein & The Boy with Green Hair, inspired by his new book A Reluctant Film Critic. On Sunday, RPM Fest presents "The Blue Rose of Forgetfullness" and six other short films by Lewis Klahr, with Klahr on-hand for a post-film Q&A. On Monday they have a free Elements of Cinema screening of Spirit of the Beehive, and then they celebrate April Fool's Day by pairing the new Liam Neeson The Naked Gun with Sylvester Stallone in Cobra (Wednesday) and Clint Eastwood in Dirty Harry (Thursday).
  • The Harvard Film Archive has a weekend featuring four films by director Masahiro Shinoda ("Sixties Shinoda"): Pale Flower (introduced by Peter Grilli) Friday, Dry Lake (aka Youth in Fury) Friday & Sunday, Double Suicide Saturday, and Punishment Island on Saturday. Monday's Kubrick screening of Barry Lyndon is sold out, but seats may be available at showtime if there are no-shows. Another weekend where everything is on 35mm film.
  • The Seaport Alamo picks up Andre Is a Idiot for one show a day Friday to Monday, (looks four-walled with the front row reserved/empty every day). Episodes 16-18 of Twin Peaks: The Return play Saturday, and a marathon of the Extended Editions of Lord of the Rings on Sunday.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has the dubbed Arco on Friday night as part of "Global Cinema Now". Amrum. Boston Turkish Film Festival continues on Saturday with thriller IDEA (director Tayfun Pirselimoğlu there in person), preceded by shorts "Minus One" and "Garan".
  • The Museum of Science seems to be sold out of all upcoming screenings of Project Hail Mary on the Omnimax screen, but has a free screening of Barbie Saturday afternoon for National Women's Month (registration required). They're closed Monday to Wednesday, including the Imax/4D screens.
  • Boston Jewish Film has one more day of the Israeli Film Series at JCC Greater Boston in Newton, with "Wild Land" on Sunday afternoon and Pink Lady Sunday evening, both of which will have post-film discussion.
  • Movies at MIT lists Monty Python and the Holy Grain as playing Wednesday; again, not sure if non-MIT folks are still welcome and if they want an email beforehand, since there seems to be no mailing list this semester.
  • The Lexington Venue is open all week but Monday with EPiC, The AI Doc, and Mr. Nobody Against Putin (no show Wednesday). The Voice of Hind Rajab plays Saturday morning, as does Keeper of the Flame (free classic). Suburban Fury has matinees Saturday & Sunday, and the 2026 edition of the New York Cat Film Festival plays Wednesday.

    The West Newton Cinema opens Marc by Sofia, The AI Doc, and The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (on Wednesday), continuing Project Hail Mary, Sentimental Value, Hoppers, Pillion, and Hamnet. They will also be hosting the entirety of Belmont World Film's International Film Series, starting on Monday with Colors of Time on Monday, which splits between a girl searching for her mother in 1895 Paris and descendants who have never met who inherit her Normandy home in the present. There's a Normandy-inspired dinner available before the film, as well.

    The Dedham Community Theatre holds over Tow and opens The AI Doc.

    Cinema Salem plays Project Hail Mary, Ready or Not Here I Come, and Hoppers, from Friday to Monday. Drunken Master II is the Friday Night Light film, with Easter Parade for the Wednesday Classic (plus Weirdo Wednesday).

    In addition to the usual, the AMC at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, they have comedy You're Dating a Narcissist!, with Marisa Tomei as a college professor who wrote a book with the film's title who has a complete freak-out when her daughter says she's engaged to a man she's only known for six weeks.
Might go for Pale Flower Friday night and see just how much more Shinoda I'm up for that weekend, before trying to catch They Will Kill You, She Dances, Alpha, Mirrors No. 3, and A Magnificent Life, maybe The Mountain and The Cameraman (which I feel like I've seen but can't find a log for). Haven't caught Project Hail Mary yet, either. It will probably be a downright nutty week for my Letterboxd page because that's a lot before Mario and The Drama eat screens!

Friday, March 20, 2026

Next Week in Tickets: Films playing Boston 20 March 2026 - 26 March 2026

Four or five film festivals this weekend! And some (kind of) play nice with each other!
  • The Boston Underground Film Festival continues at The Brattle Theatre (with Friday and Saturday midnights at the Coolidge), including local shorts package "The Dunwich Horrors", Obsession, and Cramps! A Period Piece on Friday; "Animation Disorientation", "Die Laughing", Boorman and the Devil, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 2 (35mm), and The Devil's Rejects (35mm) on Saturday; and ending Sunday with "Death, Love, and Road Trips", "New England Esoterica", CAMP, Saccharine, and The Furious.

    After that, the Brattle downshifts a bit with a double feature of Paddington & Paddington 2 on Monday & Tuesday, the Ralph Bashki version of Lord of the Rings for Tolkien Reading Day on Wednesday, and Only Lovers Left Alive on Thursday.
  • The Somerville Theatre hosts Irish Film Festival Boston on Friday & Saturday evenings - their first regular festival since 2019! - with Irish-language crime thriller Báite on Friday, while Saturday has Beat the Lotto with director Ross Whitaker on hand for a Q&A and Christy later on. There's a final screening of The Napa Boys on Monday, with cast member Mike Mitchell on-hand to introduce the film, by Ciclismo Classico Bike Travel Film Fest on Tuesday, Sideways on 35mm as the Wednesday Feel Good Film, and the Mellow Climbing film set on Thursday.

    The Capitol Theatre opens Sirât, brings back One Battle After Another, and plays Double Indemnity for Capitol Classics on Friday.
  • There's a blockbuster-sized opening for Project Hail Mary, based on the Andy Weir novel, directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, and starring Ryan Gosling as a scientist who has been sent light-years from Earth to somehow find a way to counter a galactic wave of dying suns before it reaches ours, encountering an alien with the same mission. It's at the Coolidge (many shows on 70mm film), the Somerville, Fresh Pond, The Museum of Science (Omnimax Friday/Saturday evenings), Jordan's Furniture (Imax Friday-Sunday), West Newton, CinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema & XL), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay (including Imax Xenon & Dolby Cinema), Assembly Row (including Imax Laser & Dolby Cinema), Arsenal Yards (including CWX), and Chestnut Hill.

    Not quite a blockbuster is Ready or Not: Here I Come, which picks up in the immediate aftermath of 2019's Ready or Not to pit Grace (Samara Weaving) and her previously-unmentioned sister (Kathryn Newton) against a new wave of super-wealthy folks who have sold their souls, featuring Elijah Wood, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Nestor Carbonell, and David Cronenberg. It plays Fresh Pond, CiinemaSalem, Boston Common (including Dolby Cinema), Causeway Street, Kendall Square, the Seaport (including Dolby Atmos), South Bay, Assembly Row (including Dolby Cinema), and Arsenal Yards.

    The Pout-Pout Fish is an unusually wide opening for a Viva Kids animation, with Nick Offerman and Jordin Sparks voicing a pair of mismatched sea creatures looking to save their home. It's at Fresh Pond, Boston Common, South Bay, and Assembly Row.

    Tow opens at Boston Common and the Dedham Community Theatre, with Rose Byrne as an unhoused woman who has to fight a predatory tow truck company when the bill for her car being removed spirals over $20,000. A lot of interesting folks in the supporting cast.

    Indie thriller Wardriver only gets two showtimes at Apple Fresh Pond, Saturday & Sunday at 6pm. Boston Common has 40th anniversary shows of Rad on Sunday & Tuesday. There's a mystery (horror) preview at Boston Common, Causeway Street, the Seaport, South Bay, and Assembly Row on Monday. Concert film Bring Me the Horizon: L.I.V.E. in São Paulo plays Boston Common on Wednesday.
  • In addition to a 70mm print of Project Hail Mary The Coolidge Corner Theatre bring back Oscar winners Sinners and One Battle After Another, and also opens Best Documentary Feature winner Mr. Nobody Against Putin, albeit in the smallest room and not in the 7pm slot. They also open another documentary, André Is an Idiot, which follows advertising executive André Ricciardi as he attempts to find a way to die happy with colon cancer that probably could have been dealt with had he gotten a colonoscopy; there's a special "Panorama" presentation with filmmaker Tony Benna on-hand Sunday afternoon.

    BUFF takes over the midnight slots this weekend with the "I Hate It Here" shorts package and Exorcist II: The Heretic on both Friday and Saturday. They also have kids' shows of Finding Nemo on Saturday & Sunday mornings; Sunday also has Goethe-Institut presenting the new film by Christian Petzold, Mirrors No. 3, and a marathon of the Lord of the Rings films (they're doing this for three weeks, with the 22nd and 29th sold out but tickets still available for 5 April). Two special presentations on Tuesday appear to be sold out: A "Science on Screen" presentation of Best in Show with Harvard's Canine Brains Project leader Erin Hecht, and a preview of PBS Documentary Henry David Thoreau. Wednesday has Dee Rees's Mudbound for "Calling the Shots", and Thursday has a 35mm print of Tank Girl for the "Cult Classics" show.
  • The two big Indian movies for Eid al-Fitr opened Wednesday, with Hindi-language action epic Dhurandhar The Revenge (filmed alongside last year's Dhurandhar playing Apple Fresh Pond, Boston Common, and Causeway Street and Telugu-langauge action-comedy Ustaad Bhagat Singh playing Fresh Pond and Causeway Street.

    Thai romantic comedy Food Truck: Stolen Love… and Moo Deng opens at Boston Common and Causeway Street, with Mario Maurer playing a TikTok star whose friends say they spotted a kid who looks just like him with his Korean ex-girlfriend, with the efforts to get to the bottom of this somehow leading to the kid stowing away in the truck and also accidentally abducting an internet-famous baby hippopotamus.

    Korean film The King's Warden sticks around for a few scattered showings at Causeway Street.
  • The Harvard Film Archive repeats their "The Lady and the Typewriter" movies, this time with The Hudsucker Proxy at 7pm Friday, His Girl Friday at 9pm Friday, and Meet John Doe at 7pm Saturday. Sunday's "Complete Stanley Kubrick" show is a sort of what-if situation, with Marlon Brando's One-Eyed Jacks originally intended for Kubrick to direct. Monday's screening of A Clockwork Orange is sold out, but tickets may be released if there are no-shows. Everything this weekend is on 35mm film.
  • The Seaport Alamo has episodes 13-15 of Twin Peaks: The Return on Saturday, a "Book Club" screening of Project Hail Mary on Saturday afternoon, wraps the weekly screenings of the Extended Editions of Lord of the Rings with The Return of the King on Sunday. They screen graphic novel adaptation Paying for It Sunday & Thursday evenings, Melancholia Monday & Tuesday, Daisies on Monday, and have both an early access show of Forbidden Fruits and an AGFADrome "Mystery Voyage" 1990s Hong Kong classic (my guess, based on the description, is Stephen Chow's The God of Cookery).
  • The Regent Theatre has music documentary A Man Called Hurt on Monday, playing as part of a benefit for the Mississippi John Hurt Foundation, with a number of the musicians featured in the film playing on-stage beforehand.
  • The Museum of Fine Arts has Fatih Akin's Amrum on Friday evening to open the Boston Turkish Film Festival, with more over the next two weekends. The Turner and Constable Exhibition on Screen plays Sunday afternoon.
  • Landmark Kendall Square has From Up on Poppy Hill for the Studio Ghibli Retro Replay on Tuesday, and an "Directors in Focus" screening of Martin Scorsese's The Departed on Wednesday. They're also the last holdouts showing the Oscar-nominated shorts (Animation & Live Action) after the awards.
  • Movies at MIT lists My Neighbor Totoro Friday & Saturday night; not sure if non-MIT folks are still welcome and if they want an email beforehand.
  • Boston Jewish Film begins an Israeli Film Series at their new parent organization JCC Greater Boston in Newton, with The Property on Sundayand Nina Is an Athlete on Tuesday.
  • Last weekend that The Boston Baltic Film Festival has movies available to stream (those go down after the 23rd).
  • The Lexington Venue has EPiC (Friday to Sunday plus Thursday), It Was Just an Accident (Friday to Sunday plus a movie-club screening on Wednesday), Mr. Nobody Against Putin, (Friday to Sunday plus Thursday), Sirât (Friday to Sunday and Tuesday/Wednesday), Father Mother Sister Brother (Saturday/Sunday/Tuesday/Wednesday). There's a free screening of The League of Gentlemen Saturday morning, All That's Left of You on Tuesday, and The Voice of Hind Rajab on Wednesday.

    The West Newton Cinema hosts the Lois Weber Film Festival this weekend, celebrating over a century of women in film with Weber's 1921 film The Blot on Friday night (Jeff Rapsis on the organ), Riot in Bloom Saturday evening, and the world premiere of Punkies Sunday afternoon, with various shorts programs, panels, and formal events. They also open Project Hail Mary, reopen Sentimental Value, and hold over Reminders of Him, The President's Cake, Hoppers, Pillion, Marty Supreme, and Hamnet. Cosmic Coda plays Wednesday and Minari plays Thursday afternoon.

    The Dedham Community Theatre opens Tow and holds over EPiC.

    Cinema Salem plays Project Hail Mary, Ready or Not Here I Come, Hoppers, and The Bride! from Friday to Monday. The Spooky Picture Show hosts Tom Savini's Night of the Living Dead on Saturday, there's a Whodunit Watch Party on Sunday, and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde '31 is the Wednesday Classic, with Weirdo Wednesday next door.

    Out at the Liberty Tree Mall in Danvers, they have late shows of Vampires of the Velvet Lounge, which stars Mena Suvari and Dichen Lachman in a movie about vampires looking for vampire hunters on dating apps, and the "with/and…" section of the cast includes the likes of Stephen Dorff, Tyrese Gibson, Rosa Salazar, and Tom Berenger.
I will mostly be living at the Brattle for BUFF this weekend, but decamping to Davis Square when Irish FIlm Festival Boston is going on (it works out well; I'll see Obsession when it releases wide, tend to skip movies-about-movies, and haven't much interest in the Bill Mosely visit). The work week will probably feature Project Hail Mary in 70, the AGFADrome show, and probably Ready or Not 2 and catching The Bride! before it leaves. Probably enough updates to my Letterboxd page to make up for all that baseball and travel!