In Memoriam 2025

A year-end series revisiting films by artists we’re taking a moment to remember, bringing their work back to the screen in appreciation of what they gave to cinema.
THE LIMEY (1999)

Remembering Terence Stamp
Oscar® nominees Terence Stamp (Billy Budd), Lesley Ann Warren (Victor/Victoria), and Peter Fonda (Ulee’s Gold) team up with the director of Out of Sight and Sex, Lies, and Videotape for this critically acclaimed thriller that Newsday called “a lean and mean treat for savvy action lovers.” British ex-con Wilson (Stamp) arrives in Los Angeles to investigate the mystery of his daughter’s “accidental” death. His prime suspect, the wealthy, heavily guarded music promoter Terry Valentine (Fonda), is no easy target. Propelled into an increasingly brutal search for truth, Wilson, with single mindedness and terrifying precision, moves unstoppably toward revenge. Get tickets to The Limey (1999)
REDS (1981)

Remembering Diane Keaton
Warren Beatty's award-winning epic mixes drama and interviews with major social radicals of the period, telling the story of the love affair between activists Louise Bryant and John Reed. Set against the backdrop of the tumultuous start of the twentieth century, the two journalists' on-again off-again romance is punctuated by the outbreak of WWI and the Bolshevik Revolution. Adapted from Reed's life and book "Ten Days That Shook the World," Keaton never shined so bright, stealing the film with her powerful performance. Get tickets to Reds (1981)
THE WAY WE WERE (1973)

Remembering Robert Redford
Screen legends Barbra Streisand and Robert Redford make movie magic as the captivating star-crossed lovers, Hubbell Gardiner and Katie Morosky. Theirs is a classic love story sparked by the attraction of opposites, played out against the backdrop of American life during times of foreign war, domestic prosperity and McCarthy-era paranoia in Hollywood. Winner of two 1974 Academy Awards® (Best Song "The Way We Were" and Best Score). Get tickets to The Way We Were (1973)
HARAKIRI (1962)

Remembering Tatsuya Nakadai
Following the collapse of his clan, an unemployed samurai (Tatsuya Nakadai) arrives at the manor of Lord Iyi, begging to be allowed to commit ritual suicide on the property. Iyi’s clansmen, believing the desperate ronin is merely angling for a new position, try to force his hand and get him to eviscerate himself—but they have underestimated his beliefs and his personal brand of honor. Get tickets to Harakiri (1962)
CLEARCUT (1991)

Remembering Graham Greene
4k Restoration
A white lawyer arrives in Northern Ontario to defend Indigenous activists who are blocking a logging company's clearcut of old growth on their land. A pacifist by nature, and perceiving himself as sympathetic to Indigenous concerns, the lawyer finds his values shaken when he is paired with an angry, rogue Indigenous activist named Arthur (Graham Greene, one of Canada's most towering and beloved actors). Arthur insists on kidnapping the head of the logging company in the hopes of teaching him the price of his destruction. Get tickets to Clearcut (1991)


