News

November 7, 2022
Wanda (Barbara Loden, 1970, 102 mins) New print! A Rust Belt divorcée drifts into a road trip with a bank robber in a drama written by, directed by, and starring Barbara Loden. Shot in Pennsylvania and Connecticut, this landmark of American independent cinema won Best Foreign Film at the Venice...
October 31, 2022
Grand Illusion (Jean Renoir, 1937, 113 mins) French officers attempt to free themselves from World War I prison camps in what Janet Maslin called "one of the most haunting of all war films" and Jonathan Rosenbaum cited as "one of the key humanist expressions to be found in movies: sad, funny,...
October 24, 2022
Losing Ground (Kathleen Collins, 1982, 86 mins) 35mm preservation premiere with star Seret Scott and film scholar Nzingha Kendall in person! An academic and an artist leave New York for a summer in the country, where their relationship is tested by professional rivalry and romantic jealousy. "...
Hans Frei
October 18, 2022
The upcoming YDS conference Generous Orthodoxy: Hans Frei and the Future of Theology and the centenary of Frei's birth put focus on the Hans Frei Papers held at the Divinity Library. Twelve linear feet of papers document the last two decades of Frei's professional career in a thorough way....
October 17, 2022
A Streetcar Named Desire (Elia Kazan, 1951, 125 mins) New print! This classic screens in honor of the 75th anniversary of the Tennessee Williams play's 1947 world premiere at New Haven's Shubert Theater. Marlon Brando, Kim Hunter, and Karl Malden reprise their stage roles, with Vivien Leigh joining...
Willie Ruff (photo by Michael Marsland)
October 14, 2022
Jazz musician Willie Ruff, founding director of the Duke Ellington Fellowship Program at Yale, returns to campus on Oct. 14 to celebrate the program’s 50th anniversary. Through the Ellington program, dubbed The Conservatory without Walls, renowned musicians mentored and performed with young people...
October 10, 2022
Pariah (Dee Rees, 2011, 86 mins) A Brooklyn teenager comes out and comes of age in the debut feature film from writer/director Dee Rees. Lou Lumenick called the Sundance hit "a look at the joy, confusion, and heartbreak of adolescence that's both culture- and locale-specific and, at the same time,...

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