Tickets $25. Seattle-based musician Corey J. Brewer (who performed The Shining Forwards and Backwards at the Tomorrow in December) is back with a new live score performed over the 1927 silent horror comedy film The Cat and the Canary. Regarded as one of the most important and influential films in the early history of American genre cinema, The Cat and the Canary perfected the ‘old dark house’ formula and set the stage for the Universal horror cycle of the 1930s.
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Tickets $15. Step into a world of werewolf terror and love with director Jacqueline Castel’s new horror film My Animal. Local character makeup artist Christina Kortum will give a peak behind the curtain of the fantastical world of horror makeup.
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Tickets $15. Happy Birthday to the King of the Monsters! The big 7-0. Celebrate the international icon’s day with a screening of his feature debut. Local VFX supervisor and production designer Joshua Cox will give a talk before the film, in honor of Godzilla’s recent VFX Oscar win.
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Tickets $15. Come dance around the maypole on the remote island of Summerisle with the original springtime horror film. We promise there are no bees.
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Tickets $15. Celebrate women directors’ contributions to horror with a screening of the nearly-lost-to-time film Hollywood 90028. Christina Hornisher’s sole feature film was given new life with a 4K restoration by Grindhouse Releasing in 2023. Local character makeup artist Christina Kortum will give a crash course in horror makeup before the film.
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Tickets $15. Gone West PDX will transport us somewhere that’s green with a pop-up plant sale before a screening of this musical tale of murderous foliage.
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Tickets $15. From the visionary mind of Ari Aster comes a dread-soaked cinematic fairy tale where a world of darkness unfolds in broad daylight. Get there early to make your own flower crown before the screening!
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Tickets $15. Join us after to the film for a moderated conversation between I Saw the TV Glow Director Jane Schoenbrun and PAM CUT Executive Director Amy Dotson. Teenager Owen is just trying to make it through life in the suburbs when his classmate introduces him to a mysterious late-night TV show—a vision of a supernatural world beneath their own. In the pale glow of the television, Owen’s view of reality begins to crack. AV Club writes that the second feature from director Schoenbrun (We’re All Going To The World’s Fair) is “a remarkable portrait of pop-culture obsession—how it can unite us, change us, and ripple down through our entire lives in ways both uplifting and unsettling.”
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Tickets $15. UNICORN WARS: For ages, teddy bears have been locked in an ancestral war against their sworn enemy, the unicorns, with the promise that victory will complete the prophecy and usher in a new era. Aggressive, confident teddy bear Bluet and his sensitive, withdrawn brother Tubby could not be more different. As the rigors and humiliation of teddy bear bootcamp turn to the psychedelic horrors of a combat tour in the Magic Forest, their complicated history and increasingly strained relationship will come to determine the fate of the entire war.
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Tickets $15. Based on Charles Busch’s play by the same name, you can’t have more fun if you tried with this wild parody of 1950s’ psychodramas, 1960s’ beach movies, and 1980s’ slasher films all wrapped up into one.
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