
Go: Summer of ’99 Series with Chess Club x Stand Up Comedy
- Thu, Jun 26
Run Time: 113 min.
TICKETS $15
Doors 6:30 p.m.; Event 7 p.m.
Select Showtime to Purchase Tickets
Come early for magazines + merch!
Click here to learn more about accessibility at the Tomorrow Theater.
THE EXPERIENCE
Welcome to the SUMMER OF ’99, before smartphones, social media, and streaming. Pre-doom scroll, bed rot, and AI ubiquity. 1999 wasn’t just another year—it was THE year. The one that redefined cinema. Think: Go, All About My Mother, The Talented Mr. Ripley, Election, Three Kings, and eXistenZ. It was a launching pad for today’s biggest filmmakers, a breakout year for indie film, and a cultural turning point that echoes today. To honor this watershed moment in movie history, we’re teaming up with art + magazine space Chess Club and avant garde fashion boutique Stand Up Comedy to curate a season-long celebration featuring these enduring titles. The films above not only connect shared sensibilities, but reflect the language, skepticism, rage, humor, and romance that shaped a worldview. Leave your phone behind and hold onto your ticket stubs, because this is the SUMMER OF ’99.
ON SCREEN: Go
1999. Directed by Doug Liman. Runtime: 1 hour 42 minutes. Rated R.
Letterboxd review by k., April 25, 2025: “world’s most evil miata in the last act”
Grocery store clerk Simon occasionally sells drugs from his cash register at work, so when soap opera actors Adam and Zack come looking for Ecstasy on a quiet Christmas Eve, they are surprised to find Ronna covering his shift. Desperate for money, Ronna decides to become an impromptu drug dealer, unaware that Adam and Zack are secretly working for obsessed narcotics officer Burke.
HOSTED BY: Chess Club
Chess Club (est. 2023) is a living index of global imaginations. It supplies humans with texts and tools for creative practices.
HOSTED BY: Stand Up Comedy
Stand Up Comedy (est. 2007) is located at 511 SW Broadway, and features clothes, objects, and print. It’s an uncomprehensive home with no fixed identity, for ideas that reflect an evolving attitude on societal norms and styles. The featured designers and artists use small swords to engage with more dominant forces, often exploring one discipline to better understand another. The store provides exposition for their narratives, proposing a de-centering of established order on how to look and what to see.
Note: We do not generally provide advisories about subject matter or potentially triggering content in films, and films exhibited don’t necessarily reflect the views of PAM CUT, the Tomorrow Theater, or the Portland Art Museum. In addition to the synopses, trailers and other links on our website, further information about content and age-appropriateness for specific films can be found on sites like Common Sense Media, IMDb and DoesTheDogDie.com.