Tut’s Fever Movie Palace
Tut’s Fever is a working movie theater and art installation created by Red Grooms and Lysiane Luong, an homage to the ornate, exotic picture palaces of the 1920s
You can buy admission tickets online. Pick a date and time to visit the Museum. Timed-entry slots are released generally one-month prior. All sales are final and payments cannot be refunded.
Tut’s Fever is a working movie theater and art installation created by Red Grooms and Lysiane Luong, an homage to the ornate, exotic picture palaces of the 1920s
The Museum's core exhibition immerses visitors in the creative and technical process of producing, promoting, and presenting films, television shows, and digital entertainment.
This dynamic experience explores Jim Henson’s groundbreaking work for film and television and his transformative impact on culture.
This exhibition explores the process of designing the fantastical characters for the Netflix series prequel to the 1982 film.
In his companion piece installation to The Underground Railroad, Jenkins further engages ideas about visibility, history, and power in moving-image portraits of the show’s background actors.
This new exhibition invites visitors of all ages to appreciate the painstaking work of stop-motion animation, with eight animation stations equipped with 2-D LAIKA character figures and environments that visitors can use to experiment with and create their own short films.
This new temporary exhibition explores the process of creating the story depicted in Chinonye Chukwu’s acclaimed 2022 feature Till, through storyboards created by Jesse Michael Owen.
The material on view in this new exhibition provides a glimpse into the process of bringing the story of Sarah Polley’s film Women Talking to the screen.
The gripping story of a young German soldier on the Western Front of World War I, based on the world renowned bestseller by Erich Maria Remarque.
Screening Eliane Raheb crafts a cinema of catharsis and explores the limitations of memory and recollection in this sprawling examination of her unreliable narrator’s past, present, and future.
The third feature from the Coen Brothers is a crackling, pitch-dark crime drama set in Prohibition-era America.
Join Museum of the Moving Image’s Teen Council for this immersive drop-in program to create an augmented reality moving image experience.
On Friday, 3/10, see David Lynch's most surreal and formally audacious feature film since Eraserhead, starring a brilliant Laura Dern.
On March 5, Michael Schulman, author of the new book Oscar Wars, joins us for a book signing and to introduce Todd Haynes's visionary masterpiece starring Julianne Moore.
The third feature from the Coen Brothers is a crackling, pitch-dark crime drama set in Prohibition-era America.
Join Movie Trivia NYC at MoMI for an evening of Oscars trivia, featuring a guest round from MoMI Editorial Director Michael Koresky.
This major exhibition brings the immersive, multisensory cinematic installations of visionary Spanish artist, filmmaker, and inventor José Val del Omar (1904–1982) to U.S. audiences for the first time, along with commissioned pieces by contemporary artists Sally Golding, Matt Spendlove, and Tim Cowlishaw; Duo Prismáticas; Esperanza Collado; and Colectivo Los Ingrávidos.
On the Saturday, March 11 screening of Donen and Kelly’s satirical look at Hollywood on the cusp of the sound era, film critic and author Charles Bramesco will introduce the film and sign copies of his new book, Colors of Film: The Story of Cinema in 50 Palettes.
On February 4 and 5, see encore screenings of Qiu Jiongjiong's hand-crafted masterwork, an homage to classical Chinese opera.
On Friday, 3/10, see David Lynch's most surreal and formally audacious feature film since Eraserhead, starring a brilliant Laura Dern.
On the Saturday, March 11 screening of Donen and Kelly’s satirical look at Hollywood on the cusp of the sound era, film critic and author Charles Bramesco will introduce the film and sign copies of his new book, Colors of Film: The Story of Cinema in 50 Palettes.
When he makes a series of high-stakes bets that could lead to the windfall of a lifetime, Howard Ratner must perform a precarious high-wire act, balancing business, family, and encroaching adversaries on all sides in his relentless pursuit of the ultimate win.
In connection with Ramadan and Women’s History Month, this community event focuses on women leaders and the many definitions of leadership including speaking up against injustices; taking care of each other and our communities; and creating film art with powerful messages.
When he makes a series of high-stakes bets that could lead to the windfall of a lifetime, Howard Ratner must perform a precarious high-wire act, balancing business, family, and encroaching adversaries on all sides in his relentless pursuit of the ultimate win.
On the Saturday, March 11 screening of Donen and Kelly’s satirical look at Hollywood on the cusp of the sound era, film critic and author Charles Bramesco will introduce the film and sign copies of his new book, Colors of Film: The Story of Cinema in 50 Palettes.
The Working on It program, which offers a lab-like environment for work-in-progress screenings, workshops, and discussions about the artistic process, is open to the public.
The Opening Night feature of this year's First Look festival is Babak Jalali's Sundance standout, about an immigrant named Donya, who can’t sleep and works in a fortune cookie factory in San Francisco. Get tickets now for Wednesday, 3/15!
The Working on It program, which offers a lab-like environment for work-in-progress screenings, workshops, and discussions about the artistic process, is open to the public.
On 3/16, see a selection of jury award–winning undergraduate student films from the Jonathan B. Murray Center for Documentary Journalism at the Missouri School of Journalism.
Hot-tempered and fiercely independent, Julia is a gearhead who thrives in hostile environments and turns every situation to her advantage.
Listorti’s gorgeously collaged film, shot on both 16mm and 35mm, invites viewers into the delicate work of preserving plants and celluloid, both of which are under threat of extinction and require practices of collection, inspection, and archiving.
The Working on It program, which offers a lab-like environment for work-in-progress screenings, workshops, and discussions about the artistic process, is open to the public.
The film has a throwback epic scale, spanning decades in its protagonist’s lives and set in some of the most beautiful—and unyielding—vistas on earth, and encompassing a full spectrum of emotions and experiences.
This tender and poetic love letter from daughter to mother expresses a complexity of feeling and affinity that only cinema might approach.
Select scenes from the two screenplays awarded the 2022 Sloan Student Prizes will be read by professional actors as part of this special program, produced and directed by Mêlisa Annis, and followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers.
Terra Jean Long's film explores how a landscape has been shaped by ultimately fruitless economic pursuits and a desire for comfort and stability.
By the southern bank of the river demarcating the official border between Mauritania and Senegal, filmmaker Diago convenes an open-air assembly of Black Mauritanians who, in 1989, were expelled from their homeland.
Woven with coolly framed images and carefully layered sounds, A Common Sequence is a richly generative, open-ended experience.
Mohanad Yaqubi offers a fascinating, eclectic, and inspiring survey of cross-continental solidarity using a voluminous collection of pro-Palestinian work discovered in Japan.
Warped records of unexplained disappearances and lost transmissions, abandoned projects and utopian fantasies, echoing in one place then another, moving through time. Fermented ephemera unearthed from the roots of American decay.
Thirty-five-year-old Aga starts to look after her teenage brother, Milosz, after their mother’s death. While caring for him with the dedication and responsibility of a parent, she also seeks to become his legal guardian.
Beginning with a recitation of Brecht and Weill’s “The Drowned Girl,” here is a sequence of odes, melancholy and ecstatic, to the wonderful difficulty of currently inhabiting this world in these bodies
Shaw and Kamalakanthan’s film is at once a depressingly accurate evocation of the city’s first few months of lockdown and an endearing display of cinematic ingenuity under extreme duress.
With Daphne Xu and Sophy Romvari in person Huahua’s Dazzling World and Its Myriad Temptations Dir. Daphne Xu. China/Canada/U.S. 2022, 82 mins. In Mandarin with English subtitles. In Xiong’an New Area, a government-planned city just ...
Fukada’s film constitutes a sparkling revival of the emotional currents of classical Japanese melodrama.
Governed by a musical logic, Solnicki’s film is a sensual and synesthetic delight that culminates in one of current cinema’s most eloquent needle drops.
The opposite of a detached portrait, Three Women freely engages and communes with the village, capturing the warmth of the place and its people.
Returning to a New York screen with his first film in nearly four years, Robert Beavers will present the North American premiere of his magisterial The Sparrow Dream, screening in context with his previous five films.
Every year the Academy of Arts (AVU) in Prague receives hundreds of applications. Art Talent Show observes every step in the arduous process for three studios.
Playing 3/19, the latest by the Dardenne Brothers is an angry, intimate account of the harrowing odyssey of two African refugees, a young boy and teenage girl, who have come to care for each other like brother and sister.
Ozu's quiet and haunting masterpiece, following an aging couple on a journey from their rural village to visit their married children in bustling postwar Tokyo, screens 3/24 and 3/26.
Celebrate Kermit the Frog's 60+ years on the scene with a compilation of Jim Henson’s most memorable performances as Kermit. Join us 3/25 and 3/26, both events hosted by Craig Shemin, President of The Jim Henson Legacy.
The films of Ewelina Rosińska are ecstatically impressionistic diary works whose rhythmic montages create expansive connections between sounds and images that fuse disparate spaces, feelings, and moments in time.
A selection of shorts from this year's First Look 2023.
Shaw and Kamalakanthan’s film is at once a depressingly accurate evocation of the city’s first few months of lockdown and an endearing display of cinematic ingenuity under extreme duress.
A selection of shorts from First Look 2023, including films by Lucrecia Martel, Robert Greene, Anthony Ing, and others.
Celebrate Kermit the Frog's 60+ years on the scene with a compilation of Jim Henson’s most memorable performances as Kermit. Join us 3/25 and 3/26, both events hosted by Craig Shemin, President of The Jim Henson Legacy.
This tender and poetic love letter from daughter to mother expresses a complexity of feeling and affinity that only cinema might approach.
The opposite of a detached portrait, Three Women freely engages and communes with the village, capturing the warmth of the place and its people.
Ozu's quiet and haunting masterpiece, following an aging couple on a journey from their rural village to visit their married children in bustling postwar Tokyo, screens 3/24 and 3/26.
Every year the Academy of Arts (AVU) in Prague receives hundreds of applications. Art Talent Show observes every step in the arduous process for three studios.
Five award-winning works from this year’s Marvels of Media are featured in this exhibition.
On Thursday, March 30, celebrate the winners of this year’s Marvels of Media Awards at this festive evening featuring an awards ceremony and reception, which also marks the opening of the Marvels of Media Exhibition.
On 3/31 and 4/9, see Chantal Akerman’s magnum opus, Sight & Sound's recently crowned greatest film ever made.
Though once denounced among tokusatsu fans who prefer more serious kaiju fare, this fun adventure, in which the King of the Monsters reaches his peak as campy saurian superhero, has gained a strong cult following in recent years.