A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
Sondheim's bawdy Broadway hit became a smash movie adaptation by Richard Lester and starring Zero Mostel.
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.
Sondheim's bawdy Broadway hit became a smash movie adaptation by Richard Lester and starring Zero Mostel.
The extraordinary and tuneful 2022 Best Animated Feature Oscar winner plays at MoMI April 15–21!
A meditation of the fragility of time and beauty that served as a triumphant return to filmmaking for Alain Resnais.
This chronological journey from Jim Henson’s first show to The Muppet Show features material you won’t see anywhere else. Hosted by Craig Shemin, President of The Jim Henson Legacy—April 16 and 22.
Sidney Lumet's sumptuous, star-studded adaptation of Agatha Christie's classic detective novel takes full advantage of its interwar period setting, luxuriating in the evocation of Old World decadence in its waning years.
Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure is a perceptive, sardonic portrait of a husband and father’s response to a potentially devastating avalanche at a ski resort where he is vacationing with his family.
From writer-director Paul Schrader comes a gripping thriller about a crisis of faith that is at once personal, political, and planetary. Showing April 17 as part of Science on Screen: Extinction and Otherwise.
A selection of short films and excerpts from feature films that won awards at the inaugural Marvels of Media Awards
Tim Burton proved he was a fitting choice to finally direct the long-anticipated screen adaptation of Sondheim’s masterpiece, the musical that shocked Broadway audiences in 1977. Screening April 23 & 24.
Filmed over three years, Democrats is a steadfast chronicle of the drafting of Zimbabwe’s first democratic constitution.
Sondheim and writer James Lapine’s brilliant fractured fairy tale is given the grand-scale Disney treatment, yet miraculously without sacrificing its sophistication, cleverness, or melancholy.
More than six years after the premiere of her widely acclaimed Democrats, Camilla Nielsson returns to Zimbabwe, which is at the crossroads of a fair election.