Keoma
Enzo G. Castellari (director of the original The Inglorious Bastards) considered this sweeping revenge drama to be his best work.
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.
Enzo G. Castellari (director of the original The Inglorious Bastards) considered this sweeping revenge drama to be his best work.
MoMI's Teen Council is excited to present the annual Teen Film Festival on March 4, 2022, including short films created by teens from the boroughs of New York City.
In Mario Van Peebles’s freewheeling revisionist western, five Buffalo Soldiers return to the States from the Spanish-American War with gold in their sacks and everyone from lawmen, the Army, and the KKK on their tail.
On March 9, popular and prolific deepfake creators “Myster Giraffe,” “the Fakening,” and Chris Umé join us for a free online event.
Sergei Loznitsa's acclaimed and instantly influential documentary chronicles the civil uprising that toppled the government of Ukrainian president Victor Yanukovich.
Beautifully photographed in thick jungle terrain, Chantal Akerman's adaptation synthesizes the long-take formalism of her earlier work with the spontaneity of her documentaries.
On March 12 and 25, join us for a mind-blowing collection of shorts, crazy commercials, and other rarities from the Henson vault.
In this striking documentary, Vitaly Mansky returns to footage he shot while making a movie about Russian presidential candidate Vladimir Putin, questioning his own participation, and looking for clues to explain what would happen in the ensuing two decades of Putin’s regime.
Ukrainian master filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa's searing and surreal film screens again at MoMI. All proceeds from this screening will be donated to the International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk, and funds will go towards filmmakers in Ukraine.
Two superb works of observational storytelling, including the 2021 Oscar Nominee for Best Documentary Short from Elizabeth and Gulistan Mirzaei
Survivors, observers, and expert government officials recount the 1971 uprising at the Attica Correctional Facility in this new in-depth documentary from Emmy-winning director Stanley Nelson and producer/co-director Traci A. Curry
From March 16–18, the Museum functions as a laboratory for explorations of the creative process.