Scarlet Street
Fritz Lang’s jolt of pure fatalism featured Edward G. Robinson in a career-best lead performance as a browbeaten, retired Greenwich Village cashier and amateur painter who falls into a trap set by a shady local girl.
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.
Fritz Lang’s jolt of pure fatalism featured Edward G. Robinson in a career-best lead performance as a browbeaten, retired Greenwich Village cashier and amateur painter who falls into a trap set by a shady local girl.
The funniest movie ever made about the experience of being snubbed for an Oscar stars Catherine O’Hara in one of her greatest screen roles as Marilyn Hack, who discovers that she has been tapped for a possible nomination. Screens 2/28 and 3/2.
Join Movie Trivia NYC at MoMI for an evening of Oscars trivia. Join with a team (maximum 6) or play solo for the chance to win MoMI membership, free tickets, and prizes from the gift shop.
Ivan Passer’s gripping neonoir gave John Heard the meatiest role of his career as Cutter, a broken-down Vietnam veteran determined to exact revenge for a young woman's death. Screens 2/28 and 3/1.
Free Access Mornings at MoMI are dedicated to families with children on the autism spectrum and give families an exclusive opportunity to explore exhibitions and participate in workshops that begin at 11:00 a.m. before public hours begin.
This spare and chilling entry in Val Lewton’s hallowed 1940s run of B horror movies stars a brilliant Boris Karloff as a struggling cab driver in 19th-century Edinburgh who helps procure bodies from freshly dug graves for a local doctor.
Fritz Lang’s jolt of pure fatalism featured Edward G. Robinson in a career-best lead performance as a browbeaten, retired Greenwich Village cashier and amateur painter who falls into a trap set by a shady local girl.
Ivan Passer’s gripping neonoir gave John Heard the meatiest role of his career as Cutter, a broken-down Vietnam veteran determined to exact revenge for a young woman's death. Screens 2/28 and 3/1.
Peter Bogdanovich closed out his most celebrated decade with an underappreciated gem, adapted from a novel by Paul Theroux, starring 1970s king Ben Gazzara in one of his most charming and complex star turns.
This spare and chilling entry in Val Lewton’s hallowed 1940s run of B horror movies stars a brilliant Boris Karloff as a struggling cab driver in 19th-century Edinburgh who helps procure bodies from freshly dug graves for a local doctor.
Peter Bogdanovich closed out his most celebrated decade with an underappreciated gem, adapted from a novel by Paul Theroux, starring 1970s king Ben Gazzara in one of his most charming and complex star turns.
The funniest movie ever made about the experience of being snubbed for an Oscar stars Catherine O’Hara in one of her greatest screen roles as Marilyn Hack, who discovers that she has been tapped for a possible nomination. Screens 2/28 and 3/2.