Silent Running
Visual effects wizard Douglas Trumbull showcases his frequently breathtaking model work in this science-fiction cult classic.
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.
Visual effects wizard Douglas Trumbull showcases his frequently breathtaking model work in this science-fiction cult classic.
This two-part professional development workshop series teaches educators, therapists, counselors, and parents how to use puppets when working with neurodiverse children, including those on the autism spectrum. July 29 and August 12.
This feminist essay classic was five years in the making, with contributions from hundreds of women and over 200 Australian films. It is an investigation and celebration of women's work from colonial settlement to the present, a story told by women: Aboriginals, migrants, convicts, and a variety of others.
Four women conspire to sabotage the research program of Utero, a multinational firm engaged in reproductive engineering, in On Guard, screening with two classic Australian short films.
Set over 24 hours, this low-budget, independent comedy about love, friendship, share-houses, and university bureaucracy sizzles with sharp dialogue and radiant performances from its young leads.
Emilio Delgado, who passed away earlier this year, delighted audiences for more than 44 years on Sesame Street as Luis Rodriguez. Join us for a look back at some of his most indelible moments.
In this 60-minute class, students will build puppets, learn about theater and perform their own original stories.
Celebrated visual artist Tracey Moffatt’s only feature film is a triptych of strange ghost stories rendered with a vivid staginess and dark humor, screening July 30 and August 13.
Paul Thomas Anderson's acclaimed misfit romance plays at MoMI on 70mm August 12–September 3.
In this 60-minute class, students will build puppets, learn about theater and perform their own original stories.
Exposed to a new, post-innocent world, eight-year-old Celia attempts to navigate fantasy and reality—a nuanced coming-of-age tale, with mythological elements, set against the backdrop of 1950s conservatism.
The ninth film from Quentin Tarantino revisits Los Angeles at the tail end of the 1960s, when the Hollywood studio system was fading and hippie subversion was ascendant.