Opens Friday! Joaquin Phoenix in Mike Mills New Movie, C'mon C'mon.

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C'mon C'mon arrives on the big screen at the Playhouse this Friday! Mike Mills (20th Century Women, Beginners) new film with A24 is a must-see... parents will love this film, too!

‘There are no right or wrong answers.'

"So says Johnny, a patient, constantly curious radio journalist portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix in a gratifyingly mellow, unmannered turn in 'C’mon C’mon.'

"As the film opens, Johnny is in Detroit interviewing young people for a This American Life-adjacent project about children's’ feelings about their future. Actors often say that their craft is about listening, and 'C’mon C’mon' turns that art up to 11: While tweens and teens hold forth about their dreams, anxieties and angers about everything from their families to impending environmental doom, Phoenix’s Johnny listens intently, his boom mic keeping a discreet distance, his eyes fixed on subjects who seem to come alive under his attentive gaze.

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"That same energy comes into play days later, when Johnny travels to Los Angeles to visit his sister Viv (Gaby Hoffmann) and her 9-year-old son Jesse (Woody Norman). Jesse’s father has moved to Oakland, Calif., but is descending into one of his periodic bouts with bipolar disorder; Viv asks Johnny to look after Jesse while she tends to her ex, a sojourn that will eventually turn into an Oz-like journey to New York and New Orleans.

"Fans of Kenneth Lonergan’s bittersweet uncle-nephew dramedy 'You Can Count on Me' will recognize some similar thematic DNA in 'C’mon C’mon,' which was written and directed by Mike Mills. And, like that earlier film, this movie is less about the exploits of an adorable moppet and his worldly-wise older relative than the brother-sister relationship that hovers just around the edges. Johnny is entranced by Jesse, a precocious kid who listens to opera and whose wise-child asides would make J.D. Salinger proud. But inevitably Jesse acts like any impulsive, self-involved, outright bratty third-grader, at which point Viv must act as long-distance interpreter, which includes such 21st century concepts as how to do a proper repair after an argument.

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"In other words Johnny — who is unhappily single and mostly friendless — is learning another 21st century concept: how to 'adult.' And in a gentle, thoroughly present performance that feels light-years away from the histrionics of 'Joker' and other recent outings, Phoenix returns to the kind of unforced naturalism and slow-burn intensity that made him great in the first place. Newcomer Norman does an impressive job of handling Jesse’s hair-trigger emotional swirls, even if Mills has written the character into annoyingly adorable corners. The real dramatic core of 'C’mon C’mon' emerges in Johnny and Viv’s connection, which they are reestablishing after their mother’s death, alluded to in brief but vivid flashbacks. Filmed in moody, reflective black-and-white by Robbie Ryan, 'C’mon C’mon' is a purposeful, thoughtful film, its pensive quietude emphasized by occasional readings from essays by the filmmaker Kirsten Johnson and authors Jacqueline Rose and Claire Nivola.

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"Johnny’s tentative dip into family life artfully captures the tedium, terror and confounding ecstasy of parenthood, but it more eloquently conveys the pain and discovery involved in simply trying to do one’s best. Although Mills has structured his film along the classic lines of a hero’s quest, it’s really about sitting with unresolved feelings and letting conflict, ambivalence and confusion, in all their messiness, do their necessary work. Will that work end with a repair? Or more repression? There are no right or wrong answers. But 'C’mon C’mon' suggests that the questions themselves are worth asking."

From Critic Anne Hornaday - The Washington Post

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Watch the trailer for C'mon C'mon here.

NR

In director Mike Mills latest award winning movie a radio journalist embarks on a cross-country trip with his young nephew.

Johnny (Joaquin Phoenix) and his young nephew (Woody Norman) forge a tenuous but transformational relationship when they are unexpectedly thrown together in this delicate and deeply moving story about the connections between adults and children, the past and the future, from writer-director Mike Mills.

No screenings currently scheduled.

G

Buckle up for an adventure, because "Winter Starts Now," Warren Miller's 72nd annual ski film.

Warren Miller is back with the 72nd annual film “Winter Starts Now,” featuring the best snowriding from the mom and pop ski hill down the street to the highest peak on the horizon.

No screenings currently scheduled.

NR

Director Terrance Odette in attendance for Q&A

By the late 1960s, people living in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada with a direct connection to Racalmuto, Sicily, outnumbered the total population of Racalmuto. Since 1988, The Fratellanza Racalmutese Club of Hamilton have celebrated Festa Maria SS. Del Monte, mirroring the festival held annually in Racalmuto for over 500 years.

No screenings currently scheduled.

R

A human soldier is sent from 2029 to 1984 to stop an almost indestructible cyborg killing machine, sent from the same year, which has been programmed to execute a young woman whose unborn son is the key to humanity's future salvation.

Disguised as a human, a cyborg assassin known as a Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) travels from 2029 to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton). Sent to protect Sarah is Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn), who divulges the coming of Skynet, an artificial intelligence system that will spark a nuclear holocaust.

No screenings currently scheduled.

A young man inadvertently breaks three important rules concerning his new pet and unleashes a horde of malevolently mischievous monsters on a small town.

Presented from an original 35mm print! Hosted and introduced by Cinema Time Capsule!

No screenings currently scheduled.

14A

"'No Time to Die' is a terrific movie: an up-to-the-minute, down-to-the-wire James Bond thriller with a satisfying neo-classical edge." - Variety

In NO TIME TO DIE, Bond has left active service and is enjoying a tranquil life in Jamaica. His peace is short-lived when his old friend Felix Leiter from the CIA turns up asking for help. The mission to rescue a kidnapped scientist turns out to be far more treacherous than expected, leading Bond onto the trail of a mysterious villain armed with dangerous new technology.

No screenings currently scheduled.

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