Select your showtime below.
OPENS 11/11 |
• General Admission – $11.00
• Student / Senior – $9.50
• Members – $7.50
General Admission, Student / Senior & Members tickets are available online AND at the door.
ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS. NO EXCHANGES. NO EXCEPTIONS.
*ALL FILMS START EXACTLY AT THE LISTED TIME*
PLEASE NOTE: This event has passed.
The lives of three women intersect in small-town America, where each is imperfectly blazing a trail.
This look at three women striving to forge their own paths amidst the wide-open plains of the American Northwest follows a lawyer (Laura Dern) who finds herself contending with both office sexism and a hostage situation; a wife and mother (Michelle Williams) whose determination to build her dream home puts her at odds with the men in her life; and a young law student (Kristen Stewart) who forms an ambiguous bond with a lonely ranch hand (Lily Gladstone). As their stories intersect in subtle but powerful ways, a portrait emerges of flawed, but strong-willed individuals in the process of defining themselves.
• General Admission – $11.00
• Student / Senior – $9.50
• Members – $7.50
General Admission, Student / Senior & Members tickets are available online AND at the door.
ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS. NO EXCHANGES. NO EXCEPTIONS.
*ALL FILMS START EXACTLY AT THE LISTED TIME*
“You know a filmmaker is in supreme command of her medium when what she creates feels less like a movie than a candid glimpse of ongoing lives that will continue to play out long after the lights have come on.”
– WASHINGTON POST
“As with Reichardt’s more streamlined miniatures, regional detail accounts for much of the film’s lingering resonance, as her characters are molded by (and, in some cases, rail against) the landscape they inhabit.”
– VARIETY
“Reichardt has crafted another deeply felt and beautifully ambiguous meditation on contemporary life in the far corners of the American heartland.”
– SCREEN INTERNATIONAL
“Certain Women is a kind, loving, and deeply moving portrait of big-hearted small-town people.”
– VILLAGE VOICE