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Closing out our Bogie Fest series, celebrating the legendary performances of Hollywood icon Humprey Bogart, is Nicholas Ray’s 1950 masterpiece In A Lonely Place!

Bogart plays Dixon Steele, a Hollywood screenwriter with talent to spare and a temper he can’t quite control. When a young woman he briefly encounters turns up dead, suspicion settles on him almost immediately. And the unsettling part is…it doesn’t feel entirely misplaced.

What makes In a Lonely Place stand out in a filmography stacked full of classics is how it subverts expectations of the noir genre. Directed with a quiet intensity, letting silences stretch and emotions simmer, the violence occasionally erupts in very upsetting aways. And Bogart, often the embodiment of control, lets something fray at the edges here. His Dix is charming enough…until he’s not.

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There NEVER was a woman like Gilda!

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Our Edward Yang Retrospective closes with A Confucian Confusion, the director’s 1994 comedy.

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Up next in our Slumber Party Parties series is 13 Going on 30, Gary Winick’s 2004 fantasy romcom!

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Our Page to Screen series returns with Brooklyn, John Crowley’s heartfelt 2015 drama!

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Up next in our Edward Yang Retrospective is the director’s magisterial A Brighter Summer Day!

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Up next in our Classic Movie Nights series is The Adventures of Robin Hood, Michael Curtiz’s swashbuckling 1938 adventure!

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Our Classic Movie Nights series continues with The Philadelphia Story, George Cukor’s 1940 romantic comedy!

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John Cassavetes, who gave you ‘husbands’, ‘faces’, ‘shadows’, now adds to his list of intriguing characters…

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