Special Events and Series
We’re Moving!
Our lease was not renewed in 2025 and we have moved out of 1403 NE 50th. Plans are underway to relocate the cinema and we need your help to build an even grander Grand Illusion!
Now Playing
Coming Soon
Hundreds of Beavers
- Thursday, Feb 27, 2025, 8:00pm
- Thursday, Mar 27, 2025, 8:00pm
Screening location: Central Cinema – 1411 21st Ave, Seattle
It’s springtime, so OUT WITH THE COLD, IN WITH THE CHEW! Thirteenth encore screening!
Our friends at Central Cinema are generously helping us keep the beavers gnawing away while we search for a new home. 60% of ticket sales go to our relocation fund!
In this 19th century, supernatural winter epic, a drunken applejack salesman must go from zero to hero and become North America’s greatest fur trapper by defeating hundreds of beavers.
Created by Mike Cheslik and Ryland Brickson Cole Tews, the duo behind the modern cult hit LAKE MICHIGAN MONSTER (2018).
Named one of the 10 best movies of 2024 by Ty Burr of The Washington Post and Amy Nicholson of The Los Angeles Times.
“Starts strange, gets stranger, and yet remains resolutely adorable… embraces the defiant glee of art cinema and distills it into something so thoroughly pure and sincere that it is surely hard not to fall in love with it.” Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
“It’s sure to develop a significant cult following with its unique mix of silent-era slapstick, animation elements, theme-park-style critter costumes, and general air of inspired absurdity.” Dennis Harvey, Variety
“Steroidally swollen with gags and smarts.” Guy Maddin
Goodbye Horses: The Many Lives of Q Lazzarus (with director Eva Aridjis Fuentes)
- Monday, Mar 31, 2025, 7:00pm
Screening location: Here-After (21+) – alley entrance, 2505 1st Ave, Seattle
Join us for a very special screening of the brand new documentary about enigmatic singer Q Lazzarus, with director Eva Aridjis Fuentes joining for an in-person Q&A!
GOODBYE HORSES is an intimate journey through the life of Diane Luckey (aka Q Lazzarus), narrated through her own words, lyrics, and music. The exceptionally talented but vastly under-appreciated artist, who soundtracked a key moment in SILENCE OF THE LAMBS with her cult hit “Goodbye Horses”, reveals the reason behind her mysterious 25-year long disappearance and paves the way towards her re-emergence, with stories sad, funny, and moving.
Please note: Here-After is a 21 and over establishment. The entrance is via the alley in back of The Crocodile building. Get there early to order tasty beverages from the bar and delicious food from Tat’s Deli!
“A moving and honest triumph.” Stevie Chick, The Guardian
“A beautiful tribute to a woman who was larger than life and extremely talented, but who was also, I fear, ahead of her time.” Marya E. Gates, Cool People Have Feelings, Too and author of the book Cinema Her Way
Female Perversions – New 4K Restoration
- Tuesday, Apr 1, 2025, 7:00pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
April 1st marks our 21st anniversary as a volunteer-operated non-profit! Come celebrate with us at Northwest Film Forum as we screen a brand new restoration of an underseen gem from the ‘90s. A contender for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival, FEMALE PERVERSIONS marks the feature film debut of director and co-writer Susan Streitfeld as well as the American film debut of Tilda Swinton.
Eve Stephens (Swinton), an ambitious and successful trial lawyer in Los Angeles, is up for appointment as a judge while juggling her proclivity for meaningless sex and her relationship with her kleptomaniac sister Madelyn (Amy Madigan). As she navigates intimate relationships with both male and female partners, including geologist John (Clancy Brown) and psychiatrist Renee (Karen Sillas), Eve finds fantasy and reality converging, leading to a tense climax that will decide her personal and professional fate.
Streitfeld’s film is an inspired amalgamation of erotic drama and psychological thriller set within the cutthroat environs of the Los Angeles justice system and created by a majority-female crew. Newly restored from its original 35mm camera negative!
“Darkly funny… a heady, uncompromising film.” Michele Kort, The Advocate
“One of the most provocative films I’ve seen about the complications of being female in the modern world… This is the kind of movie you can’t stop thinking about.” Roger Ebert
“Female Perversions is the most intelligent, entertaining, provocative, absorbing, and, yes, feminist movie to grace our theatres in quite some time.” Marjorie Baumgarten, Austin Chronicle
Mogwai: If the Stars Had a Sound
- Sunday, Apr 13, 2025, 4:00pm
Screening location: Here-After (21+) – alley entrance, 2505 1st Ave, Seattle
Over 25 years and 10 studio albums—using powerful sonic force mixed with subtlety and grace—Mogwai have defined their own musical genre and built a cult following. IF THE STARS HAD A SOUND takes us on a journey from their very beginnings, in the mid 1990s, to creating their tenth studio album in their hometown of Glasgow in 2020. While at first seemingly impossible to make, they ultimately made history with it.
Please note: Here-After is a 21 and over establishment. The entrance is via the alley in back of The Crocodile building. Get there early to order tasty beverages from the bar and delicious food from Tat’s Deli!
“Glaswegian cacophonists Mogwai have earned the right to an adulatory documentary – and they get one here, directed by former photographer Antony Crook… it truly soars when capturing them live.” Phil Hoad, The Guardian
“The documentary presents a beautiful picture of community surrounding the band – and isn’t community what music is meant to create?” Jenny Nulf, Austin Chronicle
Night Moves – New Restoration
- Tuesday, Apr 15, 2025, 7:00pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
In remembrance of Gene Hackman. 50th anniversary! Newly restored!
Arthur Penn’s haunting neo-noir reimagines the hard-boiled detective film for the disillusioned, paranoid 1970s. In one of his greatest performances, Gene Hackman oozes world-weary cynicism as a private investigator whose search for an actress’s missing daughter (Melanie Griffith) leads him from the Hollywood Hills to the Florida Keys, where he is pulled into a sordid family drama and a sinister conspiracy he can hardly grasp. Bolstered by Alan Sharp’s genre-scrambling script and Dede Allen’s elliptical editing, the daringly labyrinthine NIGHT MOVES is a defining work of post-Watergate cinema—a silent scream of existential dread and moral decay whose legend has only grown with time.
“One of the best psychological thrillers in a long time… Gene Hackman [is] subtle and riveting.” Roger Ebert
“A truly enigmatic thriller and a key film of the ’70s… Essential viewing.” Time Out
The Elephant Man
- Monday, May 5, 2025, 7:00pm
- Tuesday, May 6, 2025, 7:00pm
- Monday, May 12, 2025, 7:00pm
- Tuesday, May 13, 2025, 7:00pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
45th anniversary! With this poignant second feature, David Lynch brought his atmospheric visual and sonic palette to a notorious true story set in Victorian England. When the London surgeon Frederick Treves (Anthony Hopkins) meets the freak-show performer John Merrick (John Hurt), who has severe skeletal and soft-tissue deformities, he assumes that he must be intellectually disabled as well. As the two men spend more time together, though, Merrick reveals the intelligence, gentle nature, and profound sense of dignity that lie beneath his shocking appearance, and he and Treves develop a friendship. Shot in gorgeous black and white and boasting a stellar supporting cast that includes Anne Bancroft, John Gielgud, and Wendy Hiller, THE ELEPHANT MAN was nominated for eight Academy Awards, cementing Lynch’s reputation as one of American cinema’s most visionary talents.
Part of To Live Is To Dream: A Northwest Tribute to David Lynch.
“I sometimes think that John Hurt’s performance in the title role of David Lynch’s sublime biography of Joseph Merrick (renamed John in the script) is the greatest piece of film acting I’ve ever seen… From the proto–Laura Palmer locket photo of Merrick’s mother that opens the film to its droning sound design and morbidly transcendent ending, [The Elephant Man] is like a template for three decades’ worth of brilliant variations.” Adam Nayman, The Ringer
“The Elephant Man is a very pleasurable surprise.” Pauline Kael
“This is a tale of redemption and transcendence, of the hunchback of London Hospital, of the noble phantom who wanted to go to the opera, of Beauty and the Beast. In Treves’ account, though, the Beast was a Beauty. In Lynch’s hands, so is this film.” Richard Corliss, TIME