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Great Hall will be closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays from September 10 - November 20, and December 3, 4, 10 and 11. 

The Eight Mountains

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Friday, Sep 29, 2023
7 p.m.

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Saturday, Sep 30, 2023
3 p.m.

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Saturday, Sep 30, 2023
7 p.m.

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Sunday, Oct 1, 2023
2 p.m.

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General admission $10.50
Senior, Students, and DIA Members $8.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

2022 | directed by Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch

Adapted from an award-winning novel by Italian writer Paolo Cognetti, this breathtaking, grand, intimate film follows the decades-long relationship between boyhood friends Pietro (Luca Marinelli) and Bruno (Alessandro Borghi), who meet when Pietro's well-off family vacations in Bruno's tiny Alpine village.

Over the years, their friendship waxes and wanes, but the two reconnect after the death of Pietro's father and decide to build, by hand, the remote Alpine cabin the father had dreamed of.

Winner of the Jury Prize, Cannes Film Festival. In Italian, English, and Nepali with English subtitles. (147 minutes) 

“It climbs mountainous heights and rewards you with the opposite of vertigo: exaltation.” –Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian 

A man laying down on angled wood slats in the mountains with a horse nearby.

2022 | directed by Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch

Adapted from an award-winning novel by Italian writer Paolo Cognetti, this breathtaking, grand, intimate film follows the decades-long relationship between boyhood friends Pietro (Luca Marinelli) and Bruno (Alessandro Borghi), who meet when Pietro's well-off family vacations in Bruno's tiny Alpine village.

Over the years, their friendship waxes and wanes, but the two reconnect after the death of Pietro's father and decide to build, by hand, the remote Alpine cabin the father had dreamed of.

Winner of the Jury Prize, Cannes Film Festival. In Italian, English, and Nepali with English subtitles. (147 minutes) 

“It climbs mountainous heights and rewards you with the opposite of vertigo: exaltation.” –Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian