assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

Results tagged: Assisted Listening

Orwell: 2+2=5

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Oct 10, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Oct 11, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Oct 12, 2025
3 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA/France/2025 — directed by Raoul Peck | 119 min.

This daring and powerfully engaging portrait of the life and career of George Orwell propels us through the stages of the great author’s journey with urgency and passion.

Selections from Orwell’s essays and letters, narrated with rich humanity by actor Damian Lewis, provide the film’s biographical foundation. Yet the narrative never strays far from the shocking contemporary relevance of Orwell’s prescient masterwork, 1984.

Oscar®-nominated director Raoul Peck (I Am Not Your Negro) weaves together pivotal moments from screen and television adaptations of 1984, alongside contemporary documentary footage that sharpens Orwell’s blistering cautionary tale of authoritarianism into an all-too-vivid reality. Official Selection, 2025 Cannes Film Festival.

“Brilliant. The boldest documentary anyone could make right now.” – Stephanie Zacharek, Time

A still from Orwell: 2+2=5, screening at the Detroit Film Theatre in October 2025

USA/France/2025 — directed by Raoul Peck | 119 min.

This daring and powerfully engaging portrait of the life and career of George Orwell propels us through the stages of the great author’s journey with urgency and passion.

Selections from Orwell’s essays and letters, narrated with rich humanity by actor Damian Lewis, provide the film’s biographical foundation. Yet the narrative never strays far from the shocking contemporary relevance of Orwell’s prescient masterwork, 1984.

Oscar®-nominated director Raoul Peck (I Am Not Your Negro) weaves together pivotal moments from screen and television adaptations of 1984, alongside contemporary documentary footage that sharpens Orwell’s blistering cautionary tale of authoritarianism into an all-too-vivid reality. Official Selection, 2025 Cannes Film Festival.

“Brilliant. The boldest documentary anyone could make right now.” – Stephanie Zacharek, Time

Souleymane's Story

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Oct 3, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Oct 4, 2025
3 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Oct 4, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Oct 5, 2025
3 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

France/2024 — directed by Boris Lojkine | 93 min.

Racing through the streets of Paris on his bicycle making food deliveries, Guinean immigrant Souleymane (non-professional actor Abou Sangare) is struggling to stay afloat. With just two days before his asylum interview, he has only one chance to plead his case to an immigration officer who will determine his future in France.

As he rides, rehearsing his story in preparation, Souleymane wonders if he will be ready for the most important interview of his life.

Drawing spiritual inspiration from the humanist films of the Dardenne Brothers and Italian neorealists, Boris Lojkine’s propulsive new drama never leaves Souleymane’s side, offering a deeply affecting portrait of the daily trials faced by migrants around the world. In French, Fulah, and Malinka with English subtitles.

“Gripping, intelligent, extraordinary. First-time actor Abou Sangare is a revelation.” – Jessica Kiang, Variety

A still from Souleymane's Story, screening at the Detroit Film Theatre in October 2025

France/2024 — directed by Boris Lojkine | 93 min.

Racing through the streets of Paris on his bicycle making food deliveries, Guinean immigrant Souleymane (non-professional actor Abou Sangare) is struggling to stay afloat. With just two days before his asylum interview, he has only one chance to plead his case to an immigration officer who will determine his future in France.

As he rides, rehearsing his story in preparation, Souleymane wonders if he will be ready for the most important interview of his life.

Drawing spiritual inspiration from the humanist films of the Dardenne Brothers and Italian neorealists, Boris Lojkine’s propulsive new drama never leaves Souleymane’s side, offering a deeply affecting portrait of the daily trials faced by migrants around the world. In French, Fulah, and Malinka with English subtitles.

“Gripping, intelligent, extraordinary. First-time actor Abou Sangare is a revelation.” – Jessica Kiang, Variety

All Too Clear

Register:

Calendar Icon

Wednesday, Oct 8, 2025
7 p.m.

Register
Registration Free

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA/Canada/2024 | Directed by Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick | 90 min.

All Too Clear uses cutting-edge underwater drones to explore how quadrillions of tiny invasive mussels, known as quaggas, are re-engineering the ecosystem of the Great Lakes at a scale not seen since the glaciers.

To capture this epic change, husband-and-wife filmmaking team Zach Melnick and Yvonne Drebert spent more than 150 days filming underwater, making it the most ambitious underwater film ever made about the Great Lakes.

Part scientific exploration and part natural history adventure, the film showcases freshwater wildlife and environments like never before.

 

Bridge Michigan presents the Detroit premiere of 'All Too Clear: Beneath the Surface of the Great Lakes,' a new documentary blending scientific exploration with natural history adventure to showcase Great Lakes wildlife and environments in unprecedented detail. The film is presented in partnership with Detroit PBS, the Friends of the Detroit Film Theatre, Great Lakes Now, and The Nature Conservancy.

All Too Clear poster image

USA/Canada/2024 | Directed by Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick | 90 min.

All Too Clear uses cutting-edge underwater drones to explore how quadrillions of tiny invasive mussels, known as quaggas, are re-engineering the ecosystem of the Great Lakes at a scale not seen since the glaciers.

To capture this epic change, husband-and-wife filmmaking team Zach Melnick and Yvonne Drebert spent more than 150 days filming underwater, making it the most ambitious underwater film ever made about the Great Lakes.

Part scientific exploration and part natural history adventure, the film showcases freshwater wildlife and environments like never before.

 

Bridge Michigan presents the Detroit premiere of 'All Too Clear: Beneath the Surface of the Great Lakes,' a new documentary blending scientific exploration with natural history adventure to showcase Great Lakes wildlife and environments in unprecedented detail. The film is presented in partnership with Detroit PBS, the Friends of the Detroit Film Theatre, Great Lakes Now, and The Nature Conservancy.

Peter Hujar's Day

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Nov 21, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Nov 22, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Nov 23, 2025
2 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA/2025 — directed by Ira Sachs | 76 min.

In 1974, writer Linda Rosenkrantz embarked on an experimental journalism project in which an emerging artist would have a conversation with her—and her tape recorder—about the day-to-day reality of an artist’s life in New York. 

Photographer Peter Hujar agreed to participate, casually recounting the events of a single day in his life. Though the original 50-year-old tape no longer exists, a transcript survived and was published three years ago.

Now, in an elegantly modest style, director Ira Sachs has recreated the original conversation verbatim, using Rosenkrantz’s actual apartment as the setting. During the freewheeling exchange, Hujar shares details of his interactions with William Burroughs, Susan Sontag, Allen Ginsberg, and others. 

"The best film at Sundance is just two people talking. It is a masterpiece." – Bilge Ebiri, New York Magazine

A still from the film Peter Hujar's Day, screening at the Detroit Film Theatre in November 2025

USA/2025 — directed by Ira Sachs | 76 min.

In 1974, writer Linda Rosenkrantz embarked on an experimental journalism project in which an emerging artist would have a conversation with her—and her tape recorder—about the day-to-day reality of an artist’s life in New York. 

Photographer Peter Hujar agreed to participate, casually recounting the events of a single day in his life. Though the original 50-year-old tape no longer exists, a transcript survived and was published three years ago.

Now, in an elegantly modest style, director Ira Sachs has recreated the original conversation verbatim, using Rosenkrantz’s actual apartment as the setting. During the freewheeling exchange, Hujar shares details of his interactions with William Burroughs, Susan Sontag, Allen Ginsberg, and others. 

"The best film at Sundance is just two people talking. It is a masterpiece." – Bilge Ebiri, New York Magazine

It Was Just an Accident

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Nov 14, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Nov 15, 2025
3 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Nov 15, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Nov 16, 2025
2 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

Iran/France/Luxembourg/2025 — directed by Jafar Panahi | 101 min.

Vahid, an unassuming mechanic, is suddenly reminded of his time in an Iranian prison when a random traffic accident leads to a chance encounter with a man he thinks he recognizes—one he suspects was once his sadistic jailhouse captor. 

Panicked and horrified yet not absolutely certain of the man’s identity, Vahid pauses taking revenge long enough to round up some fellow ex-prisoners to try to confirm his suspicions. 

Jafar Panahi has created a masterwork in the form of an honest and deeply felt thriller, where tension combines with humor and raises difficult questions about the morality of revenge.

In Persian with English subtitles.

"Panahi summons all the medium’s expressive powers to deliver a fierce denunciation of authoritarian regimes." – Justin Chang, The New Yorker

A still from It Was Just an Accident, screening at the Detroit Film Theatre in November 2025.

Iran/France/Luxembourg/2025 — directed by Jafar Panahi | 101 min.

Vahid, an unassuming mechanic, is suddenly reminded of his time in an Iranian prison when a random traffic accident leads to a chance encounter with a man he thinks he recognizes—one he suspects was once his sadistic jailhouse captor. 

Panicked and horrified yet not absolutely certain of the man’s identity, Vahid pauses taking revenge long enough to round up some fellow ex-prisoners to try to confirm his suspicions. 

Jafar Panahi has created a masterwork in the form of an honest and deeply felt thriller, where tension combines with humor and raises difficult questions about the morality of revenge.

In Persian with English subtitles.

"Panahi summons all the medium’s expressive powers to deliver a fierce denunciation of authoritarian regimes." – Justin Chang, The New Yorker

Diciannove

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Sep 26, 2025
7:30 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Sep 27, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Sep 28, 2025
2 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

Italy/UK/2024—directed by Giovanni Tortorici | 109 min.

The highs and lows of a restless, intelligent teenager collide headlong into the concrete realities of adulthood when Leonardo (Manfredi Marini), a 19-yearold from Palermo, leaves home for the first time.

After a brief stint in London, Leonardo’s intense interest in studying literature lands him in the incomparably beautiful streets of Siena, where he immediately clashes with his instructor, his curriculum, and most chaotically, with himself.

Produced by acclaimed director Luca Guadagnino (Call Me by Your Name), Diciannove (Nineteen), marks the assured feature filmmaking debut of writer/director Giovanni Tortorici, who brings a bold visual style and witty narrative design to this tale of the emotional turmoil and anticipatory joys that accompany the familiar moment we call coming-ofage.

Official Selection, Toronto, Venice and London Film Festivals. In Italian and English with English subtitles.

“Vivid, humane, exceptional… an auspicious arrival for both the filmmaker and his intense, mercurial young star.” –Guy Lodge, Variety

A still from the film Diciannove, screening at the Detroit Film Theatre in September 2025.

Italy/UK/2024—directed by Giovanni Tortorici | 109 min.

The highs and lows of a restless, intelligent teenager collide headlong into the concrete realities of adulthood when Leonardo (Manfredi Marini), a 19-yearold from Palermo, leaves home for the first time.

After a brief stint in London, Leonardo’s intense interest in studying literature lands him in the incomparably beautiful streets of Siena, where he immediately clashes with his instructor, his curriculum, and most chaotically, with himself.

Produced by acclaimed director Luca Guadagnino (Call Me by Your Name), Diciannove (Nineteen), marks the assured feature filmmaking debut of writer/director Giovanni Tortorici, who brings a bold visual style and witty narrative design to this tale of the emotional turmoil and anticipatory joys that accompany the familiar moment we call coming-ofage.

Official Selection, Toronto, Venice and London Film Festivals. In Italian and English with English subtitles.

“Vivid, humane, exceptional… an auspicious arrival for both the filmmaker and his intense, mercurial young star.” –Guy Lodge, Variety

Monk in Pieces

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Sep 19, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Sep 20, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Sep 21, 2025
2 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA/Germany/France/2025—directed by Billy Shebar | 95 min.

Meredith Monk—composer, performer,and interdisciplinary artist—is one of the great artistic pioneers of our time, yet her profound cultural influence is largely unrecognized. With Monk’s music at its center, and interviews with David Byrne and Björk, Monk in Pieces is a mosaic that mirrors the structure of Monk’s work and illuminates her wildly original vocabulary of sound and imagery. As a female artist in the male-dominated arts scene of the ‘60s and ‘70s, Monk fought for recognition and resources.

Yet as her celebrated contemporary, Philip Glass, says, “she, among all of us, was—and still is—the uniquely gifted one.” In the final chapters, Monk, facing mortality, warily entrusts her masterpiece, Atlas, to director Yuval Sharon (now Artistic Director of Detroit Opera) for a production at the Los Angeles Philharmonic. For 60 years, Monk directed and performed in all of her own works; suddenly she must learn to let go.

“This spry, lively and appropriately offbeat biography of the artist celebrates the reverberations of a distinctive voice.” –Stephen Saito, The Moveable Fest

A still from the film Monk in Pieces screening at the Detroit Film Theatre

USA/Germany/France/2025—directed by Billy Shebar | 95 min.

Meredith Monk—composer, performer,and interdisciplinary artist—is one of the great artistic pioneers of our time, yet her profound cultural influence is largely unrecognized. With Monk’s music at its center, and interviews with David Byrne and Björk, Monk in Pieces is a mosaic that mirrors the structure of Monk’s work and illuminates her wildly original vocabulary of sound and imagery. As a female artist in the male-dominated arts scene of the ‘60s and ‘70s, Monk fought for recognition and resources.

Yet as her celebrated contemporary, Philip Glass, says, “she, among all of us, was—and still is—the uniquely gifted one.” In the final chapters, Monk, facing mortality, warily entrusts her masterpiece, Atlas, to director Yuval Sharon (now Artistic Director of Detroit Opera) for a production at the Los Angeles Philharmonic. For 60 years, Monk directed and performed in all of her own works; suddenly she must learn to let go.

“This spry, lively and appropriately offbeat biography of the artist celebrates the reverberations of a distinctive voice.” –Stephen Saito, The Moveable Fest

Cloud

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Friday, Sep 12, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Sep 13, 2025
3 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Saturday, Sep 13, 2025
7 p.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Sep 14, 2025
6 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

Japan, 2024, directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa | 124 min

This stylish, subversive thriller from suspense maverick Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Cure, Pulse) follows Yoshii, an ambitious young factory worker from Tokyo who side hustles in the murky world of online reselling, misleading buyers and sellers alike.

After swindling his way into stacks of cash, Yoshii tries to escape the crowded city by moving to the suburbs with his girlfriend, entrusting his business duties to a new assistant. Soon, however, mysterious incidents begin to threaten his security as the reality of his crimes creeps closer than he ever imagined.

At once a pulse-pounding provocation and a cautionary tale for our atomized, hustle-economy era, Cloud is a scary, genre-bending vision of real-world consequences, crafted with precision and dark, edgy humor. In Japanese with English subtitles.

"A hyper-lucid, fantastically kinetic, brilliant action movie." – David Erlich, IndieWire

A still from the film Cloud screening at the Detroit Film Theatre

Japan, 2024, directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa | 124 min

This stylish, subversive thriller from suspense maverick Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Cure, Pulse) follows Yoshii, an ambitious young factory worker from Tokyo who side hustles in the murky world of online reselling, misleading buyers and sellers alike.

After swindling his way into stacks of cash, Yoshii tries to escape the crowded city by moving to the suburbs with his girlfriend, entrusting his business duties to a new assistant. Soon, however, mysterious incidents begin to threaten his security as the reality of his crimes creeps closer than he ever imagined.

At once a pulse-pounding provocation and a cautionary tale for our atomized, hustle-economy era, Cloud is a scary, genre-bending vision of real-world consequences, crafted with precision and dark, edgy humor. In Japanese with English subtitles.

"A hyper-lucid, fantastically kinetic, brilliant action movie." – David Erlich, IndieWire

Sabbath Queen

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Sunday, Sep 14, 2025
2 p.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA/2024—directed by Sandi DuBowski | 105 min.

The result of 21 years of filming, Sabbath Queen illuminates the lifelong journey of Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie, dynastic heir of 38 generations of Orthodox rabbis, as he struggles with embracing his destiny, becoming a drag-queen rebel, a queer bio-dad and the founder of Lab/Shul—an everybody-friendly, artist-driven, pop-up experimental congregation.

This spirited documentary joins Amichai on his quest to creatively re-examine the concepts of religion and ritual, challenge patriarchy, champion interfaith love, and stand up for tolerance in an age of turmoil. In English, Hebrew and Yiddish with English subtitles.

This special screening will be followed by a live, in-person Q & A with director Sandi DuBowski.

“A fascinating look at the act of questioning yourself and your family, your surroundings and your decisions.” –Elisabeth Vincentelli, The New York Times

A still from Sabbath Queen with a drag queen in a big, blonde wig

USA/2024—directed by Sandi DuBowski | 105 min.

The result of 21 years of filming, Sabbath Queen illuminates the lifelong journey of Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie, dynastic heir of 38 generations of Orthodox rabbis, as he struggles with embracing his destiny, becoming a drag-queen rebel, a queer bio-dad and the founder of Lab/Shul—an everybody-friendly, artist-driven, pop-up experimental congregation.

This spirited documentary joins Amichai on his quest to creatively re-examine the concepts of religion and ritual, challenge patriarchy, champion interfaith love, and stand up for tolerance in an age of turmoil. In English, Hebrew and Yiddish with English subtitles.

This special screening will be followed by a live, in-person Q & A with director Sandi DuBowski.

“A fascinating look at the act of questioning yourself and your family, your surroundings and your decisions.” –Elisabeth Vincentelli, The New York Times

Anangong Miigaading: Star Wars: A New Hope

Get tickets:

Ticket Icon

Saturday, Oct 4, 2025
11 a.m.

Get tickets
Ticket Icon

Sunday, Oct 5, 2025
11 a.m.

Get tickets
General admission $11.50
Seniors, Students, and DIA Members $9.50

+$1.50 online convenience fee

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

assisted listening Assisted Listening Devices are available upon request at the box office

USA, 1977, directed by George Lucas; Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) dub: Canada, 2024, directed by Ellyn Stern Epcar | 121 min.

Experience one of the most iconic films of all time, now presented in Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe), an original language of the Great Lakes region. Anangong Miigaading is part of an effort to preserve the language for future generations.

This Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) dub will be shown with English subtitles and part of a film series hosted in conjunction with the exhibition Contemporary Anishinaabe Art: A Continuation, on view from September 28, 2025, through April 5, 2026.

Poster for Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe)

USA, 1977, directed by George Lucas; Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) dub: Canada, 2024, directed by Ellyn Stern Epcar | 121 min.

Experience one of the most iconic films of all time, now presented in Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe), an original language of the Great Lakes region. Anangong Miigaading is part of an effort to preserve the language for future generations.

This Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe) dub will be shown with English subtitles and part of a film series hosted in conjunction with the exhibition Contemporary Anishinaabe Art: A Continuation, on view from September 28, 2025, through April 5, 2026.

Subscribe to Assisted Listening