What's On

Displaying events between January 1, 2026 and January 31, 2026

Anchor Point Film Tour (Approx. 3 hrs., with intermission) The Anchor Point Tour is a celebration of the fearless spirit and artistry of highlining documentaries. Our festival is dedicated to sharing all stories—big or small—that showcase the passion, creativity, and boundary-pushing endeavors of athletes within our community. Through this event we want to uplift all parts of our community and use a portion off the revenue to provide gear to underrepresented communities. Dates: Fri 16 Booking and More Information
Cactus Pears (1:52) Anand, a 30-something city dweller compelled to spend a 10-day mourning period for his father in the rugged countryside of western India, tenderly bonds with a local farmer who is struggling to stay unmarried. As the mourning ends, forcing his return, Anand must decide the fate of his relationship born under duress. Winner, Grand Jury Prize (World Dramatic), Sundance Film Festival. (Rohan Kanawade,2025, India, 1:52, NR) Dates: Wed 14, Thu 15, Fri 16, Sat 17, Sun 18 Booking and More Information
Continuum: Death Cafe Group discussion event about mortality with tea and cookies. Dates: Tue 13 Booking and More Information
FNWeird: In Our Blood (:29) Nothing is as it seems when filmmaker Emily Wyland (Brittany O’Grady) teams up with cinematographer Danny (E. J. Bonilla) to shoot an intimate documentary about reuniting with Emily’s estranged mother after a decade apart. When her mother suddenly goes missing, possibly succumbing to the addictions that first tore her family apart, Emily and Danny must piece together increasingly sinister clues to find her before it’s too late. (Pedro Kos, 2025, USA, 1:29, NR) Dates: Fri 09 Booking and More Information
FNWeird: Obex (1:30) In pre-internet 1987, Conor and his dog Sandy live a life of seclusion, lost in the slow-rendering graphics of early Macs and televisions aglow with late night horror movie marathons. But when he begins playing OBEX, a new and mysterious, state-of-the-art computer game, he finds himself trapped in a low-tech, but high-stakes analog hellscape as the line between reality and game blurs. Audacious and uncanny, writer-director Albert Birney's OBEX is a delightfully skewed lo-fi fantasy. Shot in striking black and white, this surreally nostalgic nightmare revisits the dawn of personal computing to reflect on the loneliness of our always-online present day. (Albert Birney, 2025, USA, 1:30, NR) Dates: Fri 16 Booking and More Information
FNWeird: Radu Jude's Dracula (2:50) A frustrated filmmaker, facing creative paralysis, turns to an A.I. chatbot in order to make his latest movie a hit. The result is a series of increasingly outrageous vignettes exploring the myth of Dracula in all its forms. From a wild chase through the streets of modern Transylvania to eerie hauntings in the Romanian countryside, cinematic provocateur Radu Jude returns with another boundary-pushing epic featuring a union-busting Dracula breaking a strike, an adaptation of the first Romanian vampire novella, thwarted romance, fields of phalluses, lots of blood, and much more. (Radu Jude, 2025, Romania, 2:50, NR) Dates: Fri 23 Booking and More Information
FNweird: Serious People (1:26) A successful music video director and expectant father pushes his work/life balance to the extreme when he can't pass up the job of a lifetime and hires a doppelgänger to work in his stead. SERIOUS PEOPLE is a fresh and authentic comedy that explores what it means to be a "director" and a parent — and the replaceability of people in clout-heavy Los Angeles. (Pasqual Gutierrez & Ben Mullinkosson, 2025, USA, 1:26, NR) Dates: Fri 02 Booking and More Information
FNWeird: The Cathedral of New Emotions (1:00) A psychedelic odyssey through animation with visuals that’ll melt your mental highways, THE CATHEDRAL OF NEW EMOTIONS is a surreal German film that’s truly out of this world. The story follows a group of Berlin intellectuals and stoners as they escape from the terrors and troubles of 1970s Earth in their giant hand spaceship. As time passes and ennui sets in, the zonked-out crew decides to search for the man who convinced them to flee to the stars in the first place. Thrillingly original, gorgeously stylized, and recently made available after years of obscurity, this marvel is ready to take you on a journey to places beyond imagination. (Helmut Herbst, 2006, Germany, 1:00, NR) Dates: Fri 30 Booking and More Information
For The Living (1:57 - Co-presented with the Boulder Jewish Community Center) Alternating between the intimate story of this one Holocaust survivor and the startling similarities among individuals in all genocides, these parallel journeys bring to life how we can grow our empathy to encompass millions. And how the American educational system has long overlooked—and in 2025 now threatens to whitewash--these stories and the insights we need to prevent future genocides. Inciting the urgent conversation: When will we stop building monuments for the Dead and get busy re-humanizing the Living? When will we finally say NEVER AGAIN and truly mean it? (Marc Bennett & Tim Roper, 2024, USA, 1:57, NR) Dates: Mon 26 Booking and More Information
Glowing Goose Productions presents Fiddler on the Roof (Approx. 3 hours including one intermission) Fiddler on the Roof is a full-scale musical production with a large cast and live band. Dates: Thu 15, Sat 17, Sun 18, Thu 22, Sat 24, Sun 25 Booking and More Information
Monkey Wrench Films presents "Preserved" (2 hrs., 19 min. total: Film=94 min.; Performance/Panel=45 min.) Film screening, followed by performance of closing song by the artist Milck (Connie Lim), as well as a panel discussion featuring the filmmaker and film subjects. Preserved takes viewers inside Vermejo—a 558,000-acre living laboratory where mountain lions, bears, and countless other species reveal how wildlife is adapting in a changing world. The film spotlights the stewards working to restore this landscape—and why what happens here matters everywhere. The planet can heal. It starts with us. Dates: Tue 13 Booking and More Information
Move By Morelli: The Club Showcase (2 hrs., 30 mins., with intermission) Move By Morelli's competitive team, The Club, kicks off the 2026 competition season with their annual Showcase performance. They hit the stage for the first time, performing all their routines for family and friends. Dates: Sat 10 Booking and More Information
MycoMorphosis: Dancing with Fungi (80 mins., no intermission) MycoMorphosis: Dancing with Fungi is a multimedia Bio-Art performance the world of mycelium: underground networks of fungi that connect the roots of thousands of plants and trees. Through the integration of mycology and Japanese Butoh dance with musical soundscapes that are created by fungal bioacoustics and bio-data sonification, this artwork creates a MULTI-SENSORY experience that demonstrates a deeply intimate relationship to the earth, where the distinctions between human and non-human worlds disintegrate in slow and shapeshifting bodily practice. Dates: Fri 23, Sat 24, Sun 25 Booking and More Information
National Theatre Live: The Fifth Step (1:30) Olivier Award-winner Jack Lowden (Slow Horses, Dunkirk) is joined by Emmy and BAFTA-winner Martin Freeman (The Hobbit, The Responder) in the critically acclaimed and subversively funny new play by David Ireland. After years in the 12-step programme of Alcoholics Anonymous, James becomes a sponsor to newcomer Luka. The pair bond over black coffee, trade stories and build a fragile friendship out of their shared experiences. But as Luka approaches step five – the moment of confession – dangerous truths emerge, threatening the trust on which both of their recoveries depend. (1:30 runtime) Dates: Sun 11, Tue 13 Booking and More Information
No Other Choice (2:19) From director Park Chan-wook and based on Donald E. Westlake's novel THE AX, the story follows Man-su on his desperate hunt for a new job after his abrupt layoff from the paper company he served for 25 years. He devises a unique plan to secure a new job: eliminate his competition. (Park Chan-wook, 2025, South Korea, 2:19, R) Dates: Wed 21, Thu 22, Fri 23, Sat 24, Sun 25 Booking and More Information
Pieowa: A Piece of America (1:16) PIEOWA, celebrates the myriad ways pie is woven into Iowa’s (and America’s) culture, the lengths people will go to for a slice, and how this humble pastry can bake the world a better place. The film features comedian Tom Arnold, NPR economics correspondent Scott Horsley (NPR = No Pie Refused), Better Homes & Gardens food editor, among other notable names, alongside everyday people — church ladies, farm wives, pie shop owners, State Fair competitors, chefs, food historians, bike riders, and humanitarians. Wholesome and humorous, it will leave you feeling more hopeful about the world — and hungry for pie. (Beth M. Howard, 2025, USA, 1:16, NR) Dates: Sat 24 Booking and More Information
Small Flowers presents: Lines (1 hour, no intermission) Lines is a multidisciplinary performance that blends electronic music with Irish and Lebanese music, dance, and poetry to tell a contemporary story of resistance through resilience and joy amid displacement. By weaving together evolving folk traditions, it invites audiences to imagine a world where communities unite across borders to ensure freedom and safety for all. Dates: Fri 23, Sat 24 Booking and More Information
Souleymane's Story (1:33) Racing through the streets of Paris making food deliveries on his bicycle, Guinean immigrant Souleymane (Sangare) is struggling to stay afloat. In two days, he has to report for an asylum application interview, where he must plead his case to an immigration officer (Nina Meurisse) who will determine his future in France. As he rides, he repeats his story. But Souleymane is not ready. Drawing inspiration from Cristian Mungiu’s 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days and evoking the humanist films of the Dardennes, Boris Lojkine’s urgent, propulsive third feature never leaves Souleymane’s side in a deeply affecting account of the daily trials and uncertain futures faced by migrants in France and around the world. (Boris Lojkine, 2025, France, 1:33, NR) Dates: Thu 01, Fri 02, Sat 03, Sun 04 Booking and More Information
T2 Dance Company: Versatility Dance Festival (1 hr., 15 mins., no intermission) Contemporary dance festival, presented by T2 Dance Company, featuring national dance companies and international dance films. Dates: Sat 17 Booking and More Information
The Choral (1:53) 1916. As war rages on the Western Front, the Choral Society in Ramsden, Yorkshire has lost most of its men to the army. The Choral’s ambitious committee, determined to press ahead, decides to recruit local young males to swell their ranks. They must also engage a new chorus master, and despite their suspicions that he has something to hide, their best bet seems to be Dr. Henry Guthrie (Ralph Fiennes) – driven, uncompromising, and recently returned from a career in Germany. As conscription papers start to arrive, the whole community discovers that the best response to the chaos that is laying waste to their lives is to make music together. (Nicholas Hytner, 2025, UK, 1:53, R) Dates: Wed 28, Thu 29, Fri 30, Sat 31 Booking and More Information
The Little Things That Run the World (1:45) Insects were the first animals to evolve flight nearly 440 million years ago, and they survived all five of the known mass extinctions since then. They have also been called the “glue of life” on Earth; they literally hold ecosystems together. But, there is evidence that the pace of decline among insects in parts of the world today is fast approaching the levels of previous catastrophes. What does this mean for the rest of life on Earth, including humans? What is causing this extinction crisis? What can be done to reverse the trend? Our new release The Little Things That Run the World introduces viewers to a diverse group of scientists, nature lovers, gardeners, farmers, and general bug enthusiasts in exploring the importance of flying insects amid rapid declines in their numbers. The film documents the mysteries of the declines alongside creative and heroic human efforts to change the course of evolutionary history. (Doug Hawes-Davis, 2025, USA, 1:45, NR)
Dates: Wed 21, Thu 22, Fri 23, Sat 24, Sun 25 Booking and More Information
The Mariposa Collective presents "Resonance" (90 mins, with intermission) The Mariposa Collective presents RESONANCE featuring new dance and multimedia performance by Riley Bartlett, Cassy Clark, Angela Gumieniak, Alli Jones, Jeny Jones, Tanja London, Jesús Muñoz, Celia Grannum Perarnaud, Bridget Ryan, ShawnT Stone, and Betsy Tobin. Dates: Fri 30, Sat 31 Booking and More Information
The Voice of Hind Rajab (1:29) January 29, 2024. Red Crescent volunteers receive an emergency call. A 6-year old girl is trapped in a car under fire in Gaza, pleading for rescue. While trying to keep her on the line, they do everything they can to get an ambulance to her. Her name was Hind Rajab. The film recreates real events using actual audio recordings of the phone call. This Venice Silver Lion Grand Jury Prize winning film from twice Oscar-nominated filmmaker Kaouther Ben Hania is already being listed among the top 5 likely Oscar nominees for Best International Feature. (Kaouther Ben Hania, 2025, Tunisia, 1:29, NR) Dates: Wed 28, Thu 29, Fri 30, Sat 31 Booking and More Information
Timestamp (2:05) Keeping schools open in Ukraine is an attempt to recreate at least some of the normal life they had before the war — until February 24, 2022 (and in some regions even earlier, in 2014). Without interviews, narration and reenactments, TIMESTAMP provides an insight into how the war is affecting the daily lives of students and teachers. The film has a mosaic-like structure: it explores how a school functions in-person and online in these terrible times, both on and off the frontline, how day-to-day life is intertwined with constant danger. (Kateryna Gornostai, 2025, Ukraine, 2:05, NR) Dates: Wed 07, Thu 08, Fri 09, Sat 10, Sun 11 Booking and More Information
Urchin (1:40) On the streets of London, Mike is hustling to get by. Roadside evangelizers won't let him sleep in peace, his slippery friend won't pay up the money he stole, and before long, he finds himself in trouble with the law. As he struggles to reintegrate into society, shuffling between gigs as a line cook and a trash collector, he must balance a newfound sense of community with his own itch for self-destruction. (Harris Dickinson, 2025, UK, 1:40, NR) Dates: Wed 07, Thu 08, Fri 09, Sat 10, Sun 11 Booking and More Information
Wisdom of Happiness (1:30) This is medicine for the moment — a survival guide for navigating our traumatic world that feels more fractured and uncertain than ever. This powerful message of hope is delivered as a personal audience with one of the greatest living thinkers, Nobel Peace Prize winner, Tenzin Gyatso, known to billions around the world as the Dalai Lama. Speaking directly to all of us as a single global community, he shares practical wisdom for finding peace, compassion, and hope in the midst of chaos. With disarming clarity and deep humanity, he invites us to imagine — and help create — a world where compassion is activated as our strongest force for change, and happiness is within reach for everyone. (Philip Delaquis & Barbara Miller,2025, USA, 1:30, NR) Dates: Thu 01, Fri 02, Sat 03, Sun 04 Booking and More Information
YAGÓDY - 2026 Tour (90 min., no intermission) Ukrainian sirens YAGÓDY, kick off their 2026 US tour with two nights at the Dairy Arts Center. Celebrated for their “primal energy” (Chicago Reader, March 2025) and hypnotic vocal harmonies, this quartet blends ethno-ritual performances with feminine resilience for a “dynamic and contemporary” (Minneapolis Star Tribune) experience. Since making their North American debut in 2025, YAGÓDY has continued to evolve their craft, recently releasing a haunting new single, “Koni,” and video from director and cinematographer Olia Klymuk. Dates: Wed 14, Thu 15 Booking and More Information
You Got Gold: A Celebration of John Prine (1:30) Filmed in October 2022 at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium, this movie captures a star-studded tribute to the legendary songwriter, . The event brought together acclaimed artists, friends, and family to share behind-the-scenes stories and perform classic songs, honoring Prine's enduring legacy. Prine, widely celebrated as one of history's greatest songwriters, captivated millions of fans and earned the admiration of icons such as Bonnie Raitt, Brandi Carlile, Tyler Childers, Lucinda Williams, Dwight Yoakam, Jason Isbell, and Bob Weir, amongst many others, are featured in the film performing on the Ryman stage for this special celebration of his life and music. (Michael John Warren, 2025, USA, 1:30, NR) Dates: Wed 14, Thu 15, Fri 16, Sat 17, Sun 18 Booking and More Information

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