Wednesday Afternoons With Rialto Pictures - 27 East

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Wednesday Afternoons With Rialto Pictures

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Dancer Angela (Anna Karina) in Jean-Luc Godard's 1961 film

Dancer Angela (Anna Karina) in Jean-Luc Godard's 1961 film "A Woman is a Woman." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

Tom Courtenay in John Schlesinger's 1963 film

Tom Courtenay in John Schlesinger's 1963 film "Billy Liar." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

A scene from Jean Renoir's 1936 film

A scene from Jean Renoir's 1936 film "The Crime of Monsieur Lange." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

A scene from Jean Renoir's 1937 film

A scene from Jean Renoir's 1937 film "The Grand Illusion." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

Adrien Brody in Roman Polanski's 2002 film

Adrien Brody in Roman Polanski's 2002 film "The Pianist." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

Orson Welles in Carol Reed's 1949 film

Orson Welles in Carol Reed's 1949 film "The Third Man." COURTESY SAG HARBOR CINEMA

authorStaff Writer on Feb 24, 2025

Between now and April 16, Sag Harbor Cinema will screen eight restored films from acclaimed repertory distributor Rialto Pictures every Wednesday afternoon, including “Rififi,” “The Tales of Hoffmann,” “The Pianist,” “The Third Man,” “The Crime of Monsieur Lange,” “Billy Liar,” “The Grand Illusion” and “A Woman Is a Woman.”

The eight-week tribute to the esteemed, New York-based distributor of classic cinema is a series of midweek matinee screenings of works by, among others, Jules Dassin, Jean Renoir, Michael Powell, Carol Reed and Jean-Luc Godard.

Restorations of beloved masterpieces of foreign and American cinema from Rialto have been part of the cinema’s programs since it reopened its doors in 2021, with films such as Jacques Deray’s “La Piscine”; Federico Fellini’s “Nights of Cabiria”; Francis Coppola’s “The Conversation”; the Ealing comedy “The Ladykillers”; Jean-Pierre Melville’s “Le Cercle Rouge”; and Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless” on its 60th anniversary.

Founded in 1997 by Film Forum’s legendary artistic director of repertory Bruce Goldstein, who was joined a year later by partner Adrienne Halpern, Rialto Pictures has become a leading theatrical distributor of classic foreign and American films, with a rich catalog that includes generous selections of French New Wave and poetic realism, British and French film noir, Ealing comedies, British social realism, American cult classics, and commedia all’Italiana in between.

“Bruce and Adrienne’s impeccable taste and passion for film have made Rialto an indispensable resource for independent and arthouse cinemas like ours,” said the cinema’s artistic director Giulia D’Agnolo Vallan. “It is because of Rialto that we have access to mint 35mm prints and 4K restorations of many renowned classics as well as great films that needed to be rediscovered. Their contribution to contemporary film culture and to the moviegoing experience in the U.S, is invaluable.”

“Rialto was a natural extension to my work as a film programmer, at Film Forum and other New York theaters,” added Rialto’s Goldstein. A lot of the classics I wanted to show were available only in the worst possible 35mm prints, or not at all, and I had many Holy Grails of unobtainable masterpieces.

“But it was Godard’s ‘Contempt,’ photographed in gorgeous color and CinemaScope, that was my real impetus for starting the company,” he continued. “‘Contempt’ had no U.S. distribution in 1996, so the only way I could strike a sparkling new 35mm print was to get the theatrical rights myself. We backed it up with a fresh new marketing campaign, a new English translation and new subtitles, a brand new trailer — in other words, releasing it exactly as we would a new movie. And that’s how we’ve done every one of our releases since. In our 25 years, we’ve rereleased nearly 100 international classics and now represent the StudioCanal catalogue, one of the world’s largest film libraries.”

The series at the cinema kicked off February 26 with Jules Dassin’s 1955 thriller “Rififi” which set new standards for all heist films to follow. In March, the matinees will feature Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s 1951 visionary “The Tales of Hoffmann,” based on the 1881 opéra fantastique by Jacques Offenbach; Roman Polanski’s Academy award-winning 2002 biopic “The Pianist” about celebrated Polish composer and pianist Władysław Szpilman, a role that won Adrien Brody an Oscar; and Carol Reed’s 1949 noir “The Third Man” written by Graham Greene and starring Orson Welles.

In April, the Cinema will screen two films from Jean Renoir: “The Crime of Monsieur Lange” (1936) which François Truffaut called “the richest in miracles of camera work, the most full of pure beauty and truth … a film touched by divine grace”; and the WWI film “The Grand Illusion” (1937), the first foreign language film ever nominated for a best picture Academy Award and one of the most celebrated antiwar films of all time, called “Cinema Enemy No. 1” by Joseph Goebbels, the Reich Minister of Propaganda in Nazi Germany, who had prints of the film seized when the Germans occupied France during WWII.

The matinees will also include John Schlesinger’s 1963 British New Wave comedy “Billy Liar” starring Tom Courtenay as Billy and Julie Christie as one of his three girlfriends. Finally, the series will close out on April 16 with one of Rialto’s latest restoration, Jean-Luc Godard’s 1961 New Wave take on Hollywood musicals “A Woman Is a Woman” starring Anna Karina as a dancer who desperately wants to have a baby with her unenthusiastic boyfriend.

The full lineup and tickets are available at the box office or sagharborcinema.org. Sag Harbor Cinema is at 90 Main Street in Sag Harbor.

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