Special Events and Series
Hong Kong Cinema Classics
Monthly screenings of essential movies from Hong Kong, many long unavailable and recently restored.
Now Playing
Coming Soon
Puppygirl
- Monday, Jul 20, 2026, 7:30pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
With co-producer / star Milo Talwani in-person for an intro and Q&A!
A semi-delusional trans woman (Milo Talwani) embarks on a shocking, bizarre, and oddly touching personal odyssey to undo years of sexual repression by performing in puppygirl fetish porn in director Henry Hanson's gonzo documentary.
Official selection of the 50th annual Frameline Film Festival.
“A heartwarming exercise in neo-transgression.” Patrizia Dahlia Thompson, Headstuff.org
A Simple Machine
- Sunday, Jul 26, 2026, 7:00pm
Screening location: SIFF Film Center – 167 Republican St, Seattle(located within the Seattle Center, just north of Climate Pledge Arena / east of KEXP and The Vera Project)
With director / writer Mark Alan Hoffman in-person for an intro and Q&A.
Starring Richard Blackmon in a breakout lead role, A SIMPLE MACHINE is a coming-of-age story following Nick Allander, a recent college grad trying to figure out his life’s direction during the late stages of the pandemic. In a last-ditch attempt to get out of debt, Nick makes a series of radically frugal lifestyle choices without telling his girlfriend (Gabriela Bloomgarden) that he's going off the grid.
Shot in luminous black and white in Portland, Oregon by award-winning cinematographer Kevin Fletcher (It’s What’s Inside) and featuring an original score by Mark Orton (Nebraska, The Holdovers), A SIMPLE MACHINE is a deeply human and timely story about personal freedom and the cost of wanting less in a culture built on more. At a time of economic crisis, housing instability, and digital saturation, it offers something rare: a grounded, thoughtful counterpoint rooted in the deliberate choice towards simplicity and financial freedom. Based on the novel A Simple Machine, Like the Lever by Evan P. Schneider.
“…relevant to almost everyone in America, as affordability becomes one of our biggest worries.” Tim Molloy, MovieMaker
Hundreds of Beavers
- Thursday, Jan 29, 2026, 8:00pm
- Thursday, Feb 26, 2026, 8:00pm
- Thursday, Mar 26, 2026, 8:00pm
- Thursday, Apr 30, 2026, 8:00pm
- Thursday, May 28, 2026, 8:00pm
- Sunday, Jul 26, 2026, 7:00pm
Screening location: Central Cinema – 1411 21st Ave, Seattle
Twenty-eighth encore screening! 🎶 Summer beavs make feel fine 🎶
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.
“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
Night Nurse
- Monday, Jul 27, 2026, 7:30pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
As a series of perverse scam calls unsettles an idyllic retirement community, a starry-eyed nurse becomes entangled with her mysterious patient. Writer-director Georgia Bernstein's debut feature examines caregiving as both vocation and compulsion, and the fine, dangerous line between them.
At the start of her new job in a luxury retirement community, Eleni (Cemre Paksoy) is drawn into a series of scam calls targeting the elderly residents, a pull she can't quite name or resist. As the community's strange rhythms close around her, she grows increasingly intimate with her elusive patient, Douglas (Bruce McKenzie), until the line blurs between care and desire, devotion and delusion.
“At times, Night Nurse recalls both Steven Shainberg’s Secretary and Cronenberg’s Crash.” Robert Daniels, RogerEbert.com
“Night Nurse is exactly the kind of sweaty, smart, deeply uncomfortable erotic thriller that feels destined for cult status. It’s not just provocative—it’s pointed, funny, and disturbingly honest about the desires we pretend don’t exist.” Dan Tabor, Cinapse
“…in a genre with too few recent entries and even fewer good ones, it’s a glass of water in the desert.” Sam Adams, Slate
Her Private Hell
- Friday, Jul 31, 2026, 7:15pm
- Sunday, Aug 2, 2026, 7:00pm
Screening location: SIFF Film Center – 167 Republican St, Seattle(located within the Seattle Center, just north of Climate Pledge Arena / east of KEXP and The Vera Project)
Tickets on sale July 14th.
Nicolas Winding Refn’s latest neon-drenched vibes fest, featuring a new score by the legendary Pino Donaggio.
When a mysterious mist engulfs a futuristic metropolis, unleashing a deadly and elusive entity, a troubled young woman (Sophie Thatcher) searches for her father. Her quest collides with an American GI (Charles Melton) on a harrowing odyssey to rescue his daughter from Hell.
“Her Private Hell resists interpretation, like so many of Refn’s recent films, but executes a slow dervish swirl of hypnotic strangeness.” Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian
“The genius of Her Private Hell is that, like a kind of visual ASMR, it offers nothing really concrete, just a lot of satisfying triggers and sensory associations… Is it pretentious? You bet! But it’s the kind of pretension that’s been missing for far too long in cinema… [it’s] either for you or it isn’t and you’re either for it or you aren’t. Either way, this is a film that demands you pick a side.” Damon Wise, Deadline
Summer Tour
- Sunday, Aug 2, 2026, 4:15pm
Screening location: SIFF Film Center – 167 Republican St, Seattle(located within the Seattle Center, just north of Climate Pledge Arena / east of KEXP and The Vera Project)
SUMMER TOUR is a poetic documentary shot on 16mm that follows Jerry and Annie, a magnetic young couple devoted to the music and community of Dead & Company as they journey across America for the band’s final tour.
Blending intimate portraiture with lyrical road imagery, the film captures the essence of the Deadhead experience: an unconventional family bound together by music, freedom, and the open road.
At once a love story and a celebration of a uniquely American tradition of wandering, SUMMER TOUR reflects on what it means to seek belonging, adventure, and transcendence in a fleeting moment of cultural history.
“A Deadhead himself, [director] Richter’s film is a thoughtful and loving tribute to an often misunderstood group of fans… the structure of the documentary mirrors the wandering soulfulness of the band’s impeccable musicianship and timeless songs… [Richter’s] empathetic eye grants us access to a fascinating subject without ever betraying it… This film is for and about the fans.” Robert Daniels, RogerEbert.com
Bouchra
- Monday, Aug 10, 2026, 7:30pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
With a lived-in granularity and unmistakable visual style, BOUCHRA, the feature debut from acclaimed visual artists Meriem Bennani and Orian Barki, is a singular portrait effortlessly towing the line between documentary, visual art, and resonant family drama. Deeply felt, surprisingly sexy, and formally adventurous, Bennani and Barki’s distinctive debut forges new ground in queer cinema.
Wrestling with writer’s block for her first film, Bouchra, a queer Moroccan jackal living in NYC, starts having difficult yet overdue phone calls with her mother in Casablanca that begin influencing the project. Balancing the precarity of working as an artist in New York, the rift in her identity between her two homes and an array of friendships and romantic interests, Bouchra’s emotional reckoning with her mother and herself becomes her path to expression.
In English and Moroccan Arabic & French with English subtitles.
“The sheer intimacy with which everything in the film is presented, even with the relative remove of anthropomorphizing all the characters, is what makes it sing; the unrealness emphasizes the real narratives and emotions behind those digital facades.” Juan Barquin, RogerEbert.com
“Despite grappling with intergenerational tension, the film also makes space for the erotic thrill of sexual intimacy, passionate encounters that lighten the weight of emotional turmoil. Far from reiterating tired binaries – tradition versus modernity, elders versus youngsters – the film embraces the beauty of contradictions with open arms.” Phuong Le, The Guardian
The Blade – New Restoration
- Monday, Aug 17, 2026, 7:15pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
Among the boldest accomplishments of Hong Kong cinema’s golden age, this uniquely visceral martial-arts movie puts a gritty new spin on the story of the one-armed swordsman, an iconic figure from the moment he was introduced by the Shaw Brothers studio in 1967.
Composed in a whirlwind of immersive close-ups and fractured editing, THE BLADE follows the young sword-maker Ding On (Vincent Zhao), who, after losing an arm in an ambush, transforms himself into a furious avenger. With its intentionally disorienting stylization and starkly brutal tone, THE BLADE was a rare commercial disappointment for Tsui Hark, but it has since been reclaimed as one of the director’s most radical visions—a tour de force of action expressionism, and a scathing reappraisal of the wuxia genre’s code of masculinity, that achieves a feverish intensity.
In Cantonese with English subtitles.
Special live intro from local Hong Kong genre film connoisseur and one of the programmers of the Seattle Film Society, Patrick McFarland.
“The action scenes are some of the most chaotic in Tsui’s canon, with an emphasis on rapid, almost cubist editing that seduces you with swings and strikes caught from multiple angles.” Jake Cole, Slant
“Watching [The Blade] is like sitting in the passenger seat of a feature-length, high-speed car chase sequence. It’s thrilling, it’s confusing, and you’ve never seen anything like it before. And you want to go again and again, like a rollercoaster ride through hell.” Peter Martin, ScreenAnarchy
Full Contact – New 4K Restoration
- Monday, Sep 14, 2026, 7:00pm
Screening location: Northwest Film Forum – 1515 12th Ave, Seattle
In an effort to get his buddy out of a gambling debt, Gou Fei agrees to join forces with his friend Judge in a weapons heist. The job goes bad and Judge betrays him. Gou Fei plots the ultimate revenge on Judge and his followers and sets forth a plan of violence and deceit. Starring legendary actor Chow Yun-Fat and directed by Ringo Lam (CITY ON FIRE).
In Cantonese with English subtitles.
Special live intro from local Hong Kong genre film connoisseur and one of the programmers of the Seattle Film Society, Patrick McFarland.
“With Full Contact, Lam takes the action genre and proceeds to not merely transcend it but explode it.” Beth Accomando, KPBS.org
Don’t Play With Fire – New Restoration
- Tuesday, Sep 29, 2026, 7:15pm
- Wednesday, Sep 30, 2026, 7:15pm
Screening location: SIFF Film Center – 167 Republican St, Seattle(located within the Seattle Center, just north of Climate Pledge Arena / east of KEXP and The Vera Project)
Long difficult to find, Tsui Hark's DON'T PLAY WITH FIRE (aka DANGEROUS ENCOUNTERS OF THE FIRST KIND) is one of the most controversial and violent crime films from the Hong Kong New Wave of the 1980s. Now newly restored!
After a fatal hit-and-run, three high school friends flee the crime scene. They are witnessed by Pearl, a sadistic young girl who pursues the group and blackmails them into more crimes, with increasingly disastrous consequences.
In Cantonese with English subtitles.
Special live intro from local Hong Kong genre film connoisseur and one of the programmers of the Seattle Film Society, Patrick McFarland.
“No film captures [Tsui Hark’s] early renegade style better.” Stephanie Monohan, Screen Slate
“An unflinching, nihilistic examination of juvenile delinquency in an unstable political climate, [it] still holds up more than three decades on, both as a piece of entertainment and as a cautionary tale about the dangers of a disenfranchised young generation.” James Marsh, ScreenAnarchy