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You are here: Home / Theater Buzz / Royal

Free Sneak Preview Screening of STEFAN ZWEIG: FAREWELL TO EUROPE with Director Maria Schrader in Person.

December 2, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

FREE SCREENING – SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11 at 10 am. Director MARIA SCHRADER in person. RSVP: SashaBerman@mac.com.

STEFAN ZWEIG: FAREWELL TO EUROPE, Austria’s Official Entry for the Best Foreign Language Film – 89th Academy Awards®, was written and directed by Maria Schrader (one of Germany’s most acclaimed actresses, best known for her award-winning lead role in “Aimee & Jaguar” and for her lead role in the Emmy-winning TV series “Deutschland 83”).

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The film episodically tells the story of the Austrian Jewish writer Stefan Zweig and his life while in exile from 1936 to 1942. Best known in the U.S. for his novellas “The Royal Game” and “Letter from an Unknown Woman,” that was later adapted into a film directed by Max Ophüls, starring Joan Fontaine. His writings have also inspired Wes Anderson’s “Grand Budapest Hotel.”

Stefan Zweig (next to Thomas Mann) was the most-translated German-speaking writer of his time, but having been driven into emigration at the peak of his worldwide fame, Zweig falls into despair at the sight of Europe’s downfall, which he had anticipated early on. Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, New York, Petrópolis are four stations in Stefan Zweig’s exile, which despite offering him safe refuge and overwhelming tropical nature, won’t help him find peace and won’t be able to replace his home.
STEFAN ZWEIG: FAREWELL TO EUROPE is the story of a refugee, a tale of losing one’s home and of the search for a new one. It is a visually stunning historic picture about a great artist and, at the same time, a film about a time in which Europe was coming apart.

https://vimeo.com/181008086

 

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Filmmaker in Person, Films, Q&A's, Royal

SINS OF OUR YOUTH Special Event at the Royal.

December 2, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

Special Q&A Event after the Thursday 12/15 7:30PM SINS OF OUR YOUTH screening featuring Cast & Crew including Director & Writer Gary & Edmund Entin as well as stars Mitchel Musso, Joel Courtney, Bridger Zadina & Dani Knights.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJoc98rqN70

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Actor in Person, Filmmaker in Person, Films, Q&A's, Royal

Nancy Nimoy: Solo Exhibit at the Royal

November 24, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle 2 Comments

19 Art in the Arthouse is pleased to present the vibrant works of accomplished painter, illustrator and designer, NANCY NIMOY, at the Royal Theater. Curated by our own Tish Laemmle, this exhibit showcases Nimoy’s versatile talent in over 30 stunning pieces.  Expansive in both theme and approach, Nimoy tackles issues of politics, social media, and celebrity.

Nimoy has a way of finding beauty and meaning in the seemingly mundane. Her unique take on the everyday commands attention, while playful use of light and color make her work visually “pop.” The end result being whimsical and engaging paintings of undeniable craftsmanship.

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When Nimoy began her career in New York, a well-known design team famously admonished her for presenting a portfolio that was “all over the map.”  Today, as a sought after painter and illustrator with a long list of private commissions, corporate, publishing, theatre, and film clients, her work is quite literally, all over the map.

In the end, Nimoy’s  flexibility is, in fact, her strength.  Whether exploring icons such as The Rolling Stones, depicting a woman’s dress, or documenting the last anxious days of a diabolical political campaign, her gift for observation and storytelling shines through.  Nimoy’s influences are also many, reflecting her love of Diebenkorn, Picasso, Hockney and the German Expressionist movement, with a deep bow to Maira Kalman.

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Nimoy’s work, including portrait commissions, can be found in collections from Dublin to Brooklyn and scattered throughout her messy studio where she does her best work in her bathrobe.

The Nancy Nimoy Solo Exhibit runs through January.  Make sure to visit the gallery outside of the Royal’s main auditorium (House #1) next time you come for a movie.  Or just stop by – movie tickets are not required to view the art.

ArtHouse_Logo_08mh

2 Comments Filed Under: Art in the Arthouse, News, Royal

BEST WORST THING THAT EVER COULD HAVE HAPPENED Q&A Opening Night at the Royal with Actor Jason Alexander.

November 22, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

Actor Jason Alexander, who appeared in the original Broadway production of Merrily We Roll Along and is among the luminaries who talk about the experience in the new documentary BEST WORST THING THAT EVER COULD HAVE HAPPENED, will participate in a Q&A after the 7 PM screening at the Royal on Friday, November 25. Lisa Fung of the L.A. Times will serve as moderator.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCwqEdQykJU

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Actor in Person, Featured Films, Films, Q&A's, Royal

Humphrey Bogart Double Feature on Wednesday, November 30th in Pasadena, North Hollywood, and West LA!

November 16, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

Humphrey BogartLaemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a tribute to screen legend Humphrey Bogart with a double feature of The Big Sleep (1946, 70th anniversary) and High Sierra (1941, 75th anniversary).

College students launched a passionate Bogart cult in the 1960s, and it is still going strong today. His tough screen persona gave dimension to a number of memorable characters, and we present two of those seminal roles in this Bogie double bill.

The Humphrey Bogart double feature will play on Wednesday, November 30 at three locations: the Royal in West LA, the NoHo 7 in North Hollywood, and the Playhouse 7 in Pasadena.

CLICK HERE to purchase tickets to the 5:10PM High Sierra (includes admission to the 7:30PM The Big Sleep).

CLICK HERE to purchase tickets to the 7:30PM The Big Sleep (includes admission to the 10PM High Sierra).

HIGH SIERRA is a 1941 heist film with impeccable crime story credits; it was written by W.R. Burnett (Little Caesar, Scarface) and John Huston (The Maltese Falcon, Key Largo) adapting Burnett’s novel, and directed by Raoul Walsh (The Roaring Twenties, White Heat). Bogart plays “Mad Dog” Roy Earle, a weary, aging gangster who attempts to reject his life of crime. Co-star Ida Lupino (as his adoring moll) was actually top billed, but Bogart’s acclaimed performance vaulted him to leading man status for the rest of his career. The film also cemented the strong partnership Bogart formed with Huston, and they would collaborate on several screen classics in the next decade.

THE BIG SLEEP is a masterpiece of film noir, released in 1946, directed by Howard Hawks and written by William Faulkner, Leigh Brackett and Jules Furthman adapting the Raymond Chandler novel. It marked the second teaming of Bogart with his wife Lauren Bacall, after the two created a screen sensation in Hawks’ To Have and Have Not in 1944. The film is noted for its convoluted plot (just try to follow it) and rich atmosphere. Bogart’s take on private detective Philip Marlowe pleased Chandler, who praised him as “so much better than any other tough-guy actor.” The hero’s sexy interplay with Bacall playfully flirted with contemporary censorship restrictions, as the duo wove the mystique of “Bogie and Bacall.”

Leave a Comment Filed Under: News, Anniversary Classics, Featured Post, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Royal

A Brilliant New Batch of Introspective American Movies.

November 9, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

Recent events being what they are, we welcome several upcoming films that look deeply and well at our country and its underrepresented groups in drastically changing and challenging times.

A precursor to the marriage equality movement, the fight to legalize interracial marriage culminated in the story depicted in LOVING (opening November 18 at the Playhouse and November 23 at the NoHo, Claremont and Monica Film Center).

Written and directed by gifted young filmmaker Jeff Nichols (Take Shelter, Mud, Midnight Special), the film celebrates the real-life courage and commitment of an interracial couple, Richard and Mildred Loving (Joel Edgerton and Ruth Negga), who married and then spent the next nine years fighting for the right to live as a family in their hometown.

Their civil rights case, Loving v. Virginia, went all the way to the Supreme Court, which in 1967 reaffirmed the very foundation of the right to marry – and their love story has become an inspiration to couples ever since. The acting is excellent, prompting Michelle Dean to write in the New Republic that “Edgerton is likely to get more attention, though it is Negga’s incredible performance that makes the film so powerfully subtle.”

hero_loving_01

A tender, heartbreaking story of a young man’s struggle to find himself, MOONLIGHT is told across three defining chapters in his life as he experiences the ecstasy, pain, and beauty of falling in love, while grappling with his own sexuality. The film has been garnering rave reviews from everyone who see it.

Writing in the Detroit News, Adam Graham called it “a film of rare grace – a tender, compassionate, restrained look at a life lived in the shadows.” Ty Burr of the Boston Globe called MOONLIGHT, “in its quietly radical grace…a cultural watershed – a work that dismantles all the ways our media view young black men and puts in their place a series of intimate truths.” We open the film this Friday at the NoHo 7, November 18 at the Playhouse and Monica Film Center, and December 16 at the Claremont 5.

A scene from MOONLIGHT.
A scene from MOONLIGHT.

Our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have produced a huge new population of young veterans and their service and experiences are the focus of two new films. We open the documentary NATIONAL BIRD on November 18 at the Monica Film Center. It follows the harrowing journey of three U.S. military veteran whistle-blowers determined to break the silence surrounding America’s secret drone war. Tortured by guilt for their participation in the killing of faceless terror suspects, and despite the threat of being prosecuted, these three veterans offer an unprecedented look inside this secret program to reveal the haunting cost of America’s global drone strikes. Wim Wenders and Errol Morris are the executive producers. Jason Bailey of Flavorwire called the film ” gripping indictment of America’s increasing reliance on drone warfare. Scary, potent, powerful stuff.”

natbird

MAN DOWN is a fictionalized account of U.S. Marine Gabriel Drummer (Shia LaBeouf), who returns home from his tour in Afghanistan to find that the place he once called home is no better than the battlefields he fought on overseas. Accompanied by his best friend Devin Roberts (Jai Courtney), a hard-nosed marine whose natural instinct is to shoot first and ask questions later, he searches desperately for the whereabouts of his estranged son, Jonathan (Charlie Shotwell) and wife, Natalie (Kate Mara). We open MAN DOWN December 2 at the Playhouse and Monica Film Center.

Finally, legendary director Ken Loach’s new movie I, DANIEL BLAKE is not a U.S. film but one that does offer a profound look at the issue of income inequality in a way that has a strong bearing on our problems here in the U.S.

Winner of the Palme d’Or at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival, the latest I, DANIEL BLAKE is a gripping, human tale about the impact one man can make. Gruff but goodhearted, Daniel Blake (Dave Johns) is a man out of time: a widowed woodworker who’s never owned a computer, he lives according to his own common sense moral code. But after a heart attack leaves him unable to work and the state welfare system fails him, the stubbornly self-reliant Daniel must stand up and fight for his dignity.

A scene from I, DANIEL BLAKE.
A scene from I, DANIEL BLAKE.

In his Variety review, Owen Gleiberman described I, DANIEL BLAKE as “one of Loach’s finest films, a drama of tender devastation that tells its story with an unblinking neorealist simplicity that goes right back to the plainspoken purity of Vittorio De Sica.” The film is a reminder that what ails us here at home has parallels abroad.

Watch all five trailers:

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Featured Films, Claremont 5, Films, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Royal, Santa Monica

BY SIDNEY LUMET Q&A Tonight at the Royal.

November 4, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

BY SIDNEY LUMET producer Christopher Donnelly will participate in a Q&A after the 7:10 PM screening tonight, Friday, November 4th, at the Royal.

https://vimeo.com/156307357

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Featured Films, Filmmaker in Person, Films, Q&A's, Royal

Anna Muylaert on Her New Film DON’T CALL ME SON, Opening November 11th at the Royal.

November 1, 2016 by Lamb Laemmle Leave a Comment

In the new Brazilian movie Don’t Call Me Son, tall, dark, androgynously handsome Pierre (Naomi Nero) wears eyeliner and a black lace G-string and enjoys sex with both boys and girls. The confusion only goes deeper when the teenager’s single, working-class mom is arrested for having stolen him (and his “sister”) at birth. Thanks to the wonders of DNA, he’s returned to his biological parents: bourgeois, straight-laced and thrilled to have him back — at least until he joins them at a bowling alley in a zebra-print mini dress.

We played filmmaker Anna Muylaert’s previous film, The Second Mother, last fall and are thrilled to open her latest beginning Friday, November 11th at the Royal. What follows is a short interview with her.

You are the screenwriter of your films and co-writer of several works for cinema and TV. How was it to start from a real life situation to create the story for Don’t Call Me Son?
The basis of the plot of Don’t Call Me Son is a very famous case in Brazil. The character of the first mother has even been used in soap operas, but no one really talked about the situation of the son. I wanted to develop this situation because I thought that in a symbolic way, every child has to change its mother and family when they become teenagers and start to show new sides of their personality that the family won’t love as much as they used to when this child was a toddler.
Is that why you chose the same actress, Dani Nefussi, to play both mothers?
Exactly. I wanted the character to live a continuum: Although Pierre leaves his first mother he will soon meet her again in the face of the second mother. I chose that because I believe that our mothers shape the way we look at things in the very beginning and unless we make a lot of effort to change this, they will always be there in our subconscious, intermediating our relationship with life. But Dani Nefussi is such a great actress – and the makeup/ wardrobe characterization is so well done – that very few people notice that both moms are played by the same person.

Sao Paulo/ SP - Dezembro, 2014 STILL Longa ' Mae So Ha Uma ' , de Anna Muylaert Fotos: Aline Arruda *** OBRIGATORIO O USO DE CREDITO EM FOTOS PUBLICADAS NA WEB ou IMPRESSO ***
A scene from DON’T CALL ME SON. Photo by Aline Arruda.

With your previous film, The Second Mother, you achieved great success from both critics and audiences, and the film won awards at several festivals around the world, causing a major debate about social classes. How do you think Don’t Call Me Son will be received? What do you expect from the film? 
I see The Second Mother as the film of my maturity, a crowd-pleasing film that took me 20 years of work as a person, as a mother and as a filmmaker. It’s the blossom of many characteristics that I have been working already in my previous films. Don’t Call Me Son represents a break. In terms of style it’s totally different of all my other films. I normally work with steady shooting and this one is filmed all with hand-held camera. And also in terms of storytelling, this is a younger film, full of locations and different situations, gaps and mystery. So, I don’t know how it’s going to be received, but it’s certainly a break. Later I will probably come back to my old classic way, but at this moment I am very excited about doing a more provocative film.

PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 26: filmmaker Anna Muylaert of "The Second Mother" poses for a portrait at the Village at the Lift Presented by McDonald's McCafe during the 2015 Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2015 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
Filmmaker Anna Muylaert. Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images)

How do you chose your crew?
Cinema is an art of the crew. Finding the right crew is maybe the most important action a director takes. After many years I have recently found the director of photography who really collaborates best with my storytelling: Barbara Alvarez from Uruguay (Whisky, The Headless Woman). She and Thales Junqueira (my art director) both understand deeply that in my directing I am never looking for beauty but I am looking for life, for authenticity.

You once again have a very eclectic but relevant cast, famous Brazilian actors as well as new faces. How do you choose the actors you’re working with?
I look for actors/authors – I like actors that can contribute to their characters, who can improvise, who can create more something beyond the material I give to them, I like to be surprised by their performances. So, this is basically what I look for. Sometimes, I think of a famous actor for the leading role, but in Don’t Call Me Son, I looked for the most authentic teenagers. And I called Matheus Nachtergaele because I really like his strength on the screen and I really felt like working with him.
With Don’t Call Me Son you’re experiencing sensuality in filmmaking. Is it something you usually like to express through cinema or is it a new direction you’re exploring?

[Read more…]

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Featured Films, Featured Post, Films, Royal

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For the 21st consecutive year, Laemmle will be scr For the 21st consecutive year, Laemmle will be screening the Oscar-Nominated Short Films, opening on Feb. 20th. Showcasing the best short films from around the world, the 2026 Oscar®-Nominated Shorts includes three feature-length programs, one for each Academy Award® Short Film category: Animated, Documentary and Live Action.

ANIMATED SHORTS: (Estimated Running Time: 83 mins)
The Three Sisters
Forevergreen
The Girl Who Cried Pearls
Butterfly
Retirement Plan
 
LIVE ACTION SHORTS (Estimated Running Time: 119 minutes)
The Singers
A Friend Of Dorothy
Butcher’s Stain
Two People Exchanging Saliva
Jane Austin’s Period Drama

DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (Estimated Running Time: 158 minutes)
Perfectly A Strangeness
The Devil Is Busy
Armed Only With A Camera: The Life And Death Of Brent Renaud
All The  Empty Rooms
Children No More: “Were And Are Gone”

Please note that some films may not be appropriate for audiences under the age of 14 due to gun violence, shootings, language and animated nudity.
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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/artfully-united | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | ARTFULLY UNITED is a celebration of the power of positivity and a reminder that hope can sometimes grow in the most unlikely of places. As artist Mike Norice creates a series of inspirational murals in under-served neighborhoods in and around Los Angeles, the Artfully United Tour transforms from a simple idea on a wall to a community of artists and activists coming together to heal and uplift a city.

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/artfully-united

RELEASE DATE: 10/17/2025
Director: Dave Benner
Cast: Mike Norice

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ABOUT LAEMMLE: Since 1938, Laemmle [Theatres] has been showing the finest independent, arthouse, and international films.

Subscribe to Laemmle's E-NEWSLETTER: http://bit.ly/3y1YSTM
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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/brides | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | Nadia Fall's compelling debut feature offers a powerful and empathetic look into the lives of two alienated teenage girls, Doe and Muna, who leave the U.K. for Syria in search of purpose and belonging. By humanizing its protagonists and exploring the complex interplay of vulnerability, societal pressures, and digital manipulation, BRIDES challenges simplistic explanations of radicalization.

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/brides

RELEASE DATE: 9/24/2025
Director: Nadia Fall

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ABOUT LAEMMLE: Since 1938, Laemmle [Theatres] has been showing the finest independent, arthouse, and international films.

Subscribe to Laemmle's E-NEWSLETTER: http://bit.ly/3y1YSTM
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Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/writing-hawa | Subscribe: http://bit.ly/3b8JTym | Afghan documentary maker Najiba Noori offers not only a loving and intimate portrait of her mother Hawa, but also shows in detail how the arduous improvement of the position of women is undone by geopolitical violence. The film follows the fortunes of Noori’s family, who belong to the Hazaras, an ethnic group that has suffered greatly from discrimination and persecution.

Tickets: http://laemmle.com/film/writing-hawa

RELEASE DATE: 10/8/2025

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ABOUT LAEMMLE: Since 1938, Laemmle [Theatres] has been showing the finest independent, arthouse, and international films.

Subscribe to Laemmle's E-NEWSLETTER: http://bit.ly/3y1YSTM
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