Hocus Pocus

Fall feels, talking cats, and singing witches? That can only mean one thing… Hocus Pocus is back for Halloween 2023 at Row House Cinema! Watch the Sanderson Sisters terrorize some kids and an outrageously cute small town in Massachusetts this classic popcorn movie from your childhood.

10:00 am: Cereal Cinema

Fall feels, talking cats, and singing witches? That can only mean one thing… Hocus Pocus is back for Halloween 2023 at Row House Cinema! Watch the Sanderson Sisters terrorize some kids and an outrageously cute small town in Massachusetts this classic popcorn movie from your childhood.

  1. 10:00 am Cereal
  2. 6:00 pm

The Exorcist

Don’t miss the director’s cut — aka the version you’ve never seen — of The Exorcist. Twelve-year-old Regan MacNeil begins to develop an explicit and horrifying new personality. Her mother becomes torn between science and superstition in a desperate bid to save her daughter, and turns to Father Damien Karras, a troubled priest who is struggling with his own faith.

Don’t miss the director’s cut — aka the version you’ve never seen — of The Exorcist. Twelve-year-old Regan MacNeil begins to develop an explicit and horrifying new personality. Her mother becomes torn between science and superstition in a desperate bid to save her daughter, and turns to Father Damien Karras, a troubled priest who is struggling with his own faith.

  1. 12:30 pm

Midsommar

Come enjoy one of the best recent horror films again in theaters! When young couple travels to Sweden to visit their friend’s rural hometown and attend its mid-summer festival, their idyllic retreat quickly descends into an increasingly violent and bizarre competition in the director’s cut of this encapsulating new horror film.

Come enjoy one of the best recent horror films again in theaters! When young couple travels to Sweden to visit their friend’s rural hometown and attend its mid-summer festival, their idyllic retreat quickly descends into an increasingly violent and bizarre competition in the director’s cut of this encapsulating new horror film.

  1. 3:05 pm

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

Five friends visiting their grandfather’s house in the country are hunted and terrorized by a chain-saw wielding killer and his family of grave-robbing cannibals in this American horror staple that was banned upon release in some areas for “excessive violence.”

Five friends visiting their grandfather’s house in the country are hunted and terrorized by a chain-saw wielding killer and his family of grave-robbing cannibals in this American horror staple that was banned upon release in some areas for “excessive violence.”

  1. 8:05 pm

Black Christmas (1974)

Although this Canadian production saw its widest U.S. cable TV distribution in the early ’80s (primarily under the title Stranger in the House) to capitalize on the phenomenal success of Halloween and its offspring, this effective suspense-thriller actually predates John Carpenter’s film by four years. The story involves a dangerous psychopath hiding out in the attic of a sorority house who torments a small group of pretty young sisters (including Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder) who are staying behind over Christmas break. His tactics range from making obscene phone calls from their house-mother’s phone, to stalking the terrified boarders with sharp objects and murderous intent. Director Bob Clark, who mistook dreariness for tension in his previous horror effort Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things! (1972), here demonstrates a tight, aggressive style that generates some very original shocks — particularly the surprise ending — which clearly influenced dozens of similarly-themed

Although this Canadian production saw its widest U.S. cable TV distribution in the early ’80s (primarily under the title Stranger in the House) to capitalize on the phenomenal success of Halloween and its offspring, this effective suspense-thriller actually predates John Carpenter’s film by four years. The story involves a dangerous psychopath hiding out in the attic of a sorority house who torments a small group of pretty young sisters (including Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder) who are staying behind over Christmas break. His tactics range from making obscene phone calls from their house-mother’s phone, to stalking the terrified boarders with sharp objects and murderous intent. Director Bob Clark, who mistook dreariness for tension in his previous horror effort Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things! (1972), here demonstrates a tight, aggressive style that generates some very original shocks — particularly the surprise ending — which clearly influenced dozens of similarly-themed

  1. 10:00 pm
  1. 11:59 pm

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