Art and Indie Film Venues in NYC

I've seen some incredibly good foreign and art films in this city, as well as little-known documentaries and indie films that don't get big-budget releases at major theaters. As a film connoisseur, I can wholeheartedly recommend these venues for the kinds of films you wouldn't see anywhere else: sometimes weird, edgy, off the beaten path, obscure and thoughtful works from filmmakers who treat film not as entertainment but as a social medium, or simply as art. Paris has a lively film culture and I'm glad that New York City can at least hold its own in that department.

Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Avenue at 2nd Street
http://www.anthologyfilmarchives.org/
Conceived and long operated by Jonas Mekas, anthology has been an epicenter of sorts for avant garde filmmakers in the city. They regularly screen classics, and devote a substantial amount of programming time to new filmmakers. If you're making films in a basement somewhere, this would be the place you go, get friendly with the film lovers who work there, and probably get to screen your work.

Film Forum
209 West Houston Street near Varick Street
http://www.filmforum.org/
One of the leading movie houses for independent screenings. They specialize in NYC theatrical premiers of American independent and foreign art films. They have a strong curatorial emphasis on work that deals with social and political issues, and also offer a good documentary programming.

Film Society of Lincoln Center
165 West 65th Street near Broadway
http://www.filmlinc.com/
Founded to celebrate American and international cinema, the film society is immensely popular and lends a certain prestige to the indie films it chooses for screening.

French Institute Alliance Francaise
55 East 59th Street near Broadway
http://www.fiaf.org/calendar/calendar.asp?vw=2&evt=FILM
Well, yeah, it seems fitting that the film-loving French would have an outpost in this city too. Some incredibly good selections of contemporary and classics of French filmmaking.

IFC Center
323 Sixth Avenue at 3rd Street
http://www.ifccenter.com/
Excellent, excellent independent films from all over the world, screened daily.

Museum of Modern Art
11 west 53rd Street near Fifth Avenue
http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/filters/3
The MoMa has a huge archive of films and is an incredible place to get your film history education. With screenings several times a day, and and free access to all films with the purchase of a membership. That's a veeery good deal if you're intending to see a lot of films.

Sunshine Cinema
143 East Houston
http://www.landmarktheatres.com/Market/NewYork/NewYork_frameset.htm
Excellent arthouse cinema with not a Hollywood blockbuster in sight.

Angelika Film Center & Cafe
18 West Houston
www.angelikafilmcenter.com
Features independent foreign and domestic films, and has an excellent waiting area with cafe for socializing before and after the films. It's well-attended and on weekends many shows sell out, so it's better to book tickets in advance.

Cinema Village
22 East 12th Street
http://www.cinemavillage.com/chc/cv/
Three-screen cinema specializing in provocative independent and foreign films.

Tribeca Cinemas and Tibeca Film Institute
375 Greenwich Street
54 Varick Street
TC: http://www.tribecacinemas.com/calendar/
TFI: http://www.tribecafilminstitute.org/sloan/
Tribeca Cinemas is home to the Tribeca Film Festival and regularly screens other films and documentaries throughout the year. Tribeca Film institute is connected to the cinemas and gives grants for the production of important documentary film projects.
The opinions expressed here are those of the individual and not those of StreetAdvisor.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
The Angelika plays an interesting mix of independent films - it's actually one of the country's most successful arthouses.
http://angelikafilmcenter.com/

Landmark Sunshine Cinema on Houston also makes a visible effort to feature some diverse movies; the movies they show there range from mainstream to off-kilter independents.
http://www.landmarktheatres.com/Market/NewYork/NewYork_frameset.htm
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
I love the Angelika Film center.. I saw my first Pedro Almodovar movie there years ago- The Imaginasian Theater located on 239 East 59th Street,(between 2nd Ave & 3rd Avenue)New York, is the place to go to in Manhattan if you want to catch Bollywood and other Asian movies on the big screen.
The Paris Theater also located on the Upper East Side at 4 W 58th Street (between Avenue Of The Americas & Grand Army Plz) is an old theater which also shows foreign films in addition to some choice commercial cinema.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
How could I forget Angelika! Duh!

Sunshine is also great and definitely belongs on the list.

I think there was another tiny indie movie house in the East Village (maybe it's gone now?) but I can't remember the name. Anybody?
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uptowngirl 2yrs+
Is it the Two Boots Pioneer Theater(http://www.twoboots.com/pioneer/) which shut down in November 2008?
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
There was another place, even smaller, though too bad about Pioneer.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
Man... I always wanted to go to Pioneer, but never did; you just can't hesitate in this city.

@Uraniumfish There is also Cinema Village on E 12th St, apparently one of the oldest operating "art houses" in the city? At the moment they don't appear to be playing anything spectacular, though.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
I saw the movie Pumpkin in the East Village in an old theater with a little tiny screen... it was a great place, though almost ten years later I can't remember the name of it.
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hhusted 2yrs+
I wrote about MoMA at some point. I really like the films they present and the atmosphere is nice to. A great place to take your kids to.

I have a friend who went to the Angelika Film Center with a friend of hers. They saw this French film about a guy who was a player and he fell in love with this woman, only to find that she was killed. It was all French. No English at all. My friend speaks fluent French so she could understand the movie. She said it had a sad ending.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
@ BroadwayBK Yes! Cinema Village, too. Updated the list.

Maybe you're thinking of the same tiny tiny little film place, still can't come up with a name though.

Also, there's a good cinema for foreign films somewhere below Union Square, but that name slipped out of my head too.
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BroadwayBK 2yrs+
The only theater just below Union Square besides the huge Regal Cinemas (that I know of) is Cinema Village.....
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
I'll find it eventually. I saw that awful film by Peter Handke there, so I know it exists.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Just found the Tribecca Film Institute...
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I really enjoy some of the oldies at Film Forum - they had a great French New Wave series a couple of years ago with Resnais's Last Year at Marienbad and Le Mepris with Brigitte Bardot. Angelika I enjoy too - but my favorite is probably Lincoln Square across from Lincoln Centre - it's a great atmosphere, and central enough that it doesn't feel like you need to take a whole day trip just to see a film. My perfect date consists of coffee at the nearby Breadsoul Cafe, an indie film, and then dinner at Fiorello's or NIck and Tony's. Ideal.
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hhusted 2yrs+
I've been meaning to go to the Tribecca Film Institute. I just been so busy haven't had time. I would like to go there just once to see what the place is like.
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Uraniumfish 2yrs+
Film Forum's more off the beaten path than Angelika, generally. A bit smaller, more specialized kinds of films.
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