Denver Film Festival Must-See Picks for November 3-5: Concrete Utopia and More
Denver Film Festival artistic director Matt Campbell shares his highlights.
Denver Film Festival artistic director Matt Campbell shares his highlights.
After four couples got hitched, viewers can look forward to lots of fighting and crying in the weeks ahead.
Two new venues have been added to the festival lineup this year, but the festival’s goal is to achieve more with less.
The first two episodes of the Denver-based Married at First Sight are already making history.
Butcher’s Crossing was one of the first serious books on the West. Today it’s a Nicholas Cage movie.
“All I know is there’s going to be a whole lot of ladies moving to Denver after this season airs,” according to Nicole Haynes.
A Haunting in Blue Hill will play at Estes Park’s Historic Park Theatre, accompanied by a Q&A with paranormal investigators, haunted doll collections and a ghost hunt.
The Telluride Horror Show is a great thing to do to get in the Halloween spirit, with campfire events, horror films and more.
The Pueblo-shot creature-feature brings a local legend to life.
Need something unique to do in Denver? The Silent Film Festival has three days of rarely-seen silent gems.
Colorado Festival of Horror has genre greats, an impressive amount of local talent and a free screening of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
With titles from throughout South America, Cinema Azteca might be the most diverse contemporary Latin series ever to hit Denver.
CinemaQ founder Keith Garcia goes over this year’s festival highlights, including an appearance from cult icon Udo Kier.
In his last interview with Westword, he talked about his alter-ego and the late Phil Hartman.
The Littleton company caters to filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino and Christopher Nolan.
Sie, the only Denver theater showing Oppenheimeron 35-millimeter film, is also hosting early screenings of Barbie! But if you want the full Barbenheimer experience, go to the Glitterbomb Party.
Legendary horror host and film critic Joe Bob Briggs, of “MonsterVision” and “Joe Bob’s Drive-In Theater,” is appearing at the Archive Videostore in Aurora this weekend.
The “first true slasher film” screens Friday at Dairy Arts Center.
Malcolm McDowell is just one of the celebs you’ll see at the horror convention in Denver this weekend.
Justine Lupe, also known as Justine Lupe-Schomp, graduated from the Denver School of the Arts, and her grandparents were local leaders.
Gabriel Dohrn and Andy Juett’s “Offline,” which premieres at the Sie FilmCenter on Sunday, features the famed Broken Lizard comedians, with two of the cops from “Super Troopers.”
From hard-to-find international gems and Studio Ghibli Fest to secret film festivals, there’s more to May than blockbusters.