the art house comes to your home

THE WHISTLERS, which I watched at the Roxie Virtual Cinema

Independent films are still here, even though we can’t go to the art house theater in the Age of COVID. Not all the top acclaimed indies can be streamed right away from the major VOD services, but you watch them now at home on platforms like Virtual Cinema. Expect to pay $8-10; yes, that’s more than the $5-7 you pay at Amazon and iTunes, but it’s often the only source, and your ticket purchase supports your own local art house theater.

I’ve been watching movies from San Francisco’s Roxie Virtual Cinema. Since the COVID lockdown, I’ve seen The Wild Goose Lake, The Whistlers, Ella Fitzgerald: Just One of Those Things, Mr. Topaze and You Don’t Nomi at the Roxie.

If you want to support a Silicon Valley theater, the Pruneyard Cinemas has just launched its own Pruneyard Virtual Cinemas through eventive.

Notably, the Laemmle Theaters in Los Angeles has jumped in, too. In my book, this is the best art house chain in the US, and a whopping 32 films are now available to stream from its Laemmle Virtual Cinema.

Other indie films are being distributed on Theatrical-at-home. That’s where I watched The 11th Green.

I’m not planning to go to a real indoor movie theater anytime soon. Some film festivals and film society film series are pivoting to on-line screening, with uneven success. Right now, the best bet is Virtual Cinema at your own own favorite theater.

THE 11TH GREEN, which I watched on Theatrical-at-home

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