The Beverly Theater brings Luis Buñuel's controversial 1961 masterpiece "Viridiana" to downtown Las Vegas's Arts District. This Mexican-Spanish co-production, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes before being banned in Spain for decades, tells the story of a young novice nun whose attempts at Christian charity and piety collide with harsh reality. Buñuel's biting satire of religious hypocrisy and bourgeois morality remains as provocative today as it was over sixty years ago.
The film screens in the intimate 150-seat theater, where the venue's excellent acoustics and state-of-the-art projection do justice to Gabriel Figueroa's stark black-and-white cinematography. This is art house cinema at its finest—challenging, darkly humorous, and utterly compelling. The Beverly's commitment to presenting classic and important films makes this a rare opportunity to see Buñuel's vision on the big screen, where its power and subversive beauty can be fully appreciated.