The Beverly Theater brings Gus Van Sant's cult classic "Drugstore Cowboy" to its intimate screening room in the Arts District. This 1989 film follows a crew of junkies robbing pharmacies across the Pacific Northwest, with Matt Dillon delivering one of his finest performances as the group's superstitious leader. Van Sant's breakthrough feature combines gritty realism with dreamlike sequences, creating a portrait of addiction that's both unflinching and strangely poetic.
The film's raw aesthetic and improvised feel capture early-90s independent cinema at its most daring, featuring a memorable turn by William S. Burroughs as a defrocked priest. Screening in the Beverly's 150-seat theater with its excellent acoustics, this is a chance to see a genuine American indie landmark on the big screen, where its handheld camerawork and naturalistic performances can be fully appreciated in a space designed for serious film presentation.