Tom Tykwer's frenetic German thriller gets the big-screen treatment at The Beverly Theater, bringing its pulsing techno soundtrack and split-second storytelling to the venue's intimate main theater. The film follows Lola as she races through Berlin's streets with twenty minutes to save her boyfriend's life, the story splintering into three possible timelines that each hinge on tiny, chance details. Franka Potente's dyed-red hair and relentless sprint through the city became iconic imagery of late-90s cinema, and the film's kinetic editing style still feels sharp and urgent decades later.
Watching it in a proper theater setting adds weight to the film's visual rhythm and Manni & Lola's soundtrack, which shifts from breakbeat to orchestral swells as the narrative loops back on itself. The Beverly's acoustics and screen size suit a film built on tension and momentum, giving the audience a chance to catch details that might get lost on a smaller screen. For those who love films that play with structure and chance, or anyone curious about a defining piece of German New Wave cinema, this screening offers a good excuse to revisit—or discover—Lola's frantic run.