


Larry Clark's films remain among the most provocative portraits of American adolescence ever committed to the screen. Working with an unprecedented immediacy, he captured generations of young people navigating a world defined by freedom, neglect, and the often devastating consequences of both.
Released six years apart, Kids (1995) and Bully (2001) approach similar terrain from different angles. The former immerses itself in the kinetic energy of New York City youth culture, following a loose constellation of teenagers through twenty-four hours of casual intimacy and mounting dread. The latter turns to the manicured suburbs of Florida, where boredom, toxic friendships, and simmering resentment culminate in an act of shocking violence.
Together, these films reveal the remarkable consistency of Clark's vision: an unflinching examination of adolescence that refuses easy moralising or sensationalism. Controversial upon release and no less challenging today, Kids and Bully endure as defining works of American independent cinema, confronting viewers with the uncomfortable realities of youth in a culture that too often looks away.
Presented by Deeper Into Movies.
This is an 18+ event
01:00 PM- 05:00 PM