Stranger, smaller-room, and in-the-know Scope NYC picks for Saturday, June 13.
Club Cumming makes the Romy and Michele tea-dance idea feel knowingly campy instead of just nostalgic.
Brakhage at Anthology is a pure experimental-film detour, precise enough for viewers who want cinema stripped down to sensation.
Low Cinema gives this cult-disaster oddity the right low-polish home, where the rough edges are the point.
House of Yes gives the Pride-edition circus frame the right maximalist setting, somewhere between variety show and queer spectacle.
The Bell House turns a quotable fashion-camp movie into a live drinking-game crowd event, silly in a way that knows exactly what it is.
A neo-noir cabaret at The Red Pavilion has a Chinatown-night specificity that feels more curious than the broader theater listings.
Caveat is built for this literary-meets-burlesque premise, a smart oddball pairing with enough bite for a late Saturday.
Close Up's late set-and-session format puts serious improvisers in a looser after-hours lane, where the night can keep changing shape.
A near-midnight solo piano slot at Mezzrow is a narrow jazz-head proposition, best for listeners chasing the late thread.
IFC's midnight slot is the correct hour for this sound-obsessed psychological horror film, a late cinephile trapdoor.