The Loft Cinema at Main Gate Square: The Royal Tenenbaums

Community, Entertainment, Family

Starts on November 20, 2025 at 7:00 pm

Place

oLiv Courtyard at Main Gate Plaza, 943 E University Blvd (behind Bacio Italiano), near the corner of University Blvd. and Tyndall Ave.

Description

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20 AT 7:00PM

Free Admission

Free Outdoor Screening at Main Gate Square

Enjoy film, food and fun under the stars as The Loft Cinema lights up Main Gate Square! This FREE SCREENING will be held outdoors in the oLiv Courtyard at Main Gate Plaza, 943 E University Blvd (behind Bacio Italiano), near the corner of University Blvd. and Tyndall Ave. Seating will be provided. Delicious food and drink are available for purchase at the many restaurants in Main Gate Square.

Parking is available in Tyndall Garage or Main Gate Garage. Parking is free in Tyndall Garage with validation from any participating merchant.

This masterful tragi-comedy from Wes Anderson essays the epic misadventures of a misanthropic patriarch and his brilliant but spectacularly dysfunctional family as they spiral into glorious chaos. Gene Hackman is both funny and devastating as Royal Tenenbaum, the head of a self-destructive family of oddball geniuses who struggle to connect with each other and the world at large. Tenenbaum and his wife, Etheline (Anjelica Huston), had three children—Chas, Margot, and Richie—and then they separated. Chas (Ben Stiller) started buying real estate in his early teens and seemed to have an almost preternatural understanding of international finance. Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) was a playwright and received a Braverman Grant of $50,000 in the ninth grade. Richie (Luke Wilson) was a junior champion tennis player and won the U.S. Nationals three years in a row. Unfortunately, virtually all memory of the brilliance of the young Tenenbaums was subsequently vaporized by two decades of betrayal, failure, and disaster. Funny, sad and bewildering, The Royal Tenenbaums is a unique and brilliantly stylized study of melancholy and redemption. (Dir. by Wes Anderson, 2001, USA, 110 mins., Rated R)

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