Saturday, September 21 • Capitol Theatre  2:30pm & 7:00pm

Batman Day – Featuring Batman (1989)

Saturday, September 21 is International Batman Day, marked by DC Entertainment to celebrate the 85th Anniversary of the caped crusader. The Rome Capitol Theatre will be celebrating the enduring comic book and movie icon by screening 1989’s Batman starring Michael Keaton as Batman and Jack Nicholson as the Joker, in which The Dark Knight of Gotham City begins his war on crime with his first major enemy being the clownishly homicidal Joker.

TICKETS

 

Send us your Cat Pictures and Videos!!!

CAT LOVERS: SEND YOUR PHOTOS AND VIDEOS!!! We want to put your cat on the Capitol Theatre Screen!
Cat Video Fest 2024 is Sunday, October 13 at the Rome Capitol Theatre at 1pm. We will be screening your submitted photos and videos prior to the feature movie CAT VIDEO FEST.

 

 Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties presents Mohawk Valley Gives for its third year!  Friday, September 20, 2024, is the date when your support will have added benefit for the Capitol!

Check out the details with this link.

Fall is just around the corner, and that means a great line up of events at the Capitol Arts Complex-including the return of The Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Capitol Theatre.

Check out the great Fall line  up with this link.

Fall brings a great line up of live concerts on stage at the Capitol Theatre. The list of great acts keeps expanding. Stay informed of the latest shows coming this Fall.

Check out the upcoming concerts with this link.

A Haunted Evening of Halloween Classics

Saturday, October 19 • 7pm Rome Capitol Theatre

Candlelight concerts bring the magic of a live, multi-sensory musical experience to awe-inspiring locations like never seen before in Utica-Rome. Get your tickets now to discover music inspired by Halloween at Rome Capitol Theatre under the gentle glow of candlelight.

Tickets

Current and Upcoming Movies and Shows

Click on title below image for days and times of movie screenings and events. Use arrows to view upcoming features. For a complete listing of all upcoming live events, movies and other special programs visit this link to the events page. You view by week or month as well as a list view.

 

 

Thanks to Glenn Erikson for loaning us his storefront for the Capitolfest dealers room this year!

 Dr. Philip Carli accompanying MAN, WOMAN AND SIN

Organists Dr. Philip Carli, David Peckham and Ben Model.

 

Capitolfest 21 has come and gone, and with it attendees from approximately 32 different U.S. states and Canada.

The festival ran from August 9 through August 11, and was preceded by a “pre-glow” on Thursday, August 8, during which the 2024 documentary, Film is Dead, Long Live Film was screened, introduced by its director, Peter Flynn. Also shown on Thursday was the 1928 short comedy, Dad’s Choice, accompanied by Ben Model on the theater’s 1928 Möller organ.

    Capitolfest started in earnest on Friday morning, with David Peckham at the organ accompanying the second entry in the 1922 Leather Pushers series of boxing shorts, “Round Two,” which were successful in catapulting Capitolfest tribute star Reginald Denny  to fame. This was followed immediately by the silent melodrama, Crooked Alley (Universal, 1923), starring Thomas Carrigan as likable professional thief Boston Blackie and a teenaged Laura La Plante as his leading lady. Among the other highlights of this initial session of Capitolfests was a fascinating presentation of nitrate film decomposition by George Willeman, the Nitrate Vault Leader of the Library of Congress Motion Picture and Recorded Sound Division.

Some of the extreme rarities of Capitolfest 21 were 1930’s Fox film, Temple Tower, Hush Money, a Fox gangster melodrama from 1931 with Joan Bennett and a stellar supporting cast that included the likes of Myrna Loy and George Raft, the Reginald Denny farce comedies, Clear the Decks (1929) and I’ll Show You the Town (1925), and, in its American premiere, a new restoration of the 1930 Polish film, Janko Muzykant, courtesy of the National Archive of Warsaw. This last was a major surprise for those of us in attendance (which apparently were many!) that were unfamiliar with the Polish film industry during the early sound era, and who found the 105-minute drama to be enormously compelling.

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Capitol Arts Complex • 220 West Dominick Street, Rome, NY 13440 • Phone: 315.337.6277 • Email: [email protected]