This event is free and does not require tickets. Click "Buy Tickets" to purchase a limited reserved Picnic Basket space.
Free movies on the Enzian lawn! Wednesday Night Pitcher Shows are FREE and open to the public. Keep an eye on social media for information about rescheduled shows due to weather. Free overflow parking is available at Park Maitland School and Peach Valley across the street. Outside food & beverage is not permitted.
Want a reserved spot on the lawn with a bucket of beer and popcorn? Click here to purchase one of our limited reserved picnic baskets! All other seating is first come, first served.
Midsommar:
Somewhere between May Day and the Summer Solstice, Enzian is bringing Ari Aster’s Midsommar to the lawn!
A sun-drenched descent into folk horror where grief and ritual collide under the unforgiving constant of near-permeant daylight. After a devastating family tragedy, Dani (Florence Pugh) joins her emotionally distant boyfriend Christian (Jack Reynor) and his friends on a trip to a remote Swedish commune for a once-in-a-lifetime midsummer festival. What begins as an idyllic retreat, replete with flower crowns and communal feasts slowly reveals a series of increasingly disturbing rituals. As tensions rise within the group, Dani finds herself pulled deeper into a world where pain is shared, boundaries dissolve, and something far more permanent awaits at the heart of the celebration.
Bring a blanket, settle in, and let the midnight sun get under your skin. Maybe there is a fire? Maybe there is a bear? Maybe there is no escape once the festivities begin?
2019, 148 minutes, USA/Sweden, In English and Swedish with English Subtitles, Directed by Ari Aster, Rated R
“A terrifically juicy, apocalyptic cinematic sacrament that dances around a fruitless relationship in dizzying circles. We are not stuffed inside a cavernous house of horrors this time around.”
– Tomris Laffly, ROGEREBERT.COM
“Like the fretful violins that stagger raggedly over the soundtrack, the skin-pricking pleasures of Midsommar aren’t rational, they’re instinctive: a thrilling, seasick freefall into the light.”
– Leah Greenblatt, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
“A sunshine-and-flowers-filled waking nightmare.”
– Vince Mancini, UPROXX
“This is the kind of mad science filmmaking worth rooting for: Aster refashions “The Wicker Man” as a perverse breakup movie, douses Swedish mythology in Bergmanesque despair, and sets the epic collage ablaze.”
– Eric Kohn, INDIEWIRE