
Celebrate Florida Film Festival special guest Christina Ricci!
Free movies on the Enzian lawn!
Wednesday Night Pitcher Shows are FREE and open to the public. Keep an eye on our Facebook 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 for your besties? We have a limited number of exclusive picnic baskets for sale! Grab one fast before they sell out.
The Addams Family:
In the film that put her on the pop culture map and cemented her as a 1990s goth-girl legend, Christina Ricci is the woeful Wednesday Addams, daughter of Gomez (Raul Julia) and Morticia (Angelica Huston) who leapt straight out of Charles Addams‘ cartoons to big screen superstardom. The titular Addams family live with all the trappings of the macabre (including a detached hand for a servant). But, when a man claiming to be Fester (Christopher Lloyd), Gomez’s missing brother, arrives at their home, Morticia suspects the man is a fraud because he can’t recall details of Fester’s life. When “Fester” manages to get the clan evicted from their home, Gomez finally realizes that he is conspiring to swindle them of their fortune.
1991, 99 minutes, USA, Directed by Barry Sonnefeld, Rated PG-13
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“A laugh-in-the-dark funhouse ride that provides nearly two hours of slightly sinister sight gags and Gothic giggles, is creepy, kooky, even altogether ooky enough to satisfy any Addams addict.”
– Joe Brown, WASHINGTON POST -
“Christina Ricci's performance as the character in both The Addams Family and Addams Family Values turned Wednesday into not only a star, but a child's first goth icon.”
– Rhianna Malas, COLLIDER -
“All of the actors are spot-on perfect in their roles, particularly Ricci, whose performance as Wednesday helped cement her status as the queen of dark, offbeat films.”
– Betsy Bozdech, REEL.COM -
“Ricci expresses an unabashed adoration for the deadly and dark, and her startling straightforward lines about death, dark glares, and playful wickedness factor wonderfully to the mix and recognize her as a great talent from an early age.”
– Victor DeBonis, MEDIUM.COM

