LAMBERTVILLE: Acme Screening Room describes next film offerings

Here are the offerings at the Acme Screening Room movie venue at 25 S. Union St., Lambertville:
Tickets are $6 for members and $8 for others, unless noted.
Buy membership and tickets at the Acme or online at http://acmescreeningroom.org.
The theater is wheelchair accessible. Subtitles are available for those who are deaf or hard-of-hearing on films that provide them.
Oct. 31- Nov. 2: "Rhymes for Young Ghouls." Friday and Saturday: 7 and 8:40 p.m., and Sunday at 5 p.m.
In the Red Crow Mi’g Maq reservation in 1976, by government decree, every Indian child under the age of 16 must attend residential school. At 15, Aila is the weed princess of Red Crow. Hustling with her uncle, she sells enough dope to pay off Popper, the sadistic Indian agent who runs the school. The balance of Aila’s world is destroyed when her drug money is stolen. Her only options are to run or fight and Mi’g Maq don’t run. R, 88 minutes.
Nov. 7: "The 78 Project," plus meet the directors, Alex Steyermark and Lavinia Wright, at 7 p.m.
This film is a journey across America to make one-of-a-kind 78 rpm records with musicians in their hometowns using a 1930s Presto direct-to-disc recorder, with one microphone, with one blank disc, in one 3-minute take. Technologists, historians and craftsmen from every facet of field recording — Grammy-winning producers, 78 collectors, curators from the Library of Congress and Smithsonian — provide insights and history. NR. 95 minutes.
Nov. 8 and 9: "Love Is Strange." Saturday, 7 and 8:45 p.m., and Sunday at 5 p.m.
After nearly four decades together, Ben (John Lithgow) and George (Alfred Molina) finally tie the knot in an idyllic wedding ceremony in lower Manhattan. But when George loses his job, the couple must sell their apartment and temporarily live apart until they can find an affordable new home. George moves in with two cops, who live downstairs. Ben lands in Brooklyn with his nephew, his wife and their temperamental teenage son,with whom Ben shares a bunk bed. Along with the pain of separation, Ben and George are challenged by the intergenerational tensions and family dynamics of their new living arrangements. Rated R.