General Admission $11.00, Student/ Senior $9.50, Members $7.50. General admission tickets available online and at the door. Student and Senior tickets only available at the door. ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS. NO EXCHANGES. NO EXCEPTIONS.

“Adapting the cold language of data encryption to recount a dramatic saga of abuse of power and justified paranoia, Poitras brilliantly demonstrates that information is a weapon that cuts both ways.”

– VARIETY

“It’s a tense and frightening thriller that blends the brisk globe-trotting of the “Bourne” movies with the spooky, atmospheric effects of a Japanese horror film.”

– NEW YORK TIMES

“Whether you think Edward Snowden is a hero or a traitor, you should see the riveting documentary ‘Citizenfour’… “

– WASHINGTON POST

“No matter one’s personal stance about what Snowden did, this revelatory work is fascinating and thought-provoking, if, at the same time, oddly lacking in tension …”

– HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

“Citizenfour is at its most eye-opening and essential simply as a portrait of the then 29-year-old Snowden at a point of absolute no-return in his life.”

– TIME OUT

“Poitras shows us history as it happens, scenes of such intimate momentousness that the movie’s a must-see piece of work even if, in its totality, it’s underwhelming as argument or cinema.”

– VILLAGE VOICE

“Citizenfour does an excellent job of balancing what we already know with behind-the-scenes discussions of how the information should be released.”

– AV CLUB

“You should see this movie if you’re naïve enough to think you have a right to privacy. But don’t buy your ticket online or with a credit card.”

– VULTURE

“Citizenfour is an urgent, gripping real-life spy story that should be seen by every American, and quite likely by everybody else too.”

– SALON

“Carping about as significant a film as “Citizenfour” feels beside the point. You can wish its faults didn’t exist, but it does a real service in detailing what the scary consequences of those NSA actions could be.”

– LOS ANGELES TIMES

“There are not a lot of moments in documentary cinema that equal “Citizenfour.”

– WALL STREET JOURNAL

“[It serves as a] chance for Poitras to reorganize her Pulitzer Prize-winning story in her own medium and cinema verité style. It mostly works.”

– NPR

“Laura Poitras may be guilty of taking Snowden at face value, but she succeeds brilliantly in evoking a shadow villain intent on world domination. Big Brother is back, baby, and he’s gone digital.”

– ROLLING STONE