When the year-end catch-ups are done and the paint’s still wet on your 2016 viewing log, is there any better way to begin twelve months of movies than Orson Welles‘s Chimes at Midnight? Ahead of a home-video release, this long-rare masterpiece — Welles’s favorite of his work — has been given a restoration that Criterion and Janus Films have “sourced from Filmoteca Española’s scan of the original 35mm negative.” And you’ll get to experience this soon: it’s premiering at New York’s Film Forum and Los Angeles’ Cinefamily on January 1, and afterward expanding to cities throughout the country.

Ahead of this fine occasion, we’ve been graciously offered an opportunity to present the official poster. The work of Sterling Hundley evokes this picture’s dirtiness, starkness, overpowering middle-age aesthetics, and, of course, Falstaff, Shakespeare’s comic figure who, in this new iteration, makes for one of Welles’ greatest creations as a writer and performer. Even a brief trailer will make clear that Chimes is not to be missed, especially if the theatrical experience comes your way.

Below, one can see it for themselves, along with a new trailer: