Possession (1981)
Schedule
Fri, 20 Feb, 2026 at 07:00 pm
UTC-05:00Location
The Colonial Theatre | Phoenixville, PA
Banned upon its original release in 1981, Andrzej Żuławski’s stunningly choreographed nightmare of a marriage unraveling is an experience unlike any other. Professional spy Mark (Sam Neill) returns to his West Berlin home to find his wife Anna (Isabelle Adjani, in a role that earned her Best Actress at Cannes) insistent on a divorce. As Anna’s frenzied behavior becomes ever more alarming, Mark discovers a truth far more sinister than his wildest suspicions. With its pulsating score, visceral imagery, and some of the most haunting performances ever captured on screen, Possession is cinematic delirium at its most intoxicating. — Metrograph
PROGRAM NOTE
In 1981, exiled Polish auteur Andrzej Żuławski transformed the wreckage of his own collapsing marriage into one of World Cinema’s most electrifying acts of creative extremity: Possession. At once a psychological horror film, a Cold War nightmare, and an intimately apocalyptic portrait of divorce, the movie resists any single, stable interpretation. What begins as a warped, Bergman-esque study of marital disintegration (laced with spy-thriller intrigue) quickly mutates into a delirious phantasmagoria of doubles, religious imagery, and cosmic dread, where personal crisis and political anxiety bleed into one another.
Rather than approaching its themes of love, jealousy, and the terrifying unknowability of another person with restraint, Żuławski embraces emotional excess as a form of truth. His cinema lunges, convulses, and screams – and the results are unforgettable. Sam Neill and Isabelle Adjani give themselves over completely, with Adjani delivering a legendary, all-time great performance that won her the Best Actress prize at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival and must be seen to be believed. Famously dismissed by master filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky as “unspeakably revolting,” Possession has only grown in stature as a singular, exhilarating masterpiece. We’re proud to present it in a stunning 4K restoration from Metrograph Pictures. Some films lure audiences into their rhythms; this one seizes you, shakes you, and refuses to let go.
Where is it happening?
The Colonial Theatre, 227 Bridge St,Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:


















