The Lufkin indie cinema scene
For a city of its scale, Lufkin sustains a distinctive independent and art-house exhibition culture. Our directory currently lists 1 such cinemas in the metro area, accounting for 3 screens of programming in any given week. That slate ranges from foreign-language premieres and Sundance acquisitions to documentary engagements, repertory revivals, festival residencies, and one-off director Q&As.
Independent cinemas tend to depend on three things: a knowledgeable programmer with a point of view, a habit-forming local audience that turns up week after week, and the operational discipline to keep a small business open in a real-estate market that mostly punishes single-screen rooms. The 1 venues in Lufkin have, in their different ways, all built that loop. A working list of regional film criticism is the fastest way to learn how each room programs.
What's playing right now
The 1 cinemas above are currently programming 12 distinct films in our catalog this week. The most-booked titles in Lufkin are:
- Synecdoche, New York (2008) — Charlie Kaufman, Drama.
- Faces Places (2017) — Agnès Varda, JR, Documentary.
- The Act of Killing (2012) — Joshua Oppenheimer, Documentary.
- There Will Be Blood (2007) — Paul Thomas Anderson, Drama.
- Stalker (1979) — Andrei Tarkovsky, Drama.
- Force Majeure (2014) — Ruben Östlund, Comedy.
- All of Us Strangers (2023) — Andrew Haigh, Drama.
- Burning (2018) — Lee Chang-dong, Drama.
- The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) — Wes Anderson, Comedy.
- Boyhood (2014) — Richard Linklater, Drama.
Programming character
Across this week's bookings, Lufkin programmers are leaning into drama (10 titles), history (3 titles), documentary (2 titles), crime (2 titles), sci-fi (2 titles). The shape of any city's indie circuit is a question of which genres its programmers and audiences have agreed to take seriously, and the breakdown above is a reasonable proxy for what Lufkin currently considers part of the conversation.
If you are visiting Lufkin for the weekend, any of the venues above is a worthwhile stop and most are clustered close enough that a Saturday-Sunday double-bill across two rooms is genuinely doable. If you live here, consider taking out a membership at the one nearest you — independent exhibition only continues to exist because of the people who keep showing up. Membership programs at art-house theaters are usually the single most important revenue line for these venues.
Where to look next
Looking further afield in TX? Browse all cities in our directory, or follow a film and let the schedule decide where to go next: see our full film catalog. Programmer-driven cities like Lufkin tend to share titles with each other on a one-to-two-week lag, so the films above will frequently surface in nearby metros shortly after their Lufkin run.