The Salt Lake City indie cinema scene
For a city of its scale, Salt Lake City sustains a distinctive independent and art-house exhibition culture. Our directory currently lists 5 such cinemas in the metro area, accounting for 10 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 5 venues in Salt Lake City 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 5 cinemas above are currently programming 18 distinct films in our catalog this week. The most-booked titles in Salt Lake City are:
- Past Lives (2023) — Celine Song, Drama.
- Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012) — Benh Zeitlin, Drama.
- Tokyo Story (1953) — Yasujirō Ozu, Drama.
- Stranger Than Paradise (1984) — Jim Jarmusch, Comedy.
- Call Me by Your Name (2017) — Luca Guadagnino, Drama.
- Sherman’s March (1985) — Ross McElwee, Documentary.
- Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004) — Michel Gondry, Drama.
- How to Have Sex (2023) — Molly Manning Walker, Drama.
- In the Mood for Love (2000) — Wong Kar-wai, Drama.
- Force Majeure (2014) — Ruben Östlund, Comedy.
Programming character
Across this week's bookings, Salt Lake City programmers are leaning into drama (15 titles), comedy (6 titles), romance (5 titles), mystery (2 titles), thriller (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 Salt Lake City currently considers part of the conversation.
If you are visiting Salt Lake City 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 UT? 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 Salt Lake City 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 Salt Lake City run.