Assistive Technologies

Open Secret (1948)

Runtime
1hr 15mins
Directed by
John Reinhardt
Featuring
John Ireland,
Jane Randolph,
Sheldon Leonard
Body

75th Anniversary – Rarely Seen Film Noir – Screening in 35mm! Q&A with Brandeis Professor Thomas Doherty, author of Hollywood & Hitler.

Newlyweds Paul (John Ireland, Academy Award nominee for All the King’s Men) and Nancy (Jane Randolph) stop in a small town to visit Paul’s army buddy, Ed Stevens. Only Ed is missing, and no one seems eager to locate him. Paul is further perplexed by the white supremacist tracts he finds hidden in his pal’s apartment. An undeveloped roll of film leads to a vandalized Jewish-owned camera store and a gang of American Nazis taking over the town. 

A low-budget, hard-hitting cousin to Crossfire and Gentleman’s Agreement, which also broached the taboo subject of antisemitism by name, Open Secret is audacious for its time, depicting postwar antisemitism in a working-class setting, a Jewish character physically fighting back against his aggressors, and illustrating how prejudice can easily coalesce into an all-American strain of fascism. 

Vienna-born John Reinhardt (High Tide, Chicago Calling) assuredly directs this crime drama written by Henry Blankfort, a screenwriter blacklisted during the McCarthy era, and Jewish film & TV writer Max Wilk. The film’s original marketing boasted the tag line: THE PULL-NO-PUNCH DRAMA OF MEN CHAINED TOGETHER BY HATE!

— Preceded by —

A Night in the Garden

Director: Marshall Curry | USA | 2017 | 7m | English

In 1939, 20,000 Americans rallied in New York’s Madison Square Garden to celebrate the rise of Nazism – an event largely forgotten from American history. Marshall Curry’s Academy Award nominated film — which is made entirely from archival footage filmed that night — transports audiences to this chilling gathering and shines a light on the power of demagoguery and antisemitism in the United States.

Please note: by purchasing a ticket to this screening, you agree that your contact information will be shared with the National Center for Jewish Film for the purpose of including you on their mailing lists.

Presented by

This Week

  • Showcasing the best in live action short films from around the world!

    Showtimes
  • A frisky, feminine, film noir about psychoanalysis and many other things… 

    Showtimes
  • A bold, iconoclastic take on one of the world’s most compelling stories, from filmmaker From Maggie Gyllenhaal and starring Jessie Buckley & Christian Bale.

    Showtimes
  • A father, accompanied by his son, goes looking for his missing daughter in North Africa.

    Showtimes
  • Showcasing the best in documentary short films from around the world!

    Showtimes
  • Pre-film seminar by Dr. Shilpa Parnami of Boston University. 

    Showtimes
  • In this five-week class, explore women's voices at the intersection of direction and cinematography.

    Showtimes
  • With her take on Herman Melville’s Billy Budd, Sailor, Claire Denis firmly established herself as a great visual tone poet of our time.

    Showtimes
  • Winner, Best Documentary Feature at the 2026 Academy Awards.

    Showtimes
  • From Ryan Coogler, director of Black Panther and Creed, and starring Michael B. Jordan comes a new vision of fear. 

    Showtimes
  • Winner of the Audience Award: U.S. Documentary at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival.

    Showtimes
  • Digital screenings of the new film from Academy Award-nominated, BAFTA-winning filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson. 

    Showtimes
  • See it before, or after, watching Boorman and the Devil at BUFF! 

    Showtimes
  • 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water. That's a big place to find one fish.

    Showtimes
  • The new film from acclaimed director Christian Petzold (Phoenix, Transit). 

    Showtimes
  • Peter Jackson brings J.R.R Tolkien's Lord of the Rings from page to screen in this epic, Academy-Award winning trilogy.

    Showtimes
  • An exhilarating space adventure set in the near future.

    Showtimes
  • Take a journey into the neuroscience of man’s best friend, examining how different breeds see the world and the science behind the quirks we see on screen.

    Showtimes
  • Exclusive preview of the new PBS documentary filmdirected by Erik Ewers and Christopher Loren Ewers and executive produced by Ken Burns and Don Henley. 

    Showtimes