Sunset Cinema returns for FREE family fun!
Sunset Cinema is our annual outdoor movie series that takes place in  Sculpture Park. In partnership with Denver Arts & Venues, every summer is dedicated to films that celebrate a particular genre, director, art form or theme. We also bring in local partners to help us curate the experience with performances, costume contests, games, photo environments, craft cocktails, and more.

the social network -

 

2025 Program

All events are FREE, but please register on Eventbrite.

  • Doors Open at 6:00 p.m. 

  • Pre-Show Entertainment Starts at 6:30 p.m.

  • Films Begin at 7:30pm

Limited seating will be available on a first come, first serve basis. Bring your chairs, blankets, family and friends to the Arts Complex and enjoy the show!

Social Network - — The

The Social Network isn’t about connecting people – it’s about the loneliness of winning. It asks a question that only grows louder with time: Can you change the world without losing the people who helped you build it?

Sharp dialogue, morally complex antiheroes, origin stories that sting, and films that make you question every “like” you’ve ever given. the social network -

Here’s a short, impactful write-up for The Social Network that you could use for a blog, social media caption, film club intro, or review site. The Social Network (2010) – A Brilliant, Bitter Origin Story The Social Network isn’t about connecting people –

Jesse Eisenberg’s razor-sharp performance as Mark Zuckerberg isn’t a simple portrait of a genius or a villain – it’s a deeply uncomfortable study of someone who craves acceptance but builds walls no one can climb. Andrew Garfield as Eduardo Saverin provides the film’s bleeding heart, while Justin Timberlake’s Sean Parker oozes toxic, magnetic charisma. Under Fincher’s cool, precise direction, every deposition scene feels like a heavyweight fight, and Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross’s haunting, minimalist score turns lawsuits into symphonies. Here’s a short, impactful write-up for The Social

★★★★★ (5/5) – A modern masterpiece. Would you like a shorter version (e.g., for Instagram/TikTok caption) or a more academic write-up?

How do you turn a breakup, a bruised ego, and a line of PHP code into a $100 billion empire? David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin answer that question with electric cynicism in The Social Network – less a movie about Facebook, and more a Shakespearean tragedy about friendship, betrayal, and the lonely price of being king of the digital hill.

Photos Courtesy of Denver Arts & Venues

Denver Film