DCP

Heaven Knows What

Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie

Heroin-addict Harley (Arielle Holmes) endures the sturm und drang of love with nihilistic junkie Ilya (Caleb Landry Jones) in the Safdie Brothers’ toughest and richest movie to date, driven by a cast composed largely of first-time actors who disappear into their characters, horrify us, and break our hearts. A RADiUS-TWC release.

DIRECTOR
Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie
YEAR
2014
COUNTRY
USA
RUNTIME
94 minutes
FORMAT
DCP
START DATE
September 9, 2015

Make it a double feature with The Panic in Needle Park and save!

Harley (Arielle Holmes) is madly in love with Ilya (Caleb Landry Jones). She’s sure he loves her just as much, if only he could express it. Both of them are heroin addicts, kids who pretend to be heavy-metal rockers but spend their time scuffling, arguing, and preying on each other as they wander around New York looking for a fix and the chump change to pay for it. The script, based on Holmes’s memoir and written by the Safdies with Ronald Bronstein, is a miracle of economy. Sean Price Williams’s cinematography expresses the clouded vision of kids who can’t imagine how invisible they are to the New Yorkers who take their homes and jobs for granted. And the Safdie Brothers, in their toughest and richest movie, direct a cast composed largely of first-time actors so that they disappear into their characters, horrify us, and break our hearts. A RADiUS-TWC release. A NYFF52 selection.

Heaven Knows What
Heaven Knows What
Heaven Knows What

Read More

Announcements

Running August 12 through August 20, the 16-film festival will premiere new works alongside special presentations of spine-tingling classics and rediscoveries conjured from the dark recesses of midnight-movie lore, with filmmakers and special guests appearing for post-screening Q&As. 

Podcast

This week we’re excited to present a conversation from the 2026 edition of New Directors/New Films with Do You Love Me director Lana Daher.

Videos

On the latest episode of FLC Luminaries, our video series that spotlights talent at all levels of the filmmaking process who uplift the art and craft of cinema, Rose of Nevada director Mark Jenkin discusses his sci-fi-tinged tale of dislocation and regeneration.

Make FLC Your Home for Cinema

Member Discount on All Tickets

NYFF Pre-Sale Access

Pre-sale Access to FLC Series and Festivals

Free Tickets

Exclusive Events

Members-only Newsletter

Film at Lincoln Center Logo

Walter Reade Theater + Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center

165 and 144 W 65th Street

New York, NY 10023


212.875.5825

Be the first to hear exciting news and announcements from FLC, including upcoming programming, special offers, added tickets, and more.