Join us the First Friday of every month for our First Friday Film Series at the Palace Theatre. We have everything from Bollywood to western classics to modern classics! Admission is $7.50! Bring in a receipt from any Grapevine restaurant and receive $2.00 off the admission price! (Discount is not valid for tickets purchased online. However, if you purchase your tickets online, and bring in a receipt from any Grapevine restaurant, your popcorn is on the house!)
Questions? Call the Palace Theatre Box Office at 817-410-3100.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Bunty Aur Babli (Starring Amitabh Bachchan, Rani Mukherjee)– “Unhappy with his life and circumstances, Rakesh, the son of a railway employee in India, wants to become rich very quickly. He quarrels with the rest of his family, and leaves for Mumbai city. On the way there he meets with another runaway, Vimmi, a wanna-be model and actress, they end up getting attracted to each other, and together they carry out a rash of daring robberies - prompting the authorities to ask Dashrath, a senior ranking police-man to apprehend them and bring their respective careers to an abrupt halt. Will Rakesh and Vimmi - now known as Bunty and Babli - let Dashrath end their careers that easily?”
Bring your same day reciept from any Grapevine Restaurant and receive 2.50 off your admission.

Young Frankenstien (starring – Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Cloris Leachman) This is a typical Mel Brooks movie. It is a great parody of the Frankenstein movies. You have the best in great comedy and a typical monster storyline. This is the story of the young grandson of Baron Von Frankenstein(Gene Wilder), who gets his inheritance, and then goes to Transylvania to clear up the will. And finding his Grandfather's personal library, continues in his grandfather's footsteps. He succeeds and a real knee slapper follows.

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (starring James Stewart, Jean Arthur, Claude Rains) Naive and idealistic Jefferson Smith, leader of the Boy Rangers, is appointed on a lark by the spineless governor of his state. He is reunited with the state's senior senator--presidential hopeful and childhood hero, Senator Joseph Paine. In Washington, however, Smith discovers many of the shortcomings of the political process as his earnest goal of a national boys' camp leads to a conflict with the state political boss, Jim Taylor. Taylor first tries to corrupt Smith and then later attempts to destroy Smith through a scandal.
Click here to see our Family Christmas Films!

Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (starring Howard Keel, Jeff Richards) Adam, the eldest of seven brothers, goes to town to get a wife. He convinces Milly to marry him that same day. They return to his backwoods home. Only then does she discover he has six brothers -- all living in his cabin. Milly sets out to reform the uncouth siblings, who are anxious to get wives of their own. Then, after reading about the Roman capture of the Sabine women, Adam develops an inspired solution to his brothers' loneliness . . . kidnap the women they want!

The Philadelphia Story (starring Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn) Philadelphia heiress Tracy Lord throws out her playboy husband C.K. Dexter Haven shortly after their marriage. Two years later, Tracy is about to marry respectable George Kittredge whilst Dexter has been working for "Spy" magazine. Dexter arrives at the Lord's mansion the day before the wedding with writer Mike Connor and photographer Liz Imbrie, determined to spoil things.

Silverado (starring Kevin Kline, Kevin Costner, Danny Glover) In 1880, four men travel together to the city of Silverado. They come across with many dangers before they finally engage the "bad guys" and bring peace and equality back to the city.

The Maltese Falcon (starring Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Gladys George) Sam Spade is a partner in a private-eye firm who finds himself hounded by police when his partner is killed whilst tailing a man. The girl who asked him to follow the man turns out not to be who she says she is, and is really involved in something to do with the 'Maltese Falcon', a gold-encrusted life-sized statue of a falcon, the only one of its kind.
>

Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter…Spring (starring Yeong-su Oh, Ki-duk Kim) A young boy lives in a small floating temple on a beautiful lake, together with an elderly master who teaches him the ways of the Buddha. Years later the boy, now a young man, experiences his sexual awakening with a girl who has come to the temple to be healed by the master. The youth runs away to the outside world but his lust turns his life into hell, so he returns to the lake temple to find spiritual enlightenment.

Thoroughly Modern Millie (starring Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler Moore Millie Dillmount, a fearless young lady fresh from Salina, Kansas, determined to experience Life, sets out to see the world in the rip-roaring Twenties. With high spirits and wearing one of those new high hemlines, she arrives in New York to test the "modern" ideas she had been reading about back in Kansas: "I've taken the girl out of Kansas. Now I have to take Kansas out of the girl!"