May 9, 2025

Eclectic drama, sinister thriller opening at the Ross May 9

Two people sit on a couch, in front of a coffee table with a small tv, in a room with concrete brick walls.

A still from "Secret Mall Apartment," which opens at The Ross May 9.

Two movies — an eclectic drama and a sinister thriller — open May 9 at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center.

Trailer: Secret Mall Apartment

In 2003, eight young Rhode Islanders created a secret apartment in a hidden space inside the Providence Place Mall and lived in it for four years, filming everything along the way. They snuck in furniture, tapped into the mall’s electricity, and even secretly constructed a brick wall with a locking door, smuggling in over 2 tons of cinderblock. Far more than just a wild prank, the secret apartment became a deeply meaningful place for all its inhabitants – a personal expression of defiance against local gentrification, a boundary-pushing work of public/private art, and finally, a 750 square foot space that sticks it to the man!

"Secret Mall Apartment" is not rated and plays through May 15.

Trailer: Misericordia

The teasingly entwined ambiguities of love and death continue to fascinate Alain Guiraudie ("Stranger by the Lake"), who returns with a sharp, sinister, yet slyly funny thriller. Set in an autumnal, woodsy village in his native region of Occitanie, his latest follows the meandering exploits of Jérémie (Félix Kysyl), an out-of-work baker who has drifted back to his hometown after the death of his beloved former boss, a bakery owner. Staying long after the funeral, the seemingly benign Jérémie begins to casually insinuate himself into his mentor’s family, including his kind-hearted widow (Catherine Frot) and venomously angry son (Jean-Baptiste Durand), while making an increasingly surprising—and ultimately beneficial—friendship with an oddly cheerful local priest (Jacques Develay). In Guiraudie’s quietly carnal world, violence and eroticism explode with little anticipation, and criminal behavior can seem like a natural extension of physical desire.

"Misericordia" is not rated and is playing through May 15.

For more information on films, including showtimes and ticket availability, visit the Ross' website.