Anne Frank Remembered (Star rating unavailable)
Kenneth Branagh narrates the 1995 Academy Award-winning documentary of the short life of a spirited girl who kept a diary during her family's two years in hiding from the Nazis. The film features footage of Frank, a tour of her hiding place and interviews with people who knew her. Glenn Close reads excerpts from the diary. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday and at 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday; $4 general, $3 students and seniors. (Unrated)
Theater: UH-Manoa Art Auditorium
Hold Your Man 

Jean Harlow falls for a jailbound Clark Gable in this delightful 1933 film by director Sam Wood. At 8 p.m. Friday and at 3, 5:30 and 8 p.m. Sunday; $5. (Unrated)
Theater: Movie Museum
It's My Party (Star rating unavailable)
Eric Roberts plays a gay man who organizes a celebration before his planned suicide. The new movie also stars Gregory Harrison, George Segal, Marlee Matlin, Olivia Newton-John and Greg Louganis.
The screening is a fund-raiser for the Life Foundation and the Gay & Lesbian Cultural Foundation, and opening night for the Adam Baran Honolulu Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. At 7:45 p.m. Saturday; $11.50 and $27.50. (Unrated)
Theater: Hawaii Theatre
The Neon Bible (Star rating unavailable)
Small-time singer Gena Rowlands inspires hope in a young boy living in poverty in the American South. Director Terence Davies delivers a fierce, uncompromising look at the brutality of life and the possibility of happiness. At 7:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Monday through Thursday, 4 p.m. Sunday and 1 p.m. Thursday; $4. (Unrated)
Theater: Academy Theater
A Night to Remember 


Sparkling comedy-mystery sets whodunit author Brian Aherne and wife Loretta Young on the trail of a murderer. At 3, 5:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday; $5. (Unrated)
Theater: Movie Museum
Shanghai Triad 


Zhang Yimou, China's finest filmmaker, tries his hand at a period gangster movie. Zhang imagines a world upended by treachery and unfathomable change, where nothing beautiful can survive very long. Like all of his best movies ("Ju Dou," "Raise the Red Lantern"), "Triad" turns its drama into a metaphor for life in the People's Republic today. Also like Zhang's best, "Triad" is a monument to the beauty and talent of its star, Gong Li. At 6 and 8:15 p.m. Wednesday through June 16 and June 19 through 23; $3.50. (R)
Theater: Hemenway Theatre
Shoot the Piano Player 


A formerly successful concert pianist (Charles Aznavour) who works in a rundown Parisian cafe is pushed by his girlfriend to resume his career but instead becomes involved with gangsters. Francois Truffaut directed the 1962 film; subtitles. At 6 and 8 p.m. Monday; $5. (Unrated)
Theater: Movie Museum
Too Many Husbands 

Jean Arthur has married Melvyn Douglas when Husband No. 1, Fred MacMurray, thought dead, turns up. At 8 p.m. Thursday and at 3, 5:30 and 8 p.m. June 15; $5. (Unrated)
Theater: Movie Museum
The Voyage Home (Star rating unavailable)
Documentary follows the Hawai'iloa's two-month journey from Seattle to Juneau, Alaska, and the cultural celebration among Hawaiians and natives of the northwest coast of North America. "Voyage" was written, produced and directed by Karin Williams, a Seattle resident with Polynesian heritage; Brother Noland and Tony Conjugacion provided the music. The Center for Hawaiian Studies presents the public premiere at Jefferson Hall, East-West Center. At 7:30 p.m. Friday; free.
Theater: Keoni Auditorium
When Billy Broke His Head (Star rating unavailable)
Billy Golfus, an award-winning radio journalist who suffered brain damage in a traffic accident, goes on the road to meet activists with disabilities. The irreverent, first-person documentary blends humor with politics and individual stories, revealing the strength and anger fueling a new civil rights movement among the 43 million Americans with disabilities. At 7:30 p.m. Friday; free. (Unrated)
Theater: UH-Manoa's Art Auditorium