Film
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RATED G? Symphony Space offers a double feature of the classics “Gilda” and “Gaslight,” starring two of the 1940s’ greatest leading ladies. Rita Hayworth stars in “Gilda” (1946) as the wife of a crippled casino owner. Despite the rigors of the industry’s moral code, the film manages to be sensual: Hayworth performs a striptease in which she removes only a glove. The second film, “Gaslight” (1944), features Ingrid Bergman as a woman driven slowly insane while living with her husband in her childhood home. Tonight, 6 p.m., Symphony Space, Leonard Nimoy Thalia, 2537 Broadway at 95th Street, 212-864-5400, $10 general, $8 seniors and students, $6 members.
SLOVENIA ON-SCREEN Slovenian director Damjan Kozole attends an outdoor screening of his film “Spare Parts” (2003), about immigrants in a small town near a nuclear power plant. The jazz quartet Digital Gypsy performs traditional Slovenian melodies, and the Astoria restaurant Djerdan #1 serves a variety of Slovenian treats. The screening is part of the Socrates Sculpture Park summer film festival, which devotes each night to a different ethnic group represented in Queens. Tomorrow, 7 p.m. music, sunset screening, Socrates Sculpture Park, 32-01 Vernon Blvd., Long Island City, Queens, 718-956-1819, free.
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