Like the later
Dogme 95 creative movement, No Wave Cinema has been described as a defining period in
low budget film production.
Stranger Than Paradise was inducted into the
National Film Registry in 2002. In 2010, French filmmaker Céline Danhier created a
documentary film titled
Blank City. The film presents an
oral history of the no wave cinema and Cinema of Transgression movements through interviews with Jarmusch, Kern, Buscemi, Poe, Seidelman, Ahearn, Zedd,
John Waters,
Blondie’s
Debbie Harry, hip-hop legend
Fab 5 Freddy,
Thurston Moore of
Sonic Youth, and writer
Jack Sargeant. The soundtrack includes music by
Patti Smith,
Television,
Richard Hell &
The Voidoids,
James Chance and the Contortions,
Bush Tetras and Sonic Youth. In 2011, the
Museum of Arts and Design celebrated the movement with the retrospective "No Wave Cinema", which included works by Jarmusch, Kern, Mitchell, Poe, Zedd, Scott B and Beth B, Lizzie Borden,
Edo Bertoglio and
Kembra Pfahler. In 2017, the
Museum of Modern Art presented the exhibition
Club 57: Film, Performance, and Art in the East Village, 1978–1983, which included screenings of several rarely seen but notable No wave films. Filmmakers included Michael Oblowitz,
Ann Magnuson,
Beth B,
M. Henry Jones,
John Ahearn,
Michael Holman, and
Tom Rubnitz, among others. In 2023, the No Wave movement, including No Wave Cinema, received institutional recognition at the
Centre Pompidou in Paris with a Nicolas Ballet curated exhibition entitled
Who You Staring At: Culture visuelle de la scène no wave des années 1970 et 1980 (
Visual culture of the no wave scene in the 1970s and 1980s). Featured in the installation was Scott B and Beth B's 11 minute film
Letters to Dad. An interview with Beth B, No Wave film screenings and musical performances, and three recorded conversations with No Wave artists were included as part of the exhibition. In 2026, following the death of pioneering No wave filmmaker, Amos Poe a month earlier,
Metrograph curated an exhibition entitled
Amos Poe and No Wave Cinema. The program featured several of Poe's classics, such as
The Blank Generation,
Unmade Beds, and
The Foreigner, as well as later works such as
Empire II. Other films screened included Susan Seidelman's
Smithereens, Bette Gordon's
Variety, and
Midnight Coffee, directed by Poe protégé
Jaime Levinas. Also included was the rarely seen No wave film
Stiletto, directed by Melvie Arslanian. The film is notable for starring Poe in a leading role and its cinematography by Michael Oblowitz, who made the second No wave cinema film. ==See also==