Two people are sitting in a small theater with red and black seats, facing the camera. A screen behind them displays an image of a crowd in a building.
Antonio Golan and Brett Yates are two of the five people behind Partizanfilm in Burlington. Seen on Wednesday, Nov. 26. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

A new art house movie theater, Partizanfilm, is set to open in Burlington this week, filling the gap left by the closure of the Roxy Cinema last year.

The cinema, on 230 College St., will open to members on Dec. 3, and to the broader public the following day, with food and screenings of two movies from the 1970s, โ€œThe Last Picture Showโ€ and โ€œKings of the Road.โ€

The movie theater has two intimate auditoriums โ€” with 31 and 19 seats, respectively โ€” and a lobby with a cafe-bookstore.

โ€œI kind of couldn’t imagine living in a place without a movie theater,โ€ said Brett Yates, president of Partizanfilm and one of the nonprofitโ€™s five board members. 

Yates said the Roxy was the only commercial movie theater in Burlington, and when it closed last year, he was hoping someone would open a new movie theater. Once it became evident that no one would, he decided to step in.

โ€œI talked with some friends and with my wife, and we thought, well, maybe we could be the ones who do something about it,โ€ Yates said. 

So the five Burlingtonians started looking for spaces for sale to create the movie theater and bought the current property last May.

Glass door with a "Come in, we're open" sign and "PARTIZANFILM" written above; two people stand inside a modern office space.
Partizanfilm in Burlington on Wednesday, November 26, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Now, after months of renovation and with the help of volunteers and members, the space is ready for the upcoming opening.

The cinema will be open seven days a week and offer a mix of commercial movies, independent and foreign films, and old movies. Movies in the evening cost $12, with cheaper tickets during the day. Members have a $2.50 discount on any ticket.

Some of the first movies on the schedule include โ€œAngel’s Egg,โ€ โ€œHenry Fonda for President,โ€ and โ€œEternity,โ€ with later screenings featuring titles such as โ€œMarty Supreme,โ€ starring Timothรฉe Chalamet, and โ€œThe Secret Agent,โ€ which won the best director and best actor prizes at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival.

โ€œWe’re not business people. We’ve never started a nonprofit corporation before,โ€ Yates said. โ€œBut I think we’ve been, overall, very fortunate. It has kind of all come together.โ€

Storefront with a neon "PARTIZANFILM" sign and a backlit sign above the window displaying the same name and a red logo featuring a drop symbol.
Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Yates said the board wanted to create a social hub where people could gather and talk about films, not just a movie theater.

His wife, Michelle Sagalchik, who is also a board member, said the plan is for people to get involved in the cooperative project and potentially run to become board members when current board members finish their terms.

โ€œWe want Partizanfilm to belong to the community. We want the community to take ownership of it,โ€ Yates said. 

Partizanfilm already has about 390 members, according to Yates.

โ€œWe โ€” the founding board โ€” don’t want to run it forever,โ€ he said. โ€œWeโ€™re creating a cultural institution that we hope we can pass on to everybody.โ€