Emagine Royal Oak and Ann Arbor's State Theatre will stage the events on 1 May, with tickets priced at $55 and $60-$65 respectively.
Emagine offers a pre-show buffet in Royal Oak, while State Theatre partners with queer bar Uplift for a drag brunch, mimosa, buffet and popcorn before the screening.
The sequel premieres nearly 20 years after the original film, with Variety projecting a $190m global opening weekend and brands and local organisers launching tie-ins and special screenings.
Are premium brunch events the future of cinema, or a niche strategy that ignores most moviegoers?
Beyond brunch and lattes, what is the long-term strategy for theaters to win back audiences from streaming?
Can a sequel about industry decline recapture the aspirational magic that made the original a cultural phenomenon?