MATCH CUTS PRESENTS: AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK

MONDAY, OCTOBER 9TH – 7:30 PM

ONE NIGHT ONLY !

MATCH CUTS PRESENTS commemorates its first full year in partnering with Spectacle Theater with a screening of AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK on Monday, October 9th, aka “Columbus Day.” Proceeds and donations collected this evening will go towards the Water Protector Legal Collective.

AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK
dir. Josh Fox, James Spione, and Myron Dewey, 2017.
USA, 89 min.

GET YOUR TICKETS!

The Water Protectors at Standing Rock captured world attention through their peaceful resistance. While many may know the details, AWAKE, A Dream from Standing Rock captures the story of Native-led defiance that forever changed the fight for clean water, our environment and the future of our planet. The film is a collab­oration between Indigenous filmmakers, Director Myron Dewey, Executive Producer Doug Good Feather, and environmental Oscar-Nominated filmmakers Josh Fox and James Spione. It is a labor of love to support the peaceful movement of the water protectors.

MATCH CUTS is a weekly podcast centered on video, film and the moving image. Match Cuts Presents is dedicated to presenting de-colonialized cinema, LGBTQI films, Marxist diatribes, video art, dance films, sex films, and activist documentaries with a rotating cast of presenters from all spectrums of the performing and plastic arts and surrounding humanities. Match Cuts is hosted by Nick Faust and Kachine Moore.

SPECTOBER VII


HACK-O-LANTERN
dir. Jag Mundhra
USA, 1988

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 10 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

“A bloody moon…A scream of fear…A night of Living Hell…”

In the heyday of Satanic Panic, director Jag Mundhra (OPEN HOUSE) found a way to blend elements of giallo, supernatural horror, and slashers to create a waking nightmare fueled by heavy metal, blood, and the dark lord himself.
As a young boy Tommy (all-star character actor Gregory Scott Cummings AKA: Mac’s dad in It’s Always Sunny…) bore witness to the brutal murder of his father on Halloween night by the hand of his cult-leader grandfather (Hy Pyke – who you can see nude in DOLEMITE if you want) and kept the secret for years.

Now 18 Tommy’s seemingly kindly, pumpkin delivering, Foghorn Leghorn sounding grandpa is ready to show him “the power of the blood” and bring him into the fold.

As Halloween draws ever closer people close to Tommy start getting bumped off by a killer in a demonic mask wearing the garb of grandpa’s cult. Who is this masked killer? Gramps? Tommy himself? …or could it be someone much, much worse.

Long available only on bootleg HACK-O-LANTERN has been lovingly restored from it’s original 35mm negative by our friends at Massacre Video and presented this Spectober as a sacrifice to our lord Satan.



YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1972.
Italy. 97 min.
In English

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 7:30 PM

“I don’t feel like being involved in one of your spectacles.”

Made between ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK and TORSO, YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY is a misanthropic, brooding, manipulative and beautiful treatment of Edgar Allen Poe’s story “The Black Cat.” It also has a drunk (racist, incestuous, loathsome) author getting J&B shipped by the crate to his house, which might be the gialloest thing ever. Fans of Sergio Martino’s earlier film THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH (from which this film gets it name) might be thrown a bit by the subdued, sullen quality, but it’s part of a greater plan, a plan that includes commune freak-outs, slaughtered mistresses, gratuitous POV (on line with Martino’s next film, TORSO) and perhaps greatest of all, Edwige Fenech, of whom we can say nothing without getting the vapors. With a storyline that’ll satisfy no-loose-ends mystery fans, enough jaw-dropping cinematography and costuming to please the art crowd, and Martino’s thoughtful and visceral style (there’s also a great Bruno Nicolai score to sweeten the pot), YOUR VICE…might be Martino’s finest.

“A film with that wears its dubious morality on its sleeve, “Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key” is a tasty bit of giallo goodness. Kinky and cruel, it lives up to its purple prose title and will surely satisfy the appetites of Eurotrash fans.” -Tenebrous Kate, Love Train For The Tenebrous Empire.



THE SATANIC RITES OF DRACULA
Dir. Alan Gibson, 1973
UK, 87 min.
English

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 10 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

“Evil rules, you know. It really does.”

The last in Hammer’s run of Lee vs. Cushing Dracula films, the last Hammer film to use actual occultists as consultants, and a lurid stew of spy tropes, supernatural horror, black masses, THE SATANIC RITES OF DRACULA is considered a lesser Hammer by Anglophiles and dilettantes, but we know better, don’t we? Just consider one of the absolute best-ever monologues of cosmic dread and horror from Freddie Jones, playing Julian Keeley, a professor commanded to create a virulent variant on the black plague in order to serve the whims of The Dark Lord Lucifer! Sidestepping earlier period-piece Gothic trappings for a thoroughly contemporary London, it’s both sleek and pulpy, with as many gunfights, dirtbike chases, double crosses, regular crosses, basement nightgown covens of undead brides and occult goings-on as anyone could possibly want. A secret sect of British VIPs perform unholy rites of sacrifice in order to appease their abominable lord! It’s always fun to watch Lee and Cushing face off, the secret agent/cop drama aspect keeps everything at a brisk clip, and if that’s not enough to sell you it literally starts with a black mass in which a woman is sacrificed and returns from the dead!



A BELL FROM HELL (La campana del infierno)
Dir. Claudio Guerin, 1973
Spain, 93 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 – MIDNIGHT

GET YOUR TICKETS!

On the final day of shooting A BELL FROM HELL (La campana del infierno), director Claudio Guerin fell from the aforementioned bell tower to his death.He had only one other film (THE HOUSE OF THE DOVES) to his credit. This is all of a part for a film fixated on death, on revenge, on morbidity. A young man returns home from the asylum, where he was committed to usurp his inheritance, to wreak vengeance upon his family: or is it that simple?

 

Warning: there are several scenes of slaughterhouse footage some viewers might find objectionable.



YETI: GIANT OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
dir. Gianfranco Parolini, 1977
118 mins. Italy/Ontario.
In American-Canadian English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20 – MIDNIGHT

GET YOUR TICKETS!

Man, where the hell was GIANT OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY during last June’s MISSING LINKS series? At any rate: some movies are so bad they can only horrify in a new way, redistricting the parameters of imagination further afield than previously considered or conceded. That’s Gianfranco Parolini’s jawdropping YETI (GIANT OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY) an epic Italian-Canadian cash-in whose particulate special effects (stitching the nominal YETI into myriad locales around 1970s Toronto, somehow barely beveling the same frames as his puny human victims/lovers) posed an extraordinary challenge to the idea of monster movie verisimilitude forever. Even if the nominal attraction more clearly resembles a screaming white dude covered in (hopefully fake) animal fur, YETI is one for the history books, proudly chest-thumping a sonorous disco theme from “The Yetians” and an unabashed new perspective on Toronto as tax-shelter competitor to Dino De Laurentiis’ fantasy-land NYC. Both Parolini and his GIANT are after bigger things than your approval (or even your five dollars): this movie represents an evolutionary psycho-industrial-sexual shakeup whose true lessons have never fully come to pass.



BEYOND THE GATES
dir. Jackson Stewart, 2016
84 minutes, USA

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 – MIDNIGHT

GET YOUR TICKETS!

Filmmaker Jackson Stewart brings a tribute to the evil’s of VHS and tabletop gaming to Spectacle for a special Halloween treat. Barbara Crampton (FROM BEYOND) stars alongside Chase Willamson (THE GUEST) and Brea Grant (Robert Zombie’s HALLOWEEN II) in a flick certain to make you reconsider picking up the dice ever again. Jackson’s film weaves grief, loss, family, laffs, and gore together and crams them all in a clamshell case of doom. Barbara Crampton steals the show as the host of the deadly game and easter eggs abound for the keen eyed viewer. In an ear so obsessed with nostalgia BEYOND THE GATES delivers for those who ever rolled the bones against the Gatekeeper in the NIGHTMARE board game series. See it to jump-start your Hallo-weekend!

IMAGINE SCIENCE FILM FESTIVAL – FROZEN MAY AND MEMORY ERROR

Since 2008, the Imagine Science Film Festival has been plumbing the spaces between science and art for the most unique and inventive scientific fictions, surrealist documentaries, lab data aesthetics, and thought-provoking experimental film. For our tenth year, the theme of the festival is HYBRID, so we’re seeking those interstitial film forms more than ever. And we’ve saved some of the best for Spectacle.

 




MEMORY ERROR

various filmmakers, 2015 – 2017
77m.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 – 7:30 PM

BUY TICKETS!

Following last year’s Optic Nerves program, we return to Spectacle with another selection of the most thrillingly bizarre of the year’s scientific fictions and experiments. This year’s program focuses on copying glitches and mis-recollections: forgotten faces, genetic errors, holographic tourism, unstable computer graphics, and hazy VHS memories.

 

 




FROZEN MAY

aka FAGYOTT MÁJUS
dir. Péter Lichter, 2017
Hungary, 72m.

— NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE —
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 – 10 PM

BUY TICKETS!

1990, after the fall. Alone in the ambiguous tension and beauty of natural landscapes devoid of all but the remnants of civilization, a survivor seeks someone lost. This is genre as unsettled mood and creeping doubt, a horror script shot entirely in psychological landscape and desperate POV, perhaps a Carpenter script as reimagined by James Benning and Chantal Akerman. Whatever it is, Hunagarian experimental filmmaker Péter Lichter’s first feature exerts a strange power, drawing the viewer straight into its bleak but seductive forests of fog and shadow, seeking answers, with only a broken Commodore 64 as witness and narrator.

CINAP CINATAS II: WHERE EVIL SMELLS



CINAP CINATAS II: WHERE EVIL SMELLS

Various directors, compiled by Darren Bauler
United States Of American Death, 50 min.
Fuck Your Secular Laws

GET YOUR TICKETS!

When the original CINAP CINATAS showed in 2015, a number of viewers considered it nostalgic, a look back at a simpler time when militant Christianity was ascendant and fearmongering politicians ruled the land, a time now made somewhat quaint by our evolution into contemporary rational neoliberal humanism.

As Bobby BeauSoleil would say, ain’t life peculiar.

We return to the maelstrom of thrash metal, gut-churning 80s video nasties, televangelistic rants and teenage nihilism with more clips from police training videos, VHS sermons, intercepted broadcasts and piss-yellow journalism, thrown together in a mishmash meant to recreate the mindscape of a kid weaned on 20 sided dice, Slayer bootlegs and unblocked satellite tv who took all of this as absolute fact. Intended not as a history lesson nor as a moral fable, we dismiss all attempts to contextualize this material as folly, content to mainline apocalyptic jouissance with no regard for mental health or reasonable discourse. No answers, no solutions, no thinkpieces, no escape. SMELL AWAITS.

Following Cinap Cinatas II will be two short intermission films, then the original Cinap Cinatas (which played in 2015) in its entirety.

AN EVENING WITH AKOSUA ADOMA OWUSU


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 8:00 PM 

GET YOUR TICKETS!

For ONE NIGHT ONLY, avant-garde filmmaker Akosua Adoma Owusu will join us at Spectacle for a special presentation of her short-form works – including (but not limited to) INTERMITTENT DELIGHT (2007), ME BRONI BA (2009) and SPLIT ENDS, I FEEL WONDERFUL  (2012), with Q&A to follow.

Akosua Adoma Owusu is a Ghanaian-American filmmaker and producer whose films have screened worldwide in prestigious film festivals, museums, galleries, universities and microcinemas since 2005. Her work addresses the collision of identities, where the African immigrant located in the United States has a “triple consciousness.” Owusu interprets Du Bois’ notion of double consciousness and creates a third identity or consciousness, representing the diverse consciousness of women and African immigrants interacting in African, white American, and black American culture.

Owusu’s work is included in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Centre Pompidou, the Fowler Museum, Yale University Film Study Center, and Indiana University Bloomington, home of the Black Film Center/Archive. Owusu holds MFA degrees in Film & Video and Fine Art from California Institute of the Arts and received her BA in Media Studies and Studio Art with distinction from the University of Virginia. She divides her time between Ghana and New York, where she works as a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

 

THE 7TH ANNUAL SHREK SHOW

Buckle up, assholes! It;s time once again for the Spectacle Shrek Show!!!!!!!!111!!!!!!!111!!!!!! Eevry shrek movie back to back and then backwards while we dose you with a ton of brown acid. As usual all the money goes right in to our pockets and we scream at you and change the temperature a bunch. Forced donkey meat eating contest to follow! FUCK OFF.

Noon: Shrek
2pm: Shrek 2
4pm: Shrek the 3rd
6pm: Shrek Forever After
8pm: Shrek in the Swamp Karaoke Dance Party
10pm: Shrek 4-D
Midnight: Far Far Away Idol
2am: Donkey’s Caroling Christmas-tacular
4am: Shrek the Halls

THE 7TH ANNUAL SHRIEK SHOW

The world is horrible, that’s for sure but at least we all have Halloween. This year for the 7th Annual Spectacle Shriek Show we hope to – however briefly – help to take your mind off the impending nuclear strikes, natural disasters, sundowning “president,” bed bugs, the gathering darkness, and general malaise with a cavalcade of lady death rockers, turn of the century werewolves, cave monsters, carnivorous carnies, and globetrotting vampires. All this plus featured short films, regional news stories, cartoons, music videos, and more.

It’s time once more to turn off your brain, leave expectations at the door or at a nearby bodega, and settle in for roughly 12 to 14 hours of celebration.

We’re all in this together so make sure you bring enough candy corn to share.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21st – NOON-MIDNIGHT  (ONE DAY ONLY!) 

GET YOUR TICKETS!

Full Schedule:
Noon: WOLF BLOOD
1:30pm: DIMENSION OF BLOOD / MONSTER IN THE GARAGE
3:00pm: DEAD GIRLS
4:30pm: VIDEO VIOLENCE (presented by Lunchmeat)
6:00pm: THE STRANGENESS
8:00pm: JUGULAR WINE: A VAMPIRE ODYSSEY (16mm)
10:30pm: MALATESTA’S CARNIVAL OF BLOOD (presented by AGFA)
Midnight: FATAL EXPOSURE



WOLF BLOOD: A TALE OF THE FOREST

dir. George Chesebro, 1925
68 min, USA
Silent

The earliest surviving werewolf film kicks off our seventh year. An important distinction to make since 1913’s THE WEREWOLF beat it out by 12 years but has sadly been lost to the ravages of time. Though this is Chesebro’s only directing credit, he would act in over 400 movies in his career.

Dick Bannister (director Chesebro pulling double duty) heads up a logging company in Canada is involved in a bloody dispute with rivals lead by Jules Deveroux (Roy Watson). While being visited by his boss and her pal the doctor – Dick is viciously attacked and left for dead. Dick is badly in need of a blood transfusion – with time running out and no human blood at the ready the doctor uses the next best thing – wolf blood.

While on the mend Dick has a series of nightmares about running with a pack of wolves. When the men in the rival camp wind up slaughtered, apparently by a wolf – Dick’s greatest fears seem to be realized. The rumor mills begin churning with word getting out that Dick is a horrid lycanthrope. Dick is faced with a harrowing choice: live on as a bloodthirsty beast or take his own life?


DIMENSION OF BLOOD / MONSTER IN THE GARAGE
dir. Joe Sherlock, 1996/1997
68 min, USA

The first two films by cult filmmaker and illustrator Joe Sherlock are a welcome addition to the Shriek Show canon. With 30 years of filmmaking under his belt, Joe has a deep love for all things horror, a penchant for practical effects, and a tongue planted firmly in his cheek. What would our marathon be without some rubber masks, homemade slime, or butchery on a budget? Nothing.

Direct from the back of the VHS:

Dr. Thomas Mobius is investigating the origins of strange lifeforms found in South America. Suddenly his world is turned upside down when he and lab assistant Rachel Roundtree meet up with government agents, genetic mutations, and the mysterious Man In Black. As gruesome murders surround them can the pair find out what the conspiracy is all about before it’s too late? Find out when you enter the DIMENSION OF BLOOD!

Poor Steve. He’s a slob and everyone gives him a hard time about it, including his lovely wife Edie. As they prepare for a big party, little do they know that a hungry alien creature has escaped from a crashed flying saucer and is hiding out in their garage. As the party gets underway various guests start disappearing. Will the rest survive when they meet face-to-face with the MONSTER IN THE GARAGE?!?


DEAD GIRLS
dir. Dennis Devine, 1990
105 min, USA

Lucy Lethal, Cynthia Slayed, Nancy Napalm, Randy Rot and Bertha Beirut are all members of the metal band Dead Girls. These girls are not fucking around either. All their songs are about murder, suicide, death, and carnage. This whole schtick comes back to bite them in their collective ass when a fan tries to commit suicide while listening to their latest single aptly titled YOU’VE GOT TO KILL YOURSELF on repeat. No ones ass is more bitten however than lead singer Bertha when she discovers this fan is none other than her younger sister.

After repeated attempts at getting the girls to switch it up and go in a direction that’s less gore and more Leslie Gore, Bertha decides the Dead Girls are in need of a vacation. So to hit the reset button the band high-tails it out of town to a cabin in the woods for some sun and fun.

Little do they know that lurking in the shadows is every woman’s nightmare – a man in a fedora. He also has a skull mask but still. The band members are picked off one by one in manners related to some of their more ghastly tunes. Who is this masked killer?


LUNCHMEAT PRESENTS: VIDEO VIOLENCE
dir. Gary Cohen, 1987
98 min, USA

Despite of a longtime working relationship with both Camp Motion Pictures and Lunchmeat, we’ve never shown a crown jewel in their catalog Gary Cohen’s New Jersey SOV slasherterpiece – VIDEO VIOLENCE. This year we’ve finally decided to remedy that.

Steve and his wife, fresh from NYC, have just opened a new video store in town full of horror buffs. When an unlabeled tape shows up in the return bin, the staff can’t contain their curiosity and when the spools begin to turn they find themselves witnessing a grisly murder! A gen-u-ine snuff film! Steve runs to the cops and upon returning finds the tape swapped and his clerk missing. Local weird-beards Howard and Eli have settled into a nice habit of killing travelers and derelicts who wander into their sleepy little backwater burg but will their taped escapades lead to their demise? How far can too far go? Find out what happens when renting is not enough!

Special thanks to Gary Cohen, Josh Schafer, and Paige Davis for their unending support and generosity.


THE STRANGENESS
dir. Melanie Anne Phillips, 1985
90 min, USA

An unsung behemoth of American horror, THE STRANGENESS encompasses many if not all the elements that make up what a true “Spectacle” movie is. Filmmaker Melanie Anne Phillips (who worked under the pseudonym David Michael Hillman) blends a stop motion, claustrophobia, homemade sets, and great characters into an impressive DIY terror slurry.

A group of friends explore an abandoned underground mine only to find themselves sharing it with a slimy, tentacled monster. They are slaughtered. Years later THE DESCENT would make audiences squirm with a glossy version of this Lovecraftian nightmare. Characters are swallowed by the dark, with one standout scene lit only by a series of camera flashes. While much of the film was shot on location, some was actually recreated in the directors grandparents garage.

But don’t just take it from us…

“The monster is creepy looking, even if you’re not afraid of vaginas and part of it certainly does look like one.” – IMDb user HEFILM, 2006


JUGULAR WINE: A VAMPIRE ODYSSEY
dir. Blair Murphy, 1994
90 min, USA
special 16mm presentation

It’s 1994.

The dulcet tone’s of Slick Willy’s sax drift through the air, the World Wide Web was shaping up to be the cesspool we now know as the internet, and Beanie Babies had just gone into production.

Also, INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE came out. A globetrotting, moody, celebrity-stuffed tale of the torments of the eternal.

It’s 1994.

Filmmaker Blair Murphy has just released JUGULAR WINE. A sprawling, atmospheric, cameo laden tale of the torments of the eternal.

While JUGULAR WINE may not have the scope of INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE it certainly has more than it’s share of heart. Murphy (who grew up in a funeral home and currently lives in a giant haunted hotel in PA) shot on location in Philly, Alaska, New Orleans, LA, and Utah to tell the tale of an anthropologist on the trail of a cult of vampires. Along the way he runs into the likes of Stan Lee, Henry Rollins, and more. Undoubtedly a most ambitious undertaking. Murphy cut his teeth as a cameraman for the late Prince.

We’re proudly presenting the directors personal 16mm print at the center of this years marathon!


AGFA presents: MALATESTA’S CARNIVAL OF BLOOD
dir. Christopher Speeth, 1973
74 min, USA

We are thrilled to have recently partnered with AGFA for screenings and have been chomping at the bit to show this slab of total insanity. It’s with great pleasure that we introduce our Shriek Show audience to the once-thought-lost-totally-bonkers MALATESTA’S CARNIVAL OF BLOOD!

From the AGFA website:

“Historically speaking, the carnival is where exploitation cinema learned most of its tricks.” — Stephen Thrower, author of Nightmare USA

On the surface, MALATESTA’S CARNIVAL OF BLOOD gives off the appearance of a throwaway bargain-bin curio — but once you dig even an inch below the surface, an entire ecosystem of crazy influences, found-garbage props in the style of “Pee-Wee’s Playhouse” and avant-garde techniques come into view. Plus, it’s entirely set in a rotting wooden 19th-century amusement park (which was bulldozed not long after the film was completed.)

Oh, and did we mention it co-stars “Fantasy Island” little person Herve Villechaize?

It’s tough to synopsize in one sentence, but here goes: an evil carnival impresario lures young people to work at his fun fair, so that he can feed them to the ravenous cannibals who live in a cave beneath the carnival and who watch arty silent horror film classics projected on the wall while they feast . . . ?

Why was this film made? Who cares?!

When a film’s end credits list a sound designer as providing “psychoacoustics,” you know it’s going to be a good time for cratediggers and other fans of the weird and rare.



FATAL EXPOSURE

(aka: MANGLED ALIVE)
dir. Peter B. Good, 1989
83 min, USA

As your brain slowly oozes out of your ears with only one film left to go you wonder “Surely there can’t be anything as nuts as that last movie. I love it here. I love Spectacle.”

Well, you’re mostly right.

The great-(great?)-grandson of Jack the Ripper -also named Jack – is a photographer. He drinks blood, photographs women in lingerie and kills them in weird ways like injecting them with acid. He also breaks the fourth wall a number of times.

Praised by Michael J. Weldon in the Psychotronic Film Guide for it’s “very good” cinematography and “very real” accents, Peter B. Good’s FATAL EXPOSURE brings another years marathon to a close. Worth noting that Good worked on Disney’s Wonderful World of Color which at one point also employed another Spectacle favorite – The Wizard of Speed and Time himself – Mike Jittlov. Oh and right after that he was director of photography on FACES OF DEATH III.

STOOP SALE 2017

STOOP SALE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 – 11AM TO 7 PM

Hey! We’re selling stuff! Just like last year, only more! And as always, we have mint copies of posters from screenings gone by, a certain amount of recorded media, and various microcinematic ephemera.

In addition, we are offering a MIX TAPE (CD edition), made up of our in-house favorites to play before and after the movies. These are gonna be made to order, so be sure to loudly announce that you want one when you walk in. Not sure how much they will cost yet, but keep in mind that all moneys are going to your dearest high-rent microcinema that charges you only $5 to see countless films curated with great care.

 

INDIE BEAT: EXCURSIONS

EXCURSIONS
dir. Daniel Martinico, 2016
80 mins. United States.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 7:30 PM

In the hopes of revitalizing their marriage, a husband and wife retreat to a remote cabin with some longtime friends. Their pleasant interaction quickly assumes a relentless intensity as they push one another, mentally and physically, towards transcendence. This shortcut to enlightenment, however, has unexpected consequences. A rigorously formal film, EXCURSIONS burns slowly, evolving from an exacting series of durational long-takes into a living, breathing, cacophony of madness.

Daniel Martinico is an artist and filmmaker based in Los Angeles. His debut feature OK, GOOD premiered at Slamdance, had its international premiere at the Sydney Film Festival, and was awarded the Grand Jury Prize at Mauvais Genre. Martinico’s short appropriation-based video works have exhibited in galleries, festivals, and museums internationally, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, LA Filmforum, Il Cinema Ritrovato, and Rencontres Internationales Paris/Berlin. Excursions is his second feature film.

MATCH CUTS PRESENTS: ALLAN SEKULA AND NOËL BURCH’S THE FORGOTTEN SPACE

 

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH
ONE NIGHT ONLY – 7:30 PM

INTRODUCED BY DAVID FRESKO

MATCH CUTS PRESENTS and Spectacle Theater present Allan Sekula and Noël Burch’s THE FORGOTTEN SPACE.

THE FORGOTTEN SPACE
dir. Allan Sekula and Noël Burch, 2010.
Netherlands and Austria, 112 min.
In multiple languages w/ English subtitles.

The “forgotten space” of Allan Sekula and Noël Burch’s essay film is the sea, the oceans through which 90% of the world’s cargo now passes. At the heart of this space is the container box, which, since its invention in the 1950s, has become one of the most important mechanisms for the global spread of capitalism.

The film follows the container box along the international supply chain, from ships to barges, trains, and trucks, mapping the byzantine networks that connect producers to consumers (and more and more frequently, producing nations to consuming ones). Visiting the major ports of Rotterdam, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Guangdong province, and many places between, it connects the economic puzzle pieces that corporations and governments would prefer remain scattered.

We meet people who have been reduced to cogs in this increasingly automated machine – the invisible laborers who staff the cargo ships, steer the barges, drive the trucks, and migrate to the factories, and whose low wages form the base of the entire enterprise.

Employing a wide range of materials and styles, from interviews to classic film clips, essayistic voiceover to observational footage, THE FORGOTTEN SPACE provides a panoramic portrait of the new global economy and a compelling argument about why it must change.

“An engrossing and provocative essay film… Various experts offer informative analysis, but the testimony of seamen, factory workers and residents of a California homeless encampment is at the heart of the film’s guiding ethical and aesthetic principles, which have to do with the defense of human dignity in the face of a system that so often appears hostile or indifferent to it.” —A.O. Scott, The New York Times

“THE FORGOTTEN SPACE begins as an investigative documentary and concludes as a mythopoeic essay on modernity and the sea.” —Artforum

“Too political for mainstream taste, obligatory for everyone else.” —Jonathan Rosenbaum, Film Comment

Text courtesy of Icarus Films

DAVID FRESKO is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Culture and Media at Eugene Lang College, the New School. He recently completed a Ph.D. in the Department of Art & Art History at Stanford University with a dissertation entitled “Montage—Praxis—Politics: Radical French and American Film of the 1960s and 1970s,” which shows how filmmakers in France and the United States utilized the technique of montage to galvanize solidarity with political movements at home and abroad, above all those across the decolonizing world. His writing has appeared in animation: an interdisciplinary journal, InVisible Culture and The Global Sixties in Sound and Vision: Media, Counterculture, and Revolt (Palgrave Macmilan, 2014). David also holds an M.A. in Film and Media Studies from Emory University and a B.A. in Film Studies with a concentration in filmmaking from Wesleyan University, where he was trained in 16mm and digital film production. Prior to joining academia he worked as a documentary film editor and at the legendary Mondo Kim’s on St. Mark’s Place. 

MATCH CUTS is a weekly podcast centered on video, film and the moving image. Match Cuts Presents is dedicated to presenting de-colonialized cinema, LGBTQI films, Marxist diatribes, video art, dance films, sex films, and activist documentaries with a rotating cast of presenters from all spectrums of the performing and plastic arts and surrounding humanities. Match Cuts is hosted by Nick Faust and Kachine Moore.