CATS IN THE CRADLE (TO THE GRAVE): THREE JAPANESE GHOST STORIES

This Spectober, our Japanese Ghost Story series returns with three bakeneko-mono or ghost-cat stories, one of the most popular sub-genres of kaidan. All three of these films involve a woman who is wronged by a feudal lord and either ruthlessly murdered or driven to suicide. But first, she urges her cat to lap up her blood as she lies dying. The cat is transformed into her avenging spirit and proceeds to bring misery and death to the Lord’s castle.

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BLACK CAT MANSION
Dir. Nobuo Nakagawa, 1958
Japan, 69 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 19 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23 – 10:00 PM

Acknowledged by Nobuhiku Ôbayashi as a major influence on HAUSU, BLACK CAT MANSION contains an unusual, extended present-day sequence bookending its Edo-period tale. Filmed in blue-tinted monochrome, the modern-day segment involves a doctor who relocates to an old country mansion to care for his sick wife. Once there, the doctor and his wife begin to experience bizarre hallucinations. They consult a monk who relates the tragic history of the mansion: a tale of a jealous lord, a blind monk and his distraught sister and a possessed cat.  BLACK CAT MANSION features near-psychedelic set pieces that point the way towards Nakagawa’s most celebrated horror masterpiece JIGOKU, made two years later.

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BAKENEKO: A VENGEFUL SPIRIT (aka THE CURSED SWAMP)
Dir. Yoshihiro Ishikawa, 1968
Japan, 86 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 – 10:00 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25 – 7:30 PM

Lord Nabeshima, who rose to power by murdering his master, demands that the young Yujiki become his concubine. When she refuses to submit, he murders her and her fiance Yuki. Yujiki’s cat consumes her blood and becomes her avenging spirit, possessing one of Nabeshima’s wives and murdering his vassals, his concubines and his only son.

Ishikawa was one of the writers of BLACK CAT MANSION, and though he directed few films, Bakeneko displays directorial genius. Beginning in a quietly haunting vein reminiscent of UGETSU, BAKENEKO descends into a nightmarish parade of splattered blood, decapitations and ghosts gnawing on severed limbs.

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THE HAUNTED CASTLE (aka SECRET CHRONICLES OF THE GHOST-CAT)
Dir. Tokuzô Tanaka, 1969
Japan, 82 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 5:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 10:00 PM

THE HAUNTED CASTLE’s narrative is a bloodier retelling of BLACK CAT MANSION, but its unique and elaborate visual style, marked by disorienting zooms and elaborate tracking shots, wouldn’t be out of place in a giallo. Much of the film take place in near-total darkness, illuminated only by slivers of candlelight and lightning flashes. Director Tokuzô Tanaka was an assistant director on RASHOMON, UGETSU and SANSHO THE BAILIFF, and he later directed the great kaidan THE SNOW WOMAN, a favorite from last Spectober’s series of Japanese Ghost Films.

THE HOUSE OF HATE

THE HOUSE OF HATE
Dir. George B. Seitz
1918
USA

PART 1: Episodes 1–5

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 5:00 PM

PART 2: Episodes 6–10

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29 – 10:00 PM

Short-form weekly action serials were the blockbusters of the early cinema, and Pearl White was their queen. White rose to fame in wildly popular and aliterated titles such as THE PERILS OF PAULINE and THE EXPLOITS OF ELAINE, narrowly avoiding death every episode, only to be imperiled in another, often literal, cliffhanger ending. White famously did (almost) all of her own stunt work, swimming rivers, shooting pistols, and thrilling an audience who came back every week to see their plucky heroine evade the latest trap her enemies set for her.

Much of White’s filmography has been lost, but THE HOUSE OF HATE is among the few of her surviving serials. White plays Pearl, the illegitimate daughter of a munitions tycoon. Suspecting the rest of his family of plotting against him, Pearl’s father names her the sole heir to his fortune, outraging his scheming relatives, and making Pearl the target of a mysterious masked maniac set on murdering her.

This October, Spectacle is proud to present the entire ten-episode series in two parts; episodes 1-5 and episodes 6-10.

This digital transfer comes to us from our friends at Serial Squadron.

MAN IN MAN II: MORE GAY PORN CLASSICS FROM HAND IN HAND STUDIOS

Bijou Video is a Chicago-based distributor specializing in restoring vintage gay pornographic films. In conjunction with Bijou, Spectacle Theater is proud to present a collection of weird, dark hardcore features from prominent 70s NY production company Hand in Hand Studios. For this Spectober installment, the films portray sexuality by turns as tragic, horrific, bizarre, funny, and worthy of celebration.


THE DESTROYING ANGEL
Dir. Peter de Rome
USA, 60 min, 1976

** Screens with de Rome’s short film THE SECOND COMING, 13 min **

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29 – 7:30 PM

Almost more horror movie than porn, THE DESTROYING ANGEL is an occasionally terrifying loose adaptation of a Poe story about a Catholic priest going on sexy/deadly mushroom trips and seeing his doppelganger everywhere. The sex scenes are frightening and captivating, and the last scene (spoiler!) features the priest crying while jerking off on his own grave. Directed by Peter de Rome (ADAM & YVES, screened at Spectacle in 2014), whose shorts were recently released by BFI.

 


THE NIGHT BEFORE
Dir. Arch Brown
USA, 72 min, 1973

MONDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 – MIDNIGHT
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 10:00 PM

THE NIGHT BEFORE gets its straightforward gay porn “narrative” out of the way in the first half before getting on with being exceptionally odd and psychedelic. There’s body painting, someone sucking a disembodied cock that appears out of a bowl of fruit, a woman dancing in Central Park for no reason, and if you want to see an orgy scene
where a dildo goes in so deep it comes out someone’s mouth, this film is highly recommended. Also appearing: kittens.


BALLET DOWN THE HIGHWAY
Dir. Jack Deveau
USA, 93 min, 1975

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 7:30 PM

Opposites attract when a New York ballet dancer’s car breaks down on the highway and he is rescued by a closeted truck driver. An ambivalent romance blossoms until he finds the city apartment he shares with his boyfriend, a fellow dancer, filled with horny truckers. Filled with sadness and unrequited longing, BALLET DOWN THE HIGHWAY is directed by Jack Deveau, whose disco-tastic DRIVE screened at Spectacle in 2014.

GHOSTS OF SHRIEK SHOWS PAST

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 – MIDNIGHT: 555
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9 – MIDNIGHT: THE UNDERTAKER AND HIS PALS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16 – MIDNIGHT: HEADLESS EYES
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23 – MIDNIGHT: MARLEY’S REVENGE: THE MONSTER MOVIE

Since the dawn of time, Spectacle has long been carried on the backs of many a supporter. It’s kind of like that poem Footprints that hung in your grandma’s dorm room. Or better yet, it’s like an ant farm. A cool ass ant farm that shows the best movies you’ve ever seen. To be blunt–Spectacle wouldn’t and couldn’t exist without the often jaw-dropping amount of love we receive from filmmakers, distributors, cinephiles, and (of course) our audience.

In 2011, we held our first ever horror marathon (and last ever sci-fi marathon). Over the course of the next 4 years the marathon would play host to some incredible titles both old and new while laying waste to brains both old and new. Whether you stopped by for the full 12 (sometimes 14) hours or just came for one movie (or maybe you’re the those two dudes who showed up at 2am after the first one who thought it started at midnight instead of noon)–we say thank you.

To celebrate half a decade of marathons we present GHOSTS OF SHRIEK SHOWS PAST. The following titles are hand picked one from each past year to lead into The Fifth Annual Spectacle Shriek Show this year on October 24th. Without the generosity, kindness, and confidence of the following presenters (and others too numerous to cover in this brief post) we wouldn’t be where we are today.

South Third Street Forever.


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Massacre Video presents: 555
Dir. Wally Koz, 1988.
90 min, USA.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 – MIDNIGHT

From The First Annual Spectacle Shriek Show. (2011)

A hippie killer with a sex-fueled, murderous bloodlust is on a rampage and he’s brutally murdering innocent young couples! A nationwide trend of killings with the same m.o. happens to catch the eyes of Detective Haller and Sergeant Connor. Every five years, within five days of each other, the killer strikes! Now it’s up to Haller and Connor to find out who is behind these grisly murders. Who is this crazed, blood thirsty hippie? And more importantly, what is the significance of the third ‘five’?

Written by Roy Koz and directed by Wally Koz, this rare SOV splatter-classic has recently been given the royal treatment by Massacre Video with a DVD, special edition DVD, and an already eBay fodder clamshell.


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Lunchmeat VHS Fanzine presents: THE UNDERTAKER AND HIS PALS
Dir. T.L.P. Swicegood, 1966.
63 min, USA.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9 – MIDNIGHT

From The Spectacle Shriek Show II. (2012)

Two degenerate café owners cook up a depraved alliance with a demented Undertaker and run amok through town on their motorcycles, hacking up hot dames and cleaving craniums. Select portions of the corpses are served up as daily specials at the café and The Undertaker gets to bury the leftovers. But when a pair of local detectives smell something fishy afoot, the trio’s reign of terror runs into some trouble.

One of Lunchmeat Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Josh Schafer’s all-time favorite flicks, this pioneering pitch black comedy is a kitschy slice of pure drive-in delirium that plants its tongue firmly in cheek, then bites it off and spits it out onto a sizzling hot plate ready for you to enjoy. Once you’ve ingested the wacky slab o’ cinema cheeze that is THE UNDERTAKER AND HIS PALS, you’ll never get the taste out of your mouth!

Dig it!


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Spectacle Midnights presents: HEADLESS EYES
Dir. Kent Bateman, 1971.
78 min, USA.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16 – MIDNIGHT

From The Third Annual Spectacle Shriek Show. (2013)

You know how it is for starving artists, right? I mean, look at your clothes. Anyway, it used to be even harder! So hard that some of them turned to a life of crime. This is especially true in the case of Arthur Malcolm. Down on his luck, Arthur is caught robbing an apartment and loses his eye in the process. Once he’s healed he’s out on the streets and, brother, he is HEATED. Arthur sets about on a mad killing spree, gouging out the eyes of his victims with a spoon. He collects the eyes for his artwork, you see. This continues for some time with mixed results.

This film was directed by Kent Bateman, father of Jason and Justine, in the streets of a now long gone version of NYC. According to this film, it was a time when a hooker would approach a man covered in blood in the middle of the day in order to turn a trick. The good old days. In addition to this movie being totally batshit insane with a FIERCE mutant soundtrack, it’s a veritable snapshot of a city as nasty as they come. The performances are hammy and intense, like Easter dinner in a mental institution.

Not to be missed!


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Horror Boobs presents: MARLEY’S REVENGE: THE MONSTER MOVIE
Dir. Jet Eller, 1989.
83 min, USA.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23 – MIDNIGHT

From The Fourth Annual Spectacle Shriek Show. (2014)

“I don’t know about you, man, but I’m still huuuuungry.”

Two bozos get picked up by a gang of vigilantes out to scrub the streets of scum after mistaking the men for drug smugglers. The problem is they’re actually smuggling in their aunt and uncle. The four are whisked away to the local island where they murder all the other drug smugglers. You know what though? None of this even matters because once they get to the island things get really out of hand. Zombies rise from the grave, a giant hell monster shows up, and the vigilantes aren’t too pleased either. How will anyone escape this island alive?

Another marathon mainstay and VHS monolith, Horror Boobs has been providing not only marathon fare but midnight fodder at Spectacle for over a decade![citation needed] This years entry is…well, something special indeed.

Featuring a completely new transfer and other goodies. If you saw this at the marathon last year, you still haven’t truly seen it. A house favorite and rare treat!

THE 88 GAME – CONVERSATIONS WITH CON

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THE 88 GAME – CONVERSATIONS WITH CON
Dir. Gen Ken Montgomery, 1993/2012
USA, 60 min.

With:

PREMIER CON/TACT
Dir. Julien Perrin, 2009
France, 12 min.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 – 7:30 PM

After the interest and enthusiasm around CON-MYTHOLOGY and CON-MEDITATIONS in August, we thought we’d extend the Conrad Schnitzler vibe with THE 88 GAME – CONVERSATIONS WITH CON, a rarely-screened documentary by CON-MYTHOLOGY organizer (and CON friend and collaborator) Gen Ken Montgomery. Based solely off of an interview conducted by Montgomery at Schnitzler’s Berlin studio in 1993, the hour-long work focuses on hearing from Schnitzler himself. At first speaking about THE 88 GAME, a “computer-assisted piano CONcert performed remotely,” the CONversation expands to Schnitzler’s own reflections on his massive career and the thoughts and philosophies behind his work. CON fanatics (and anyone interested in experimental music and sound art) will be thrilled to dig in deep here – an informal but intensive look into the mind of one of the greats. The work is paired with PREMIER CON/TACT, another documentary short on Schnitzler.

THIS LONG CENTURY Presents AT SPECTACLE

As curator and co-founder Jason Evans has maintained This Long Century–an online archive of personal insights from artists, authors, filmmakers, musicians and cultural icons the world over–since 2008. With each update This Long Century invites a handful of contributors to share a reflection on something of personal meaning to them. How this translates is up to each contributor, in the past these contributions have included such diverse content as diaries, scrapbooks, family photos, home movies, odes to friends, source material and work in progress. As an unmediated project, This Long Century serves as a direct line to the contributors themselves; shining a light on their everyday lives and uncovering new, unexpected, ways in which to interpret their work.

In celebration of their upcoming 300th post This Long Century has partnered with Spectacle to share in this similar sense of discovery and invite four past contributors to present a selection of their favorites films, giving each carte blanche. Kicking off the series will be TLC’s backbone himself – Jason Evans (9/10), along with Jennifer West (9/16), Lodge Kerrigan (9/24), and Aïda Ruilova (10/2) all in attendance.


This Long Century presents: FATE + 2x SHORTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – 7:30 PM
** This Long Century curator / co-founder Jason Evans in person! **

This showcase of films from past This Long Century contributors begins with two rarely screened shorts; HOUSE & GARAGE (25 mins) by Nick Relph and Oliver Payne and TREMOLO AMERICANA (3 mins) by Collier Schorr. Followed by one off VHS screening of the feature film FATE (80 mins) by director and cinematographer Fred Kelemen, described by critic Susan Sontag as “a visionary, one-of-a-kind achievement”.

FATE
(aka: Verhängnis)
Dir. Fred Kelemen, 1994
80 minutes, Germany
In German

The paths of people from various countries cross during the course of one night. They speak different languages, but they are fatefully bound together by the solitary quest for happiness and deliverance. Sloping paths are all that’s left for them in an age of lost perspectives, lost refuges and lost homelands. They sink deeper with every movement that should be liberating them. Every gesture of love becomes a gesture of humiliation. The desperate dance of their life has become a passionate dance of death.

** Fate was shot on Hi-8, and transferred to 16mm via TV screen.

“In minute long takes that preserve the real time of the events, an artificial existence is acted out before the ruthless eye of the camera which has the courage to observe. An existence which, by its directness and veracity, seems to transform into real life.” –Krasimir Krumov

Fred Kelemen is known as a director and cinematographer. His film FATE (1994) received the German National Film Award in 1995 and other awards world wide. Since then, he has made a number of films as director like FROST (1997/1998), NIGHTFALL (1999) and FALLEN (2005). He also collaborated as cinematographer with several film directors, such as Béla Tarr on JOURNEY TO THE PLAIN (1995), THE MAN FROM LONDON (2007), and THE TURIN HORSE (2011), and Joseph Pitchhadze on SWEETS (2013).

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HOUSE & GARAGE
Dir. Nick Relph and Oliver Payne, 2001
32 minutes, UK

The title of Relph and Payne’s short film, the second in their trilogy focused on contemporary British culture, makes reference to suburbia — where domestic life typically includes a house and a garage — as well as to the dance music genres of the same name, that flourished there. A collage of images and music, interspersed with spoken passages. Shot with a mixture of video, 16mm and Super 8, in a way that recalls a home movie or a video scrapbook. Imported cultures rub shoulders with middle England, cutting from the den-like bedrooms of ordinary British teenagers, to a man in a cowboy hat as he performs a country and western line-dancing routine.

TREMOLO AMERICANA
Dir. Collier Schorr, 1998
3 minutes, USA

A neckline, a uniform lapel, short buzz cut hair — a brief moment between a young soldier and girlfriend in small town Germany is captured in extreme details. As both lovers turn in a swirling embrace, a soundtrack of iconic American rock music plays.


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This Long Century presents: An Evening with Jennifer West

HANDTINTING
Dir. Joyce Wieland, 1967-68
6 minutes, Canada

Produced during Wieland’s 10-year New York period, HANDTINTING was made from the outtakes of a Job Corps documentary. The artist used the same dyes from her textile works as a means of coloring the film. Streaking colors disorient the viewer, as does Wieland’s editing—small movements, actions, and uncompleted gestures all emphasize qualities of disjunction and repetition.

BLACK PLUS X
Dir. Aldo Tambellini, 1966
9 minutes, USA

A group of black children play at Coney Island, in and out of the water, enjoying the rides at the amusement park. The 16mm image goes from positive to negative, from black to white.

BUTTERFLY
Dir. Shirley and Wendy Clarke, 1967
4 minutes, USA

Shirley Clarke filmed this short 3-minute film with her daughter Wendy in 1967 (the same year as JASON). It was screened once at the Elgin, as part of an anti-war program of various directors, and has since been discovered and restored by Milestone.

SECRET SCREENING
Dir. ???
43 minutes

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM

Jennifer West was born in Topanga Canyon, California. Recent exhibitions include Contemporary Art Museum, Houston (2010); PAINTBALLS AND PICKLE JUICE, Kunstverein Nuremberg, Germany (2010); POMEGRANATE JUICE & PEPPER SPRAY, Marc Foxx, Los Angeles (2009); LEMON JUICE AND LITHIUM, Transmission Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland (2008); ELECTRIC KOOL-AID AND THE MEZKAL WORM, Vilma Gold, London (2008); OCCAMY, Marc Foxx, Los Angeles (2007); The White Room, White Columns, New York (2007). Group shows include IN FULL BLOOM, Galleria Cortese, Milan, Italy (2010); KURT, Seattle Art Museum, Curated by Michael Darling (2010); CELLULOID. CAMERALESS FILM, Kunsthalle Schirn, Frankfurt, Germany, curated by Esther Schlicht (2010); SKATE THE SKY, part of LONG WEEKEND, Tate Modern, London curated by Stuart Comer (2009); NOW YOU SEE IT, Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, curated by Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson (2008); DRAWING ON FILM, Drawing Center, NY (2008) curated by Joao Ribas; HERE’S WHY PATTERNS Misako and Rosen (2008); IF EVERYBODY HAD AN OCEAN: BRIAN WILSON, AN ART EXHIBITION (touring) Tate St. Ives, Cornwall, England; ; CAPC Musee d’Art Contemporain, Bordeaux, France (2007-08) curated by Alex Farquharson; COME FORTH! EAT, DRINK, AND LOOK…, Gavin Brown at Passerby, New York (2008); WORDS FAIL ME, MOCAD, Contemporary Art Museum, Detroit, Michigan, curated by Matthew Higgs (2007).


This Long Century presents: An Evening with Lodge Kerrigan

FILMS OF CHANTAL AKERMAN
FULL PROGRAM DETAILS FORTHCOMING

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 10:00 PM

** Filmmaker Lodge Kerrigan in person! **

Chantal Akerman is a touchstone filmmaker for many. Although best known for her groundbreaking first feature, JEANNE DIELMAN, 23 QUAI DU COMMERCE, 1080 BRUXELLES, Akerman is responsible for a vast and hugely varied body of work. For this event filmmaker Lodge Kerrigan will focus on some lesser known Akerman films, including the intimate and emotive documentary ONE DAY PINA ASKED.

“Akerman’s film is a work of modestly daring wonder, of exploration and inspiration. With her audacious compositions, decisive cuts, and tightrope-tremulous sense of time-and her stark simplicity-it shares, in a way that Wenders’s film doesn’t, the immediate exhilaration of the moment of creation. Akerman’s film is of a piece with Bausch’s dances.” — Richard Brody, The New Yorker

Lodge Kerrigan lives in New York City. His films include CLEAN, SHAVEN, CLAIRE DOLAN, KEANE, and REBECCA H. (RETURN TO THE DOGS).


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This Long Century presents: An Evening with Aïda Ruilova

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 – 7:30 PM

** Filmmaker Aïda Ruilova in person! **

LIFE LIKE
Dir. Aïda Ruilova, 2006
USA, 5 min.

French erotic-horror director Jean Rollin has appeared in two of Aïda Ruilova’s films, both set in Rollin’s Paris home. For LIFE LIKE (2006), the second of the two films, Ruilova shuttles between the interior of Rollin’s apartment and the exterior locations of his films. Revisiting these sites, blending new footage with Rollin’s old scenes, the film traverses the private and filmic spaces of Rollin’s macabre world.

THE IRON ROSE
Dir. Jean Rollin, 1973
France, 86 min.
In French with English subtitles.

THE IRON ROSE is one of Jean Rollin’s most personal works. A departure from the vampire genre for which Rollin is known, the film can be seen as a simple tale: a couple enter a graveyard, once night falls they are unable to make their way out. What’s underneath though is a surreal and melodramatic ghost story unlike any of his other works. The film is accompanied by a striking, stripped down piano score by Pierre Raph (who would also score Rollin’s JEUNES FILLES IMPUDIQUES).

Aïda Ruilova was born in 1974 in Wheeling, West Virginia and lives and works in New York. Ruilova was a nominee for the 2006 Hugo Boss Prize. Her work has been featured in the 50th Venice Biennale, the 2004 Whitney Biennial, and the 4th Berlin Biennial, as well as Tate Britain, London, ZKM, Karlsruhe, The Kitchen, NY, and the Museum of Modern Art, NY. Her recent film HEAD AND HANDS: MY BLACK ANGEL was screened at the Rotterdam film festival in 2013. Upcoming exhibitions include EXCESS BEAUTY at Salzburger Kunstverein and PUNK at the CA2M Contemporary Madrid Art Center 2015.

THE STREET FIGHTER TRILOGY

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This September, Spectacle presents three incredibly savage, incredibly savory kung fu films that launched the career of martial arts star Sonny Chiba and became landmarks of Japanese exploitation cinema – THE STREET FIGHTER TRILOGY!

Following the crossover success of Bruce Lee (who died the previous year), the mighty Japanese film company Toei decided to gamble on a considerably darker, more nasty brand of martial arts action with an unknown actor as the star. The result was THE STREET FIGHTER- a hard-boiled, gore-drenched exploitation classic that spawned an entire franchise of sequels and spinoffs.

Praised by fans as some of the best kung fu films of the era and worshipped by Tarantino for decades, don’t miss this chance to experience grindhouse exploitation at its finest!

Presented UNCUT and in their ORIGINAL JAPANESE LANGUAGE!


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THE STREET FIGHTER
Dir: Shigehiro Ozawa, 1974
Japan, 87 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 10PM

Sonny Chiba IS Tokuma Tsurugi: a high-priced, high-voltage assassin hired by the Yakuza to kidnap the heiress of a deceased billionaire. When his demands are too high, all-out chaos ensues. Shortly thereafter, the body count starts to grow…

A significant shift away from the classic, technical martial arts, THE STREET FIGHTER features numerous sequence of raw, shockingly graphic brawls and battles that garnered the film the first ever X rating solely for violence. Chiba is pure brute force, an anti-hero that acts not out of honor, but for self-satisfaction. But even for a character with zero morals, Chiba’s magnetic personality shines through, lending his mercenary killer a sparkly, devilish demeanor.

A prime cut of juicy 70s kung-fu topped with an X-ray blast to the skull, THE STREET FIGHTER is unadulterated escapism of the bloodiest order.


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RETURN OF THE STREET FIGHTER
Dir, Shigehiro Ozawa, 1974
Japan, 79 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 10PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – 10PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 – 7:30PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 – 5PM

Chiba returns in full beast mode for THE SREET FIGHTER TRILGOY’s second entry!

Once again hired by the Yakuza to do their dirty business, Tsurugi must grapple with potentially killing an old friend and an old nemesis hellbent on revenge!


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THE STREET FIGHTER’S LAST REVENGE
Dir, Shigehiro Ozawa, 1974
Japan, 80 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – 10PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 – 10PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 – 10PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 – 7:30PM

THE STREET FIGHTER TRILGOY concludes with Sonny Chiba channeling James Bond!

THE STREET FIGHTER’S LAST REVENGE takes a turn towards spy film and finds Tsurugi using a fistful of gadgets and masks to battle a sombrero-donned, laser-wielding Mexican bandito!

Featuring pinku legend Ike Reiko!

TWO FILMS BY ROLF BELGUM

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DRIVER 23
Dir. Rolf Belgum, 1998
USA, 72 min.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 7:30PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – 5PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 10PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – 10PM

THE ATLAS MOTH
Dir. Rolf Belgum, 2001
USA, 72 min.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 10PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 – 10PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 7:30PM

A true-life This Is Spinal Tap, Rolf Belgum’s two-film verite opus documents musician/deliveryman Dan Cleveland as he attempts to take his fourth-rate “progressive metal” band Dark Horse out of his cluttered Minneapolis basement and into the limelight. Filmed over seven years and only occasionally venturing outside Cleveland’s house, these two documentaries offer a portrayal of obsessive determination undaunted by terrible decisions, harsh reality and repeated failure. Cleveland has a severe form of obsessive-compulsive disorder which he treats with extreme doses of Zoloft and Prozac, and as we watch him strive for glory, his delusions of grandeur appear alternately psychotic, moronic, misguided and yet ultimately inspiring. He remains valiantly if obliviously steadfast as we witness his marriage crumble, his bandmates quit, his talent questioned, and his ill-conceived schemes – such as a horrifyingly dangerous rope-and-cinderblock pulley system designed to move heavy musical equipment – fail miserably. But despite every possible setback, Cleveland constructs the makeshift “Jury Rig” Recording Studio in his basement and ultimately completes, after nearly a decade, Dark Horse’s debut CD “Guts Before Glory.” Taken together, Belgum’s films, made for under $700, deserve to be placed alongside American Movie as a classic portrait of quixotic ambition gone awry.

YOU CALL THIS PROGRESS!? ALYCE WITTENSTEIN AT SPECTACLE

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 – 8:00 PM
 ** w/ Alyce Wittenstein, Steve Ostringer, & Garrett Oliver in attendance for intro/Q&A! **
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – 10:00 PM

Alyce Wittenstein has been called the “Queen of the New York Underground” and this September, Spectacle is pleased to play host to her and the films making up her MULTIPLE FUTURES trilogy. These films are jam packed with familiar faces, exquisite set pieces, snappy dialogue, and dazzling costumes. While the films have indeed been shown the world over, these screenings will be the first in New York in almost two decades. Join us all month for these remarkable films in a celebration of science fiction, hilarity, character actors, and ghastly view of a not-too-distant world.

PLUS
Special guests, vintage press and screening ephemera from around the world, original props, maybe some custom made buttons, outtakes, and more!


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BETAVILLE
Dir. Alyce Wittenstein, 1986
20 min.

The first in what would come to be known as the MULTIPLE FUTURES trilogy, BETAVILLE – a post-modern nightmare – finds a down and out detective Coman Gettme (played by Wittenstein mainstay Steve Ostringer) returning to his hometown after a chance meeting with The Girl (Holly Adams). Once the two arrive in Gettme’s Cadillac things immediately go from bad to worse for this gumshoe when he learns, over a slice at Stromboli’s, that High Fashion is the new law in town. Gettme becomes obsessed with The Girl and is determined to meet back up with her and “save” her from the these fashionable fascists.

BETAVILLE kicks off the trilogy in a pitch perfect send up of the French New Wave and science fiction, and turns noir on it’s ear while (literally) running through some familiar parts of NYC. Holly Adams is nothing short of dynamite and Ostringer’s distinctive production design would lay the groundwork for the look of the films to come. Years before becoming Brewmaster at the Brooklyn Brewery, Garrett Oliver was co-producer on the film. The short would go on to be nominated for a number of awards at festivals and play all over the world – often (unsurprisingly) alongside Godard’s ALPHAVILLE.

“Most of the detective narrator dialogue is clever, the cinematography is excellent, and I liked the (sort of) industrial music and the song by the Singing Squirrels.” – Michael J. Weldon, Psychotronic Magazine #2, 1989.


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NO SUCH THING AS GRAVITY
Dir. Alyce Wittenstein, 1989
40 min.

In the not too distant future the LaFont corporation has all but taken over Earth. The company has revolutionized all elements of style, beauty, education, and housing but in the process (progress?!) has shipped many of Earth’s more “useless” inhabitants to the mysterious man made planet – and the largest scale experiment in human history – known as Nova Terra. Two scientists – Kay Zorn (Holly Adams) and Albert Leenhardt (Steve Robinson) are about to receive a prestigious award for their work on the LaFont Facelifter when they learn that Nova Terra is disrupting the Earth’s gravitational pull and will soon collide if it’s not destroyed. A headstrong lawyer and Kay’s boyfriend – Adam Malkonian (a scenery chewing Nick Zedd) – mouths off to a judge (the incomparable Taylor Mead – RIP) while defending a human teacher and is ordered to be relocated to the doomed planet. After meeting with the ambassador of Nova Terra (Emmanuelle Chaulet of Eric Rohmer’s BOYFRIENDS AND GIRLFRIENDS), Malkonian learns that perhaps the LaFont Corporation hasn’t been entirely truthful about what really happens on Nova Terra and vows to stop the destruction.

Wittenstein’s first sync sound film is overflowing with amazing set pieces and incredible performances. Some scenes were shot at the New York Hall of Science – including an Ames room and a number of other dazzling optical illusions. Look out for cameos from Michael J. Anderson (TWIN PEAKS), Wittenstein’s father as the insidious Andreas LaFont, and the director herself on Nova Terra.


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THE DEFLOWERING
Dir. Alyce Wittenstein, 1994
40 min.

“The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old are dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.” – Antonio Gramsci, Prison Notebooks.

The quote above opens Wittenstein’s third and final film – THE DEFLOWERING. Again featuring some of Wittenstein’s tried and true players – Holly Adams, Emmanuelle Chaulet, Taylor Mead, and more – the film concerns yet another evil corporation this time HUXLEY BIO-TECH and their means to sanitize/beautify this world of ours. This time Wittenstein (with Ostringer back on production design) takes the costuming helm as well.

The TIB (Total Immune Breakdown) virus has left the planet reeling and lethal allergic reaction are at an all time high. Huxley’s efforts to produce perfect, designer children that are immune to viruses have had the side effect of hyper-allergic reactions. Why isn’t anything being done about allergies? No one wants to fund it! With the mortality rate skyrocketing, can mankind bounce back and feel the soft caress of skin against skin ever again or will the line at the Holo-Memorial Funeral Home grow ever longer?

BOY WONDER: THE SHORT FILMS OF CURTIS HARRINGTON

BOY WONDER: THE SHORT FILMS OF CURTIS HARRINGTON
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1946-2002
Total program time: 96 min.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – 10:00 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – 10:00 PM

** Don’t miss this month’s Harrington Midnights, Friday the 18th and Saturday the 19th! **

Special thanks to Flicker Alley and Drag City

If you happened to catch perennial Spectacle favorite NIGHT TIDE earlier this summer, then you know the strange power the film’s director Curtis Harrington can command. And like NIGHT TIDE, Harrington’s short films have a similar haunted allure…

Before having an incredibly diverse career that saw him direct everything from tv shows like CHARLIE’S ANGELS and DYNASTY to tv movies-of-the-week to low-budget studio flicks to Roger Corman schlock-fests, Harrington was part of the West Coast experimental film scene and an early pioneer of New Queer Cinema aesthetics.

Recently restored to their full glory, Spectacle is delighted to showcase the early shorts of an important yet criminally overlooked filmmaker who orbited the spheres of both Hollywood and the avant-garde.

“…tense, surreal abstract art suffused with a queer sensibility. Like his friend Kenneth Anger, Harrington used the cinematic language of B-movies to express what it was like to be a gay man in America in the mid-20th century, grappling with the often-intertwined feelings of fear and desire.” –The Dissolve


FRAGMENT OF SEEKING
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1946
USA, 14 min.

Made at the age of 20 when Harrington was a film student at USC, FRAGMENT OF SEEKING features Harrington cryptically addressing his homosexuality in a double role. A year later, Harrington’s friend and frequent collaborator Kenneth Anger would cover similar terrain with FIREWORKS.

“A climactic fragment from the existence of an adolescent Narcissus.” –Curtis Harrington


PICNIC
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1948
USA, 22 min.

Harrington extends ideas from FRAGMENT OF SEEKING onto a bigger canvas as a family outing on a beach turns off-kilter as a young man pursues a mysterious woman.

“A satirical comment on middle class life frames a dream-like continuity in which the protagonist pursues an illusory object of desire.” –Curtis Harrrington


ON THE EDGE
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1949
USA, 6 min.

A man, a woman, a ball of yarn, and the bubbling mud pits of the Salton Sea’s post-apocalyptic wastelands. Featuring Harrington’s mother and father in the lead roles.

“A beautiful and frightening allegory of human frailty.” –Harvard Film Archive


THE ASSIGNATION
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1953
USA, 7 min.

A Death-like figure in a Venetian mask takes a gondola ride through Venice’s canals before arriving at his destination.

“… invites comparison with Nicolas Roeg’s DON’T LOOK NOW: The lush color cinematography used in both only brings out more strikingly the decrepit majesty of Venice’s slow slide into the surrounding marshlands.” –Slant Magazine


THE WORMWOOD STAR
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 1955
USA, 10 min.

A visually dazzling portrait of legendary artist/poet/actress/occultist Majorie Cameron, filmed at her studio amongst her paintings (most of which she later burned in an act of ritualized suicide). A must-see for fans of the counter-culture icon.

“…a mini-masterpiece…” –Dangerous Minds


USHER
Dir, Curtis Harrington, 2002
USA, 37 min.

A fitting, campy end to Harrington’s career, USHER is Harrington’s long-gesticulating adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s “Fall Of The House Of Usher.” Made when Harrington was 76 years old, USHER is a larger-scale reworking of Harrington’s first 8mm short and the last film he would make before his death in 2007.