Mr. Johnny Legend’s TV IN ACIDLAND

tv-in-acidland TV IN ACIDLAND
Program 1: In the Beginning… (the birth of “live” TV late 1940s – 1955)
Program 2: The Modern Age (1955 – early ‘70s)

Dir. Johnny Legend, collected footage, 2012
USA, 153 min. with intermission

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 – 8:00PM
One night only with Johnny Legend in attendance!

GROUCHO MARX AND THE PROFESSOR OF HIPOLOGY
BETTY WHITE’S TIRED HOUSEWIFE BLOOD
MILTON BERLE WIGGLES WILDLY

“A hand-made montage of the most shudderingly strange and awesomely revealing moments early television could offer… the damndest thing you ever saw!” –Boho Beat

Mr. Johnny Legend is a savior of forgotten horror films, wrestling promoter, Rockabilly Hall of Famer, and director of documentaries, improvised happenings, hot tub pornos and collected ephemera. But of all his unruly projects in several decades of haunting Hollywood, Mr. Legend considers TV IN ACIDLAND “undoubtedly the most ambitious and incredibly entertaining of them all. The majority of the footage here has never been shown theatrically and has remained virtually unseen by most viewers for over half a century.”

This astounding time capsule of the golden age of “really live” television is a non-stop collection of classic variety shows, skits, commercials, and indescribable oddities featuring the biggest (and strangest) stars of the era, many making their broadcast debut. It is an unabashed cinematic “love-letter” to the first quarter century of televised insanity!

Starring Marilyn Monroe, Jack Benny, Peter Lorre, Ernie Kovacs, Steve Allen, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Liberace, Groucho Marx, Lucy and Desi, Buster Keaton, Jonathan Winters, Rod Serling, Edward G. Robinson, Judy Garland, Jackie Gleason, James Dean… and many, many more!

PLUS…
Johnny Legend really live and in person to share his personal stories of Hollywood stardom and madness!

EPHEMERA: SAFETY FIRST!

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EPHEMERA: SAFETY FIRST!
1940s-2002
Approx. 95 min. USA.

MONDAY, JUNE 1 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, JUNE 14 – 5:00 PM
SUNDAY, JUNE 28 – 7:30 PM

Safety films are modern morality plays aimed at You, The Everyman! Without their stern guidance you would get your dumb self killed in short order. OSHA’s 2010 statistics list over 4,000 on-the-job fatalities and millions of productive hours lost due to accidents. Unfortunately, even when depicting very real dangers, safety films’ authoritative tone and stiff reenactments (not to mention terrible gore effects) elicit more laughter than concern.

These ephemeral films fill a social (and sometimes legal) need to educate the public on what it means to be ‘safe’. When society is confronted with new technology or changing environments, it is up to the safety film to show the proper path to tread. They want to save you from yourself – your wild emotions, lazy shortcuts, rule-bending and other human foibles all lead straight to your gory, violent death. Safety films want you to watch out, and whether by gentle caution or gruesome reenactment, they WILL get their message across.

So join us for an evening of well-intended threats, frights, falls and severed limbs! Bonus: a US Postal Safety Rap featuring young Justin Timberlake!

LIVE AND LEARN (1951)
TIME OUT FOR TROUBLE (1961)
ON EVERY HAND (1969)
COOKING – KITCHEN SAFETY (1949)
ONE GOT FAT (1963)
WHY TAKE CHANCES? (1952)
RANGE SAFETY (1990)
DANGER IS YOUR COMPANION (1940s)
OFFICE SAFETY (1970)
SAFETY IN OFFICES (1944)
CHRISTMAS TREE HARVEST (2002)
SHAKE HANDS WITH DANGER (1970s)
HAZARDS AROUND BINS AND HOPPERS (1978)
DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE (1976)
STAIRWELL SAFETY (2001)
GUNS ARE DIFFERENT
HALLOWEEN SAFETY (1985)
POST OFFICE SAFETY RAP (1990s)
HAZARDS IN MOTION (2001)
SAFETY: IT’S YOUR RESPONSIBILITY (1982)
WILL YOU BE HERE TOMORROW? (1998ish)
SAFETY: IN DANGER OUT OF DOORS (1970s)
A SAFE DAY (early 1940s)
HOSPITAL SAFETY (1979)

Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (archive.org), where 5,336 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

EPHEMERA: POPULUXE

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EPHEMERA: POPULUXE
1956-1964.
Approx 78 min. USA.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – 10:00 PM

EPHEMERA: POPULUXE from Spectacle Theater on Vimeo.

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Today these didactic artifacts are relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, all of whom freely lampoon such easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities. Our monthly EPHEMERA program aims to present these documents to a contemporary audience in perhaps a more even light, ideally free from the ironic framing that can easily overwhelm some of their more interesting details. Fortunately… the humor is irrepressible.

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September’s installment POPULUXE is the first all-color edition, celebrating the  Golden Age of America via the lavish advertisement culture of late-50s/early-60s. This is the Space Age, the Atomic Age, the age of car and kitchen culture, of the nuclear family, of modern design, of leisure, wealth, empowerment, ideals and commerce. In the luxurious world of the future, everything is going to be gorgeous, sleek and perfect and we would like to sing and dance and dazzle all that money out of your pocket. The sky is the limit.

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Films featured in POPULUXE include: Aluminum On The March (1956), American Look (1956), Century 21 Calling (1964), Design For Dreaming (1956), The Golden Years (1960), A Touch Of Magic (1961) and The Wonderful New World Of Fords (1960).

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Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

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Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 5,336 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

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Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

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PARTLY ART: A NIGHT OF ORPHANED MEDIA

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 13TH – 8:00 PM – ONE NIGHT ONLY!

Co-presented by 3Ton Cinema & SPCL NTRST.

Join us for a two-tiered, multi-format immersion into a cornucopia of found media… manipulated, archived, re-contextualized, collected and always deeply-loved.

This night celebrates two milestones in one: a kick-off of 3TON Cinema’s 16mm digitization campaign ‘20,000 ft. Dash’ as well as the premiere screening of SPCL NTRST’s first full-length album ‘Category: Health.’

Alongside cartoon bits, surprises and an excerpt from a film about digestive systems, 3TON Cinema will present a potpourri of orphan material from their 16mm collection. Highlight include: DRAGONFOLD (1979, 7m), a computer-animated illustration of ‘how to fill space’ created by recently-deceased Brooklyn filmmakers Bruce and Katharine Cornwell, FREE FALL (1964, 9m), Arthur Lipsett’s “attempt to express in filmic terms an intensive flow of life [and] the transformation of a physical phenomena into psychological ones,” and A FLOWERING PLANT FROM SEED TO SEED (1980, 12m), a time-lapse film depicting the growth cycle of tomatoes.

Accompanying live experimental/electronic score to these films will be provided by Matt Wellins (http://mattwellins.com) and Qixoni:

 

Following this, SPCL NTRST will debut the entirety of their new ‘Category: Health’ album, which manipulates found tapes that tackle the theme of health from a variety of styles and perspectives into a roughly 30m assembly.

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Since 2009, 3Ton Cinema has been making an effort to collect, exhibit and appreciate 16mm films. Inspired largely by the work of Oddball Films and Other Cinema, then spurred initially by a generous donation of films from the Prelinger Archive in San Francisco, CA, 3TON’s aim is to examine, share and re-purpose their 1000+ film collection.

More info: http://3toncinema.info

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SPCL NTRST is an A/V band who fixate on analog video sources to create new ‘music videos’ out of only the audio and video material found on each individual artifact. Their currently focus is on ephemeral –educational, promotional, corporate, industrial, etc.– VHS tapes.

More info: http://spclntrst.com

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REMIX TO COGNITON

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Re-Made/Re-Modeled Cinema from the Film Society of the Spectacle
One Week Only! • August 16 – 22

In its two-and-a-half years, Spectacle has often functioned as a creative space, offering its screen to amateur or established editor-filmmaker-curators as a means of exploring new ways of engaging with the moving image. Evoking the traditions of New York arthouses, third-world videotheques, and the stoner chill pad in your high school friend’s treehouse, it’s put forth an earnest effort to color outside the lines of the canon, and has never shied away from dismantling it, puzzling at the parts, and feverishly reassembling them while hoping Dad doesn’t notice. Though artists have drawn inspiration from the cinematic apparatus by rejiggering its constituent parts since the form’s inception, international video sharing, increased bandwidth, and the ready proliferation of digital moviemaking tools have provided unprecedented material, accessibility, and ease of making movies like BLADE RUNNER totally new and better.

Likewise, though Big Cinema exhibition is not likely to be outpaced for long, we are presently at a moment where the gap in audience-perceived quality between a $150,000 D-Cinema system and some thing we got at B&H is relatively small. Therefore, as we have crested the digital conversion, DIY HD remixes are capable of carrying as much screen-authority as the now-primarily-video content displayed at hallowed cinema grounds like Film Forum and IFC Center. When, interviewed by intrepid boy-reporter Keannu Reeves in the 2012 documentary SIDE-BY-SIDE, Fox Filmed Entertainment CEO Tom Rothman portentously cautions that we are entering an era in which “anyone can make a movie,” this is probably what he’s sad about. Join us, friends, in salting the wound.

REMIX TO COGNITION is a week-long serving of work made from repurposed footage that was born at Spectacle or is otherwise associated with its all-volunteer staff roster. As in most cases, 100% of ticket sales or donations go directly to supporting the space.
THE LINE-UP
FRI / 16 / 8PUnclear Holocaust w/ Golden Eye*
FRI / 16 / 10PSouth Third Forever: Year One
SAT / 17 / 8P & 10PCognition Point (In SPECTRASENSORY 3D Smell-O-Vision)
SAT / 17 / 12AHollywood Burn w/ Nuke ‘Em Duke*

SUN / 18 / 10PReplicant City w/ Boldly Going

MON / 19 / 7.30PTough Guys w/ a bout de souffle
MON / 19 / 10PI Hate Myself and I Want to Die
TUE / 20 / 8P & 10PMIL KDU DES score Sound Stage Massacre
WED / 21 / 8PPolice Mortality and Protect and Serve w/ Death Wish*
WED / 21 / 10PSouth Third Forever: Like Tears in the Rain

*These three screenings are FREE but the artists encourage donations to Spectacle.


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UNCLEAR HOLOCAUST
The Anti-Banality Union, 2011. 65 min. U.SS.A.
Amerikan with some Arabic.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16 – 8:00 PM

Unclear Holocaust is a feature-length autopsy of Hollywood’s New York-destruction fantasy, comprised of scenes from over 50 studio-system star vehicles, special effects showcases, and outright representational terrorisms from the last eighty years of Amerikan cinema and re-edited into one hyper-heretical master-narrative.

“It is the unrivaled assembly of the greatest amount of capital and private property heretofore captured in one frame, that, with unfathomable narrative efficacy, suicides itself in an annihilatory flux of fire, water, and aeronautics”, say the directors. “The prequel to 9/11”, say others.

With GOLDEN EYE (LJ Frezza, 2013. 6 min.)

Propaganda is the dissemination of data and surveillance is the collection of data. The James Bond series of films is a collection of propaganda, glorifying the practice of espionage. This video is an abridged history of surveillance in the 20th Century, comprised of every James Bond movie released before the War on Terror. It is an examination of the semi-permanent State of Exception in which US Citizens find ourselves, where extralegal proceedings have become the standard operating procedure.

This screening is FREE but the artists encourage donations to Spectacle.


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SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: YEAR ONE
Compiled by C. Spencer Yeh, 2010-2011/2013.
USA.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16 – 10:00 PM

In just over two-and-a-half years, Spectacle has created over 600 custom trailers running one-to-two minutes in length. This compilation, assembled by artist and prolific Spectacle trailer editor C. Spencer Yeh, spotlights selections from the theater’s first year of operation. They offer a glimpse into the unorthodox curatorial decisions of a fledgling microcinema run by a small handful of non-professional misfit film and video enthusiasts. Working at a fervent pace to assemble material for their rigorous seven-day-a-week programming schedule, the editors developed a singular vernacular that exists on a separate plane than the traditional techniques of commercial exploitation.

A second compilation, spotlighting Spectacle’s growth toward collective actualization, follows on August 21.


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COGNITION POINT
Jon Dieringer & Vanessa McDonnell, 2013.
45 min. USA/USSR.

Showing in Our Very Own <<<SPECTRASENSORY 3D>>> Smell-O-Vision Process!

SATURDAY, AUGUST 17 – 8:00 & 10:00 PM

In this singular live collaboration, Jon Dieringer & Vanessa McDonnell enrapture the senses with abstracted imagery from stunning 1950-60’s USSR sci-fi movies, post-converted to anaglyph 3D, and accompanied live by free-associated smells, transporting the audience to heretofore unimagined worlds.


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HOLLYWOOD BURN
Soda_Jerk with Sam Smith, 2011.
52 min. Australia.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 17 – MIDNIGHT

HOLLYWOOD BURN is an anti-copyright epic constructed from hundreds of samples plundered from the Hollywood archive. Made over 10 years, it is a bombastic free culture call-to-arms and an expensive copyright lawsuit waiting to happen.

Mimicking the hyperbolic rhetoric of today’s copyright cops, it pits a righteous league of video pirates against the evil tyrant Moses and his Copyright Commandments. Determined to alter the present by changing the past, the pirates travel back to 1955 to construct the ultimate weapon: an Elvis Presley video-clone. Part sci-fi + rom com + biblical epic + action movie, this remix manifesto adopts the tactical responses of the parasite, feeding off the body of Hollywood and inhabiting its cinematic structures and codes. The unwitting all-star cast includes Elvis Presley, Charlton Heston, Batman, Bette Davis, Jaws, Jesus, the Hulk, the Hoff and the Ghostbusters.

This screening is FREE but the artists encourage donations to Spectacle.



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REPLICANT CITY
Akiva Saunders & Brendan Shields, 2012.
USA. 53 min.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 18 – 10:00 PM

SPARKLE MOTION provides a live score to the greatest sci-fi detective allegory ever made, remixed and condensed by Akiva Saunders into 53 minutes of android noir apocalypse.

Brendan Shields is a cinephile and longtime bedroom DJ under the name Sparkle Motion. He is also one half of Smash TV together with Ben Craw.

REPLICANT CITY from Spectacle Theater on Vimeo.

with BOLDLY GOING (LJ Frezza, 2010. 4 min.)

Ignoring the Prime Directive, Captain James T. Kirk becomes entangled in conflicts spawned by his own interventionist policies. By the time he realizes his error, it has become clear that he has no choice but to continue his perpetually escalating campaign.


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TOUGH GUYS
Jon Dieringer, 2012.
USA. 111 min.

MONDAY, AUGUST 19 – 7:30 PM

This is Mean Streets, otherwise untouched, with the pop songs ripped out replaced by amateur cover versions from YouTube—25 in all directly corresponding to the original. The result is a wholesale dismantling of authorship, cinematic space, expectation, and the intellectual property of The Rolling Stones, Ltd., whose songs—and music of other genres including early rock, soul, doo wop, rhythm and blues, Cazone Napoletana, opera and salsa—are now performed variously by wayward narcoleptics, fried teenagers, amateur tenors, Polish pre-teen beauty pageant contestants, hip dads and people testing out new keyboards. An analysis of vicarious cultural production as practiced by Martin Scorsese, YouTube performers, and the artist, Tough Guys is also a joyous paean to egalitarianism and the enduring, irrepressible folk underpinnings of tight-assed corporate culture.

The Scorsesean ‘needle drop’ style of scoring with pop music inspired a whole new branch of the film industry—a mammoth bureaucracy of rights, licensing, music supervisors, clearance coordinators and entertainment lawyers with attendant opportunities for marketing and brand synergy between corporate film and music; Tough Guys elbows its way toward an imagined alternative space.

With A BOUT DE SOUFFLE (LJ Frezza, 2010, 2 min.)

A machinima remake of Godard’s a bout de souffle (1960) by way of Grand Theft Auto 4.


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I HATE MYSELF AND I WANT TO DIE
Greg Eggebeen & Ben Shapiro, 2012.
USA. 40 min.

MONDAY, AUGUST 19 – 10:00 PM

The biographical story of Nirvana through the media detritus left in Kurt Cobain’s wake. A brand new narrative-compilation of lost interviews, rabid fan tributes, insensitive true-crime shows, crushing live footage, and even Kurt’s long-lost 1984 homemade horror film, Horror Movies (Kurt’s Bloody Suicide).

Original event trailer:


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MIL KDU DES score UNIVERSE
1960. Canada.
30 min.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 20 – 8:00 & 10:00 PM

Note: Due to a last minute death in the MIL KDU DES keyboard family, the group will no longer be performing to a remixed version of THE SOUND STAGE MASSACRE. Instead, the band has chosen to compose an all-new score to 1960’s breathtaking UNIVERSE.

Universe is a lost triumph, creating a vast and awe-inspiring portrait of the universe as it might appear to a space-traveller, and delving into the astronomer’s art. The austere beauty of its images inspired Stanley Kubrick’s 2001.

Below is an original trailer from a previous screening:


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POLICE MORTALITY
Anti-Banality Union, 2013.
66 min. U.SS.A.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21 – 8:00 PM

Do you ever try to imagine the last crime?
Suspect that Robocop is the 99%?
Or wish that the pigs would off themselves, so you don’t have to?

Leave it to Hollywood and the Anti-Banality Union, in the world premiere of POLICE MORTALITY, the vengeful follow-up to last year’s 9/11 bonanza UNCLEAR HOLOCAUST.

The immaculate suicide of one police officer begins to reveal the contradictions of police existence to a force which, finding itself utterly irreconcilable with itself, resorts to communism, terrorism, and ultimately terminal civil war, eradicating the prevailing organization of life in the process.

Original event trailer:

PROTECT AND SERVE
Greg Eggebeen & Ben Shaprio, 1930-2011.
26 min. USA.

A short compilation of golden-age police procedural tutorials, self-defense training vids, and the most nightmarish amateur footage of macings, beatdowns, and brutal assaults ever captured by the public.

This screening is FREE but the artists encourage donations to Spectacle.


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SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: LIKE TEARS IN THE RAIN
Compiled by C. Spencer Yeh, 2011-2013.
USA.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21 – 10:00 PM

In just over two-and-a-half years, Spectacle has created over 600 custom trailers running one-to-two minutes in length. This compilation, assembled by artist and prolific Spectacle trailer editor C. Spencer Yeh, spotlights selections from the theater’s second year of operation to present day.

Advancing from Year OneLike Tears in the Rain explores work that becomes more formalized in certain aspects while reflecting a kaleidoscopic array of approaches. It focuses on the transition of Spectacle from a very (very) small handful of owner-programmer-volunteer-janitor-editors to a larger group leveraging collective action and the power of friendship to realize the goal of forming a self-sustaining off-non-profit seven-day-a-week screening space that shows awesome stuff all the time. Though fleeting in purpose, and advertising one-off shows at a DIY venue in a city in which such spaces are themselves ephemeral by nature of fashion and circumstance, it is hoped these pieces might stand as a testament to what is surely one of the most prolific programming and found-footage collectives in the city.

EPHEMERA: SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU.

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EPHEMERA: SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU.
1947-1973.
Approx. 80 min. USA.

THURSDAY, JULY 11 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 25 – 10:00 PM

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Today these didactic artifacts are relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, all of whom freely lampoon such easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities.

Our monthly EPHEMERA program aims to present these documents to a contemporary audience in perhaps a more even light, ideally free from the ironic framing that can easily overwhelm some of their more interesting details. Fortunately… the humor is irrepressible.

July’s installment SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU focuses on the common themes of adolescent sexual education and awareness. After a program of didactic shorts that run the gamut from hand-holding to menstruation-training will be the mashup BOYS BE AWARE, a home-made combination of two infamous, classically-homophobic Sid Davis atrocities that use the exact same script: Boys Aware (1973) and Boys Beware (1961). This edit switches between the two liberally, providing an interesting look at how the same piece of undeniably dated writing is manifest in two markedly different eras.

Finishing up the program will be the entirety of the notorious 1964 paranoia-bomb THE CHILD MOLESTER, a PSA so dark and foreboding that it seems equally inappropriate for children, teens, parents and even child molesters.

*WARNING: ‘THE CHILD MOLESTER’ FEATURES EXTREME IMAGERY*

Sources for SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU include: As Boys Grow (1957), Boys Aware (1973), Boys Beware (1961), The Child Molester (1964), Dating Do’s and Don’ts (1949), Going Steady (1951), How Much Affection? (1958), Human Reproduction (1947), Molly Grows Up (1953), Physical Aspects of Puberty (1953), Social-Sex Attitudes In Adolescence (1953), What To Do On A Date (1950).

Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 4,439 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

EPHEMERA: ACT NATURAL

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EPHEMERA: ACT NATURAL
1949-1972.
Approx. 80 min. USA.

SATURDAY, JUNE 8TH – 7:30PM
SATURDAY, JUNE 29TH – 7:30PM

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Today these didactic artifacts are relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, all of whom freely lampoon these easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities.

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Our monthly EPHEMERA program aims to present these documents to a contemporary audience in perhaps a more even light, ideally free from the ironic framing that can easily overwhelm some of their more interesting details. Fortunately, the humor is irrepressible.

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June’s installment ACT NATURAL compiles moments from the common theme of psychological and emotional unease, particularly in adolescence. How best can Tom, Dick and Jane navigate the rough terrain of daily social interaction, family dynamics and self-actualization? If there must be something wrong with me, are things ever going to be okay?

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Preceding the feature collage will be the short WHY DOESN’T CATHY EAT BREAKFAST? (1972, 4m, Color, USA), a puzzling and surreal PSA that manages to eerily dance around its core theme of childhood body consciousness.

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Sources for ACT NATURAL include: Angry Boy (1950), Boy With A Knife (1956), Facing Reality (1954), Habit Patterns (1954), Jealousy (1954), Keeping Mentally Fit (1952), The Outsider (1951), Self-Conscious Guy (1951), Stage Fright (1949) and more!

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Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 3,801 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

EPHEMERA: WHAT WAS NEW YORK?

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EPHEMERA: WHAT WAS NEW YORK?
1939-1969, TRT: 90m, Color/B&W, USA.
MONDAY, MAY 13 – 8:00 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 28 – 8:00 PM

As one of the most characteristically diverse places on the planet, New York City’s 20th-century history has produced sights and sounds of an astonishing breadth. May’s EPHEMERA program WHAT WAS NEW YORK? offers a curated selection of moments from the history of NYC as it has been captured on celluloid. From specific transit exposés to neighborhood profiles, this edit utilizes a variety of framing contexts interchangeably to present an appropriately-scattered portrait of a location in constant flux; its assembly chronological yet timeless.

Preceding the feature program is LIVE AND LET LIVE (1947, 10m, Color, USA), an innovative safety awareness film produced by the Aetna Casualty & Surety Company that utilizes brightly-colored model cars to demonstrate traffic scenarios via tabletop stop-motion animation.

Sources for WHAT WAS NEW YORK? include: Around The World In New York (1940), Arteries Of New York City (1941), Coney Island (1940), For The Living (1949), R.F.D. Greenwich Village (1969), Story Of A City (1947), Story Of Newspaper History In The Making (1945), The City (1939), Third Avenue El (1950) and Village Sunday (1960), as well as many private home movies.

Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 3,801 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

EPHEMERA: FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL GUIDANCE

EPHEMERA: FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL GUIDANCE
1947-1963.
TRT: 90 min.
SATURDAY, APRIL 13TH – 10PM
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24TH – 7:30PM
Our Prelinger Archives series returns for another installment this April!

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Pioneered by the Coronet Instructional Films company, Centron Productions, McGraw-Hill and Encyclopaedia Britannica—as well as more eccentric individuals like Sid Davis and Jam Handy—these films today have been relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, who freely lampoon these easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities.

April’s EPHEMERA program FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL GUIDANCE compiles moments from these films that focus on the frequent theme of social development. Looking to properly shape the future sons and daughters of the U.S.A. into well-adjusted citizens, the milquetoast, aw-shucks sincerity of these shorts of course strikes an uncanny, off-kilter chord to today’s audience. This compilation arranges its selections into a rough narrative of growing-up; our protagonists age and learn lessons stage-by-stage, gradually maturing into utterly perfect adults ready to meet the challenges of tomorrow.

Preceding the feature collage will be the full short A DATE WITH YOUR FAMILY (1950, 10m, B&W, USA) interspersed with full-color outtakes from the set of the film itself, exposing glimpses of the personalities behind the actors in gag-reel relief; a fascinating peek beneath the characteristically unnatural, almost inhuman veneer of sponsored films from this era.

Sources for FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL GUIDANCE include: Act Your Age (1949), Appreciating Our Parents (1950), Are You Popular? (1947), Beginning Responsibility (1951), The Benefits Of Looking Ahead (1950), A Better Use Of Leisure Time (1950), The Bully (1952), Cheating (1952), Cindy Goes To A Party (1955), Don’t Get Angry (1953), Each Child Is Different (1954), Family Life (1949), Good Table Manners (1951), Gossip (1953), How Quiet Helps At School (1953), How To Be Well-Groomed (1949), Office Etiquette (1950), The Procrastinator (1952), Shy Guy (1947), The Snob (1958), Social Courtesy (1951), Ways To Settle Disputes (1950), What Makes A Good Party (1950) and Your Junior High Days (1963).

Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 3,801 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.