BASEBALL IS CINEMA: AN EVENING WITH JOHN DEMARSICO

BASEBALL IS CINEMA: AN EVENING WITH JOHN DEMARSICO
dir. John DeMarisco, 2025.
United States, 20-30ish mins.
THURSDAY, MAY 22 – 7:30 PM – Moderated by Bradford William Davis, writer, cultural critic, and Fort Worth Telegram columnist.
THURSDAY, MAY 22 – 10 PM – Moderated by Caroline Golum, filmmaker, writer, programmer, and masochistic Mets fan.

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Much like cinema itself, America’s pastime has endured across three centuries: from the scrappy days of the Lumiere Bros’ actualities and the amateur club ball of the late 19th century, through Hollywood and baseball’s dominating heyday in the middle-20th, to the shared uncertainties of the 21st-century’s hyper-capitalist technocracy. Played in a “wide shot” and packed with nine innings’ worth of narrative, baseball is arguably our most cinematic sport – and few broadcasters in the game understand this magic quite like Sports New York director John DeMarsico.

Since 2019, DeMarsico has brought his filmmaking background and cinephile bona fides to the New York Mets’ broadcasts, sweetening regular season games with Sergio Leone-inspired showdowns, kinetic camera moves, and an array of spicy graphics. His work on Sports New York has screened throughout the city, and touted in the pages of MUBI Notebook, Baseball Prospectus, and the New York Times. Thanks to the Mets’ increasing prevalence on national broadcasts, DeMarsico has graciously offered to join us on a night off for a survey of his most exciting work. For movie buffs and baseball fans alike, this one-night-only event is not to be missed (and yes, you can check the score during the screening)!

 

An Evening with Graham Swon: THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS

THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS
dir. Graham Swon, 2018
USA. 98 min.

FRIDAY, MAY 23 – 7:30 PM (Q&A ONE NIGHT ONLY)

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Almost a zelig-like figure of the New York film scene, Graham Swon is best known as a producer on some of the best and most truly independent American films of the past decade. As if helping create the films of Ted Fendt, Ricky D’Amrbose, Matías Piñeiro, and Dan Sallitt weren’t enough, Swon is also a startlingly innovative filmmaker in his own right whose first two films, THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS (2018) and AN EVENING SONG (for three voices) (2024), display an impressive penchant for visual experimentation, narrative game-playing, and a transcendental attention to the passage of time and memory. In honor of the release of AN EVENING SONG in New York and Los Angeles, we’ll be hosting Swon to present a special screening of his first film THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS.

Set over one night at a girls’ high school slumber party where five friends hold a scary story contest, SECRETS is an heir to storytelling anthologies like Boccaccio’s Decamaron, Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, or EC Comics’ Tales from the Crypt. Filled with sumptuous dissolves, a mysterious narrator, and durationally long shots that stretch beyond 20 minutes, it’s also a rich aesthetic experience aided by cinematographer Barton Cortright. Both nostalgic of teenage innocence and filled with the macabre, SECRETS is a unique and unsettling evocation of the precariousness of suburban childhood explored through American oral traditions.

“This non-gory horrific tale without monsters or bloodshed is probably the most poisonous and scary US film produced in recent years. Inspired by Southern Gothic’s dark romanticism, shot with acute minimalism, this film conjures up the best contemporary horror writers (such as Brian Evanson, Thomas Ligotti or Lisa Tuttle) with its hypnotic narration, its stylised grammar, both elegant and brutal, and its existential and metaphysical terror. In a gesture that reminds one of Warhol, Graham Swon prints on the young girls’ faces an ancestral violence inherent to the American culture, and puts the spectators in a torpor from which they will unheartedly depart.”

– Victor Bournérias

PEACHES & HERBS: TAIWANESE ACTION FANTASIES

Peaches & Herbs: Taiwanese Action Fantasies

On January 24, 1987, the China Times published an incendiary speech delivered by Edward Yang at his 40th birthday celebration a few months prior. Yang’s speech, later dubbed his “Another Cinema” manifesto, was drafted in response to growing domestic criticism of Taiwan’s New Cinema movement (of which Yang was a pioneering figure) for what was seen as arthouse overindulgence and lack of popular appeal. Despite the movement bringing international renown to Taiwan’s film industry, these criticisms became too frequent and forceful to ignore, causing Yang and his fellow New Cinema filmmakers to denounce the globalizing of Taiwan’s film market, effectively ending the New Cinema movement and beginning the pursuit of Another.

Five days later, a movie about a magical fruit-themed kung fu fighting child graced Taiwan’s screens.

Though likely not the alternative that Yang had envisioned, the Taiwanese film industry saw a boom in the number of kid-friendly action fantasy productions throughout the late-80s & early-90s, thanks in part to the rising global popularity of tokusatsu series like POWER RANGERS and a burgeoning home video market that re-introduced entire generations to the action and wuxia films of yesteryear. These releases, many of which were produced through Choi Chung-lam’s Kinko Yingi Co., often incorporated fantastical elements from Chinese literature and folklore already familiar to children, while scratching that tokusatsu itch with plenty of colorful characters, rubber-suited monsters, magic talismans, and mythical powers.

The legacy and impact of these films is still up for discussion— Unfortunately many of these titles have either been lost to time or have only sustained via poorly-translated bootleg VHS & VCD rips— but we at Spectacle see it as an oddly fascinating detour for Taiwan’s film industry during a period of great self-reflection and political & social transition, both within the industry itself and for the country at-large.

CHILD OF PEACH

CHILD OF PEACH (捉鬼雜牌軍)
dirs. Chen Chun-liang & Chiu Chung-hing, 1987
Taiwan. 97 min.
In Mandarin with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, MAY 2 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, MAY 8 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 24 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, MAY 29 – 7:30 PM

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High up in the Himalayas lies the Peach Garden, an idyllic paradise where flora and fauna flourish thanks to the natural power of the Sword of the Sun. When the monstrous Demon King (Huang Chung-yu) invades the Garden to claim the sword for himself, the Garden’s master and his wife send their only son down to Earth where he’s endowed with super-human abilities. Years later, the teenage Peach Kid (Lin Hsiao-lu) teams up with former guardians of the Garden— three shape-shifting superpowered children named Tiny Dog, Tiny Monkey, and Tiny Cock— to banish the Demon King once and for all.

Loosely based on the Japanese fairy tale, Momotarō, and incorporating healthy doses of Journey to the West and Superman lore, CHILD OF PEACH has become the gold standard for Taiwanese action fantasy. The film spawned two semi-related sequels and has since become a cult classic for its barrage of ridiculous ideas, spanning everything from witches and zombies to human-shark hybrids and fruit-based mecha. Its directors, Chen Chun-liang & Chiu Chung-hing, each went on to helm some of the genre’s heaviest hitters (as this series demonstrates), while its star, Lin Hsiao-lu, built her own cottage industry out of playing magically-powered children across films like KUNG-FU WONDER CHILD, KING OF THE CHILDREN, and DRAGON KID.

MAGIC OF SPELL

MAGIC OF SPELL (桃太郎大顯神威)
aka CHILD OF PEACH 2
dir. Chiu Chung-hing, 1988
Taiwan. 80 min.
In Mandarin with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, MAY 3 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, MAY 9 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 24 – 7:30 PM

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Peach Kid (Lin Hsiao-lu) returns for another fruit-bearing adventure. This time he and his buddies, Tiny Dog, Tiny Monkey, and Tiny Cock, must team up to save the recently reborn Ginseng King (no relation to the one from our last foray in Taiwanese action fantasy) from a demon sorcerer intent on using the living plant-child’s powers to restore his lifeforce.

The first semi-sequel to CHILD OF PEACH takes on a much darker tone than its predecessor, pitting our plucky prunus persica against devils, the undead, and jiangshi of all stripes. Though still technically a kids’ movie, the film also boasts some of the genre’s creepiest villains in Chang Shan’s demon sorcerer and his band of henchmonsters, introduced to the audience bathing in the blood of children and inexplicably hellbent on slaughtering the Peach Kid and anyone close to him. But on the lighter side, Peach Kid gets a sweet new theme song in this one!

THE TWELVE FAIRIES

THE TWELVE FAIRIES (至尊無敵之戰神)
dir. Chiu Chung-hing, 1990
Taiwan. 91 min.
In Mandarin with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 7 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 17 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, MAY 30 – 5 PM

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Long ago when the world still looked like a Hanna-Barbera cartoon, the Buddha staged a race around the world to decide which twelve sacred animals would comprise the Chinese zodiac, leaving behind his young emissary, Bai Mai (Shadow Liu), to help maintain the balance between good and evil. Centuries later, Bai Mai must summon the forces of the zodiac, each of whom takes the form of a human being that embodies the archetypal characteristics of their respective animals, to defeat an army of darkness spawning from Devil’s Island.

From the same team behind the PEACH films comes our deepest, wildest, and most poorly-translated cut of the series. For his final film as director, Chiu Chung-hing goes out with a bang, uniting the stars of his two biggest hits— HELLO DRACULA’s Shadow Liu and Peach Kid him/herself, Lin Hsiao-lu, here playing a completely different magically-powered kung fu fighting child— for a deliriously entertaining blend of animation, puppetry, trippy effects, wire-fu, Rube Goldberg traps, and pyrotechnics, with a climactic sequence that just about tops everything else Kinko Yingi Co. had done to-date. And yes, in case you were wondering, the avatar for the Pig spirit is indeed a cop.

NEW SEVEN DRAGON BALL

NEW SEVEN DRAGON BALL (新七龍珠)
aka DRAGON BALL: THE MAGIC BEGINS
dir. Chen Chun-liang, 1991
Taiwan. 90 min.
In Mandarin with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, MAY 10 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MAY 16 – MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY, MAY 25 – 5 PM

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A group of aliens led by the villainous Lord Horn (Philip So) scour the Earth for seven precious orbs known as the “Dragon Balls Pearls” which, once gathered, can summon a wish-granting dragon that can bestow the dark Lord with unlimited power. After inheriting one of the pearls from his grandfather, it falls on the young Son Goku Monkey Boy (Chen Chi-chiang) and his gang of magical misfits to collect the remaining pearls before they fall into Lord Horn’s clutches, in what is definitely not an unauthorized adaptation of a certain hyper popular manga.

For fans of the DB franchise hoping to see live action takes on its iconic characters, go look somewhere else… Because like most Chinese-language adaptations of Japanese manga, this one bears little resemblance to its source material (though ironically brings it closer to the series’ original inspiration of Journey to the West). In lieu of Krillin, Piccolo, and Vegeta, we get new fan favorites like, uh, Piggy, Seetou, and Turtle Man. Action-packed, deeply silly, chronically horny (at least for a children’s movie), and by all accounts, still leagues better than the other live action DB movie out there.

QUEEN OF FIST

QUEEN OF FIST

QUEEN OF FIST (山東老娘)
aka KUNG FU MAMA
dir. Chien Lung, 1973
Taiwan. 89 min.
In Mandarin with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, MAY 9 – 5 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 11 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 24 – 10 PM

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“It’s not nice to fool with mother… The meanest mother of them all!”

When an axe gang murders a young boxer and kidnaps his sister, their elderly mother travels from Shandong to Shanghai to seek revenge on the gang’s vicious Boss Lu. Her arrival is met with derision from the gang, but little do they know that the sweet little old lady standing before them is really a tough-as-nails kung fu master, ready to kick some serious ass to protect her family.

A solid Taiwanese basher with a matronly twist, launched into the stratosphere by a powerhouse performance from Hsieh Chin-Chu. Hsieh, a star of wuxia serials in the 1940s and 50s, was well into her 60s when she took on the role of the incomparable Mother Ma. Although the film was released under multiple different titles between Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the U.S., we here at Spectacle prefer to run with the literal translation of its Chinese title (and riff on the similarly-named Shaw Bros. classic), “The Granny from Shantung”.

Be sure to bring your most badass 奶奶 out to a special Mother’s Day screening on Sunday, 5/11!

Special thanks to Far East Flix.

WHEN IN DOUBT, MAKE NO SENSE – TWO DOCUMENTARIES BY iara lee

Born in the Ponta Grossa region of Brazil, iara lee has made a name for herself as one of the most prolific activist documentarians of our time. She began her film career as a producer for the Sao Paulo International Film Festival in the 1980s and eventually moved to New York City to develop her own mixed-media company. What began as an experiment to seek the intersection between cinema, music, architecture, and poetry would grow into something far more mission-driven. By the late 2000s, her self-run Caipirinha Productions would evolve into the Cultures of Resistance Network, a global outreach publication dedicated to promoting artistic demonstrations of social justice.

 

A participant in the 2010 Gaza Freedom Flotilla, iara lee is a true example of utilizing filmmaking for the greater good. After her debut tech-doc SYNTHETIC PLEASURES (1995) screened in NYC earlier this year, Spectacle is proud to present two more of her documentaries showcasing our global utopic potential: MODULATIONS and CULTURES OF RESISTANCE

MODULATIONS
dir. iara lee, 1998
United States. 75 min.

FRIDAY, MAY 2 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 6 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MAY 16 – 7:30 PM

MONDAY, MAY 19 – 10 PM

 

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With the alluring tagline “cinema for the ear,” MODULATIONS is the definitive world travelogue of the rave culture that thrived through the ’90s. Packed with revelatory interviews with music vanguards like
Genesis P-Orridge and interspersed with uproarious live sets from the likes of Squarepusher and the Future Sound of London, MODULATIONS presents itself less like a documentary and more like a kaleidoscopic deep dive into one of the more singular subcultures of our age. It’s “Peace Love Unity Respect” distilled onto film.

CULTURES OF RESISTANCE
dir. iara lee, 2010
United States. 73 min.

SATURDAY, MAY 3 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MAY 9 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 13 – 10 PM
MONDAY, MAY 19 – 7:30 PM

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Beginning as a gut reaction to the start of the Iraq War, iara lee felt inspired again to travel the world and film it in a new light. From graffiti artists in Iran to grassroots guitar technicians in Brazil to the creative dreams of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, CULTURES OF RESISTANCE is a universal, beautiful tribute to Indigenous art, offering a path to communal healing in an authoritarian world.

Special thanks to Carlos Pina and the Cultures of Resistance Network

THE DUMB GIRL OF PORTICI

THE DUMB GIRL OF PORTICI
dirs. Phillips Smalley and Lois Weber, 1916
United States, 115 min.
Silent with English intertitles.

SATURDAY, MAY 10 – 7:30 PM – ONE NIGHT ONLY! LIVE SCORE BY JAKE PEPPER AND ZACH KOEBER

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Spectacle is proud to present one of American cinema’s first true epics, with a new original score performed by esteemed local musicians Jake Pepper and Zach Koeber. 

With a production budget of $250K and based on the 1828 French opera La muette de Portici, THE DUMB GIRL OF PORTICI was Universal’s first blockbuster gamble, showcasing ballerina Anna Pavlova’s elegant dancing against the backdrop of a tragedy of star-crossed lovers. Pavlova plays Finella, our titular “dumb girl,” whose hopelessly romantic personality attracts a powerful Spanish duke (Wadsworth Harris). However, this affair complicates Finella’s relationship with her brother Masaniello (renowned silent filmmaker Rupert Julian), a determined fisherman slowly rallying the people toward revolution. 

Elevating melodrama to violent heights, THE DUMB GIRL OF PORTICI is one of the earliest examples of movie magic, with biblical images of public chaos and heavenly, spellbinding dance footage from Pavlova and company. The film originally screened with orchestral accompaniment; while we don’t necessarily have the space for a full symphonic group, we are pleased to work with two of the DIY music scene’s finest, Jake Pepper and Zach Koeber. Appearing for the first time at Spectacle, they’ll provide a music accompaniment to match the picture’s majestic presentation. 

…a crucial rediscovery—as are the art of Weber over all and, for that matter, the celebration of Pavlova’s single screen performance … Along with the specifics of their genius, “The Dumb Girl of Portici” is a welcome reminder that the history of cinema still belongs to the future.

—Richard Brody, The New Yorker

Jake Pepper and Zach Koeber make up half of Ace Bandage, the jam-heavy rock band based in Brooklyn. Their fondness of improvisation and vast knowledge of timbral music allows them to shift seamlessly through varied sonic palettes. Pepper also performed in Brooklyn synth punk outfit Future Punx, while Koeber got his start in the local scene as one-third of Archie Pelago, and he currently collaborates with deep house producer Max in the World. Both Jake and Zach have also guest DJ’d on the prestigious independent station The Lot Radio.

Special thanks to George Schmalz and Kino Lorber.

THE TIJUANA TRILOGY

This May, Spectacle presents three recent feature films (plus one short) by the Tijuana-based filmmaker Diego Hernández. Starting in 2021, Hernández began to release a series of short, low-budget features that explore Tijuana’s many idiosyncrasies from a personal perspective. His approach to filmmaking — unhurried and spontaneous — combines a documentary approach to filming micro-communities with a frank specificity that reveals an adept understanding of form and style. This recent trilogy of breezy but perceptive films offer an intimate glimpse at previously unseen facets of the Mexican border-city and zero in on the lives of student protestors, carpenters, and theater actors.

LOS FUNDADORES (2021) follows three university students whose education is put on pause due to government corruption and student protests. Filmed in locked, long shots, this debut feature demonstrates Hernández’s preternatural understanding of compositional values and human relationships. AGUA CALIENTE (2022) is a pandemic film, but of a tender and subtle sort. The film examines the relationship between the filmmaker and his mother during lockdown — a broken boiler throws a wrench in their day-to-day rituals. EL MIRADOR (2024) –– Hernández’s longest film to date at 76 minutes — takes his interest in Tijuana’s history and arts-community in a new direction. Charting the relationship between two improv actors who are hired to star in a rich kid’s film about cartel violence in Tijuana, the film offers a smart satire of tired tropes in Mexican cinema.

LOS FUNDADORES
(THE FOUNDERS)
dir. Diego Hernández, 2021
Mexico. 62 mins.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, MAY 4 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, MAY 8 – 7:30 PM followed by remote Q+A with Diego Hernández
SATURDAY, MAY 17 – 5 PM
MONDAY, MAY 26 – 7:30 PM

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Diego (Hernández) and Andres (Madrueño) make doors for a living. Both of their artistic pursuits are on pause because Tijuana’s public university is on strike and cultural budgets are nil. At some point, Andres meets an actress-cum-taco vendor named Renee (Ortiz). They rehearse for a play together. THE FOUNDERS won a Silver Puma for Best Mexican Film at FICUNAM in 2021 and Special Mention in the Premier Film Competition at FIDMarseille.

AGUA CALIENTE
(HOT WATER)
dir. Diego Hernández, 2022
Mexico. 64 mins.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

MONDAY, MAY 5 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14 – 7:30 PM followed by remote Q+A with Diego Hernández
FRIDAY, MAY 23 – 5 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 27 – 7:30 PM

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Diego (Hernández) and his mother, Graciela (Rodríguez), share a home together during the Covid-19 lockdown. Diego interviews his mom to fend off boredom. Together, they carry out chores. A broken boiler interrupts their life. Melissa (Castañeda), Diego’s girlfriend, and her impending birthday force Diego to reconsider a lot of decisions in his life.

EL MIRADOR
(THE VIEWPOINT)
dir. Diego Hernández, 2024
Mexico. 76 mins.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

MONDAY, MAY 5 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 18 – 5 PM followed by remote Q+A with Diego Hernández
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 31 – 5 PM

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Annya (Katerina) and Guillermo (López) are two aspiring actors unsure about what the future has in store for them. Annya works as an uber driver. Guillermo works at a call center. A misunderstanding leads them to star in a film about Tijuana that explores the city’s uptick in violence during the 2010s. It’s a bit of a goof, but a real opportunity.

all films screening with

CALLEJONES
(ALLEYWAYS)
dir. Diego Hernández
Mexico. 13 mins.
In Spanish with English subtitles

In 13 minutes, Hernández relates three stories about three different film screenings. A skeleton key of sorts for the rising filmmaker, as well as a terse and poetic look at his life and hometown. Musical interludes complement his reminiscing.

Special thanks to Diego Hernández.

RED BONE GUERILLAS

RED BONE GUERILLAS
dir. Pierre Bennu, 2003
100 mins. United States.
In English.

TUESDAY, MAY 6 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 18 – 7:30 PM followed by Q+A with Pierre Bennu (ONE NIGHT ONLY!)
WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 – 10 PM 
FRIDAY, MAY 30 – 7:30 PM

GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS

SPECIAL EVENT (Q&A) TICKETS

Spectacle is thrilled to invite interdisciplinary artist PIERRE BENNU back to present his film RED BONE GUERILLAS, which the theater showed in 2013 after it was recommended by filmmaker Terence Nance (AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY, RANDOM ACTS OF FLYNESS).

Shot on miniDV, Bennu’s zero-budget feature debut follows a troupe of young acting students who seek revenge after being bullied by their teacher, an overhyped Broadway has-been named Magenta Bergenstein (“You clap for yourself, not me!”)

Led by aspiring filmmaker Bonita Evans, the Red Bone Guerillas initially set out to document Magenta’s downfall, but soon find themselves staging public interventions that combine Situationist philosophizing with revolutionary politics, striving for an “aesthetic towards freedom” even as their lives can’t help but pull them in other directions.

While Bennu’s film begins like a Christopher Guest-style sendup of theater-kid narcissism and the eternal question of whether capital-A art can effect political change, it soon reveals itself as brilliant study of forms and clichés. Some scenes feel like gripping reality television, others like performance pieces ala Andrea Fraser. And while the film makes sure to entertain, its final act unravels like a political thriller, tackling the blurring of the private and public self in ways that recall both SUNSET BOULEVARD and any number of unfolding real-time celebrity meltdowns. Maybe the funniest thing about the RBGs is how easy it is for them to get to the top: while Bennu’s prescient vision of socially mediated paranoia mostly takes place offline, it’s telling that a cell phone or a suite of computer monitors signals both distraction and power – a lurch forward in conspicuous consumption.

PIERRE BENNU is an award winning filmmaker, writer, artist and performer. He is the principal creative of Exittheapple, an alternative media and arts company specializing in film and digital media, visual arts, gift books, and music.

WINDOW ON YOUR PRESENT

WINDOW ON YOUR PRESENT
dir. Cinqué Lee, 1988
60 mins. United States.
In English.

FRIDAY, MAY 2 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 10 – 5 PM followed by Q+A with Cinque Lee (ONE NIGHT ONLY!)
TUESDAY, MAY 13 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, MAY 26 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 31 – 7:30 PM

GENERAL ADMISSION TICKETS

SPECIAL EVENT (Q&A) TICKETS

15 years after being released on DVD (and almost 40 years after it was shot), artist Cinqué Lee’s WINDOW ON YOUR PRESENT returns to the flaming S – this time, with Cinqué Lee in person for Q+A.

Collaborating with Jim Jarmusch on his directorial debut, Lee – who appeared in Jarmusch’s MYSTERY TRAIN and served as both cowriter and coproducer on his brother Spike’s CROOKLYN – gives us an unsettling dreamscape taking place in the rubble and ruins of a post-apocalyptic Brooklyn neighborhood.

WINDOW ON YOUR PRESENT creates a morbid and lonely atmosphere seen through the eyes of two protagonists, Europa and Lever. Surrounded around a colorless existence, the dialogue-free film shows us horrors of neglect, abuse, and dangerous lonesome through the eyes of this young couple while they search for something special outside of their dreary world.

Filmed on the cusp of the No Wave movement specific to New York filmmakers expanding outside of a small screening room on St. Marks Place, Lee leans into gritty and guerilla style filmmaking that movement is really known for. Between the visuals from cinematographer Leslie Mentel (SHE’S GOTTA HAVE IT), the voiceover by Maria Pieneres, and the incredible jazz score by Spike and Cinqué’s father Bill Lee, this collaboration of artists makes WINDOW ON YOUR PRESENT feel less like a movie and moreso a collaborative work of art.

“Genetically much closer to maudit French literature than to mainstream American cinema, Cinqué Lee’s visually haunting 1980s post-apocalyptic narrative tone-poem should be regarded as a true underground classic!” – Jim Jarmusch

MOTHERS

MOTHERS
(母たち)
dir. Kurokawa Yoshimasa, 1987
120 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, MAY 2 – 5 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 11 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 17 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 28 – 10 PM

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Screening for the first time ever in New York City, Kurokawa Yoshimasa’s MOTHERS is a rare primary-source document of radical dissent during the era of Japan’s supposed postwar economic miracle. Spectacle presents the film alongside a reprise of Kim Mirye’s 2017 documentary LOOKING FOR THE WOLF (aka EAST ASIA ANTI-JAPAN ARMED FRONT.)

MOTHERS was conceived and directed by the filmmaker while he was in prison, a member of the “Scorpion” cell of the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front (EAAJAF), incarcerated after the 1974 bombing of the Marunouchi offices of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. (He remains there to this day, although he maintains an active presence on social media.) During Kurokawa’s incarceration, Ken Sasaki helped complete the project.

“This film depicts transformation the mothers of the members of the East Asia Anti-Japanese Armed Front underwent as they begin to reflect on themselves born and raised in the time and space ruled by Japan’s Emperor System that led Japan into wars of aggression against China and the rest of Asia as well as the post-war corporate economic aggression through the struggles of their sons and daughters. I hope the audience learn that people can change and that we can also change our attitudes toward the wars that are happening now, and discrimination and oppression of others.” – Ken Sasaki

Program notes from the 1997 Yamagata Documentary Film Festival read:

“As testimony to Kurokawa’s idea that “the emperor system is not only an incarnation of the patriarchal principle but also the embodiment of the female principle,” the film aims “to critically examine the essence of the Japanese maternal image.”

In it, Sasaki Ken and other film crew members interview the mothers of those in prison, including Kurokawa’s mother, on 8mm camera. Daidoji’s and Kurokawa’s mothers gradually begin to learn more about the “emperor system” because of the crime their sons committed, and another woman chooses to adopt Masunaga Toshiaki as her son after the incident. The film describes the mothers shouldering the heavy burden of the bombing and their calm acceptance of reality, even as they continue the campaign against their sons’ death sentences. The mothers’ honest discussion of their feelings is interspersed with humorous analytical short plays and scenes of Hokkaido, which refer to Daidoji’s most central experience. The film concludes with a confession of the “pathos of self-hatred for having no choice but to live as a native of Imperial Japan.”

Special thanks to Hajime Imamasa, Sabo Kohso, Ken Sasaki and Kim Mirye.