MUBI Presents: CENTRAL AIRPORT THF


CENTRAL AIRPORT THF
dir. Karim Aïnouz, 2018
Germany, 98 mins
In Arabic & German with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, MARCH 5 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, MARCH 7 – 10 PM

MUBI’s latest Special Discovery is Karim Aïnouz’s award-winning CENTRAL AIRPORT THF, an intimate documentary that explores an iconic, now vacant Berlin airport currently being used to shelter refugees.

Berlin’s historic defunct Tempelhof Airport remains a place of arrivals and departures. Today its massive hangars are used as Germany’s largest emergency shelter for asylum seekers, like 18-year-old Syrian refugee Ibrahim. As Ibrahim adjusts to his transitory daily life of social services interviews, German lessons and medical exams, he tries to cope with homesickness and the anxiety of whether or not he will gain residency or be deported.
CENTRAL AIRPORT THF will be available to stream exclusively on MUBI starting February 8th. Watch here.
MUBI is a curated online cinema, streaming hand-picked award-winning, classic, and cult films from around the globe. Every day, MUBI’s film experts present a new film and you have 30 days to watch it. Whether it’s an acclaimed masterpiece, a gem fresh from the world’s greatest film festivals, or a beloved classic, there are always 30 beautiful hand-picked films to discover.

SMASH TV


This March, Spectacle is proud to welcome the esteemed DJ/VJ duo Smash TV (Brendan Shields & Ben Craw) back behind the velvet curtain for a mini-retro (emphasis on retro) every Thursday night. Since 2012 Smash TV, has been gracing the Spectacle screen with “long for entertainment for short attention spans” showcasing a love of cinema spanning multiple genres and decades.

THURSDAY, MARCH 7th – 7:30 PM – SKINEMAX (2011)
THURSDAY, MARCH 14th – 7:30 PM – MEMOREX (2012)
THURSDAY, MARCH 21st – 7:30 PM – GUNSLINGER (2014)
THURSDAY, MARCH 28th – 7:30 PM – MEGAPLEX (2016)


SKINEMAX
edited by Smash TV, 2011
55 min, USA

THURSDAY, MARCH 7th – 7:30 PM

Skinemax is Koyaanisqatsi for a generation raised on late night television and B-movie VHS tapes. It’s long form entertainment for short attention spans. An hour long VJ odyssey, it will move your body and warp your mind.

A nostalgic look back at a half remembered childhood growing up in the 80s and early 90s, Skinemax takes a close look at the culture of that era. The images that motivated, delighted, and terrified us on the silver screen, set to propulsive modern music that pines for a simpler time.

Containing lightning quick edits from 44 different films, Skinemax has been described as “hypnotizing” and “a veritable nostalgia nuke.” Recently featured on six of the top 25 blogs in the world, it aims to draw attention to the rapidly developing art of the mashup or supercut. It also holds the distinction of being one of the longest duration videos to ever go viral.


MEMOREX
Edited by Brendan Shields, 2012
50 minutes

THURSDAY, MARCH 14th – 7:30 PM

SMASH TV’s latest opus, MEMOREX is the most nostalgic thing you’ve ever seen if you were a kid in the 80s. Culled from over forty hours of 80’s commercials pulled from warped VHS tapes. Endless beach parties, Saturday morning cartoons, sexy babes, sleek cars, toys you forgot existed, station idents, early computer animation, all your favorite sugary cereal mascots, and so much more. An ode to the hyper consumerism and sleek veneer of a simpler time.

The audio, mixed by your friends at Smash TV, provides a perfect accompaniment to the warped and weirdly nostalgic footage, like finding your favorite cassette from childhood after it’s been baking in the sun for 25 years. VHS Head, Hype Williams, LA Vampires, and Boards Of Canada are just a few of the artists you can expect to hear.

It’s the nostalgiapocalypse for anyone born between 1975 and 1985. Your favorite everything you totally forgot existed.

screens with:

GUNSLINGER
edited by Smash TV, 2014
62 min, USA

Gunslinger is the ultimate tribute to the Old West. The BACK TO THE FUTURE III of our trilogy, if you will, Smash TV has bid a fond farewell to the neon excess of the 80s and set the controls of the DeLorean back to 1885. A simpler – and infinitely more dangerous – time.

Painstakingly assembled from more than 50 Western movies, ranging from Sergio Leone’s early Spaghetti Westerns all the way up to 90s re-imaginings such as DESPERADO and WILD WILD WEST, GUNSLINGER serves as a humble attempt to pay homage to one of the longest running and most influential genres of the silver screen.

Taking a magnifying glass to one of the most prolific genres in film history, GUNSLINGER aims to preserve the ideals and struggles of a unique time and place in history which becomes more and more foreign to our daily lives with each passing year. Deliberately paced to match the look and feel of a Western, it recontextualizes classic tropes of the genre to deliver a unique and fast paced narrative.

A mysterious stranger arrives in town, authority is challenged, vengeance is sought, tensions run high at the saloon, a frantic horse chase ensues, and everything goes to hell in an epic gunfight you’ll have to see to believe.

The audio borrows from a number of different genres; from time-honored soundtracks by Ennio Morricone and John Barry, to modern hip hop and electronic reworkings of genre standards.

Gunslinger condenses 30 years of Western movies into one unforgettable hour. The good. The bad. The ugly. An ode to the Man with No Name.


MEGAPLEX: BEYOND & TURBO
edited by Smash TV, 2016
80 min, USA

THURSDAY, MARCH 21st – 7:30 PM

MEGAPLEX is the most insane double feature the world has ever seen. With a running time of 80 minutes and thousands of cuts from more than 80 movies, Smash TV has spent the past year and a half cramming the most entertainment possible into every second. It’s dense enough to pressurize these diamonds in the rough into gleaming treasures.

MEGAPLEX is the long awaited followup to the critically acclaimed SKINEMAX, much more fully realized, utilizing myriad editing and layering tricks picked up over the past five years. Deeper, darker, and definitely more bizarre.

Borrowing from the Grindhouse tradition and from Tarantino’s more recent tribute, MEGAPLEX is a double feature comprised of BEYOND (Sheilds) and TURBO (Craw) that both members of Smash TV worked on independently to create a massive cinematic sandwich.

SATAN PLACE


SATAN PLACE
dir. Scott Aschbrenner & Alfred Ramirez, 1988
67 min, USA

SATURDAY, MARCH 2 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MARCH 15 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MARCH 23 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, MARCH 29 – 7:30 PM

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“Wow that was weird, that looked like Doris…nah, can’t be! She’s soup!”

In the Summer of 1988 while attending school for Film & Television production in our nation’s armpit (West Hollywood, FL) a group of friends decided to put their education to good use and make a feature film to appease our Dark Lord. Armed with equipment and studio space borrowed from the school, the crew set their sights on the booming video market and set out to make an anthology horror film. The result would be SATAN PLACE: A SOAP OPERA FROM HELL, a splattery send up of EC comics, MTV, domestic bliss, the perils of hitchhiking, and more. Three segments – DISPOSABLE LOVE, SAY GOODNIGHT SOPHIE, and TOO MUCH TV with a wraparound – SALLY SATAN – break up the film into tender vittles peppered with comedic flourishes and gore to thrill and tantalize.

With the project completed in 1989, the crew set out to distribute the film themselves via their own Thunderhill Entertainment label even producing a comic adaptation of the film inked by folks from Marvel’s stable of artists. By the early 90’s the film was being stocked in Blockbuster after a glowing review from Joe Bob Briggs in the Orlando Sentinel where he calls the film “a feminist horror anthology” and raves “Satan Place is yet another of those made-in-Florida let’s-go-get-a-camera-and-dress-up-our-girlfriends-in-lingerie-and-throw-blood-on-’em video classics, and actually this one is about the best I’ve seen. Once again, though, I’ve gotta ask. Why Florida? What the heck is going on down there? The state of hurricanes, serial killers and more cheesy horror flicks than you could find at a video store in downtown Detroit.”

After the rush was over, SATAN PLACE quickly became a rarity sitting comfortably beside such other Florida regional horror gems as ZAAT, NIGHTMARE IN A DAMAGED BRAIN, and BLOOD RAGE. Now, 30 years later Spectacle is proud to present a new, never before seen restoration straight from director Scott Aschbrenner with the film coming to DVD for the first time ever later this year! Hail Satan.

WHERE IN THE HELL IS THE LAVENDER HOUSE?


Dirs. David Hall and Thomas D. Rotenberg, 2019 Canada, 95 min.
In English

TUESDAY, MARCH 19 – 7:30PM & 10PM
DIRECTOR Q&A AND SPECIAL SKYPE CALLS  
10PM followed by afterparty at Un**n P**l ($5 for Spectacle Theater ticket holders)

SATURDAY, MARCH 23 – 7:30PM & 10PM
DIRECTOR Q&A AND SPECIAL SKYPE CALLS  

WORLD PREMIERE!
LIVE PRANK CALLS BY LONGMONT POTION CASTLE! FILMMAKERS IN ATTENDANCE!
For over 30 years, the artist known only as Longmont Potion Castle has been beguiling and bedeviling random victims across the country with the most avant-garde prank calls ever recorded. Throughout it all he has remained completely anonymous, released over 16 original albums, and become a cult favorite, notably amongst musicians. LPC describes the albums as his “phone work,” or “absurdist art” rather than the clumsy label “prank phone calls.” The recordings combine prank calls with sound collages, often filtering his voice through a Digitech RDS 8000 delay unit to produce odd sound effects, thus making whoever he has called even more confused.
This March, Spectacle is proud to host the world premiere of the very first Longmont Potion Castle documentary, “Where In The Hell Is The Lavender House? The Longmont Potion Castle Story.” Directed by David Hall & Thomas D. Rotenberg, the film includes interviews with Rainn Wilson, Andrew Bujalski, Pissed Jeans, Municipal Waste, NBS Electronics, Twist and Shout, Pig Destroyer, Weyes Blood, Cattle Decapitation, Pinback, and a variety of hard-core fans, the film peeks behind the curtain of America’s Underground Prank Call King.

Both screenings at this historic event will feature the filmmakers in attendance, and Longmont Potion Castle himself will be calling in to conduct live prank calls from the theater. You don’t want to miss this.
And don’t forget the AFTER PARTY! After the 10PM screening, head to Union Pool with your ticket stub for a discounted ticket to the after party. ($5 for ticket holder, $10 for non-ticket holders.)

CORPSE FUCKING ART: THE FILMS OF JORG BUTTGEREIT AND CARL ANDERSEN (PART 2)

Upsetting many an innocent audience’s stomach, NEKROMANTIK and NEKROMANTIK 2 have deservedly earned a cult reputation for their wanton necrophilia and general repulsiveness. Yet more than just isolated cinematic perversions, these films belong to a mini-movement of transgressive cinema pouring forth from Berlin during the late 80’s and early 90s. Spectacle is unfortunately proud to present a three month long mini-retrospective of two filmmakers from this milieu – Carl Andersen and Jorg Buttgereit. Buttgereit’s DER TODESKING and SCHRAMM help keep you feeling cold all through March followed by Carl Andersen’s no-wave scored MONDO WEIRDO and VAMPYROS SEXOS (AKA I WAS A TEENAGE ZABBADOING) playing all April.

[CONTENT WARNING: These films contain scenes of explicit sexual contact, mutilation, rear female nudity, violence, frontal male nudity, dark humor, disembowelment, castration, nihilism, decapitation, suicide, Nazi imagery, deviant sex, depictions of murder, frontal female nudity, ejaculation, mental illness, rear male nudity, criminal mischief, on-screen urination, sexual perversion, blood, and adult language.]

Special thanks to Cult Epics and American Genre Film Archive.



DER TODESKING
Dir. Jorg Buttgereit, 1990
Germany, 80 min.
In German with English Subtitles

SATURDAY, MARCH 2 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MARCH 22 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, MARCH 28 – 10 PM

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Seven days, seven stories of suicide as told through Jorg Buttgereit’s grainy 8mm lens. On Monday a lonely man circles endlessly around a room filled with hand-drawn pictures of fish before drowning himself in his tub, on Thursday the camera explores the outskirts of an empty bridge while dozens of suicides flash across the bottom of the screen, and so on and so forth throughout the week – all while a rotten corpse decomposes in a morbid framing device linking the tales.

Featuring a stand-out score from Buttgereit go-to Daktari Lorenz, DER TODESKING replaces the juvenile transgressiveness of it’s necrophile predecessor with a darker and more sobering look at mental illness. Helped in no small part by an continually inventive camera language and a sharper focus the repressed traumas of German society, this is perhaps Buttgereit’s most fully realized effort.



SCHRAMM
Dir. Jorg Buttgereit, 1993
Germany, 65 min.
In German with English Subtitles

SATURDAY, MARCH 9 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, MARCH 22 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, MARCH 30 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS
FACEBOOK EVENT

“Today I am dirty, but tomorrow I’ll be just dirt”

A loner with frequent fantasies of castration and a predisposition for decapitating random salesmen who knock on his door, Lothar Schramm may be Jorg Buttgereit’s most uncomfortable creation and that’s saying a lot. Plot counts for little across the 60 minutes of bleak character study and fragmented storytelling that make up SCHRAMM, but what intrigue there is comes through Schramm’s sole human connection – his next door neighbor Marianne (NEKROMANTIK 2’s Monika M.), a sex worker who Schramm can’t decide if he wants to murder or protect.

Shorn of the transgressive playfulness of the NEKROMANTIK films or the structuralist experimentation of DER TODESKING, SCHRAMM is a relentlessly bleak depiction of one man’s fractured mental state that refuses even an inch of mercy. Told in a highly subjective style that shifts between memory, fantasy, and reality – often within the same frame – SCHRAMM has an uncanny ability to disturb you like few films can.

MIKE MADNESS: Three Films by Michael M. Bilandic


Does the phrase “New York microbudget indie” give you hives? Are you worn out from watching the same three sadsacks navigate “existential crises” and blather on about Artaud as they amble down Brownstone-lined sidestreets? Rest easy, weary cinephile, because Spectacle has a hotshot of free-wheeling macabre aimed directly at your jugular!

Cultural anthropology and low-budget unpredictability mix and mingle on the mean streets where writer-director Michael M. Bilandic has trained his jaundiced camera eye. Burned-out techno DJs, gangs of marauding teen rap-rockers, and a rollerblading drug dealer are just a handful of strange characters you’ll meet in this alt-teur’s cinematic Rolodex. Bilandic’s films are something of best-kept secret around these parts – produced the fringes of New York’s humble movie colony, these sui generis works beg to be celebrated.

These three feature films – HAPPY LIFE, HELLAWARE, and the spanking-new JOBE’Z WORLD – are untouchable works of rare art that mark this cool cat as one to watch. Think you can handle the multi-sensory stimulation of American independent cinema’s boldest visionary? Shed those presumptions and take a dip – the water’s fine!




JOBE’Z WORLD

dir. Michael M. Bilandic, 2018.
USA. 68 mins.

FRIDAY, APRIL 5 – 7:30 w/Mike Bilandic, Jason P. Grisell, Theodore Bouloukos, and others for Q&A
(This event is $10.)

TUESDAY, APRIL 9 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, APRIL 12 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, APRIL 13 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 23 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS           FACEBOOK EVENT

The latest – and, arguably, greatest – from Bilandic and his stable of collaborators is a downtown elegy dedicated to the nitehawks, weirdos, and recluses that haunt the shadier corners of our fair metropolis. Combining the director’s trademark satirical sensibility with a ticking-clock suspense story, JOBE’Z WORLD charts one night in the life of the titular rollerblading pill-slinger (Jason P. Grisell) and his beastin’ cadre of tough customers. Jobe’s otherwise average workday takes a turn for the bizarre with a special delivery for master thespian Royce David Leslie, a larger-than-life A-list star heartily portrayed by Theodore Bouloukos (recently anointed by New Yorker critic Richard Brody as “a secret weapon of independent cinema!”). After Leslie’s livestreamed drug overdose goes viral, Jobe takes to the streets, evading paparazzo and police with mercurial swiftness and an armload of disguises. Spacey, succinct, and side-splittingly hilarious, here’s a chance to see one of the year’s best.


HELLAWARE
dir. Michael M. Bilandic, 2013.
USA. 73 mins.

SATURDAY, APRIL 13 – 7:30 PM w/Mike Bilandic, Keith Poulson and others for Q&A
(This event is $10.)

THURSDAY, APRIL 11 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 16 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 23 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS             FACEBOOK EVENT

Local heartthrob Keith Poulson stars as aspiring photographer Nate, whose disgust with – and desire for – art-–world legitimacy leads him down the darkest alleys of the world wide web and into the thick of rural America’s rap-rock scene. After a bro-y photoshoot with a group of teenaged, would-be Juggalos, Nate achieves meteoric success as a documentarian of backwoods subculture – but at what cost? The tenuous nature of “authenticity” and a wicked examination of the contemporary art industrial complex dog our hero’s journey from poseur hanger-on to enfant terrible. The sinister nature of his sudden success – like the subjects themselves – is a mere stepping stone, sending Nate and his pals hurtling toward a schadenfreude-laden conclusion that scratches every bitter itch.




HAPPY LIFE
dir. Michael M. Bilandic, 2009.
USA. 73 mins.

SATURDAY, APRIL 20 – 10PM w/Mike Bilandic & cinematographer Sean Price Williams and others for Q&A
(This event is $10.)

MONDAY, APRIL 8 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, APRIL 28 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS            FACEBOOK EVENT

“Culture is like a pendulum… statistically, it’s going to swing back in my direction.”

Bilandic’s first feature outing is a portrait of the artist as an aging trance DJ that predates the inevitable revival of this head-crushing dance genre by a good decade. Released in 2009 to considerable acclaim – including glowing reviews from Variety and the New York Times – the swift and scrappy dark comedy follows schlubby record store proprietor/mixmaster Keith as he attempts to save his business from the gaping maw of hyper-gentrification. Shot on bleeding, beautiful digital video by cinematographer Sean Price Williams, and executive produced by Abel Ferrara, HAPPY LIFE is a film about nostalgia that, in the ten years since its release, has matured into a document of a recent past gone by.



MIKE MADNESS MIDNIGHT: A YOUTUBE JOURNEY
dir. The Internet, 1989 – ????
USA. ???? mins.

SATURDAY, APRIL 20 – MIDNITE
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

ONLINE TICKETS            FACEBOOK EVENT

In addition to being among New York’s Finest [Directors], Michael M. Bilandic is world-renowned for his abundant gifts as a champion YouTube surfer and found web art curator. Who knows what’s coming up in the rotation with MB in the driver’s seat? Satiate your rabid curiosity for a paltry $5!

RADICAL OBSERVATION: The Films of Kazuhiro Soda


It’s no secret that the last twenty years have seen an explosion in disorientingly slick and overproduced nonfiction cinema. All the more reason there’s something revelatory about the films of Kazuhiro Soda, who spent many years producing docs for NHK, the biggest broadcasting corporation in his native Japan, before becoming a one-man-crew to follow an old classmate running for local office in the classic CAMPAIGN (2007). Soda makes crucial decisions on the fly after winning the trust of the people he’s interviewing; when those arrangements threaten to encroach on the drama onscreen, the filmmaker never hides his role in the proceedings. A prolific author, citizen journalist and cat-lover, Soda is an utterly one-of-a-kind documentarian, celebrated at festivals and seminars worldwide in the decade since CAMPAIGN. This spring, in addition to multiple opportunities to see his breathtaking new INLAND SEA, Spectacle is honored to host the maverick documentarian for a two-month retrospective of Soda’s “observational films”, including his deep dive into the University of Michigan’s massive football stadium THE BIG HOUSE (made in collaboration with a class of undergraduates, when Soda was a visiting professor.) Soda is infamous for his “ten commandments” of documentary filmmaking, which are as follows:

1. No research.
2. No meetings with subjects.
3. No scripts.
4. Roll the camera yourself.
5. Shoot for as long as possible.
6. Cover small areas deeply.
7. Do not set up a theme or goal before editing.
8. No narration, super-imposed titles, or music.
9. Use long takes.
10. Pay for the production yourself.

“Soda’s habit of never showing his subjects in humiliating or overexposed positions is less a lapse of documentarian duty than a gesture of respect; tellingly, the two subjects whom Soda chooses to film despite their discomfort and protestations are career politicians he visibly doesn’t much respect (and even then, it’s only their public demonstrations he records). It might be more accurate, however, to label this trait as a therapeutic device: it’s because Soda’s subjects feel at ease with the filmmaker that they open up to the camera as trustingly, gratefully, and cathartically as they do. Decorousness is an unusual virtue to celebrate in an observational filmmaker, but then much about Soda is unusual. Some other documentary filmmakers equal Soda in keenness, intelligence, and wit, but few come off as so genuinely caring and kind, able to shift from observer to assuager with such beguiling grace.” – Max Nelson, Cinema Scope

Special thanks to Laboratory X Films, Rock Salt Releasing and MUBI.

( poster by Luke Alexander Atkinson )

INLAND SEA
(港町)
dir. Kazuhiro Soda, produced by Kiyoko Kashiwagi. 2018.
122 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, MARCH 2 – 7:30 PM – KAZUHIRO SODA AND KIYOKO KASHIWAGI IN PERSON!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

ONLINE TICKETS
FACEBOOK EVENT

SUNDAY, MARCH 3 – 5 PM
TUESDAY, MARCH 5 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, MARCH 12 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, MARCH 25 – 10 PM

INLAND SEA is Soda’s first film in black-and-white since student days at the School of Visual Arts – an idea suggested by his longtime partner and producer Kiyoko Kashiwagi, whose mother is from Ushimado, the fishing town profiled onscreen. What began as a casual stopover while Soda was shooting his epic documentary OYSTER FACTORY (coming to Spectacle in April) grew into its own stirring meditation on nature, industry and loss; it’s also a rich look into the farming of fish, Ushimado’s main stock and trade. The archipelago is an example of Japan’s shift to metropolitan centers of industrial power, while the film’s elderly protagonists (but especially the 84-year-old Kumiko, a fiery-tongued villager who spends every day near the ocean) typify the country’s aging, marginalized population outside the big cities. Soda doesn’t skimp on the texture of their disappearing way of life, but as he said at the film’s world premiere at the 2018 Berlinale, “I don’t make films that can be reduced to a simple catchphrase.” INLAND SEA is a vision of documentary that’s clear yet contemplative, rigorously made yet almost drunk with the earthy poetry of the sleepy port village’s bygone years.

“The scene in which one of the subjects briefly takes over the film – bringing the camera with her to finally tell a story she probably had never told anyone – was so calmly stunning, raw, and emotional. It didn’t feel forced or manipulated. It just seemed like something very naturally walked into the filmmaking. It’s an art of documentary filmmaking… A subtly moving and breathtaking documentary.” – Bong-Joon Ho, filmmaker (OKJA, THE HOST, MOTHER)

“With its sensitive approach and gentle curiosity, INLAND SEA approaches a certain timelessness. The generous and emphatic engagement that emerges from the film is both moving and beautiful.” – Andréa Picard, Artistic Director of Cinéma du Réel

“Primarily a work of simple and unapologetic humanism, happily in love with people. In the second half, the emphasis shifts to local gossip, chatterbox and unofficial guide Kumiko, an octogenarian of child-like enthusiasms whose garrulousness evidently exerts a powerful spell over the director. The fact that she passed away in 2015 during the editing process — the shooting took place back in 2013 — perhaps helps to explain her increasing prominence as the film unfolds, with Wan-chan and Soda taking more of a back seat, the eponymous sea only intermittently visible.” – Neil Young, The Hollywood Reporter





CAMPAIGN
(選挙)
dir. Kazuhiro Soda, production associate Kiyoko Kashiwagi. 2007
120 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, MARCH 24 – 5 PM – KAZUHIRO SODA AND KIYOKO KASHIWAGI IN PERSON!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

ONLINE TICKETS
FACEBOOK EVENT

Shot in just 12 days, Soda’s breakout observational doc (which later won him a Peabody Award) film follows Kazuhiko Yamauchi, a mild-mannered former classmate of the filmmaker’s, hand-picked by Japan’s long-entrenched Liberal Democratic Party to run for a vacant City Council seat in a Tokyo suburb. Yama-san’s lack of political experience or camera-ready charisma isn’t a total liability; his tactic of choice is “bowing to everybody, even to telephone poles”, while apparatchiks and spinmeisters from the corridors of power descend on Kawasaki to steer the process (including Japan’s former Prime Minister, the eternally suave Junichiro Koizumi.) Even though it’s all too real, CAMPAIGN one-ups the mockumentaries of Christopher Guest and Sacha Baron Cohen for its rib-bruising spotlight on the circus of local political theatre.

“Appreciation of this film hardly depends on an intimate knowledge of or interest in Japanese politics; the candidate and his prospective constituents don’t manifest much of either. Instead Mr. Soda uses tried-and-true fly-on-the-wall techniques to create a real-life satire. CAMPAIGN may invite a certain skepticism about democracy, but it will surely restore your faith in cinéma vérité.” – A.O. Scott, The New York Times

MENTAL
(精神)
dir. Kazuhiro Soda, production associate Kiyoko Kashiwagi. 2008.
135 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6 – 7:00 PM – KAZUHIRO SODA AND KIYOKO KASHIWAGI IN PERSON!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

ONLINE TICKETS
FACEBOOK EVENT

After being diagnosed with “burnout” at the end of too many grueling work weeks, Soda became fascinated by alternative means of mental health treatment. MENTAL is a portrait of an outpatient psychiatric clinic called Chorale Okayama, founded by one Dr. Masatomo Yamamoto – the protagonist of the film, an elderly doctor working for essentially nothing. Chorale Okayama serves people with incurable mental disorders, who Yamamoto essentially believes can be nevertheless helped by a sympathetic community of listeners.

Soda structured MENTAL so that viewers would will feel like they’re stepping into the clinic just like he did for the first time, unaware of what he would find. It’s not the easiest film in his body of work to watch but is nevertheless an act of courage, looking beyond what the filmmaker calls “the invisible curtain” that separates the well from the unwell (a questionable dichotomy to begin with.) As Soda speaks with Yamamoto’s patients about their lives, struggles, hallucinations and dreams, MENTAL becomes an extraordinary cross-examination of taboo in Japan, to say nothing of the accumulated costs of trauma and, finally, the documentary form’s inherent potential for compassion.


CAMPAIGN 2
(選挙2)
dir. Kazuhiro Soda, production associate Kiyoko Kashiwagi, 2013
145 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, MARCH 24 – 8 PM – KAZUHIRO SODA AND KIYOKO KASHIWAGI IN PERSON!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

ONLINE TICKETS
FACEBOOK EVENT

Soda’s sequel to CAMPAIGN is another showcase of Yama-San’s dedication to politics, but also sees him taking on a more cohesive electoral persona: this time running against the Liberal Democratic Party machine that propelled him to victory years before, with a strong anti-nuclear agenda in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima meltdown. Even if CAMPAIGN 2 picks up where the pyrrhic victories of the first film left off, it also complicates its goofier image: as Soda profiles other Kawasaki residents, candidates and dealmakers, he also shows us how his own celebrity has grown following (and because of) the first CAMPAIGN. The result is an absorbing survey of the relationship between Japanese politics and society, and a self-reflexive question of the role played by public debate in shaping mores on the ground.

“With people fretting over heightened radiation levels, to eat and to breathe is a matter of life and death – and Soda’s efforts in recording the quotidian around him makes perfect sense, as he captures images of masked commuters on train platforms and on the streets, signage about electric conservation, or even children playing in a park, bereft of the fear their parents might feel. Though at times protracted and repetitive, it’s a process which keeps track of a certain point in time when politics and real life converge – or, as seen in CAMPAIGN 2, how a disconnect remains between the two.” – Clarence Tsui, The Hollywood Reporter


THE BIG HOUSE
dirs. Vesal Stoakley, Sean Moore, Sarika Tyagi, V. Prasad, Britty Bonine, Alex Brenner, Catie DeWitt, Dylan Hancook, Daniel Kahn, Rachael Kerr, Audrey Meyers, Hannah Noel, Jacob Rich, Kevin Tocco, 2018
directed and produced by Kazuhiro Soda, Markus Nornes, and Terri Sarris
119 mins. United States.
In English.WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 – 7 PM – KAZUHIRO SODA IN PERSON!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

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THE BIG HOUSE is the result of an undergrad course taught by Soda at the University of Michigan in 2016, alongside professors Terri Sarris and Abé Markus Nornes. U Mich’s campus boasts the the single largest football stadium in the United States (capacity: 107,601), the eponymous “Big House”, so Soda challenged his young co-directors to stick as closely as possible to his Ten Commandments while capturing eye-of-the-storm footage across two different game days – resulting in perhaps the most durable testament to his custom-developed technique. Given the filmmakers’ freedom to roam, THE BIG HOUSE is a riveting and frequently hilarious all-you-can-eat buffet of direct cinema that focuses on “everything but the game”.

While the film was shot during the 2016 election season, Soda et al do not conjecture any easy diagnoses about conservative politics or Midwestern identity. Their reluctance to directly insert politics into a sports doc is palpable, while the concurrent spectacle of football and pageantry are nearly superceded by the massive logistical coordination that makes it all possible. These ins and outs become their own discrete narrative arcs; what exhilarates is coming up for air among the cheering hordes, the ambient satisfaction of picking out real-life details while being swept up in a much bigger wave.

“We are social animals, social creatures. Sometimes we cannot endure being alone, and being individual—we have this also. We are being constantly invited to fascism. And what you see in Michigan Stadium is a demonstration of that. It feels so good when you lose yourself and feel like you are a part of a larger something. If you’re rooting for your team and wearing the same colors and singing the same song at the same time with 100,000 people, you feel good! I felt good too. Although I’m not from Michigan, and I’m Japanese. But when I was there shooting, I felt so good. Which was very scary too (laughs). And I felt a desire inside of me, to be connected with everybody else and to be lost in this crowd, to be part of this huge creature. The problem is that politicians are trying to use that, use this tendency that we have.” – Kazuhiro Soda, interviewed in Shingetsu


RADICAL OBSERVATION: The Films of Kazuhiro Soda (APRIL DATES)


PEACE
(平和)
2010. 70 mins.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10 – 7:30 PM with Kazuhiro Soda and producer Kiyoko Kashiwagi in-person for Q&A.
(This event is $10.)

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Considered an “extra” among Soda’s official body of what he calls “observational films”, PEACE is a radiant portrait of Toshio and Hiroko Kashiwagi, an elderly couple running a “Welfare Transportation Service” in the town of Okayama – a town which is (not entirely coincidentally) the site of Soda’s previous deep dive into alternative caretaking, the 2008 documentary MENTAL. The pair are also the parents of Soda’s producer and wife Kiyoko, so part of the thrill of PEACE comes from watching Soda shape his ten commandments of documentary filmmaking in following people from otherwise life. Working with reduced assistance from the Japanese government, Toshio and Hiroko pair tend to their charges, who include a traumatized WW2 veteran living alone in a flea-ridden shoebox and a worker who describes himself as unmarriable due to a physical deformity. It’s obvious their decades of care have not yielded in a lavish lifestyle or worldwide fame, yet Toshio and Hiroko carry on. PEACE is beloved (and possibly infamous) for a subplot detailing Toshio’s attention to the stray cats gathering near his house, episodes which offer an oasis refuge of tranquility amid the grind of day-to-day life (and, in his wife’s words, a “nuisance for the neighbors”.)

“In its depiction of calm cooperation under adverse conditions, PEACE proves newly relevant in the wake of the Honshu earthquake and subsequent tsunami, suggesting increased arthouse viability….Docu proceeds in a continuous flow that appears effortless, segueing from person to person and cat to cat with perfect equanimity, Soda handling all aspects of the filming himself.” – Ronnie Scheib, Variety

 



OYSTER FACTORY

(牡蠣工場)
2015. 150 mins.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17 – 7PM with Kazuhiro Soda and producer Kiyoko Kashiwagi in-person for Q&A.
(This event is $10.)

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Like INLAND SEA, this film grew out of summer vacations spent by Soda and Kashiwagi in the village of Ushimado, in Japan’s Okayama prefecture – the fishing town of 7,500 where Kashiwagi’s mother grew up. After being invited by a fisherman named Hirano to film his oyster factory, Soda and Kashiwagi ended up accumulating over 90 hours of material in three weeks. The result is one of the filmmaker’s most sweeping works, complete with a 20-minute opening sequence in which nary a word is uttered onscreen. The extracting, shelling and scooping out of many varieties of shellfish become indelible soundscapes unto themselves, and the filmmakers’ careful attention to the given moment anticipates the stream-of-consciousness narrative of INLAND SEA. OYSTER FACTORY in particular bears out Soda’s sixth “commandment” of filmmaking, to cover small areas deeply. In time, conversations with incoming oyster factory manager and owner Watanabe (whose own business closer to Tokyo has been displaced by the Fukushima meltdown) and his employees take the lid off the the fishing industry’s wariness towards newly hired workers from China. The result is a hypnotic (and at times nailbiting) survey of heavy industry, plus all the raw humanity that entails: increasingly embattled in getting his footage, Soda captures remarkable glimpses of comradery and xenophobia, to say nothing of the compact between these fishermen and the Seto Islands Inland Sea that stretches back at least a few centuries.

“Superb.” – Charles Mudede, The Stranger

“All’s well that ends well? The film offers no such pat arc. Instead it digresses freely, tracking the adventures of a white stray cat Soda and his wife adopt and following the rescue of a fisherman who falls off a dock…. (OYSTER FACTORY) is warm, insightful and human.”Japan Times

 


THEATRE
(演劇)
2012. 172 mins.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, APRIL 27 – 12 PM with Kazuhiro Soda and producer Kiyoko Kashiwagi in-person for Q&A.
(This event is $10.)

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“Human beings are organisms that perform.” – Oriza Hirata

Not unlike MENTAL, Soda’s fourth feature-length documentary captures many people refracting around a solitary and perhaps genius central figure – in this case, the perpetually exhausted Oriza Hirata, considered by many to be Japan’s most prestigious playwright and theatre director. Hirata’s stamina and attention to detail are indeed made epic over the course of Soda’s two-part, nearly six-hour portrait (which we’ll be screening marathon style, as it was released in Japan.) THEATRE forms Soda’s most elaborate inquiry into art culture and its relation to society, especially insofar as the brass tax of running such an operation like Hirata’s Seinendan (meaning “Youth League”) theatre company, as well as smaller festivals and performances – the constant mapping out of logistics, endless small fires to be put out, and lots of rehearsals. The shooting of actors at work bring both THEATRE films closer to the realm of staged drama than any of Soda’s other works (unless you count CAMPAIGN), but only in the time made available before Hirata calls for a break or asks an actor to try a different approach.



THEATRE 2

(演劇 2)
2012. 172 mins.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, APRIL 27 – 4:30 PM with Kazuhiro Soda and producer Kiyoko Kashiwagi in-person for Q&A.
(This event is $10.)

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If the first THEATRE zeroed in on Hirata as an impresario, the sequel expands on questions of art and society by following him as he seeks financing for more ambitious-still performances, including the kind of work that’s made him famous internationally – his interest in staging plays with robot actors alongside the humans. Hirata’s own European influences and philosophical insight amount to a master class, but also open up essential questions: Why have people been watching Romeo & Juliet for 400 years despite knowing the ending? What is theatre? Why do human beings act? What emerges is a (frequently hilarious) depiction of Hirata’s belief in public arts programming as a kind of therapeutic practice, and his unwavering faith in the ability of this kind of performance to startle and surprise a different audience each time.

“Through the fascinating spirit and creativity of Oriza Hirata, Kazuhiro Soda’s THEATRE 1 & 2 evokes a plurality of dimensions cleverly portrayed as inseparable aspects of the same problem: pedagogy vs. performance, culture vs. politics, individual creation and experiences vs. collective involvement and responsibilities. A tale of art in our time, THEATRE 1 & 2 is one of those rare and precious acts of filmmaking that delves deep into the essence of culture. – Jérôme Baron, Artistic director, Festival des 3 Continents

BLUE GOD 1 & 2 by carl1


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20 – 7:30 PM w/ Special Q&A and discussion with director carl1 and DP Sean Dahlberg led by artist Alex Ito

THURSDAY, MARCH 21 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, MARCH 29 – 10 PM

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BLUE GOD 1: INTO THE DIRT, PINK
dir. carl1, 2016.
USA/Taiwan, 32 min.

Two young girls engage in a metaphysical conversation on the rooftop of their school. Together, they decide they are unwilling to accept the expectations of adulthood, and vow to escape society altogether. Filmed by three collaborators during the summer of 2015 in Taipei and Southern Taiwan, Into the Dirt, Pink is the first of a two part series about the birth of Blue God.

BLUE GOD 2: MY LETTER TENDERLY
dir. carl1, 2018.
USA/Taiwan, 60 min.

In the second act, the protagonists enter a series of dream worlds and alternate dimensions. Within this, a hummingbird, a leaf dance. Two flowers strike a deal with the moon and sacrifice a chicken. When the girls reawaken, they find themselves in the presence of a blue god and tasked with a new everyday.

carl1 (b. 1991 Fremont, California) is an NYC-based artist that goes by many names. Their practice includes sculpture, film and poetry, and is frequently collaborative, fragmentary and ongoing.

RUINS AND REVOLUTIONARIES: MRINAL SEN

MRINAL SEN, director of at least 34 feature films in the Indian state of Bengal, passed away on December 30th at age 95. Critics called his early work the catalyst of the Indian New Wave and he became one of the major figures in Bengali “parallel cinema”. Sen came from a politically active family, and lived through India’s independence, Marxist uprisings and communist rule in Bengal, and the more recent rise of conservative nationalism.

Sen’s films tend to center around ideas and interpersonal exchanges, which expand through a solid cast of actors and carefully shot settings. Sen worked frequently with celebrated cinematographer KK Mahajan, including the three films in this small retrospective. What comes through is a portrait of Calcutta and it’s surrounding region from the relationships within it. Political parties are questioned, middle class values are laid bare, and the ancient past makes an inescapable imprint.



PADATIK
(aka THE FOOT SOLDIER)
dir. Mrinal Sen, 1973
India, 91 min.
In Hindi/Bengali with English subtitles.

MONDAY MARCH 4 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY MARCH 15 – 7:30 PM (Q AND A with writer UDAYAN GUPTA)
MONDAY MARCH 25 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY MARCH 31 – 7:30 PM

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PADATIK is the last film in Mrinal Sen’s triptych of Calcutta films, which includes INTERVIEW and CALCUTTA ’71. This film largely takes place within a young woman’s apartment, where a young revolutionary hides from the authorities. Sumit has taken part in a high-profile action and was lucky to escape capture. He spends his days in Shila’s flat reflecting on his own philosophical turmoil, suspicions within the party, and a difficult relationship with his father. Shila (Simi Garewal) works a day job in advertising but also a side project where she interviews local woman on gender inequality. PADATIK balances the tension of the domestic hideout with playful new-wave film gestures, assuring that life is full of beautiful distractions.

One can assume Sumit is a Naxalite, a catchall term used at the time by authorities to describe all revolutionary guerrillas and left-wingers. An armed revolt of landless peasants and urban bombings of state offices in the late ‘60s lead to a massive crackdown against supposed agitators. By the early ‘70s, 2,600 people were detained, and many more were murdered in the countryside. Some took to hiding, as is the case in PADATIK. This film shows the complexity of party engagement, struggles with defeatism, and the strain put on family and relationships.



KHARIJ
(aka THE CASE IS CLOSED)

dir. Mrinal Sen, 1982
India, 99 min.
In Bengali with English subtitles.

MONDAY MARCH 11 – 10 PM
SATURDAY MARCH 16 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY MARCH 26 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY MARCH 30 – 7:30 PM (Q AND A with writer UDAYAN GUPTA)

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A bourgeois couple hires a twelve-year-old boy from a desperately poor background to do household chores. During a cold spell, he dies in his sleep while barricaded in the kitchen. This tragic incident is beyond the emotional and practical abilities of the young couple, and they bumble through doctor’s reports, police investigations, and legal advice. The collective lack of care for the young boy is apparent, yet the blame is bounced around between the husband, the wife, and the landlord.

“All of us are at fault universally… we try to set aside the truth with these [law] books”, says a lawyer friend of the family. The law protects the middle class couple, however they must live with the guilt for the way they live in the world.



KHANDHAR
(aka THE RUINS)

dir. Mrinal Sen, 1983
India, 100 min.
In Hindi with English subtitles.

SUNDAY MARCH 3 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY MARCH 26 – 10 PM
SUNDAY MARCH 31 – 5 PM

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“Want a drink? Dinner here can take centuries.”

Two city guys are convinced by their friend to take a trip to his family’s crumbling countryside manor to relax and appreciate the decaying beauty. Soon after they arrive, they are made aware of a lingering marital drama that haunts the ailing matriarch and Jamini, her daughter. Subash, a quiet photographer, explores the estate and becomes entranced by Jamini. They develop an almost wordless and torturous flirtation. There is something ancient and fated that thwarts them, as though the ruins themselves play an active part in their destiny.