STEWED ANGELS: CAROLINER ON TOUR

LIVING PROOF OF THE 1800’s (1995)
AN 1800S AFFECTUANT: A VISUAL VIEW OF HISTORY (200?)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

STEWED ANGELS: CAROLINER ON TOUR from Spectacle Theater on Vimeo.

Described by an integral source (who wishes to remain anonymous) as “a collective of a bunch of denizens modeled in pitchfork clay and dipped in cowhide puree”, the band Caroliner began in San Francisco in 1983, apparently drawing their music from the songbook of an 18th century singing bull named, unsurprisingly, Caroliner.

Wielding bizarre pseudonyms, an uncomfortably mutating band name, and an ever-evolving roster, Caroliner blended Harry Smith’s dandruff, an obscurantist manner and the sound of a turntable playing Stockhausen at 3¼ rpm with intricate drawings + screenprinting of ergot poisoned half beast, not humans to complete their cardboard and cloth costumes, props, informational materials and what some have termed “Industrial Bluegrass” music.

Caroliner holds a special place in the heart of Spectacle, and presenting these tour videos from two different realms of the band’s career is a rare treat indeed. But what should you expect to see? Viewers should be aware that the answer is not for the weak of heart: STEWED ANGELS promises a lot of blacklight, sewn up street-found outlandish costumes, kids-book style animation, confused crowds, and potential acid flashbacks.

 

These eye poppin’ posters (design: Ben Tuttle) are available for sale ! At the theater or on Etsy !

 

 

ANTI-VALENTINES ’18

Celebrating the Season of Love. Anti-Valentines all February!

 


 


THE BLOOD ROSE (LA ROSE ÉCORCHÉE) 
Dir. Claude Mulot, 1970
France, 92 min.
Dubbed in English.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

This Valentines Day, if you find yourself in love with a tortured painter who promises to carry you off to his ancient castle in France, we strongly advise that you first see this film. Director Claude Mulot was mainly a maker of les films pornos, and LA ROSE ÉCORCHÉE has a certain sensuality wound around its EYES WITHOUT A FACE-esque plot. There are poisonous plants and nasty wounds, and passionate romance tested by tragedy and jealousy. Plastic surgery cannot heal old wounds, but it can certainly create new ones.

We have a beautiful copy of LA ROSE ÉCORCHÉE, and every candelabra-carrying, thinly gowned scene is sure to enchant. Brought to you by Mondo Macabre and Spectacle Anti-Valentines 2018.

See series trailer.



ALRAUNE
(a/k/a: A DAUGHTER OF DESTINY)

dir. Henrik Galeen
Germany, 1928
108 mins.
Silent with English intertitles.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

Professor Jakob ten Brinken (Paul Wegener, DER GOLUM) is a mad scientist and “world famous authority on genetic cross-breeding” who vows to create life by impregnating a woman from the dregs of society with a mandrake root in an attempt to study the idea of nature vs. nurture. According to legend the root is believed to sprout from the spilled semen of a hanged man. One night his nephew, Franz, goes out and returns with a prostitute for the Professor to experiment on. She bears him a beautiful daughter, named Alraune (played by Brigitte Helm, fresh off the set of METROPOLIS), who the professor adopts and sends away to a convent. Despite her sheltering, Alraune grows up deceptive, corrupt, and promiscuous. After convincing her boyfriend to rob his parents and hit the road, Alraune dumps him for a circus magician and becomes his assistant. The professor finds her there, performing in the circus, and reprimands her til she leaves with him. Once home, he introduces her to the upper crust and showers her with gifts in an attempt to win her love. Alraune plays all sides of the fence and eventually drives her “father” to madness and desperation.

Galeen’s version of this strange legend is not the first, coming 10 years after a version now thought lost. The story would be told in 1930 and again in 1952. This version is highlighted by the cinematography of Franz Planer (who would later be nominated for Academy Awards and serve as DP on BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S) and the haunting performances of Wegener and Helm. This often overlooked gem of German cinema and twisted take on the traditional Frankenstein legend sits confidently alongside the other titles in this years Anti-Valentines series. A perfect last date movie.

See series trailer.

 



FOUR-SIDED TRIANGLE
dir. Terrence Fisher, 1953
UK, 81 min.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

Here is a love story from the source of modesty, propriety and evil in the form of human reason: the English middle-class. It is a tale from the wet end of a local doctor’s pipe, of how he nurtured a young genius named Bill and underwrote the laboratory Bill later built with his best friend and co-inventor, Robin. From a semi-electrified barn a contraption is made (out of plexiglass and television sets) with the ability to duplicate matter. Everyone can now own an original Monet and a Rolls Royce!

The rogue young scientists understand humanity little more than they understand economics, and Bill wants to push the machine into more bodily forms of replicas. Particularly, he wants to manufacture another young woman out of the one he has longed for since childhood. This desire is amplified by Lena’s recent marriage to Robin (itself a conventional arrangement for reproduction). Will she agree to be further duped? Who will the duplicate love, or will she even love at all?

See Series Trailer.

 

 


BLOOD IN THE DUST

 

 




CUT-THROATS NINE
(aka: Condenados a Vivir)
dir. Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent, 1972
Spain, 90 min.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11 – 5 PM
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

A wagon full of sadistic criminals is being chaperoned to prison through the mountains when they’re attacked by a gang of bandits seeking gold. What they didn’t realize is that it’s hidden in plain sight…in the very chains that shackle the men! When the dust settles only the sergeant, his daughter, and seven of the murderous prisoners remain. Without horse or wagon, the sergeant must face the elements, the trailing bandits, and the wrath of the seven men in tow while trying to reach their destination and protect his daughter, Sarah. Can Sgt. Brown get this motley crew to prison? Are one of the men the very same that murdered his wife? Is greed stronger than these golden chains?

Hailed as “possibly the most violent Eurowestern ever made” by Michael J. Weldon of Pyschotronic Magazine, CUT THROATS NINE surely lives up to it’s infamous reputation. A rare instance of a snowbound bloodbath, the film is as bleak as it is foreboding.

Presented by Hypercube Media.




GOD DOES NOT PAY ON SATURDAY
(aka: Dio Non Paga Il Sabato, Kill The Wicked!)
dir. Tango Boccia, 1976
Italy, 95 min.
In English.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

When a stagecoach robbery leaves one of their gang wounded, the remaining bandits hide out in a nearby ghost town and begin kidnapping and torturing anyone who happens to come by…

Though later remade as the psychedelic freakout MATALO! this version, made by “the Italian Roger Corman”, uses every part of the buffalo to create a stunning example in the Spaghetti Western tradition. Peppered with bright colors and religious iconography, GOD DOES NOT PAY ON SATURDAY manages to make even the light of day filled to the brim with tension. The ghost town setting creates an underlying sense of dread that gets ramped up by Angelo Francesco’s score. Lead actor Larry Ward would go on to be the voice of Jabba the Hutt.




CEMETERY WITHOUT CROSSES
dir. Robert Hossein 1969.
Italy. 85 min.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2 – 10 PM
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18 – 5:00 PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

After her husband is mercilessly hanged by a ruthless land baron, Maria implores Manuel, an old flame, to infiltrate the killer’s ranch and wreak vengeance. Manuel reluctantly leaves the ghost town where he lives to embark on the mission, but is ever haunted by his unrequited affection for Maria.

Prolific French actor Robert Hossein directed and starred in this inspired homage to his friend Sergio Leone. As sharpshooter Manuel, he dons one black glove (channeling the cool of garage rock band The Music Machine?) and imbues the whole production with laconic ennui. A visually striking and brooding picture, the requisite gritty and violent tropes are delivered with an artistic fervor ahead of its time.

“A French take on the Italians’ take on American genres — a “baguette western” ! Inspired by the international success of Sergio Leone’s DOLLARS trilogy, and armed with the catchiest of theme songs via international cult figure Scott Walker, CEMETERY WITHOUT CROSSES offers a Gallic spin on the Euro gunslinger pic.” – AGFA.

Presented by AGFA.




THE WIND IS WHISTLING UNDER THEIR FEET
Dir. György Szomjas, 1976.
Hungary. 95 min.
In Hungarian with English subtitles.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS HERE

Original trailer from 2014:

György Szomjas brings exquisite style and pacing to this elegiac gallows western about a betyár — a kind of highwayman popular in 19th century Hungarian balladry — set amid the Great Hungarian Plain in 1937. It follows the path of a brooding, aging outlaw newly escaped from prison whose personal revenge quest dovetails with the interests of the landless herdsman who oppose the state’s building a canal through the fields on which they work their trade. He becomes an unlikely hero to unwashed vagabond workers while facing down a mutually-admiring adversary in the form of a forthright squire who had captured him before. Meanwhile, an opportunistic youngster attempts to work both sides to his benefit. As ditches are dug for canals and corpses alike, the state puts increasing pressure on the wistful squire, who realizes the social order is changing and his fortunes are in decline; and yet he remains dutifully attached to his mission.

Though carefully paced and based on historical documents, THE WIND IS WHISTLING UNDER THEIR FEET aims squarely for populist appeal. The autumnal palette, period imagery, and sudden outbursts of hysterical grotesquery recall Andrzej Żuławski’s THE DEVILS. Yet most of all it brings to mind the unlikely grouping of Woody Guthrie, Miklós Jancsó, and Akira Kuroswawa — or maybe Béla Tarr meets Sergio Leone. Whatever the comparisons, THE WIND IS WHISTLING UNDER THEIR FEET is a stirring, forgotten gem in classic Spectacle tradition.

QUIET CITY

SATURDAY, JANUARY 20 – 7:30 to MIDNIGHT

Featuring short films/interdisciplinary collaborations between filmmakers, composers, performers, and visual artists.

Filmmakers: Johnny Siera, Gabriel Noguez, Ephraim Kirkwood, Greg McMullen
Composers: Luke Schwartz, Evan Joseph, Greg McMullen
Musicians: Greg McMullen, Sarah Mullins
Visual Artist: Jorge Velez .

BEST OF MIDNIGHTS ’17


MAGIC CRYSTAL (aka Mo fei cui)
dir. Jing Wong, 1986
95 min, Hong Kong
In Chinese with English subtitles
FRIDAY, JANUARY 5 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JANUARY 27 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS HERE

A breakout hit at a recent FIST CHURCH screening, we’re pleased as punch to bring this uhhhh “loving homage” to films like E.T. and Indiana Jones but with 5000% more Cynthia Rothrock beatdowns.

Andy (Andy Lau), Pancho, and Pin Pin (an actual child named Bin Bin in real life) jet off to Greece to find Andys friend Shen after receiving an urgent message that his life is in danger. After a lengthy montage of them having A LOT of fun in Greece the come to find that sure enough the KGB and Interpol are chasing down Shen after learning of his discovery of an ancient artifact in the ruins. Pin Pin accidentally ends up with it and finds out that this is no ordinary hunk of jade but that it houses an alien who communicates via brain-waves. Pin Pin promises not to tell and the crystal grows a finger so they can pinky swear. Andy pairs up with Cindy (the inimitable Cynthia Rothrock) to track down the evil Karaov (Richard Norton star of GYMKATA which we have definitely never shown) who has vowed to do anything to get his hands on the treasure. Everyone ends up back in Greece for a showdown beneath the ruins as they navigate traps and tricks to return the crystal back to its rightful place – and…owner?

No exaggeration when we say that this film owes much to the work of Spielberg et al but these fight scenes are downright jaw-dropping. Fast, ferocious, and wonderfully filmed. If you missed this at FIST CHUCH now’s your chance to redeem yourself. Not to be missed!



THE SEVENTH CURSE (aka: Yuan Zhen-Xia yu Wei Si-Li)
dir. Ngai Choi Lam, 1986
78 min, Hong Kong
SATURDAY, JANUARY 6 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS HERE

For Dr. Yuan adventure has become a way of life – though not one he asked for. On a routine mission to pick up some of the herb that cures AIDS the good doctor stumbles across a tribe deep in the countryside of Thailand. Unfortunately for them, the evil priest of this “Worm Tribe” is in the middle of resurrecting Old Ancestor with a ghastly human sacrifice! Furious that his ritual as been interrupted the priest puts a blood curse on Dr. Yuan and he narrowly escapes with his life.

Now a year later he must travel back to Thailand with his pipe-smoking professor friend (Chow-Yun Fat in the ‘Wisely’ role – something of Hong Kong’s Indiana Jones) must travel back to reverse the curse before his seventh vein bursts in his heart and kills him. To do this they must use an artifact called Buddha’s Eye. Along the way (with intrepid reporter Maggie at their side) they’ll fight monks, walking skeletons, monsters, rolling boulders, and the film’s true star – a small ghost that flies into people and then makes them explode.

A smash hit from a recent FIST CHURCH screening (every other Sunday at 3PM) that had the audience stumbling around in the dark, using their phones as flashlights, trying to find their jaws on the floor. From the director of THE STORY OF RICKY this film truly has it all. Though very much a CATIII Indian Jones film it owes a debt of gratitude to a bouquet of other influences including 1979’s ALIEN. If you’ve never been to FIST CHURCH this is the type of high quality mystery entertainment you’ve been missing.



SCARLET STREET
dir. Fritz Lang, 1945.
USA, 102 min.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS HERE

“How can a man be so dumb?”
The noir and the femme fatale will forever be bound together, merrily going to Hell, dragging all suckers, chumps, marks, rubes and shills into an endless abyss of suffering and death. As well they should! Noir, at its black heart, is about tearing a (seemingly) ordinary Joe to *nothing* while the audience howls for more. We’ll find that here, on SCARLET STREET, but with a director like Fritz Lang there’s more than one twist on the way to the noose. Based on Georges de La Fouchardière’s novel and play La Chienne (also the basis for the equally great Jean Renoir film by the same name), SCARLET STREET is, quite simply, one of the essential film noirs.

The great Edward G. Robinson plays Christopher Cross, the sap in question, at the end of a sad quarter-century of working as a cashier, enduring his wife and putting what little light still shines in him towards his painting hobby. Like most saps, Chris wants little more than to be some damsel’s white knight, and that chance actually arrives when he gets between va-va-va-voom Kitty (Joan Bennett, who was in everything from BULLDOG DRUMMOND to SUSPIRIA) and cheap hood Johnny (Dan Duryea of WINCHESTER ’73). Through a series of scams, lies, forgeries and tragedies, Chris and Kitty begin one of the darkest descents the screen has brought us, with Lang constantly, methodically twisting the knife, masterfully ratcheting up the tension all the way to the end. Fans of Lang’s earlier, more directly Expressionistic work like SPIES and the MABUSE films will find lots to love here, Robinson truly plays one of cinema’s great sad sacks, Joan Bennett is the embodiment of weaponized seduction, all combining to make a film absolutely perfect for a hot summer night when you can’t sleep and your soul cries for something, *anything* but the dreary monotony of our pointless lives. Great date film, too!



HEADLESS EYES
Kent Bateman, 1971
78 min, USA
SATURDAY, JANUARY 13 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS HERE

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

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



GALAXY DESTROYER
dir. Bret Piper, 1986
95 min, USA
In German w/ English subtitles
FRIDAY, JANUARY 19 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS HERE

“I am the king, I am the king
One dead marine through the hatch
Scratch and scrape this heavenly body
Every inch of winning skin
There’s garbage in honeys sack again”

The Birthday Party, “Junkyard”

In GALAXY DESTROYER, veteran character actor Matt Mitler (THE MUTILATOR, BASKET CASE 2) plays Harry Trent – a role he would reprise two years later in Piper’s MUTANT WAR – a spy who steals a spaceship. While attempting to return to Earth, Harry finds the controls are malfunctioning and is unable to land… After a grueling five years in orbit, Harry comes back around and manages to descend to the planet’s fertile surface. But upon his return, Harry finds his beloved homeworld has been taken over… And while hailed as a hero and savior, he’s tasked with saving the way of life he once held so dear – if only he can figure out how.

A jack of all trades, director Brett Piper (A NYMPHOID BARBARIAN IN DINOSAUR HELL) cut his teeth in the early Eighties, and continues doing so to this day. Piper’s work truly shines when he’s able to showcase his love of practical effects; in GALAXY DESTROYER alone crab monsters, spaceships, and melting faces abound.



MATCH CUTS: REMEMBERING INNINIMOWIN AND SEX SPIRIT STRENGTH

REMEMBERING INNINIMOWIN
dir. Jules Koostachin, 2010.
USA, 76 min.
English/Cree with English Subtitles.

Remembering Inninimowin is a two-year long documentary film project on the personal journey of a Cree woman, the documentarist, as she starts to remember her first language, Inninimowin (Cree).

SEX SPIRIT STRENGTH
dir. Courtney Montour, 2015.
USA, 40 min.

TICKETS HERE

SEX SPIRIT STRENGTH follows Michael and Jack, two young Indigenous men, as they shed the stigma and shame associated with their sexual health and gender identity. Michael, a former addict who lived a high-risk lifestyle that left him with permanent scars, hopes his activism work will discourage other young people from going down the same path. Jack, a transgender gay man, is committed to bringing pride back to two-spirit identity through education and activism.

Text courtesy of the filmmakers

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

IMAGE SPEAK


IMAGE SPEAK

“The essay’s innermost formal law is heresy. Through violations of the orthodoxy of thought, something in the object becomes visible which is orthodoxy’s secret and objective aim to keep invisible.” – Theodor Adorno

Does the moving image become an illustration of text, or is text created in response to footage? What does a process look like in which the text and image are being developed simultaneously? IMAGE SPEAK celebrates the world of essay films in which little hierarchical delineation between text and the moving image exists. As Timothy Corrigan writes in The History Of The Essay Film (2017) these are works that “do not create new forms of experimentation, realism, or narrative; they rethink existing ones as a dialogue of ideas.”

ONE NIGHT ONLY
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14 AT 7:30 AND 10:00PM.

TICKETS HERE

Organized by Georgia Wall and Rachel James.

With works by:

At 7:30PM:

Su Friedrich – “Gently Down The Stream”

A film constructed from fourteen dreams taken from eight years’ worth of Friedrich’s journals. The text is scratched directly onto the film so that you hear your own voice as you read. The accompanying images of women, water, animals and saints were chosen for their indirect but potent correspondence to the text.

Alia Ayman – “Zuzu/Samia/1893”

A found footage piece that repurposes Egyptian belly dance films to ressurect Little Egypt, a stage name first used by dancers who travelled from Alexandria to perform at the 1893 Chicago World Fair.

Kevin Ritter – “Hell.”

Filmed entirely underground in the MTA system, ‘Hell’ is about evangelism and existential dread.

lili white – “A PHILADELPHIA STORY”

Based a true story about a rape that happened in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, sometime in the 1980’s

Morgan King – “in between”

An (inevitably flawed) exploration of dimensions and time through String Theory.

Rachel Lazar – “Stereo Moment”

It’s about leaving the doctor’s office feeling sicker than when you arrived.

At 10:00PM

Tony Cokes – Manifesto A

This is the first in Cokes non-consecutively produced series of promotional tapes for his conceptual band SWIPE. 3#, subtitled Manifesto A Track #1, introduces Cokes concern with the ideological apparatus that undergirds the music industry. The video takes up a song by Seth Price, which is itself the systematic recreation of an early electronic pop song by Kraftwerk.

Alex Schmidt – “The Spectrum”

A film about queerness, autism, and groups.

Jennifer Atalla – “CBT for OCD”

A spiritual walkabout through footage found from the net about life, death, technology, you, me?

Mia Ardito – The Burden of Evidence: (Notes For Tomorrow, Today) VOL. 1

(Random Access Memory) (Internal Harddrive) (External Device) (2013-2017)

Sam White – “Movements 1000”

about making something from what you have and are able to borrow

Sara O’Brien – “faster the current”

A short film about being there but not there and here but not fully.

Sonia de Jager – “Memory: A Hypothesis / Human Representation Machine, Human Representation-Machine, Human-Representation Machine, Human-Representation-Machine”

Whether abstractly or quite concretely: the human represents. And by representing the human becomes, in turn, represented. Identifying borders, hierarchies or degrees of freedom within the various systems implicated in (self-)representation may seem straightforward when the human body is understood as the locus of creativity. If we consider the human body’s technoculturally mediated experience the task becomes slightly more challenging: who or what enables and drives representation? This brief essay-film analyzes the human-representation-machinecontinuum as a platform for the evolution of cognitive feedback, considering this semiotechnological triad as a unified trinity.

Each program lasts about 1 hour.

TALKS BACK PART 2

TALKS BACK (PT. 2)
Curated by Angela Washko
95 min
MONDAY, DECEMBER 18th
ONE NIGHT ONLY – 7:30PM (WITH Q & A!) and at 10:00
ARTISTS IN ATTENDANCE

TICKETS HERE

Talks Back is a screening program featuring video and performance-for-video works by women artists who have opted to move away from the limitations of gallery contexts and art world audiences and put themselves in conversation with television and cinema (and their audiences). Inspired by the possibilities offered by public access television, reality television and virtual environments, these artists bring new meaning to films, television programming, and multi-user digital spaces by inserting themselves into existing media narratives which don’t often include their perspectives. Through remixing their bodies into found footage or literally getting onto reality television programs, these artists assert the need for the narratives of intersectional feminists in the mainstream media we consume every day.

Artists in the program include Morehshin Allahyari, Ann Hirsch, Narcissister, Rachel Rampleman, Suzie Silver, Skawennati and Angela Washko.

Special thanks to the artists and curator.

FREEBIRD
Suzie Silver, 1993
11 min

“Suzie Silver directs and performs all the roles in this raucous and hilarious music video rendition of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Freebird”, the infamous Southern rock anthem for an entire generation of 1970s male youth. In this spoof of straight mass culture, Silver flips ironically between roles; from a lesbian proudly proclaiming her sexuality at the Academy Awards, to an in-concert Coors-drinking Ronnie Van Zant, and, finally, to a black-lace lesbian lounge swinger celebrating the wild, colorful world of “out” visibility. Silver draws upon an amazing array of found footage and special effects to bend genders and genres with spectacular visual delight.” – SS

MILLIONAIRE WORTHY: HOME EDITION (A PRIMER)
Angela Washko, 2013
8 min

“Angela Washko explores metrics and seduction in this video work that presents audiences with a strategy for romantic success through data analysis of the Bravo television show Millionaire Matchmaker. The project was the primer video which ultimately led to a public access television show called ‘Millionaire Worthy TV’.

‘Millionaire Worthy’ began as a research project through which the artist watched all 72 of the existing episodes of Millionaire Matchmaker and analyzed exactly what values were being communicated to its viewership by making spreadsheets and graphs detailing what traits men on the show state that they are looking for in women, and what the host declares unacceptable about the women she denies opportunities to date these men. Performing as analyst and (un)qualified authority, Angela Washko attempts to embody Patti Stanger’s teachings…the impossibility of which is made clear by highly contradictory data.” – AW

TIMETRAVELLER™ EPISODE 1 & 2,
Skawennati 2008-2013
6 min & 9 min

“It is critical that Aboriginal people show up in The Future. Sepia-toned, historical images of silent, unnamed Indians are everywhere but rarely do we appear in future imaginaries, even our own. As a Mohawk woman, I believe that we need to visualize ourselves as full participants in the future in order to assume our appropriate role as active agents in the shaping of new mediums and new societies. At the moment, nothing can represent The Future better than a real-time, interactive, 3D space where fantastical people populate improbable architecture and fly, teleport, and telepathically communicate their thoughts and dreams. Second Life, the popular virtual world, is such a space. How do Indigenous people fit into such spaces? And, more importantly, what is our role in defining those spaces? TimeTraveller™ is a creative and critical intervention into such discussions. TimeTraveller™ is a 9-part machinima that tells the story of Hunter, an angry young Mohawk man living in the 22nd century. Despite his impressive range of traditional skills, Hunter is unable to find his way in an overcrowded, hyperconsumerist, technologized world. He decides to use his edutainment system, his TimeTraveller™, to learn about his heritage. Through a bizarre glitch in the system, he meets Karahkwenhawi, a young Mohawk woman from our present. Together they criss-cross time, and end up discovering the complexity of history, truth, and love.” – S

IN THE REALM OF RARE AND ANALOGOUS ACCIDENTS
Morehshin Allahyari, 2013
10 min

Side by Side; Searching for a relationship that defines the states of belonging; The space in the middle. Questioning the power of the image… the image that guides us. The image that lies. “Something is of course always lost when we get to see only one side. It is for the exact same reason that one must have the courage to confess the pain of the coma-like contrast of life and cinema. In this scenario, somehow we must put it all together to see the big picture; While in the state of unconsciousness, we are stuck at the thin edge of a screen where two worlds, two countries, and two cities separate for the sake of it. I feel helpless standing in the middle. In this chain of accidents, in this battle of guns and bombs, in the pile of my notes, thoughts, and nostalgic memories of Texas and Tehran, the world lacks trust in common sense.” -M

{intermission}

HERE FOR YOU
Ann Hirsch, 2010
14 min

“In 2010 I was cast on the Vh1 reality dating series Frank the Entertainer…In a Basement Affair. I was one of fifteen female contestants vying for the heart of Frank “The Entertainer” Maresca, a thirty-year-old unemployed reality show mainstay, as we all lived in a house with Frank and his parents. I consider my time on the show a performance but I have also made work from the experience as well to recontextualize my experience for an art audience. Here For You combines footage from my reality TV experience, original video, and secret audio I captured during my in person audition. Edited to appear almost as a dream, this video explores the supposed sincerity that was assigned to my character during the show, questions the romantic nature of my relationship with Frank, and explores my mental state during the filming of the show and afterwards.” – AH

HOT LUNCH
Narcissister, 2009
4 min

“Narcissister employs a spectacle-rich approach to explorations of gender, racial identity, and sexuality. Humor, pop songs, elaborate costumes, contemporary dance, and her trademark mask are her tools in deconstructing stereotypical representations. Narcissister questions fetishism, particularly sexual fetishism, which is notorious in its fixing of racist and gendering stereotypes. Rather than abandon this contaminated site, Narcissister dives headlong into the muck, into the depths of the fantasy and fetish itself, to expose and deconstruct their power.” – N

UPSIDE DOWN ON AMERICA’S GOT TALENT
Narcissister, 2011
3 min

“People might ask, ‘Why is she interested in these low brow possibilities? Why is she diluting her work? What about the politics’ Is it possible to be strongly political and appear on these talent competitions? I think it’s radical that I would want my work to be seen on such a huge platform. If one aspires to show only in the art world, who is going to see their work? Elitist culture, people already in the know, who are already liberal. To be able to reach all kind of people- different classes, ages groups – feels righteous. And I’m protected by the mask. Narcissister can always only be a mirror of what’s around her.” – N

POISON (MY SISTER FUCKED BRET)
Rachel Rampleman, 2006
31 min

“Rachel Rampleman’s Poison (My Sister Fucked Bret) is a 30-minute video account of the artist’s younger sister Sarah’s early childhood introduction to, and later teenage interactions with, Bret Michaels – lead singer of ’80s hair-metal / glam-rock band Poison. With Poison music video clips interspersed throughout, a now (circa 2006) adult Sarah, living as the single mother of a toddler, shares her vivid and hilarious recollections of her multiple encounters with Bret, which eventually culminated in her spending a deeply unsatisfying weekend with the object of her decade-long obsession at his “cheesy” mansion in Tennessee. Shot solely and claustrophobically within Sarah’s 2006 Kentucky home, the stories relayed in this video convey in excruciating detail the experience of being a naïve and self-conscious adolescent in the suburban Midwest in the throes of total rock-idol worship, followed by the thrill and excitement, then ultimately the bittersweet disappointment, that actually getting to meet one’s idol can entail.” – RR

AIN’T NOTHING LIKE BEING FREE

AIN’T NOTHING LIKE BEING FREE
dir. John Meyer, 2016
USA, 49 min
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13 – 7:30 PM

TICKETS HERE

Ever find yourself wondering why Coney Island couldn’t have instead been a huge Jesus-themed theme park? Or why you even bother attending your “friend’s” “DJ set,” when you could just be spittin’ verses about life and freedom on the stoop with your real homies?

For just a moment, if you can, in that megalopolis-twisted mind of yours, try to imagine an America less convoluted, less distracted, and a maybe bit more free. For instance, instead of “soiled subway rat,” think “small disabled dog with wheels for legs.” Or perhaps instead of a city slickin’, cold brew wieldin’ hoser taking up sidewalk space, consider trading him in for an unlicensed Don Quixote faithfully hacking his way through dubious foliage with a dull machete. Try substituting your therapist and adderall prescription for some wisdom from a philosophical BBQ maverick and a rack of sweet baby back ribs. And while you’re stuck there again in L-train hell, deep down wouldn’t you rather be busting donuts in velvety mud on an ATV?

Well now that all our hot garbage is starting to freeze over, we invite you to clock out of your metropolitan nightmares for a meandering vacation in sunny, sultry Central Florida. Soak up the rays as a candid cast of soul-bearing tour guides show you a thing or two you won’t pick up in any hot yoga class. All shot in holy SVHS with a shaky hand and a heart of gold, ANLBF is a freewheeling, ingenuous portrait of contemporary America, living out its sometimes dreary, sometimes delighted dream in a seldom documented corner of this crazed country.

UNSINKABLE

UNSINKABLE: MY HEART WILL GO ON
dir. [Name of Director]
live score / video collage
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19 – 7:30 AND 10:00 PM

TICKETS HERE

Even after two decades, [year of blockbuster] blockbuster [name of blockbuster] remains indelibly etched into the collective consciousness. Originally released to breathless acclaim, 14 Oscar nominations, and 11 wins including Best Picture, and endlessly repeat theater visits by teenage viewers, the movie lingers in the memories of many, accompanied a deep-seated shame at knowing every note in “[title of canadian soundtrack pop hit]”.

Join us on the twentieth anniversary of [name of blockbuster]’s debut for a live reconstruction of [blockbusting director]’s unsinkable creation. With visual processing by Sleepy Peopl and an improvised score by Cyrus, [EVENT NAME] is a 30-minute voyage into the unknown, a wreckage that will go on and on.

Cyrus is Maggie Drew Brennan and members of Tar Of. Maggie is a city-based visual, audial dilettante. Tar Of play experimental pop and electronic textures, and recently discovered a shared past obsession with a certain cinematic experience.

Sleepy Peopl piece together live video projections from found and created materials and one of them has still never seen TITA–[film in question].