TICKET OF NO RETURN

TICKET OF NO RETURN
Aka Bildnis einer Trinkerin. Aller jamais retour.
Dir. Ulrike Ottinger, 1979.
Germany. 108 min.

SATURDAY, JUNE 11 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JUNE 18 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JUNE 30 – 5:00 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

One of the best known films from ever-prolific German auteur Ulrike Ottinger, TICKET OF NO RETURN is a topography of the booze-soaked streets of Berlin. Frequent collaborator Tabea Blumenschein stars as a silent stranger hiding out from her past via a one-way train trip to Germany, motivated by a singular passion for alcohol. Featuring Nina Hagen and an unforgettably unique sightseeing tour of the city of Berlin.

SEVEN WOMEN, SEVEN SINS

SEVEN WOMEN SEVEN SINS
Dirs. various. 1987.
Various. 101 min.

THURSDAY, JUNE 9 – 5:00 PM
MONDAY, JUNE 13 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29 – 10:00 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

As wide-ranging an omnibus film as there has ever been, a group of some of the most important international filmmakers of the last few decades – all of them female – take on each of the biblical vices. Bette Gordon, Chantal Akerman, VALIE EXPORT, Maxi Cohen, Laurence Gavron and more contribute a contemporary celluloid sin. The result is a thoroughly unpredictable introduction to each filmmaker’s work; encapsulating devious narratives and experimental collages, film and video.

Special thanks to Women Make Movies.

CAT SCRATCH FEVER

CAT SCRATCH FEVER
Dir. Lisa Duva, 2011.
USA. 73 min.

MONDAY, JUNE 6 – 7:30 PM ** Director in person! **
SATURDAY, JUNE 18 – 10:00 PM ** Director in person! **
THURSDAY, JUNE 23 – 5:00 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

Lisa Duva’s first film plays like a cyberpunk CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING: a lo-fi panopticon daydream following two best friends as they lose themselves down a self-reflexive online k-hole. CAT SCRATCH FEVER’s effervescent witty weirdness surfaced briefly on the festival circuit in 2012 but demands a rewatch, at the very least for its lead performances (Starsha Gill and Kara Elverson) and its singular Delphic oddness which recalls Věra Chytilová channeling Vonnegut.

FANGS

FANGS
Aka Anyab.
Dir. Mohammed Shebl, 1981.
Egypt. 100 min.
In Arabic with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, JUNE 2 – 5:00 PM
SATURDAY, JUNE 11 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, JUNE 17 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, JUNE 28 – 10:00 PM

GET YOUR TICKETS!

The Arab Spring and aftermath has yielded an accompanying wave of essential social realist film documents. But where, you ask, are all the Middle Eastern disco vampires now? Those occupied a special part of the early 80s — namely the exhilarating Egyptian ultra-camp triumph that is FANGS.

The premise — a young couple attempt to shelter from a storm at a creepy castle only to have their lives changed forever — may have been lifted straight from THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (along with the dance numbers, professorial framing device, and disembodied lips intro sequence). But however much director Mohammed Shebl may have worn his love of that cult icon on his sleeve, his ambitious and wildly imaginative attempt to transcribe it into contemporary 1981 Egypt makes for something wholly his own. Black magic, singing vampires in spangles, Egyptian pop cameos, awkward climbing Dracula sequence, implausible fog machine deployment, a shockingly banging original electrofunk soundtrack by the film’s co-writer (fleshed out with bizarre soundtrack cues lifted directly from American movies of the time), kinetic on-screen animation effects — it’s all here.

In a memorable postmodern tangent the film even turns aside into social commentary to prove the existence of the ordinary “vampires of Egyptian society”, wherein Dracula pops up in various mundane roles (price-gouging plumber, opportunistic cab driver, etc) to continue haunting the leads decades into the future. If there’s any doubt about what sort of film world we’re in, it’ll be settled in the first minutes, when our protagonists’ relationship is established via an outside-the-window-serenade, with a bunch of random joggers in knee socks and shorts leaping in as back-up dancers. All of which serves, as well, as a strange reminder of the much relaxed social climate that prevailed in Egypt 30 years ago. (In his next film, Shebl would even work in cuts from a Divine video to establish the appropriate vibe at a club scene.)

Mohammed Shebl, an iconoclastic radio personality and filmmaker who died young 20 years ago, was a bit of a glorious outlier in the Egyptian film world. Over the course of four features he fought a one-man war to jump-start the Egyptian horror film industry, which sadly never quite caught on with audiences and critics. But besides his own subsequent films, brimful of love for the likes of EVIL DEAD and NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET, he did manage to inspire a brief generation of surreal ghost stories and tales of the Egyptian Weird, most sadly untranslated and unseen in the west. His debut FANGS, however, has been translated and provides an ecstatic, essential window into a rarely seen side of Arabic cinema.
Warning: contains one unsimulated chicken sacrifice.

May Midnights

FRIDAY, MAY 6: Hologram Man
SATURDAY, MAY 7: Little Marines 2

FRIDAY, MAY 13: Digital Man
SATURDAY, MAY 14: Edge of the Axe

FRIDAY, MAY 20: Little Marines 2
SATURDAY, MAY 21: Hologram Man

FRIDAY, MAY 27: Death Promise
SATURDAY, MAY 28: Digital Man


THE EDGE OF THE AXE
AKA: Al filo del hacha 
Dir. José Ramón Larraz, 1988
Spain, 90 minutes.
In English.

SATURDAY, MAY 14 – MIDNIGHT

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

 

404 FUTURE NOT FOUND – Cyberworlds and Terminal Cases

Everything is becoming science fiction. From the margins of an almost invisible literature has sprung the intact reality of the 20th century. – J.G. Ballard

With virtual reality making headlines again, it’s time to revisit our past hopes for a projected, bypassed future. During the early 90s, humanity teetered on the verge of enormous innovations that would completely change the way we interfaced with reality and interacted with technology. Fantasy and sci-fi normally tap into an existing zeitgeist, but back then fiction led fact, with J.G. Ballard and William Gibson writing worlds innovators set out to make real.

This series takes a look at the lag between processing power and materials catching up with the half-digital future we strove towards, a technical wonderworld still bound by wires and clunky physical machines, with early CG and cyber-aesthetics influenced by practical effects from 80s films, and neologisms like ‘cyberspace’ created by an author still writing on typewriter.

As we enter the fourth stage of Baudrillard’s full precession of simulacra, let’s take a look back at our ham-fisted attempts to make man, machine and reality become virtually one. Consider these films the awkward yearbook photos of our sleeker, detached present-day.



EPHEMERA: SOCIAL MACHINES
Dir. Various, 1939 – 2008
USA. Approx. 75 min.
MONDAY, MAY 9 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 15 – 5:00 PM
SATURDAY, MAY 28 – 10:00 PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Social machine – n. An environment comprising humans and technology interacting and producing outputs or action not possible without both parties present.

Robo-human relations get a bad rap in media – if it’s not machines gaining sentience, rising up and brutally enslaving/destroying human oppressors, it’s some human going mad with technologically-enhanced power, with the occasional cyborg killing spree or computer-to-human virus spreading. SOCIAL MACHINES aims to correct this dystopian bias by highlighting decades of positive, if goofy and awkward, man-machine interaction.

Could it be said the still-burgeoning cyberworld is the praxis of humanity’s robot hopes? In hoping to improve our fragile, mortal selves we extended our bodies via machine – outsourcing memory to data banks, enhancing strength with bionic prosthetics, building robots in our own image*. Slowly we shifted from bringing technology into the world to work as we do, to building technology to become a world we enter into. We’re now extending our minds to a larger digital neural network, using feedback algorithms to tailor our online experiences, and, once again, trying to create a believable virtual reality.

Join us as we take a journey deep into the Uncanny Valley of good intentions and electronic interactions, with humans and machines working side by side to create a better world for all.

*and by ‘own image’ I mean automatically defaulting to bipedal vertebral structures and YEARS’ worth of freaky, mostly female-gendered simulacra.



AN INITIATION INTO VIOLENT EXHIBITIONS OF MACHINE PERFORMANCE: THREE DECADES OF SURVIVAL RESEARCH LABS
USA.
FRIDAY, MAY 20 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, MAY 26 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 31 – 10:00 PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

For over three decades, Survival Research Labs has awed and intimidated with large-scale, fantastically destructive mechanized performance art. Founded in 1978 by Mark Pauline and joined by a larger organization of engineers, technicians, and artists, SRL literally built a world with humanity marginalized as fragile spectator, completely irrelevant to the chaotic industrial maelstrom at hand. Brutal is incorrect – inhuman is the exact word – these events feature machines turned performers, completely freed from practical use. Names like Flame Hurricane, Shockwave Cannon, Hand O God, Big Arm, and Mr. Satan undersell the intense workmanship and severe destructive capabilities behind each creation – often utilizing sketchily-sourced military-grade parts, these machines are elegant and pragmatic in their operation. Unlike today’s everyday appliances, designed to be physically inaccessible to the user, SRL’s robots are marvels of hand-built efficient futility.

Spectacle is very proud to present a sampler of SRL’s over-30 years and 50 shows of work, each a general dedication to the idea of more is more, with apolitical agenda and displays of terrifying power. Things comes full circle with L.A. MOCA’s 2011 installation; featuring the De-Manufacturing Machine from SRL’s first show MACHINE SEX, then sprung on an unsuspecting audience at a commandeered gas station, now in a comfortable institutional setting destroying electronic-organic creations (including a crawling baby doll fitted inside a raw chicken), nothing could more perfectly sum up SRL’s history of creation and subversion than well-heeled museum patrons attentively waiting to be splattered by guts and wires. SRL continues “producing the most dangerous shows on earth”.

With selections from:

A BITTER MESSAGE OF HOPELESS GRIEF
Dir. Jon Reiss, 1987

EXTREMELY CRUEL PRACTICES: A SERIES OF EVENTS DESIGNED TO INSTRUCT THOSE INTERESTED IN POLICIES THAT CORRECT OR PUNISH
Dir. Jon Reiss, 1985

AREA NIGHTCLUB SHOW NYC
Ed. Jon Reiss, 1985

CRIMEWAVE SHOW
Dir. Dave Scardina, 1995

DANGEROUS CURVES
Dir. Dave Scardina, 2005

SURVIVAL RESEARCH LABS AT L.A. MOCA
Ed. Allan Kelley, 2011

THE DOOM SHOW
Dir. Leslie Asako Gladsjo, 1994


CYBERPUNK
Dir. Marianne Trench, 1990
USA. 60 min.

FRIDAY, MAY 6 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, MAY 16 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, MAY 24 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25 – 10:00 PM

SUNDAY, MAY 29 – 5:00 PM
FRIDAY, JUNE 10 – 5:00 PM
** BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! **  Director present!
SUNDAY, JUNE 19 – 5:00 PM ** BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! **

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Itself an artifact of the time and aesthetic being documented, CYBERPUNK is a fun, highly stylized sampler capturing its eponymous subculture still coalescing. Featuring interviews with William Gibson, Timothy Leary, founder of VPL Research/inventor of the Data Glove Jason Lanier, and encompassing musicians, animators, plastic surgeons, crafters, and self-proclaimed hackers, the movie shows and tells simultaneously with talking-head interviews overlaid and interspersed with then-cutting-edge CG animation and graphic effects. Reflecting the range of its subjects’ motivations, sometimes this is practical, masking coders casually chatting about illegal data access, and sometimes it’s purely for visual flair.

The documentary’s timing places it at a unique juncture – there’s talk of phone phreaking, VR potential and research, body modification, warez trading, database hacking, but no concrete mention of the internet as we know and use it today. AOL for DOS was released February 1991, Windows in 1992; CYBERPUNK just missed the radical breakthrough that was readily accessible dial-up, existing in a world where text-based intranets with node points were the closest equivalent. Of all people it’s a computer theorist outlining the blind spot most clearly; speaking to the (assumed) main fear of technology being how small and powerless it makes the average person feel and citing the military-industrial complex as example, the idea of complete personal connectivity and power doesn’t even occur. And yet the possibility is present in the film – one hacker tells how a 14-year-old poking around an AT&T database for kicks had the FBI knocking on his door after he’d inadvertently nudged a satellite out of orbit. In a present with unlimited texting on readily available handheld computers, it’s tempting to giggle at one hacker bragging “I make free phone calls…everywhere. You name it…Europe, Asia…..The United States…”, but hindsight’s 20/20 – CYBERPUNK is a snapshot of those excited for a future they nearly saw coming.

 



DIGITAL MAN
Dir. Philip J. Roth, 1995
Nevada, 91 min.
In English.
FRIDAY, MAY 13 – MIDNITE
SATURDAY, MAY 28 – MIDNITE

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Spectacle offers up this late-night cyberwar curio fielded from the pixelated precipice between Atari and The Matrix. Starring an Altmanesque corps of noteworthy surnames, Philip Roth’s Digital Man concerns a glitch in national security so cruel, it’d be divine if it weren’t so damn digital: a time-traveling supercyborg touches down in the small-town Southwest just in time to hijack an apocalypse’s worth of nuclear launch codes.

Fresh off a realm too insane in its violence and punishment for mere humans to enter, the Digital Man must be stopped – and it’s up to a motley crue of wisecracking heavyweights (some military experts, some shotgun-toting salt of the earth) to take him out, analog style. Tons and tons and tons and tons of fireball explosions (replete with slo-mo backflips and brutal, spaghetti-worthy shootouts) ensue, culminating in one night you can’t merely “attend” while on your laptop.

Digital Man is a very entertaining movie, with good acting, excellent photography and outstanding F/X. It does suffer from a mediocre script however. A very good, overall effort from a bunch of actors who fall into the category of “where have I seen them before?” A rating of 8 out of 10 was given. – VCRanger, IMDB

lets get down to brass tax where can we get this movie someone upload cmon it cant be ilegal look at it buying it would be a magor crime – Jamie Mcfayden, YouTube

I’ve seen Digital man almost a decade ago when it came to video. My dad rented me this movie to watch over the weekend since he was leaving with my mom. I loved it so much that I’ve watched it five or six times in 48 hours !!! – thebigmovieguy, IMDB

Don’t just settle for T2 ,experience this equal, yet lower budget Sci-Fi action outing,with martial arts giant Matthias Hues in the lead. – “A Customer”, Amazon

I rented this when it came out on video. I remember thinking the special effects and costumes were pretty cool back then. And in the early-to-mid-1990s computer animation was a novelty, so that added to the movie’s appeal. (And back then CGI looked cooler with those smooth surfaces.) – felicity4711, YouTube



HOLOGRAM MAN
Dir: Richard Pepin, 1995.
USA. 101 min.

FRIDAY, MAY 6 – MIDNITE
SATURDAY, MAY 21 – MIDNITE

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

LOS ANGELES, THE 21st CENTURY: Slash Gallagher (Evan Lurie), a revolutionary bomber locked in holographic stasis, finally gets a parole hearing. “Relax,” the technician transporting Gallagher says: “I’m a genius.”

But when Gallagher’s corporate handlers get hacked, the vicious terrorist is on the loose again – from prison to prism. As his vengeance is wreaked across the city, innocent blood spilt in multiple dimensions, the only man to stop him is the rookie who put him in the slammer way back when: Kurt Decoda (Joe Lara). Richard Pepin’s direct-to-video film is a brain-flattening kaleidoscope of superhighway chases, dusty warehouse explosions, shocking shootouts and gorgeously realized dystopian nightmares. This May, justice isn’t blind – it’s holographic.

FESTIVAL OF (IN)APPROPRIATION #8: CONTEMPORARY FOUND FOOTAGE FILMMAKING

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ONE NIGHT ONLY: THURSDAY, MAY 12 – 7:30PM AND 10:00PM

Whether you call it collage, compilation, found footage, détournement, or recycled cinema, the incorporation of already existing media into new artworks is a practice that generates novel juxtapositions and new meanings and ideas, often in ways entirely unrelated to the intentions of the original makers. Such new works are, in other words, “inappropriate.” This act of (in)appropriation may even produce revelations about the
relationship between past and present, here and there, intention and subversion, artist and critic, not to mention the “producer” and “consumer” of visual culture itself. Fortunately for our purposes, the past decade has witnessed the emergence of a wealth of new audiovisual elements available for appropriation into new works. In addition to official state and commercial archives, resources like vernacular collections, home movie repositories, and digital archives now also provide fascinating material to repurpose in ways that lend it new meaning and resonance. Curated by Jaimie Baron, Greg Cohen, and Lauren Berliner. Sponsored by Los Angeles Filmforum.

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

ASTRO BLACK: WE ARE THE ROBOTS by Soda_Jerk (Australia, digital video, color, sound, 2010, 6:35)
LANDSCAPE WITH BROKEN DOG by Orazio Leogrande (Argentina, digital video, black & white and color, 2014, 14:00)
LET ME ASMR YOU by Clint Enns (Canada, digital video, color, sound, 2014, 2:40)
IT TAKES ALL SORTS by Rachel Stuckey (US, digital video, color, sound, 2014, 10:30)
OVERPASS by Kami Chisholm (Canada, digital video, color, sound, 2014, 4:57)
THE END OF AN ERROR by Peter Freund (US, digital video, black & white, sound, 2013, 10:00)
DEAR BRITNEY by Duke and Battersby (US, digital video, color, sound, 2014, 5:00)
THE PLASTIC GARDEN by Ip Yuk Yiu (Hong Kong, digital video, color, sound, 2013, 11:30)
SOFT PONG INARI by Michael Lyons & Palle Dahlstedt 
(Japan/Sweden, digital video, color, sound, 2014, 2:06)
NOTES FOR A POLISH JEW by Abraham Ravett (US, 16mm & 8mm on digital video, color, silent, 2012, 8:05)
SEND ME A COPY by Albert Alcoz (Spain, digital video, color, sound, 2011, 5:24)
IN LIGHT, IN! by Ken Paul Rosenthal (US, 16mm on digital video, black & white, sound,
2013, 12:00)

Full program notes can be found on the Festival of (In)appropriation’s website.

GRRRL GERMS: A VISUAL HISTORY OF RIOT GRRRL

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“What is Riot Grrrl?” filmmaker Lucy Thane continually asks the fans, zinesters, and musicians profiled in her 1993 film IT CHANGED MY LIFE. By that point the term had taken on a ubiquitous, undefinable life of its own: derided by the media, twisted by its detractors, and worshiped by an increasingly large cultural movement of young women in the US and UK. While originally coined by Olympia, WA-based zinesters and musicians Tobi Vail (Bikini Kill) and Molly Neuman (Bratmobile) to describe the core network of politically-minded punk women in Olympia and DC, Riot Grrrl in its truest sense describes any do-it-yourself creative outlet of feminist fury: from cut-and-paste zines to punk shows to the grainy, politically-charged Pixelvision and 16mm visual subversions of the underground female and queer filmmakers of the era.

GRRRL GERMS (named after Molly Neuman and Allison Wolfe’s zine; itself titled after a Bratmobile song) is meant as a tiny offering of these works, from incandescent early films such as Sarah Jacobson’s I WAS A TEENAGE SERIAL KILLER (featuring music by Heavens to Betsy) to shorts from members of Miranda July’s chainletter tape collective Big Miss Moviola to raw and energetic archival footage. These films encompass the noisy irreverence of one of the most prolifically angry and influential artistic movements in recent decades.

More in The Village Voice.


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IT CHANGED MY LIFE
Dir. Lucy Thane, 1993.
UK. 25 mins. + 90 min of additional footage
5/13 7:30 PM

SUNDAY, MAY 1 – 5:00PM
FRIDAY, MAY 13 – 7:30PM
** SKYPE INTRO W/ FILMMAKER **
TUESDAY, MAY 17 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, MAY 23 – 10:00PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

With unlimited access and uncanny instincts, filmmaker Lucy Thane chronicled Bikini Kill and Huggy Bear’s 1993 UK tour/media circus with a stockpile of borrowed film equipment. Capturing around twenty-four hours worth of candid interviews, concert footage, and heated discussions with fans in venue bathrooms, Thane artfully distilled the footage into a twenty-five minute film that encapsulates the international breadth and fiery division of the Riot Grrrl movement. The raw tapes from which the final product was culled are equally rich historical documents featuring appearances by Courtney Love, Catcall Records’ Liz Naylor, and The Raincoats, among others. Spectacle is pleased to premiere a selection of footage from these rushes – recently digitized by the Fales Collection at NYU – along with the film.


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SHE’S REAL (WORSE THAN QUEER)
DIr. Lucy Thane, 1997.
UK. 50 mins.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 4 – 10:00PM
FRIDAY, MAY 13 – 10:00PM
TUESDAY, MAY 17 – 10:00PM
THURSDAY, MAY 26 – 10:00PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Lucy Thane’s 1997 follow-up to IT CHANGED MY LIFE probed the idea of subcultures-within-subcultures: specifically the artists and bands that made up the Queercore scene, such as Toronto’s Fifth Column. SHE’S REAL is a testament to the necessity of inclusiveness within a political movement, and how the queer musicians within Riot Grrrl gave voice to thousands of young women.


GRRRL LOVE AND REVOLUTION and WOMEN’S PUNK ART MAKING PARTY

WEDNESDAY, MAY 4 – 7:30PM
SUNDAY, MAY 15 – 7:30PM
SATURDAY, MAY 28 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

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WOMEN MAKE MOVIES PRESENTS: GRRRL LOVE AND REVOLUTION
Dir. Abby Moser, 2011.
US. 42 mins.

Shot between 1993 and 1996, filmmaker Abby Moser documented the New York City chapter of the Riot Grrrl movement. The resulting film is a portrait of the intense frustrations of the time: Riot Grrrl chapters nationwide had attempted to distance themselves from their misrepresentation in the mainstream media by cutting them off completely. GRRRL LOVE AND REVOLUTION is an important archival document of the meetings, punk shows, and events that occurred during this time of cultural flux — when an underground network founded in the name of grrrl solidarity suddenly became a sensationalized international movement.

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WOMEN’S PUNK ART MAKING PARTY
Dir. Mary Billyou, 1996.
US. 33 mins.

A documentary in which a group of young women meet for an art-making party. Located at The Beehive Collective in Washington, DC, six individual episodes are loosely interspersed, allowing each participant a chance to represent themselves. Included: a feminist stripper preparing for work, a puppet show, and a music video.


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THIS IS NOT A TEST: SHORTS 1990-1998
TRT – 88 minutes

SATURDAY, MAY 7 – 10:00PM
THURSDAY, MAY 19 – 7:30PM FILMMAKERS IN PERSON!
MONDAY, MAY 23 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Feeling dejected and misunderstood in her overwhelmingly male college film program, Portland artist Miranda July began distributing open calls for female film work within Riot Grrrl zines nationwide. She would then compile all of the submissions, record them to VHS, and send them back to the filmmakers as a chainletter tape entitled “Big Miss Moviola.” The work is fresh and surprising – most often from young burgeoning filmmakers struggling to find solidarity and companionship within their artistic communities. The tapes included work by artists such as Mary Billyou and K8 Hardy, who drew inspiration from the early ’90s work of underground filmmakers Jennifer Reeves, Sarah Jacobson, Sadie Benning, G.B. Jones, and others. This program documents the evolution of that filmic movement: from the disruptive, violent, and often hilarious early films to the irreverent experiments of the videotape age.

BUTCH PATROL
Dir. Myra Paci, 1990.
US. 2 min.

TRANSELTOWN
Dir. Myra Paci, 1992
US. 19 min.

FLOW
Dir. Mary Billyou, 1995.
US. 5 mins.

ANTS IN HER PANTS
Dir. K8 Hardy, 1998
US. 5 mins.

MONSTERS IN THE CLOSET
Dir. Jennifer Reeves, 1993.
US. 14 mins.

I WAS A TEENAGE SERIAL KILLER
Dir. Sarah Jacobson, 1993.
US. 27 mins.

Special thanks to Kristen Fitzpatrick and Women Make Movies, Lucy Thane, Lisa Darms and the Fales Collection at NYU, Sam Green, Myra Paci, Mary Billyou, K8 Hardy, Tara Mateik and Jennifer Reeves.

CHILDREN ON FIRE 2: CHILDREN ON FIRER

Children on Fire returns with more of the strangest and most unconventional films to deal with ideas of childhood, or play and growth, imagination and personal responsibility. Though many of them flirt around the edges of the standard “coming out age” movie, not are quite so committed to easy answers about the mysteries of youth and the painful passage into young adulthood. In this second series of troubling youth movies and/or movies about troubling youth, we have selections both heartwarming (Alexandre Rockwell’s Little Feet) and horrifying (Bill Lustig’s Uncle Sam), oblique (The Deagol Brothers’ Make Out With Violence) and downright psychedelic (Russian children’s animation and sci-fi).


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MAKE OUT WITH VIOLENCE
Dir. Deagol Brothers, 2008
USA, 105 minutes

TUESDAY, MAY 3 – 10:00PM
SATURDAY, MAY 14 – 10:00PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18 – 10:00PM
MONDAY, MAY 30 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Teeangers Patrick and Carol mourn the loss of their friend Wendy until they discover her animated corpse. They search for ways of resurrecting her spirit or, failing that, satisfy their love between the living and the dead.


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LITTLE FEET
Dir. Alexandre Rockwell, 2013
USA, 64 Minutes

SATURDAY, MAY 7 – 7:30PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11 – 10:00PM
FRIDAY, MAY 20 – 7:30PM
TUESDAY, MAY 31 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Determined to set their pet goldfish free, Lana and Nico embark on a magical urban odyssey from their Los Angeles home to the ocean. Their adventure, seen through the eyes of the brother/sister team, is filled with an array of wild and sometimes frightening encounters! Little Feet is a the return of director Alexandre Rockwell to his black and white 16mm roots that won him a Grand Jury Prize at The Sundance Film Festival with In The Soup. Little Feet’s cinematography shows the poetic side of Los Angeles one rarely sees and stands as an homage of sorts to the very first films shot in the city.


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UNCLE SAM
Dir. Bill Lustig, 1996
USA, 90 Minutes

MONDAY, MAY 2 – 10:00PM
SATURDAY, MAY 21 – 10:00PM
TUESDAY, MAY 24 – 10:00PM
SUNDAY, MAY 29 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

It’s Fourth Of July Weekend, and the recently discovered corpse of Sgt. Sam Harper – killed by ‘friendly fire’ during the first Gulf War – is returned to his all-American hometown. But when Sam rises from the dead to punish the unpatriotic, only his young nephew and a bitter Korean War veteran (Soul icon Isaac Hayes of SHAFT and SOUTH PARK fame) can stop his red-blooded rampage. Draft dodgers, tax cheats, crooked politicians and flag-burners beware: UNCLE SAM wants you… DEAD!

Timothy Bottoms (THE LAST PICTURE SHOW), Bo Hopkins (THE WILD BUNCH), William Smith (FAST COMPANY), P.J. Soles (HALLOWEEN, CARRIE) and Oscar nominee Robert Forster (JACKIE BROWN) co-star in this zombie horror hit directed by William Lustig (MANIAC, RELENTLESS) and written by Larry Cohen (IT’S ALIVE, PHONE BOOTH).


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LITTLE MARINES 2
Dir. A.J. Hixon, 1992
USA, 86 minutes

SATURDAY, MAY 7 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, MAY 20 – MIDNIGHT

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

The boys who played the loveable backyard commandos in LITTLE MARINES are back! Now they’ve banded together as the fearless Hawks, aiming to take on the arrogant Eagles in the Arkansas heartland’s annual dirt bike decathlon. Warning- This film contains Arkansas, fearless Hawks, arrogant Eagles and dirt bike decathlonning.

SOYUZMULTFILM ANIMATION SERIES: CHILDREN ON FIRE IN THE USSR

As a complementary program to our popular and expanding series “Children on Fire”, we have an animated series of films from Soyuzmultfilm in Russia. Soyuzmultfilm is an abbreviation of Union Children’s Animations, and they employed over 700 skilled laborers in its animation, stop-motion, and puppetry productions. Despite the extreme artistic repression of the day, animations were able to evade some of the adult rules and take on projects regardless of their commercial value. Soyuzmultfilm has won numerous animation awards and its films have topped lots of best-of lists, although these laudations haven’t saved the studio from the ravages of 90s U.S. infiltration and 2000’s Russian capitalism. Spectacle thanks Soyuzmultfilm for permission to show these films. спасибо, Союзмультфильм!


PROGRAM 1: Folktales in the Fog

MONDAY, MAY 2 – 7:30PM
SATURDAY, MAY 14 – 7:30PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18 – 7:30PM
SUNDAY, MAY 22 – 5:00PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE


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HEDGEHOG IN THE FOG
Dir. Yuriy Norshteyn 1975. USSR, 11 min.
In Russian with English subtitles.

HEDGEHOG IN THE FOG is the most well-known animation that Norshteyn made for Soyuzmultfilm. While following the arc of a Russian folktale, it trades action for the expression of subtle emotion. An inquisitive hedgehog has to pass through a forest filled with fog to find his bear-friend, who has prepared a campfire and samovar for them. The fog holds both intrigue and impediment, and also creates a hide-and-seek game with the beautifully tactile animation. Unlike the dramatic finales of other folk tales, the end desire for the hedgehog is to count the stars in the pleasurable company of a chatty and warm-hearted friend.


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TALE OF TALES
Dir. Yuriy Norshteyn, 1979, USSR, 29 min.
In Russian with English subtitles.

For many of Norshteyn’s works, the moral failures of humanity are redeemed in the silly and earnest efforts of anthropomorphized animals. The subtle symbolic content of TALE OF TALES should also be realized in light of the fact that Soyuzmultfilm was a state company, staffed with Stalinist bureaucrats as well as artists. Tale of Tales disobeyed the rules of Soviet Realism – not so much because it contains a subversive message, but because of the lack of coherent message at all. Norshteyn’s wife Francesca Yarbusova and screenwriter Lyudmila Petrushevskaya were key contributors to the film, which had a laborious journey from conception to surviving censorship to capturing the attention of the world outside the USSR.


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BELOVED BEAUTY
Dir. Vladimir Degtyaryov, 1958, USSR, 45 min.
In Russian with English subtitles

Here is a fantasy tale that obeys all of the traditional rules, whether Soviet or Western. A young man is told of a legendary great beauty, he goes in search of such a prize, faces perilous challenges, and is ultimately victorious. The exceptionality of this standard story is in the stop-motion animation and intricate puppetry used in BELOVED BEAUTY. Rather than being caught up in a fantasy, the fable is told by little bobble-head puppets with sensational costumes. This is a beautiful film forged by superior and mystical craftsmanship.


PROGRAM 2: Beloved Soviet Furball

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CHEBARUSKA, GENA THE CROCODILE and SHAPOKLYAK

Dir. Eduard Uspensky, 1969, 1971, and 1974. USSR, 69min (total).

FRIDAY, MAY 6 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, MAY 9 – 7:30PM
SUNDAY, MAY 22 – 7:30PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

Just a regular story of a pipe-smoking, besuited Crocodile who posts a “seeking roommate” ad and pairs up with a creature that came out of a crate of oranges. The friendship of Cheburaska and Krokodil Gena flourishes into connections with other lonely souls, to the point where the duo feel obligated to build a clubhouse for them all. Based on children’s stories by Upensky, this puppet-animation from Soyuzmultfilm Studios had a wide appeal with kids growing up throughout the Soviet empire. The crocodile has a lovely singing voice, and at the end of the third episode he croons: “even if giving up on the past is a bit sad, everything the best is still to come – like a carpet, like a carpet, a long road unrolls ahead”.


PROGRAM 3: Cold War Space Adventure
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THE MYSTERY OF THE THIRD PLANET
Dir. Roman Kachanov, 1981. USSR, 50 min.

TUESDAY, MAY 3 – 7:30PM
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11 – 7:30PM
SATURDAY, MAY 21 – 7:30PM
MONDAY, MAY 30 – 10:00PM

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

While the Jetson family was stuck in a well-manicured space metropolis destined to bring about alcoholism and delinquency, two hairy Soviet captains zoomed around the far reaches of space with a crafty and adventurous little girl. Glasnost was five years away, but THE MYSTERY OF THE THIRD PLANET managed to feature loungy synth music, trippy creatures, and incompetent robots. The plot is similar to something you’d find in Scooby-Doo, but the mysteries contained in the third planet elevate the story to very decent sci-fi.