AN EVENING WITH RUMI MISSABU AND FRIENDS

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AN EVENING WITH ORIGINAL COCKETTE, DIRECTOR, PRODUCER, ARCHIVIST RUMI MISSABU WITH SPECIAL GUESTS
Various films (Rumi Missabu, Joe E. Jeffreys, Conrad Ventur, James Windsor,
Robert James & Theodore Nguyen and more)
USA, approx. 90 min.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 8 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

Spectacle welcomes the return of Rumi Missabu, here to present new and classic short films with fellow filmmakers Joe E. Jeffreys and Conrad Ventur live in person! Including a live musical performance, a discussion on independent and cult film, and a collection of short films from the ’80s to 2014, it’s an suitably extravagant salmagundi including films by Missabu, Jeffreys, Ventur along with fellow Cockette James Windsor (Tahara), David Weissman, Robert James & Theodore Nguyen, Mister WA and more! Will include, among the following:

ONE DAY IN SF – BOOMTOWN 3.0 by Mister WA (2014) 10:16

FLAMING CREATURES/OTHER by Joe E. Jeffreys
Video installation by NYU Proffesor, Drag Show Video Verite creator.

HITLER LOVES RUMI MISSABU (2014) 3:50 by James Windsor aka Tahara of the
Cockettes

RUMINATIONS (2014) by Robert James & Theodore Nguyen
*New promo trailer of feature film to be released Summer 2015. A
gender-bending coming of age story of a pioneer of the 60s counter-culture
movement in San Francisco. Ruminations uncovers the man James Bartlett
underneath the artist Rumi Missabu.

SONG FROM AN ANGEL (1988) 4:44 by David Weissman
Rodney Price’s moving last song-and-dance prior to his death from AIDS

BEAUTIES WITHOUT A CAUSE (1985) 6:35 by David Weissman
Evil drag queens on a rampage.

Plus a potpourri of additional snippets and delights including:

*TIP-TOE PAST THE WITCH (2013) by Kimba Anderson
*TREE, YOUR SAP BEATS GENTLY AGAINST MINE (1969) by Michael Kalmen
*INTERIORS (2011) music video by David Riley
*A COCKTAIL OF GLAMOUR & ANARCHY by Rumi & Scrumbly
*STRANGER IN PARADISE MASHUP by Joe E. Jeffreys
*THE GLITTER EMERGENCY (2010) by Paul Festa

REMIX 2 COGNITION

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ONE (LONG) WEEKEND(ISH) ONLY – OCTOBER 16 – 22

Following the success of last year’s inaugural REMIX TO COGNITION series, we present to you its sequel – REMIX 2 COGNITION. What better way to describe this experience than to resurrect and edit last year’s text?

REMIX 2 COGNITION is a long-weekend serving of work that was conceived by/associated with Spectacle Theater’s all-volunteer staff roster, with a focus on the repurposed and remodeled. 100% of ticket profits and donations go directly to supporting the space.

In its four years, Spectacle has often functioned as a creative space, offering its screen to amateur and established editor-filmmaker-curators as a means of exploring new ways of engaging with the moving image. Evoking the traditions of New York arthouses, third-world videotheques, and the high school stoner basement, Spectacle has never shied away from dismantling the cinematic canon, puzzling at its the parts, and feverishly reassembling, hoping Dad doesn’t notice. Since the cinematic form’s inception, artists have drawn inspiration from rejiggering the constituent parts of the apparatus. In recent years, international video sharing, increased bandwidth, and the ready proliferation of digital moviemaking tools have all provided unprecedented material, accessibility, and ease – of making movies like WORLD WAR Z totally new and better.

Likewise, though Big Cinema exhibition is not likely to be outpaced for long, we are presently at a moment where the gap in audience-perceived quality between a $152,550 D-Cinema system and a “prosumer” enthusiast purchase is relatively small. Therefore, as we have crested the digital conversion, DIY HD remixes are capable of carrying as much screen-authority as the video content projected at hallowed cinema grounds; simultaneously the textures of “obsolete” video mediums are now a prized ingredient in the visual stew. When interviewed by intrepid boy-reporter Keanu Reeves in the 2012 documentary SIDE-BY-SIDE, Fox Filmed Entertainment CEO Tom Rothman portentously cautions that we are entering an era in which “anyone can make a movie.” REMIX 2 COGNITION is probably what he’s sad about. Join us in salting the wound.

THE LINEUP

SHR INK MAN: A LIVE SCORE BY MIL KDU DES AND LOUIS PIQUETTE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16 – 8 and 10 PM

STRONG–THING (b/w TENDER PREY)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 8 and 10 PM

SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: AIM FOR THE TRASH CAN
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17 – MIDNIGHT

***CANCELLED*** PARIS GROUP INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS P3: PASSION, POWER, AND PROFIT
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM
***CANCELLED***

YOUR GENIUS ON THE BIG SCREEN: A SPECTACLE GROUP SHOW
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 10 PM

THE SIMPSONSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – MIDNIGHT

ANTI-BANALITY UNION PRESENTS: STATE OF EMERGENCE
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 – 8 and 10 PM

SPED: A LIVE SCORE BY SCRIMPY
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 8 and 10 PM

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SHR INK MAN
Edited by Louis Piquette, Live Music by MIL KDU DES, 2014
USA, 42 min.

THURSDAY OCTOBER 16 – 8 and 10 PM

MIL KDU DES (aka Mark Freado Jr. and Steve Pellegrino, with the hired bow of Erin Routson), having previously live-scored UNIVERSE: I SEE NO GOD UP HERE, and THE SOUND STAGE MASSACRE (based on the cult Italian horror gem STAGE FRIGHT: AQUARIUS), will tackle SHR INK MAN, a melancholic re-imagining of THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN. In addition to the milky walls of Spectacle, MIL KDU DES have also hauled a s s e s to the Cinefamily in LA, and the Museum of Arts and Design in NYC.

First premiered during Spectacle Theater’s residency in the abovementioned museum’s NYC Makers: A MAD Biennial, Louis Piquette’s edit on SHR INK MAN directs the live score as an added monstrous presence, threatening the cinematic walls of diegesis. As the titular protagonist inversely scales to the increasing size of his troubles, MIL KDU DES paws and nibbles at, and then eventually swallows the entire soundtrack from the original film.

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STRONG-THING and TENDER PREY
by H.A. Campbell & Jon Dieringer

FRIDAY OCTOBER 17 – 8 PM and 10 PM

Following its explosive premiere at The Museum of Arts and Design this summer, STRONG-THING flexes its guns at Spectacle alongside the premiere of TENDER PREY, a harrowing parable about the toxic atmosphere of pedophilia in Hollywood.

STRONG-THING
Dir. H.A. Campbell & Jon Dieringer, 2014
USA, 30 min.

STRONG-THING is a mythic meditation on the biographical, on-screen, and celebrity personae of Arnold Schwarzenegger that presents a master narrative built with material repurposed from the entire breadth of his pre-gubernatorial filmography. Hysterical, lucid, action-packed, and elegiac, the journey of the Strong-Thing from lab-engineered specimen through interplanetary exile, arrival on Earth, discovery of its means to success, and rise through the ranks of celebrity and power mirrors the parallel allegorical threads running through virtually all of Schwarzenegger’s filmography as well as his personal rise from Austrian immigrant to unlikely leading man and governor of California. Free of dialogue, STRONG-THING is a nimble work of uniquely character-driven cinematic détournement cycling through incisive narrative drive and surreal interior interludes exploring the Strong-Thing’s feelings of ambition, loss, vindictive determination, alienation, and fear. This eisegetical voyage is accompanied by sound design/composition by artist C. Spencer Yeh (Burning Star Core).

TENDER PREY
Dir. H.A. Campbell & Jon Dieringer, 2014
USA, 14 min.

TENDER PREY restructures the 1985 werewolf film SILVER BULLET, starring Corey Haim, into a parable concerning the toxic atmosphere of pedophilia surrounding child actors in Hollywood. Radically abridged and shuffled, the film now tells the story of an All-American Boy living in perpetual fear of a sexual predator, a narrative horrifically parallel to Haim’s own experience as a preteen Hollywood coverboy. Meanwhile, his guardian, Gary Busey, is portrayed as hopelessly complicit for his unresponsiveness, manifest in his repeated sublimation into alcoholic stupor. Both characters retreat into anxious fantasia as they recognize their inabilities to cope with the cycles of abuse and denial in which they are enmeshed. Juxtaposed then synthesized, unspeakable acts of on- and offscreen predation violently scratch away the veneer of child stardom.

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SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: AIM FOR THE TRASH CAN
Dir. Various, Compiled by C. Spencer Yeh, 2014
USA. 82 min.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17 – MIDNIGHT

Following warm on the heels of SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: APPROVED FOR ALL AUDIENCES (as seen at the Museum of Arts and Design’s NYC Makers: A MAD Biennial), a survey of custom-edited movie trailers compiled from the over-700 created since Spectacle’s scrappy beginnings, comes SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: AIM FOR THE TRASH CAN. Whereas ALL AUDIENCES attempted a broad overview, strategically edited for the museum’s broad audiences, TRASH CAN kicks a 180 and lures all the nasty exploitation, howling horror, and explosive action-packed genre trailers out of the Spectacle gutter into one seamy vacation package. This 82 minute-long shitty cruise traverses all the rank detours and volatile twists and turns you might’ve missed unless you’ve spent mad N.I.S.S. (Nights In Spectacle’s Service). Spoiler alert – the calls are coming from inside the trash can and this boat never left the sewer.

Various versions of the SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER trailer compilations have screened at Pittsburgh’s Three Rivers Film Festival, the Kinomuzeum festival at Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej w Warszawie. Yeh has also presented his own trailers to LAMPO at the Graham Foundation in Chicago, and the Museum of Modern Art in our very own NYC.

Warning: graphic violence, sexuality, and other adult subject matter

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PARIS GROUP INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS P3: PASSION, POWER, AND PROFIT

***CANCELLED*** CHECK OUR LISTINGS FOR LATEST NEWS ***CANCELLED***

SATURDAY OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM

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YOUR GENIUS ON THE BIG SCREEN: A SPECTACLE GROUP SHOW

SATURDAY OCTOBER 18 – 10 PM

The intimate epicenter of the REMIX 2 COGNITION series, YOUR GENIUS ON THE BIG SCREEN invites all Spectacle Theater volunteers near and far to contribute short-form efforts into one massive collective mess. In some cases these shorts are seeing sun for the first time ever. We aim to flatter and flatten our moonlights/dayjobs/daydreams in this night of show-and-show around the glow and warmth of the burning “S.”

Running order is TBD –

THE MASKS WE WEAR
Dir. Aaron Schimberg, 2014
USA, 7 min.

“Dr. Arthur Newman suggests that “we all wear masks, metaphorically speaking” as a means of adopting a “socially acceptable image.” Are masks really a metaphor? Can we choose the masks we wear? Can we remove our masks at will? Are these masks always socially acceptable? These questions may or may not be answered, or posed, using sound and image from two films, Peter Bogdanovich’s MASK (1985), a biopic about Rocky Dennis, an affable Southern California teenager, and Charles Russell’s THE MASK (1994), concerning the adventures of Stanley Ipkiss, a hapless bank-clerk from Edge City.”

PRETY WOMAN
Dir. Annelise Ogaard, 2013
USA, 1 min.

“THE MOVIE THEY DON’T WANT YOU TO SEE. These days “Hollywood” is too caught up in things like “major stars” and “production quality” to recognize what really matters: a good heart. We turned to grassroots fundraising to pursue our vision, but Kickstarter declined our pitch for not “being” a “real thing.” Starring Elspeth K. Walker, Sean, and the inimitable Mehron Cantusehislastnameforemploymentreasons, PRETY WOMAN is Garry Marshall’s 1990 classic like we’ve never seen it before—and you never will again!!”

BABY’S BOTTOM I
Dir. Ventriloquist, 2012
USA, 4 min.

Enthusiastic new parents are over-sharing too.

TONE BANK
Dir. Spcl Ntrst, 2013
USA, 12 min.

All a/v samples in TONE BANK are sourced from the origin tape.

A THING IN SPACE
Dir. Zack Hall, 2014
USA, 3 min.

DYNAMITE BOSS
Dir. Brady Welch & Colin Sonner, 2014
USA, 5 min.

TWO RATS
Dir. Maya Edelman and Nate Dorr, 2013
USA, 3 min.

“A music video for “Two Rats” by Fables.”

BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC
Dir. LJ Frezza, 2013
USA, 5 min.

“A series of prayer scenes from Hollywood films produced about and/or during World War II. A consideration of ideological and technological othering.”

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Dir. Vanessa McDonnell, 2014.
USA, 5 min.

“John Boorman’s 1967 film POINT BLANK is reconstructed as a dream experienced by Lee Marvin, wherein his anxiety and remorse are given expression and his unconscious desires fulfilled.”

YOUR NEXT: Live Wardrobe Fail [PSA+] R2c c3.haptic COG-OCT
Dir. Chris Byler, 2014.
USA, 10 min.

“Recent unpaid works by Chris Byler.”

???
Dir. C. Spencer Yeh, 20??.
USA, ?? min.

???
Dir. Darren Bauler, 2014.
USA, ?? min.

 

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THE SIMPSONSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
Dir. Lenora Jarrett, 2013
USA, 60 min.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – MIDNIGHT

Every aired moment of The Simpsons—from Ullman through the movie and up-to-date— sped up roughly 20,000% to fit comfortably into one truly hysteric viewing experience.

What more do you need to dohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh?

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STATE OF EMERGENCE
Dir. The Anti-Banality Union, 2014
USA. 60 min.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19 – 8 and 10 PM

STATE OF EMERGENCE is a zombie movie without zombies.

Society asks: Who is the enemy? From where does he attack? How do we distinguish him from one of our own, and how do we immunize ourselves against him?

But it’s too late for these questions. The illness that society feels victimized by has metastasized to an irreversible degree. It can’t be cured with surgery, heavy medication, or even wholesale amputation. “Stability at all costs! No life-support machine is too expensive!” But the virus is becoming stronger than its host, and its hostility is irrepressible.

The Anti-Banality Union is an amorphous pack of movie critics. The movie they never tire of criticizing is the one we all live in, and if they ever write anything, it’ll be its end credits.

The Anti-Banality Union is not a fixed collective. Everyone who has experienced enough narrative closure through Hollywood to know from the signs all around us that the story of Western Civilization is coming to an end is a member.

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SPED – A LIVE SCORE BY SCRIMPY

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 8 and 10 PM

SPED
Dir. 20th Century Fox Film Corporation, 1994–2014
USA, 50 min.

“Speed is the hope of the West.”
–Paul Virilio

Twenty years ago, when millions flocked to see SPEED, they got there as fast as they could. Subways and cabs were too slow—people ran across the hoods of cars stuck in traffic. Imagine their disappointment when they got there: Keanu has to keep the bus going at 50 mph. Fifty!? That’s below the freeway speed limit everywhere in the USA. Without Mark Mancina’s pulsing score, we would’ve fallen asleep after the first explosion, maybe waking up for the famous leap across the void and the Benghazi-reminiscent bus-plane collision.

If SPEED thrilled viewers back then, it certainly doesn’t anymore. The smug complacency of the 90s has been replaced by a need for speed more desperate than ever, an urge to stifle the uneasiness we feel about our unstoppable momentum toward the abyss. We can’t be expected to have patience for long, slow, boring movies—we don’t have enough time left for that. French producer Marin Karmitz once said that runtimes of over 110 minutes are a sign of contempt for the viewer. At 116 minutes, SPEED is an insult.

By accelerating it to twice its original velocity, we’ve made SPEED adequate to its essence. Having banished Mancina’s orchestral deceptions, we’ll be convoyed by the electro-psychedelic warriors of Scrimpy as we rip through Los Angeles at 100 mph. “There’s enough C-4 on this thing to put a hole in the world!”

SPECTOBER IV

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For the fourth year, Spectacle is proud to present a month-long, lovingly-selected series of unknown, mysterious, and shocking films from around the world: SPECTOBER IV.


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BEGOTTEN
Dir. E. Elias Merhige, 1990.
USA, 72 min.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 10 PM

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” -John 3:16 (King James Bible)

Easily one of the most singular films in the history of experimental cinema, E. Elias Merhige’s BEGOTTEN is a deeply religious, allegorical nightmare carved onto celluloid distanced from place or time, uncovering visceral, primitivist brutality that may be unparalleled in the history of the moving image.

“One of the ten most important films of modern times.” -Susan Sontag

Despite its near-total lack of cultural reference points, the churning, repetitive, symbolic actions of the entities depicted on-screen—all players from Merhige’s radical Theater of Material troupe—suggest a broad mythology culled from sources as widespread as ancient Egyptian apologues, disparate pagan lore and, of course, Christian allegory. There is no dialogue or traditional narrative, yet BEGOTTEN’s hypnotic aesthetic and the engrossing actions of the film’s characters—named God Killing Himself, Mother Earth and Son Of Earth, Flesh On Bone—are never anything but riveting and pointed.

“…seems almost entirely self-contained, with little effort to engage an audience on even the level of moth; the film’s approach is far too grotesque for that. The experience of watching ‘Begotten’ can best be characterized as intense.” -Janet Maslin (NY Times)

BEGOTTEN was painstakingly re-photographed and optically printed in order to achieve the film’s iconic chiaroscuro, famously requiring up to 10 hours of post-processing for every minute of on-screen time. Its widest mainstream exposure came long after the festival circuit and art-house run, when the aesthetically-consonant, Goth-as-fuck Marilyn Manson tapped Merhige to direct his video for the song “Cryptorchid” from the 1996 album Antichrist Superstar, a video which ended up including quite a bit of footage from BEGOTTEN directly. After this, Merhige entertained an unlikely flirtation with Hollywood and the world of commercial video, directing SHADOW OF THE VAMPIRE (2000), SUSPECT: ZERO (2004) and one of the best Interpol music videos (for “The Heinrich Maneuver”… not a great song).

“Evokes Alexander Sokurov and Francis Bacon as well as early David Lynch and a great many splatter films… if you’re looking to be freaked out you shouldn’t pass it up.” -Jonathan Rosenbaum (Chicago Reader)

[Trigger Warning: Extended, recurring scenes of violent religious ceremony.]


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BLOOD THEATER
aka Movie House Massacre
Dir. Rick Sloane, 1984.
USA. 78 min.

Special thanks to Rick Sloane

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30 – 7:30 PM

The staff of the Spotlight movie house is pleased to be opening their new location. That is, until they find out that every time the theater has been opened – someone gets killed. Unfortunately for these (doomed) kids, the bottom line is all that matters to their boss, and more importantly – his boss. Legacy of death aside – the show must go on!

In accordance with the unintentional Spectober tradition of having one of the films in our program take place in a movie theater (see also: ANGUISH) – the first feature from director Rick Sloane (HOBGOBLINS, HOBGOBLINS 2, MIND BODY & SOUL, etc) is peppered with strange theater related deaths, tinny synths, hilarious loudspeaker announcements, inside jokes (all the films projected in the movie theater were made by Sloane while attending school in LA), and a heaping helping of Mary Woronov <air horn>. Clocking in at just under 80 minutes, the film wastes no time establishing the set up and getting right down to business. Mary Woronov shines as the evil Miss Blackwell and relishes at the chaos around her.

King of the Witches – previous presenters for DESPERATE TEENAGE LOVEDOLLS, LOVEDOLLS SUPERSTAR, & SURVIVE –  return to Spectacle for another piping hot slab of analog pie with their brand new VHS release of this video store staple. Join us for the final screening on Oct. 30th w/ KOTW in attendance with tapes, posters, and who knows what else!


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DON’T DELIVER US FROM EVIL
Dir. Joël Séria, 1971.
France, 110 min.
In French with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30 – 10 PM

“Really about the obsessive nature of female friendship, of girls suffering a tedious, square world filled with hypocrisy and becoming hopped up by literature and the forbidden and hellfire and all the stuff that’s so intense when you’re 15, [DON’T DELIVER US FROM EVIL] is a fiendish paean to the freaky bad girl—girls who, when staring into that bland void would rather, quite literally, burn out than fade away.” – Kim Morgan, Sunset Gun

Special thanks to Pete Tombs and Mondo Macabro

One of the great unhearalded works of early ‘70s youth rebellion, DON’T DELIVER US FROM EVIL is about a pair of upper-class parochial school BFFs who swear themselves to Satan and set out, in their own seemingly innocent way, to inflict pain and cruelty on do-gooding “idiots.” Over the course of a summer, the two have neighboring country vacation homes, and when Anne, the instigator of the two, is left on her own, her place becomes a haven for all kinds of wickedness. The girls amuse themselves with sexual intimidation of their neighbor, restaging Christ’s Carrying of the Cross with a lame groundskeeper, holding a Satanic ceremony, and seducing a married man. When they return to school, they make the ultimate statement of contempt for middle-class values.

The film is as much about hiding under the covers with flashlights and dirty books and sneaking cigs and communion wine as it is figuring out where to hide a body. It’s not difficult to imagine why the film never received US distribution: it’s not a lurid exploitation that could appeal to a grindhouse crowd, but its arthouse style and whimsy is rooted in too much anti-bourgeois perversion to appeal to sophisticated New Yorkers. (Though Amos Vogel does single it out in FILM AS A SUBVERSIVE ART.) Consider it a cross between Jean Eustache and Michael Haneke with a bit of Buñuel and Larry Clark thrown in—but one that seems uniquely attuned to its young, rebellious female protagonists. It’s a true diamond-in-the-rough.

Rally your best friend and check it out: this is essential bad girl viewing.

Trigger warning: attempted sexual assault of a minor


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FADE TO BLACK

Dir. Vernon Zimmerman, 1980
USA, 102 min.

Special thanks to Vernon Zimmerman

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23 -10 PM

Eric Binford is a lonely, chain-smoking film addict eking out a meager living by delivering film canisters around LA for a small distributor. One day, he crosses paths with a Marilyn Monroe-lookalike whom he somehow gets to agree to a date. When it appears that she stands him up, his cinema-obsessed brain snaps. Transforming himself into a rotating cast of classic horror characters, Binford sets out on a killing spree to destroy his oppressors! Will a coked-out, harmonica-blasting cop be able to stop him in time?

A labor of love for writer/director Vernon Zimmerman (whose credits span everything from the Terrance Malick-scripted trucker pic DEADHEAD MILES to road flick BOBBIE JO AND THE OUTLAW to roller derby gem UNHOLY ROLLERS to camp classic TEEN WITCH), this oddball early 80s effort isn’t gory enough to be a straight slasher and too weird to be a straight drama, as Dennis Christopher (BREAKING AWAY) infuses BInford with a healthy amount of depth and empathy. It feels like TAXI DRIVER crossed with an abandoned John Waters script, all the while predating the self-referential, postmodern SCREAM horror sensibilities by over 15 years.

If anything, the film-obsessed lead has a few lines that, admittedly, hit pretty close to home for some Spectacle members! And be on the lookout for a young Mickey Rourke as a bully!


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FEAR HAS 1000 EYES
Dir. Torgny Wickman, 1970
Sweden, 76 min.
In Swedish with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 7:30 PM

The first (and only?) Swedish erotic horror film ever made, FEAR HAS 1000 EYES isn’t the grindhouse film that title might suggest. Instead, it’s a moody, atmospheric film about the eerie relationship between Anna, her priest husband, and their friend/caretaker, who has sold her soul to the devil. Anna is pregnant, with a shadowy history of mental trouble and anxious tendencies, living with Sven in rural Sweden. Surrounded by snow and not much else, Anna’s mind runs wild, until their friend Hedvig comes to stay with them, ostensibly to care for Anna…but there are other forces at play in the household.

The film asks more questions than it answers, and the ending is explosive and enigmatic. Anita Sanders gives an appropriately blank-eyed performance as Anna, a priest’s wife trapped in the middle of nowhere. With more in common with a Bergman film than your average sex occult thriller, FEAR HAS 1000 EYES brings a sexy slow burn to SPECTOBER IV.


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LIZARD IN A WOMAN’S SKIN
Dir. Lucio Fulci, 1971
Italy, 104 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 7:30 PM

Before becoming renowned for orchestrating some of the nastiest gore sequences in cinema, Lucio Fulci directed a string of (still fairly gory) gialli, or lurid Italian mystery films, of which LIZARD IN A WOMAN’S SKIN is one of the finest. And though the psychedelic lounge vibe is no stranger to the genre, LIZARD is the most drug-addled orgiastic giallo trip ever conceived.

In one of her iconic performances, genre legend Florinda Bolkan plays Carol, a frustrated housewife who experiences anxious erotic dreams about dalliances with her libertine neighbor, Julia (Anita Strindberg). When one of the fantasies turns spectacularly sour and Julia appears as a corpse, Carol wakes up to learn that Julia has been actually murdered in reality under mysterious circumstances. Initially convinced of her own guilt, but then unsure, Carol is thrust into a paranoid gauntlet of drugs, sex, murder, and suicide as she, her philandering husband, and investigators all try to untangle the killer’s identity.

With it’s LSD-laced narrative and ghoulish hippies, LIZARD IN A WOMAN’S SKIN gives a whole new meaning to the phrase “death trip.” And besides being a great showcase for Bolkan, it features a number of stellar behind-the-scenes credits, including composer Ennio Morricone and special effects artist Carlo Rambaldi (E.T., ALIEN, POSSESSION), whose work on this film actually landed him in court—pegging him with the distinction of being the first special effects artist ever called before a judge to prove his effects weren’t real.

TRIGGER WARNING: a brief hallucinatory scene of simulated animal cruelty


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THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED
Dir. Lee Madden, 1971
USA, 85 min.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 7:30 PM

“Summon the AAAy-toner!”

Can your soul stand the theological implications of 1971’s THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED? You get old-school 42nd Street madness with this lost exploitation flick about the dangers of uncanny Bible-quoting hippies and the generation gap.

If you hate religion, goodness gracious, do we have a flick for you! Not quite a “gem,” but certainly an object of intense fascination: THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED is an almost forgotten, “ripped from the headlines,” deliciously nasty 1970s grindhouse flick that has gotten better with age as its subtextual philosophical questions have gotten more prescient over the years.

Neither the Manson-esque followers of psycho-prophet Billy Joe Harlan (a perfect Michael Sugich) nor the “Squares” who spend their last dime on religious trinkets instead of necessities, are spared: foolish Reverend Pierce has used this month’s mortgage payment on a giant wooden cross; and drug-pushing Billy Joe exults to his faithful, “They was all just a bunch of sinners…but I saved them, Lord! I showed them that using dope was the way to turn on to You!

Meanwhile, Billy Joe’s hooded henchman, the Atoner (“the AAAy-toner!” shrieks the mystical nutjob in a way that will become a secret code to everyone who sees this film), lurks and slaughters for his master, like a medieval Jason Voorhies transplanted to suburban SoCal, prefiguring those killers with superhuman powers who stalked 1980s slasher pix.

After testifying against these “Kill for Jesus” freaks because they crucified (!) her preacher husband, Fanny Pierce (former Hollywood starlet Jeanne Crain, fresh from 1967’s”youth in revolt”/drag-racing exploiter Hot Rods to Hell) finds herself in Straw Dogs territory as the incensed cultists seek holy revenge—by stalking her to a house where she’s babysitting—dig this—college students.

Enlivened by beyond over-the-top performances and some extraordinary documentary-style footage of the soup kitchens of Los Angeles’ Skid Row, this is the exploitation market in overdrive, plugging into then-topical/now-dated qualms: Fear the Hippies! The Mansons are everywhere! Beware of longhairs! Christians are murderous, brainwashed loonies! Hey, wait a minute…

Yet with all its sleazy and grim turns, 1971’s THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED is a valid primer on the nature of guilt, earned or not—with a great twist ending (that you should just forget we ever mentioned).

Helped by a breakneck—hint, hint—pace, the script that feels like something John Waters wrote, but taken absolutely seriously.

With nary a sense of irony, the movie seems too bleak and malicious to be considered “Camp,” but its overwrought earnestness means it should be seen as the epitome of such: the unselfconscious overacting, the old-fashioned Hippie-Fear, the sociological pondering of the necessity of organized religion in an age of random mass-murder and widespread unemployment—this movie seems to has faith in its own nonsense, and it’s honestly infectious—while being too cheap and slapdash to be completely believed.

Born and raised in Brooklyn, director Lee Madden also helmed the exploitation classics Hells Angels ’69 (1969; a must-see biker-heist flick starring the actual Hells Angels) and the better-than-average bikers-join-hippies-against-dune-buggies Angel Unchained (1970). Now catch his largely unseen THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED!


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LA PAPESSE
aka The High Priestess
Dir. Mario Mercier, 1975
France, 95 min.
In French with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 – 7:30 PM

“Penitence for the sinner!”

Newly married Laurent is initiated into a coven led by a mysterious woman in order to learn the secrets of black magic through mental and physical struggle. Once he becomes a member, he is told he must bring his wife Aline into the fold, and as Laurent tries to convince her, Aline suffers a series of nightmares brought on by the High Priestess in order to break her resolve.

Set in a desolate rocky area of rural Frances shot in beautiful Eastmancolor, the easiest comparison to make would be to the films of Jean Rollin or else to the great Morgane et ses Nymphes, yet with Mercier there’s a more malevolent feel, a sense of brutality that’s as much about leather-clad skinhead thugs as nightgown orgies. Mercier’s third and final film (after the similar EROTIC WITCHCRAFT), LA PAPESSE is as psychedelic as a Renato Polselli film, has more whippings than three Robbe-Grillet films, offers some of the most frenetic nude dancing you’ll ever see plus a great moody synth/organ/percussion score by Éric Demarsan.

TRIGGER WARNING: Animal Cruelty (hen sacrifice)


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PEONY LANTERN GHOST STORY
aka Kaidan botan-dôrô
Dir. Satsuo Yamamoto, 1968
Japan, 88 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 7:30 PM

“August 13 is the first day of the Festival of Obon, when people honor their ancestors – and when the spirits of the dead return.”

Hagiwara Shinzaburou (Kôjirô Hongô) is disowned by his upper-class family for refusing to agree to a marriage of convenience. He returns to his life as a schoolteacher in a working-class village. On the first day of the Festival of Obon, he is approached by a beautiful young woman, Otsuyu, and her maid, Oyone, who impart to him their tragic tale. He falls in love with Otsuya, but his health steadily deteriorates after each tryst. Even after realizing that Otsuyu is a ghost and that the affair will soon kill him, he cannot resist her. At the insistence of the priest and his own schoolchildren, Hagiwara agrees to be locked in the village temple until the end of the Festival, but Otsuyu will not be so easily thwarted.

Kaidan Botan-Dôrô dates back to at least the Meiji Period. Director Yamamoto, an outspoken member of the Japanese Communist Party, infuses the ghost story, initially a Buddhist moral tale, with political substance. The film expands its focus to take in the workings of the community, and instead of a lone priest protecting Hagiwara from the ghosts, as in the original tale, the whole village is enlisted to help. Hagiwara has refused his family fortune to teach poor children, but it is greed which leads to the final tragedy.


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THE SNOW WOMAN
aka Kaidan Yukijorô
Dir. Tokuzô Tanaka, 1968
Japan, 79 min.
In Japanese with English subtitles

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 10 PM

The story of Yuki-Onna, the Snow Woman, who kills any man who sets his eyes upon her, is best-known to western audiences as one of the segments in Masaki Kobayashi’s 1965 portmanteau horror classic KWAIDAN. Made just three years later, Tokuzô Tanaka’s poetic and haunting feature-length interpretation adheres to the basic outline of the folk tale (which is also referenced in Kurosawa’s DREAMS), infusing it with added emotional depth and political subtext and one-upping Kobayashi’s version with some truly inspired and terrifying set-pieces.

Shigetomo, a master sculptor, and his apprentice Yosaku set out for the Mino Mountains to find the suitable wood from which to carve the Buddhist statue for the state temple. Caught in a blizzard, they take refuge in a hut, where the Snow Woman finds them asleep. She murders the sculptor but, struck by Yosaku’s “youth and beauty”, impulsively decides to spare him if he promises to never tell anybody what he witnessed. He returns safely to his village but soon falls in love with a new arrival named Yuki, who is really the Snow Woman disguised as a human.


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VIY
Dir. Konstantin Yershov & Georgi Kropachyov
1967, 78 minutes
In Russian w/ English subs.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 10 PM

A young student must pray for 3 days over the body of a recently deceased woman – believed to be a witch – while her restless spirit and a gang of ghouls temp, prod, and terrorize him to no end. Based on the story (also called Viy) by Nikolai Gogol, the film boasts some excellent effects work and a beautiful score.

TO MY GREAT CHAGRIN: THE UNBELIEVABLE STORY OF BROTHER THEODORE

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TO MY GREAT CHAGRIN: THE UNBELIEVABLE STORY OF BROTHER THEODORE
Dir. Jeff Sumerel, 2008
USA, 74 min.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 7:30PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 10PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 5PM

All screenings include a free Brother Theodore button!

Self-described “philosopher, metaphysician and podiatrist,” and proud wearer of a hairdo like a Renaissance monk caught in a 1950s dryer chair, Brother Theodore was one of the most weird and hilarious stage and screen performers you’ve only sort of heard of.

Having memorably scratched Hollywood’s gilded glass ceiling in the 1989 noir-com classic THE ‘BURBS as creepy, laconic neighbor Uncle Ruben Klopek (alongside a young Tom Hanks, ever-unhinged Bruce Dern, post-bikini Carrie Fisher, and pre-drugs but still snot-nosed Corey Feldman), Theodore had also developed a semi-regular second-string guest rapport with David Letterman, appearing on his show sixteen times. (YouTube alert!)

But the basis for the mainstream flirtations — indeed the basis for Theodore’s entire creative persona, which he never deviated from — was a one-man Greenwich Village stage show he performed for nearly seventeen years, blowing the socks off Eric Bogosian, Woody Allen, and Penn & Teller (among others) along the way.

Flamboyant, confounding, fanatic, hilarious, and strangely tender — Theodore’s monologues hinted at a fount of rage, pain and alienation, to which TO MY GREAT CHAGRIN delves into fascinating, surreal detail. From Weimar playboy and friend of Albert Einstein to penniless (and family-less) survivor of Dachau and refugee in Eisenhower’s America, Jeff Sumerel’s brilliant, needed documentary gives one of America’s greatest monologists a lasting stage to showcase his singular “stand-up tragedy.”

SPECTOBER IV: MIDNIGHTS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3: SERGIO MARTINO – THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4: SERGIO MARTINO – THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10: SERGIO MARTINO – ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11: SERGIO MARTINO – YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17: R2C – SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18: R2C – THE SIMPSONSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24: SERGIO MARTINO – TORSO
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31: THE CURSE OF GHOUL FRIDAY

========= ALL THE COLORS OF GIALLO: SERGIO MARTINO MIDNIGHTS =========

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All month we spotlight the five gialli the prolific Sergio Martino directed between 1971 and 1973. Ranging from Agatha Christie/Edgar Wallace-style mysteries to Polanski-esque paranoid thrillers and proto-slashers, these lurid pulp masterpieces are exquisite exercises in style and represent quintessential examples of the genre. They also feature incredible soundtracks and amazing leading ladies, most notably Edwige Fenech and Anita Strindberg, who appear side-by-side in YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY. Though Martino went on to make dozens of films in other, sensational genres, he never fully returned to giallo. Nonetheless, these are up there with the best of Bava, Argento, and early Fulci.


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THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH
aka BLADE OF THE RIPPER
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1971.
Italy. 96 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 – MIDNIGHT

Sergio Martino’s first giallo is also one of the genre’s most sexually dynamite works. Raven haired French beauty Edwige Fenech is Julie Wardh, an ambassador’s wife in Vienna still reeling from her sadomasochistic relationship with an intense ex-lover, Jean. As she arrives, a killer is stalking women on the streets—and Jean just happens to be in town. In the meantime, she meets George, the debonair cousin of her friend Carol, who thrives of seducing married women. Things heat up between the pair while bodies pile in the streets and Jean remains a menacing presence—and soon, the sets his sights on Julie, spinning the plot through dozens of twists.

THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH is totally out-of-control, and a major genre classic: a hot mess of over-the-top stylization, kinky sex, nightmare interludes, brutal killings, suspense sequences, and, of course, a top-notch soundtrack by Nora Orlani including an insane version of “Dies Irae” that kicks in whenever Julie has flashbacks about having dirty sex with Jean. A giallo essential!


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THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1971.
Italy. 91 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4 – MIDNIGHT

Bombshell Anita Strindberg anchors Martino’s most nimble and classic example of giallo tropes in THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL, which ostensibly tells the story of a woman under investigation following the mysterious explosion of her wealthy husband’s airplane. When she travels to Greece to collect her inheritance, a number of variables come into play: a vindictive mistress and her hired thug, an insurance claim investigator, a stalker-killer on the loose, and a photojournalist, Cléo (Strindberg), assigned to the story. After a number of twists and turns, the investigator and journalist become the center of the story—and the killer’s prime target.

THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL has a whole lot going for it: particularly, a simply incredible score by Bruno Nicoli that is among the best work ever done in the genre, and Martino’s best suspense sequence, in which a stealthy home invasion leads to a rooftop chase recalling Louis Feuillade’s classic LES VAMPIRES serial. THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL is pure sex, suspense, and style — a total thrillride.


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ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1972.
Italy. 95 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 – MIDNIGHT

Sergio Martino reteams with muse Edwige Fenech for a Polanski-esque paranoid nightmare about a woman, Jane, who begins to lose her mind after taking heavy meds following a miscarriage. As she grows cold toward her partner, warms up to her sexy neighbor Mary—played by Marina Malfatti from THE NIGHT EVELYN CAME OUT OF HER GRAVE—who encourages her to get her act together by, er, joining a devil-worshiping sex cult. Somehow, this only makes things worse. When a phantasmic stalker gets into the mix and Jane participates in ever-more ritualistic murder orgies, things spiral further into madness.

ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK is Sergio Martino’s most surreal film, featuring a number of delirious nightmare set pieces. As always, Fenech is fantastic, and as ROSEMARY’S BABY knockoffs go, this is one of the best.


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YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1972.
Italy. 97 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 – MIDNIGHT

“I don’t feel like being involved in one of your spectacles.”

Made between ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK and TORSO, YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY is a misanthropic, brooding, manipulative and beautiful treatment of Edgar Allen Poe’s story “The Black Cat.” It also has a drunk author getting J&B shipped by the crate to his house, which might be the gialloest thing ever. Fans of Sergio Martino’s earlier film THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH (from which this film gets it name) might be thrown a bit by the subdued, sullen quality, but it’s part of a greater plan, a plan that includes commune freak-outs, slaughtered mistresses, gratuitous POV (on line with Martino’s next film, TORSO) and perhaps greatest of all, Edwige Fenech, of whom I can say nothing without getting the vapors. With a storyline that’ll satisfy no-loose-ends mystery fans, enough jaw-dropping cinematography and costuming to please the art crowd, and Martino’s thoughtful and visceral style (there’s also a great Bruno Nicolai score to sweeten the pot), YOUR VICE…might be Martino’s finest.


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TORSO
aka The bodies bear traces of carnal violence
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1973
Italy. 93 min.
In English with a few previously cut scenes in subtitled Italian

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 – MIDNIGHT

TORSO is the fifth and final giallo by under-appreciated genre master Sergio Martino. Having perfected the lurid and stylish pulp-literary whodunnit with films like THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH and THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL, here he strips the giallo formula down to its raw essentials, breaking it down into a new form of distilled carnage-by-numbers that anticipates the American slasher—which has never approached this level of bravura panache.

The plot is absurdly minimal: a masked man is killing college coeds along with anyone else who threatens to reveal his identity. The police’s only clue is a red scarf, which is probably intended as a mocking allusion to the red herring. (At one point, a character who thinks she’s identified the killer remembers he was wearing a black scarf with an abstract red pattern rather than a red scarf with an abstract black pattern—yet they look identical.) No matter the details: the film is pure sex and dismemberment, ranging from necking in cars to lesbian exhibitionists to a drug-fuelled hippie orgy, which, in one of the film’s most memorable sequences, results in someone wandering half-naked and stoned through thick fog in a dew-drenched forest before encountering the killer, clad in a leather jacket and ripped stocking mask, appearing like a swampy apparition. The film unlikely culminates in an incredibly nail-biting and grisly protracted suspense sequence that is pure edge-of-your-seat cinema.

Thanks to our friends at Blue Underground, we’re pleased to present the film in a stunning transfer made directly from the film’s original, uncut elements. We’ll show it with the English-language soundtrack, which has a minute or two of previously excised footage in subtitled Italian.


=================== MIDNIGHTS: REMIX 2 COGNITION ===================

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SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: AIM FOR THE TRASH CAN
Dir. Various, Compiled by C. Spencer Yeh, 2014
USA. ?? min.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17 – MIDNIGHT

Following warm on the heels of SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: APPROVED FOR ALL AUDIENCES (as seen at the Museum of Arts and Design’s NYC Makers: A MAD Biennial), a survey of custom-edited movie trailers compiled from the over-400 created since Spectacle’s scrappy beginnings, comes SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER: AIM FOR THE TRASH CAN. Whereas ALL AUDIENCES attempted a broad overview, strategically edited for the museum’s broad audiences, TRASH CAN kicks a 180 and lures all the nasty exploitation, howling horror, and explosive action-packed genre trailers out of the Spectacle gutter into one seamy vacation package. This hour-plus-long shitty cruise traverses all the rank detours and volatile twists and turns you might’ve missed unless you’ve spent mad N.I.S.S. (Nights In Spectacle’s Service). Spoiler alert – the calls are coming from inside the trash can and this boat never left the sewer.

Various versions of the SOUTH THIRD STREET FOREVER trailer compilations have screened at Pittsburgh’s Three Rivers Film Festival, the Kinomuzeum festival at Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej w Warszawie. Yeh has also presented his own trailers to LAMPO at the Graham Foundation in Chicago, and the Museum of Modern Art in our very own NYC.

Warning: graphic violence, sexuality, and other adult subject matter


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THE SIMPSONSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
Dir. Lenora Jarrett, 2013
USA, 90 min.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18 – MIDNIGHT

“Every aired moment of The Simpsons (from Ullman through the movie and up-to-date) sped up (a lot) to fit into a 90 minute program.”

What more do you need to dohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh?



=================== THE CURSE OF GHOUL FRIDAY ===================

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THE CURSE OF GHOUL FRIDAY
Another Psychotic Series of Short Films Celebrating the Supernatural!
Approx. 90 min.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31 – MIDNIGHT

Like a plutonium razor blade in a vampiric apple, The Spectacle celebrates All Hallows Eve with the return of the short film series that will steal your soul: THE CURSE OF GHOUL FRIDAY!

Risk your sanity with 90 minutes of werewolves, witches and warlocks—and all their unholy pals, like hungry ghosts, murderous toys, bad acid trips, Martian invaders, necrophiliacs, ice-cream-stealing monsters, and everybody’s best friend: The Apocalypse!

Are you brave enough to let yourself be exposed to the cosmic dread that lurks beyond the veil of human consciousness? Are you tough enough to withstand a maelstrom of animation and special effects techniques? Are you strong enough to deal with an utter disregard for propriety?

Sure you are—you go to movies at The Spectacle!

Featuring works by (or inspired by) Poe, Lovecraft, Angela Carter, Christopher Nolan, Stephen King, Guillermo Del Toro, H.G. Wells, Brian De Palma, the Butthole Surfers—and not to mention that most terrifying book in history: The Bible!

Like Dan O’Bannon’s zombies, THE CURSE OF GHOUL FRIDAY can’t be stopped with a bullet to the head—after all, you can’t kill something that was never alive!

With more than 20 shorts in an approximately 90 minute program, be the first kid on your block to experience unfathomable and indescribable evil; all for the low, low prices of $5—and your immortal soul!!! And it’s only at the Spectacle: BWAH-HAH-HAH-HAH!!!

TRIGGER WARNING: These are horror films, okay? It’s their job to push your buttons and freak you out with a myriad of twisted and disturbing methods! No refunds!


ALL THE COLORS OF GIALLO: SERGIO MARTINO MIDNIGHTS

martino-banner

All month we spotlight the five gialli the prolific Sergio Martino directed between 1971 and 1973. Ranging from Agatha Christie/Edgar Wallace-style mysteries to Polanski-esque paranoid thrillers and proto-slashers, these lurid pulp masterpieces are exquisite exercises in style and represent quintessential examples of the genre. They also feature incredible soundtracks and amazing leading ladies, most notably Edwige Fenech and Anita Strindberg, who appear side-by-side in YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY. Though Martino went on to make dozens of films in other, sensational genres, he never fully returned to giallo. Nonetheless, these are up there with the best of Bava, Argento, and early Fulci.


wardh-banner

THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH
aka BLADE OF THE RIPPER
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1971.
Italy. 96 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 – MIDNIGHT

Sergio Martino’s first giallo is also one of the genre’s most sexually dynamite works. Raven haired French beauty Edwige Fenech is Julie Wardh, an ambassador’s wife in Vienna still reeling from her sadomasochistic relationship with an intense ex-lover, Jean. As she arrives, a killer is stalking women on the streets—and Jean just happens to be in town. In the meantime, she meets George, the debonair cousin of her friend Carol, who thrives of seducing married women. Things heat up between the pair while bodies pile in the streets and Jean remains a menacing presence—and soon, the sets his sights on Julie, spinning the plot through dozens of twists.

THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH is totally out-of-control, and a major genre classic: a hot mess of over-the-top stylization, kinky sex, nightmare interludes, brutal killings, suspense sequences, and, of course, a top-notch soundtrack by Nora Orlani including an insane version of “Dies Irae” that kicks in whenever Julie has flashbacks about having dirty sex with Jean. A giallo essential!


scorpion-banner

THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1971.
Italy. 91 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4 – MIDNIGHT

Bombshell Anita Strindberg anchors Martino’s most nimble and classic example of giallo tropes in THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL, which ostensibly tells the story of a woman under investigation following the mysterious explosion of her wealthy husband’s airplane. When she travels to Greece to collect her inheritance, a number of variables come into play: a vindictive mistress and her hired thug, an insurance claim investigator, a stalker-killer on the loose, and a photojournalist, Cléo (Strindberg), assigned to the story. After a number of twists and turns, the investigator and journalist become the center of the story—and the killer’s prime target.

THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL has a whole lot going for it: particularly, a simply incredible score by Bruno Nicoli that is among the best work ever done in the genre, and Martino’s best suspense sequence, in which a stealthy home invasion leads to a rooftop chase recalling Louis Feuillade’s classic LES VAMPIRES serial. THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL is pure sex, suspense, and style — a total thrillride.


colors-banner

ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1972.
Italy. 95 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 – MIDNIGHT

Sergio Martino reteams with muse Edwige Fenech for a Polanski-esque paranoid nightmare about a woman, Jane, who begins to lose her mind after taking heavy meds following a miscarriage. As she grows cold toward her partner, warms up to her sexy neighbor Mary—played by Marina Malfatti from THE NIGHT EVELYN CAME OUT OF HER GRAVE—who encourages her to get her act together by, er, joining a devil-worshiping sex cult. Somehow, this only makes things worse. When a phantasmic stalker gets into the mix and Jane participates in ever-more ritualistic murder orgies, things spiral further into madness.

ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK is Sergio Martino’s most surreal film, featuring a number of delirious nightmare set pieces. As always, Fenech is fantastic, and as ROSEMARY’S BABY knockoffs go, this is one of the best.


vice-banner

YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1972.
Italy. 97 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 – MIDNIGHT

“I don’t feel like being involved in one of your spectacles.”

Made between ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK and TORSO, YOUR VICE IS A LOCKED ROOM AND ONLY I HAVE THE KEY is a misanthropic, brooding, manipulative and beautiful treatment of Edgar Allen Poe’s story “The Black Cat.” It also has a drunk author getting J&B shipped by the crate to his house, which might be the gialloest thing ever. Fans of Sergio Martino’s earlier film THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH (from which this film gets it name) might be thrown a bit by the subdued, sullen quality, but it’s part of a greater plan, a plan that includes commune freak-outs, slaughtered mistresses, gratuitous POV (on line with Martino’s next film, TORSO) and perhaps greatest of all, Edwige Fenech, of whom I can say nothing without getting the vapors. With a storyline that’ll satisfy no-loose-ends mystery fans, enough jaw-dropping cinematography and costuming to please the art crowd, and Martino’s thoughtful and visceral style (there’s also a great Bruno Nicolai score to sweeten the pot), YOUR VICE…might be Martino’s finest.


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TORSO
aka The bodies bear traces of carnal violence
Dir. Sergio Martino, 1973
Italy. 93 min.
In English with a few previously cut scenes in subtitled Italian

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24 – MIDNIGHT

TORSO is the fifth and final giallo by under-appreciated genre master Sergio Martino. Having perfected the lurid and stylish pulp-literary whodunnit with films like THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH and THE CASE OF THE SCORPION’S TAIL, here he strips the giallo formula down to its raw essentials, breaking it down into a new form of distilled carnage-by-numbers that anticipates the American slasher—which has never approached this level of bravura panache.

The plot is absurdly minimal: a masked man is killing college coeds along with anyone else who threatens to reveal his identity. The police’s only clue is a red scarf, which is probably intended as a mocking allusion to the red herring. (At one point, a character who thinks she’s identified the killer remembers he was wearing a black scarf with an abstract red pattern rather than a red scarf with an abstract black pattern—yet they look identical.) No matter the details: the film is pure sex and dismemberment, ranging from necking in cars to lesbian exhibitionists to a drug-fuelled hippie orgy, which, in one of the film’s most memorable sequences, results in someone wandering half-naked and stoned through thick fog in a dew-drenched forest before encountering the killer, clad in a leather jacket and ripped stocking mask, appearing like a swampy apparition. The film unlikely culminates in an incredibly nail-biting and grisly protracted suspense sequence that is pure edge-of-your-seat cinema.

Thanks to our friends at Blue Underground, we’re pleased to present the film in a stunning transfer made directly from the film’s original, uncut elements. We’ll show it with the English-language soundtrack, which has a minute or two of previously excised footage in subtitled Italian.

THE WOOSTER GROUP’S WHITE HOMELAND COMMANDO

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WHITE HOMELAND COMMANDO
By The Wooster Group
Dir. Elizabeth LeCompte, 1992.
USA. 63 min.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1 – 8:00 PM
Introduced by EAI’s Rebecca Cleman and presented by The Wooster Group’s archivist Clay Hapaz

ENCORE SCREENINGS:
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 13 – 10:00 PM

Presented courtesy of The Wooster Group and Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI)

Spectacle is pleased to welcome legendary downtown performance troupe The Wooster Group for a very special screening of WHITE HOMELAND COMMANDO, their 1992 short feature that represents the group’s first work conceived solely for video rather than stage.

Referencing the form of the then-new police procedural drama and law enforcement reality TV, WHITE HOMELAND COMMANDO, written for the company by Michael Kirby in 1986, is composited from actual accounts of urban hate crimes to tell the story of a four-member task force assigned to infiltrate a New York City white supremacist organization. Split into eight chapters, the video by cinematographer Ken Kobland is rendered in an incredibly synthetic style with heavily processed imagery and brilliant colors, elevating the faux-documentary television drama format into the unreal. Company members Ron Vawter, Jeff Webster, Kate Valk, Peyton Smith, Nancy Reilly, Anna Köhler, Michael Stumm, and Willem Dafoe star. David Van Tieghem composed the original music.

The Wednesday, October 1 show will be presented by Wooster Group archivist Clay Hapaz and introduced by Rebecca Cleman of Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI). We’re also holding encore screenings on Wednesday, October 8 and Monday, October 13, both at 10:00 pm.

We’re also very pleased to present alongside other Wooster Group screenings organized by our friends at The Silent Barn and Microscope Gallery. Don’t miss The Wooster Group’s incredible 1977/2013 feature Rumstick Road on Monday, September 29 at The Silent Barn followed by another evening of Wooster rarities at Microscope Gallery on Friday, October 3.

ROOT HOG OR DIE

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ROOT HOG OR DIE
Dir. Dan Stafford, 2014
USA, 45 min. (Roadshow Edit)

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 8PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

Desert Island and Spectacle are proud to welcome artist John Porcellino (KING-CAT) for a stop on his tour across these united states in support of the crowdfunded documentary film ROOT HOG OR DIE as well as his new book The Hospital Suite. John will be presenting a “roadshow” edit of the documentary as well as a slideshow, readings, Q&A, and more.

ROOT HOG OR DIE follows the life of John Porcellino, who has self-published King-Cat Comics and Stories for twenty-five years. His comics, with equal parts Thoreau and Hüsker Dü, showcase the moments-between-moments which make up the majority of our lives, but which many fail to notice.

“…perhaps no comics artist since Charles Schulz has rendered so much psychological detail with so few lines.” -Rain Taxi Review of Books

“I wanted to face existence. That’s like Punk and Buddhism and everything.” -John P.

“The Hospital Suite is a landmark work by the celebrated cartoonist and small-press legend John Porcellino—an autobiographical collection detailing his struggles with illness in the 1990s and early 2000s.

In 1997, John began to have severe stomach pain. He soon found out he needed emergency surgery to remove a benign tumor from his small intestine. In the wake of the surgery, he had numerous health complications that led to a flare-up of his preexisting tendencies toward anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The Hospital Suite is Porcellino’s response to these experiences—simply told stories drawn in the honest, heart-wrenching style of his much-loved King-Cat mini-comics. His gift for spare yet eloquent candor makes The Hospital Suite an intimate portrayal of one person’s experiences that is also intensely relatable.

Porcellino’s work is lauded for its universality and quiet, clear-eyed contemplation of everyday life. The Hospital Suite is a testimony to this subtle strength, making his struggles with the medical system and its consequences for his mental health accessible and engaging.” -Drawn & Quarterly

RED BONE GUERRILLAS

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RED BONE GUERRILLAS
Dir. Pierre Bennu, 2003.
USA, 103 min.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – 7:30PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 – 7:30PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 10:00PM

What starts out like a DIY Christopher Guest send-up of theater culture morphs into something entirely else in Pierre Bennu’s RED BONE GUERRILLAS, the sole feature film by the illustrious Baltimore-based multimedia artist. After being bullied by an overhyped, narcissistic Broadway has-been named Magenta Bergenstein (“You clap for yourself, not for me!”), a troupe of young acting students embark to mix Situationist theater with a revolutionary politic – an “aesthetic towards freedom” – even as their lives can’t help but pull them in other directions. With a startlingly natural pitch, Bennu blends a real theatrical character-building exercise – the dialogue was improvised on-set – with a commentary on collective radicalization that makes for a densely packed, full-throated and furiously honest satire.

It’s a masterful study in forms, cliches and their appearances – their rises and falls within media. Some scenes feel like gripping reality television, some like outdoor performance pieces; the funniest thing about the RBGs is how easy it is for them to get to the top.  Despite Bennu’s knack for the essayist’s approach, the film makes sure to entertain while its story’s final act unravels like a political thriller, tackling the blurring of the private and public self in ways that recall both SUNSET BOULEVARD and any number of unfolding real-time celebrity meltdowns – largely happening in a pre-Internet microcosm. (A cell phone, or suite of computer monitors, signal both distraction and power – a lurch forward in conspicuous consumption.)

Please note: a selection of Bennu’s early short films will play before RED BONE GUERRILLAS.

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

HOW ANNA GOT HER GROOVE BACK: KARINA AFTER GODARD

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The Wall Street Journal Critic’s Pick!
Brooklyn Magazine Critic’s Pick!
Bedford + Bowery Critic’s Pick!
The L Magazine Critic’s Pick!

Anna Karina possesses an otherworldly style, magnetism and grace that has helped her become perhaps the most recognizable face in world cinema. Her legendary collaborations with Jean-Luc Godard on VIVRE SA VIE, BAND OF OUTSIDERS, PIERROT LE FOU, and several others made her an international star and an icon of the French New Wave, but their off-screen marriage was tumultuous, and they permanently separated in 1966.

Following their split, Godard took a turn for his most politically-minded directorial period and Karina branched out into different lead roles, working with everyone from Luchino Visconti to Rainer Werner Fassbinder. For this series, Spectacle has selected three of her lesser-known but equally enthralling works made after her separation from Godard: the radiant pop musical ANNA, the mysterious chamber drama RENDEZVOUS À BRAY, and the heady sci-fi thriller THE TIME TO DIE.

Special thanks to Ricki Askin, Clémentine De Blieck, Cathérine Delvaux, Chris Etscheid, Cinémathèque Royale de Belgique, and Universal Music.


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ANNA
Dir. Pierre Koralnik, 1967
France, 85 min.
In French with English subtitles.

U.S. PREMIERE!
WITH CUSTOM ENGLISH SUBTITLES CREATED BY SPECTACLE!

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – 10:00 PM

A kaleidoscopic, energetic burst of bright colors, infectious musical numbers, and absurdly charming performances, ANNA is a pop-art musical masterpiece that has been locked away for far too long.

Originally made as the first color film for French TV, Anna Karina stars as a shy artist who is unknowngly photographed one day and soon becomes the obsession of an advertising executive (played by French New Wave stalwart Jean-Claude Brialy). He plasters her image up all over town in an attempt to discover the mystery girl, whom he doesn’t seem to notice is the same girl that he keeps bumping into whose wearing those nerdy-chic glasses…

But really, this is all just an excuse for zany, irrestistable fun. The Yé-Yé music, scored and soundtracked by French pop icon Serge Gainsbourg (who also makes several on-screen appearances), is some of the most infectious and catchy work of his career, with Karina’s vocals shining throughout, including the famous ‘Roller Girl’ number that has since been referenced in countless fashion spreads. Every sequence features candy-coated visuals and sumptuous costuming soaked in the era’s impeccable style, all supported by ace contributions from key Godard personnel, including editor Françoise Collin (BAND OF OUTSIDERS, PIERROT LE FOU, 2 OR 3 THINGS I KNOW ABOUT HER) and DP Wally Kurant (MASCULINE FEMININE). Impossible to resist, the film feels like a pitch-perfect melding of Godard’s A WOMAN IS A WOMAN and Demy’s THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG, with Karina’s adorable beauty and effervescent charm as the center of attention. And be on the lookout for a Marianne Faithfull cameo!

The film was a hit on French television in the late 60s and received a brief Japanese theatrical run in the 90s, but has since vanished and, to the best of our knowledge, has never screened before in the US. Working with Universal Music, Spectacle is enthralled to present this lost gem of 60s French cinema.



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RENDEZVOUS À BRAY
Dir. André Delvaux, 1971
France/Belgium/West Germany, 86 min.
In French with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 10:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – 5:00 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 – 7:30 PM

*OFFICIAL SELECTION – 1971 BERLIN FILM FESTIVAL*

Paris 1917: a young pianist (Mathieu Carrière) receives a note from an old friend in the Air Force to join him at his lush country estate that happens to be close to the front lines of World War I. He arrives but his friend is nowhere to be found, with only the quiet, beautiful housekeeper (Anna Karina) present. While he spends days waiting for his friend’s arrival, his mind wanders to past events. At night, the mysterious woman appears again…

Based on a short story from surrealist Julien Gracq, Belgian auteur André Delvaux marries his trademark subtle blurring of fantasy and reality to Gracq’s shape-shifting text. Much like the film protagonist, Delvaux got his start by playing the piano to silent films in 1950s Brussels, and his musicality shows in the film’s sonata-like form, weaving variations of memories and moments into an ambiguous, intriguing mood piece. Cloaked in dense Gothic atmospheres and muted colors, RENDEZVOUS À BRAY gives off a melancholy, dream-like aura, subtle in approach but haunted by unspoken desires and half-remembered, half-imagined nostalgia.

Working with Delvaux’s daughter, we’re honored to present this classic of Belgium cinema.

“One of the most erotic films ever made… try to imagine a quiet blend of Jules and Jim and Gertrud filmed in color (the cinematographer is the great Ghislain Cloquet, who also did superb work for Demy, Bresson, Polanski, and Penn) and you’ll start to get some idea of the mood… as much as I revere some of the Belgian films of Chantal Akerman, if I had to choose only one Belgian film to take with me to a desert island, I’d have a pretty rough time forsaking this 1971 masterpiece by André Delvaux.” -Jonathan Rosenbaum



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THE TIME TO DIE
(aka Le temps de mourir)
Dir. André Farwagi, 1970
France, 81 min.
In French with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 – 10:00 PM

A woman (Anna Karina) rides a white horse, carrying a videotape case. She approaches a metal tree and the horse throws her off, knocking her unconscious and sending the videotape case rolling down a hill. The case lands next to a sleeping bodyguard. He awakens and takes the case to his boss’s mansion. The tape shows security camera footage of his boss being assassinated. But the boss is still alive, and he is determined to find out the origins of the tape and his alleged future killer. Soon enough, the boss and bodyguards stumble upon the unconscious woman, who awakens and seems to know the future…

A stylish, puzzling sci-fi mystery dealing with time travel and destiny, THE TIME TO DIE features loads of retro-cool technology futurisms and immaculate production design, but also manages to treat its subject matter with philosophical seriousness and respect. It supposes that the future is something not only inevitable, but unavoidable. The best we can do is hurl forwards towards our destiny.