THE COMEDIC ODDITIES OF TRENT HARRIS

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LUNA MESA with THE GREATEST LOVE STORY EVER TOLD (1985)
Dir. Trent Harris, 2011
USA, 60 min.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 – 5:00 PM New York City Premiere!
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, AUGUST 21 – 10:00 PM

Trent Harris’ latest film LUNA MESA is his take on a travelogue that harkens back to the early booming days of mini-dv experimental features. With a mostly aimless and wandering narrative, the film follows along a photographer who is having a relationship with a videographer and then on one day, he is found shot dead in his hotel room in Cambodia. She discovers a mysterious notebook that is filled with random symbols and very cryptic messages and travels around the world to find out who murdered him. Harris’ mystery is void of his previously trademarked humor but instead flirts with unconventional convictions and focuses on jilted dialogue to round out his outsider outlook.

An added bonus to the screenings of LUNA MESA is an early little seen documentary from Trent Harris called THE GREATEST LOVE STORY EVER TOLD (20 min.) which interviews Joyce McKinney, a woman who was accused of kidnapping and raping a Mormon in London which became the subject of Errol Morris’ popular documentary TABLOID.


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THE BEAVER TRILOGY
Dir. Trent Harris, 1979, 1981, and 1985.
USA, 83 min.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 8 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, AUGUST 14 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, AUGUST 25 – 7:30 PM

Perhaps one of the cornerstones of the comedy cult canon, THE BEAVER TRILOGY is a series of three shorts about a man named Groovin’ Gary. The first short is a documentary; filmmaker Trent Harris runs into the eccentric Groovin’ Gary by chance in a parking lot. After a series of relentless phone calls, Trent is convinced to go to a talent show at a high school where Groovin’ Gary will be performing in drag as Olivia Newton John. With performances from teenagers interspersed with this weirdo, the audience is predictably shocked and appalled by Gary’s talent.

The second short is a 100 dollar budgeted narrative remake with Sean Penn as Groovin’ Larry and is essentially a lo-fi parody of the original subject matter. The final vignette sees Crispin Glover in the starring role and is more robust, glossy, and thoughtful. It is also a slightly more delirious attempt at the narrative (perhaps taking more fictionalized liberties) with a turn to comedic melodrama. Each segment shows an evolution of the director’s perspective and respect for the subject while being delivered with warped humor and an oddly poignant finale.


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PLAN 10 FROM OUTERSPACE
Dir. Trent Harris, 1995
USA, 80 min.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 8 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, AUGUST 12 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, AUGUST 17 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, AUGUST 26 – 10:00 PM

Perhaps set in a universe shared with Adventures of Pete and Pete or Pee Wee’s Big Adventure but shades dirtier and a 100% more Mormon, PLAN 10 FROM OUTERSPACE is Trent Harris’ madcap follow-up to his cult classic RUBIN AND ED. A female writer unearths a plague that might hold the secrets that ties the early Mormons with an alien race whose ultimate plan is for world domination. Filled to the brim with a cast of quirky outlandish characters, PLAN 10 FROM OUTERSPACE is a frantic conspiracy religious satire and remains true to Harris’ utter nonsense canon.

PLANET REVENGE LIVE SCORE

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SATURDAY, JULY 19 – 7:30 PM & 10:00 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

On July 19th, Spectacle invites you for a ONE NIGHT ONLY collaboration: Planet Revenge! But rather than the lunging sci-fi epic suggested by the title, please join us instead for a languorous and lush tribute to everybody’s favorite orb, scored by Benjamin Felton’s Blood Revenge. Felton plays long form songs on electric guitar, inspired by equal parts finger-picked guitar playing, Indian classical music, the outdoors, and synthesizers; through loops and improvisation, an attempt is made at briefly changing how the performer and the audience experience a space and interact with each other.

Felton’s music can be considered as a blissed-out soundtrack for your commute to work, or as a sonic landscape of your favorite vacation spot – in this case, Mother Earth! Against a cornea-copia of cascading waterfalls, frozen ice, trickles of dew jogging down-leaf and swooping canvases of lakes, rivers, gullies and countrysides, Felton will use his guitar-power to interpret an already-established story told exclusively through visual images and field sounds, echoing unforgettable onscreen textures off of Spectacle’s four walls in a feast of sight and sound. Planet Revenge: so breathtaking, it’ll turn you into an environmentalist.

A Monday Evening with The Saturday Giant

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MONDAY, JULY 14 – 8:00PM & 10:00PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

On Monday, July 14th, Spectacle welcomes Phil Cogley (aka: The Saturday Giant) for an evening stop off on his latest tour.

The Saturday Giant is a one-man art-rock band from Columbus, Ohio, established in 2010. Since then, The Saturday Giant has produced three releases, played dozens of shows across the U.S., collaborated with technology conferences and performing arts groups, and become one of the most respected acts in his hometown—all while crafting an innovative and compelling live show in which he sculpts layers of guitars, drums, bass lines, beat boxing, keyboards and vocals into towering walls of sound, without the aid of prerecorded samples. Even while maintaining his rigorous touring schedule, The Saturday Giant is preparing his full-length debut for 2014.

Cogley will be performing to a selection of short films from the early age of cinema including Thomas Edison’s FRANKENSTEIN (1910), DW Griffith’s THE LONEDALE OPERATOR (1911) – later remade as THE GIRL & HER TRUST – and finally the haunting, melancholic, and beautiful THE LAND BEYOND THE SUNSET (1912).

A COCKETTES DOUBLE FEATURE


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LUMINOUS PROCURESS
Dir. Steven Arnold, 1971
USA, 73 min.

THURSDAY, JULY 3 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 25 – 10:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30 – 10:00 PM

Two young men wander into a building on the shore, where they have heard they can see the most elaborate sexual fantasies performed, like a smutty Locus Solus, in Steven Arnold’s definitely West Coast take on the psychedelic film as practiced by Jack Smith, Ira Cohen and Kenneth Anger. Meandering among a series of decadent tableaux, deeper and deeper into a world where identities and sexualities merge and split, well performed by none other than the Cockettes and scored by synth guru Warner Jepson, until the two young men finally realize they’re not just spectators, they’re to become the new additions. Trying to sum it up as a plot, however, misses the point of a film like this: it’s a phantasmagorical vision, a Symbolist paean, taking inspiration from butoh theater to Erich Von Stroheim to form a shabbily glamorous vision.


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ELEVATOR GIRLS IN BONDAGE
Dir. Michael Kalmen, 1972
USA, 56 min.

THURSDAY, JULY 3 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30 – 7:30 PM

Cockettes fans will find many similarities between Elevator Girls In Bondage and the live Cockettes shows of the late 60s and early seventies, combining psychedelia, slapstick and political critique into a film both of its time and unlike anything else.

Starring Spectacle favorite Rumi Missabu along with fellow Cockettes Pristine Condition, Hibiscus and Miss Harlow, the film gleefully subverts and exploits genre tropes, Marxist rhetoric and folks songs as the employees of a hotel decide to get revenge against poor wages and mistreatment as led by elevator girl Maxine (Missabu).

Fans of 70s underground cinema, queer cinema in general, and goofy satire mixed with sharp critique will definitely want to come out and see it for themselves.

MONDO AMERICA

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THE KILLING OF AMERICA
Dir. Sheldon Renan & Leonard Schrader, 1982
USA, 90 min.

SATURDAY, JULY 5 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 10 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 31 – 7:30 PM

ALL OF THE FILM YOU ARE ABOUT TO SEE IS REAL. NOTHING HAS BEEN STAGED.

So begins the 1982 shockumentary THE KILLING OF AMERICA, a film that, even among its mondo movie contemporaries, stands out as one of the grimmest and most infamous films ever produced. So much so, in fact, that to this day it remains effectively unreleased in The United States.

If violence is the disease, then THE KILLING OF AMERICA is the microscope. Compiled almost entirely from news broadcasts, security camera footage, etc, THE KILLING OF AMERICA chronicles nearly every major violent incident of the era, from the JFK assassination onward. The America presented here is land characterized by widespread burnout and disillusionment. Add to that the increasing pervasiveness of the mass media, as well as an obscene overabundance of firearms, and you are left with a sobering portrait of a sick society, in which insanity and paranoia breed easily. Meanwhile, three decades later…

Directed by Sheldon Renan & Leonard Schrader (brother of Paul Schrader), and featuring a noteworthy narration by voiceover master Chuck Riley.

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GOODBYE UNCLE TOM
Dir. Gualtiero Jacopetti & Franco Prosperi, 1971.
USA. 135 min. Director’s Cut.
In Italian with English subtitles

SATURDAY, JULY 5 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, JULY 8 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 31 – 10:00 PM

Rarely seen Director’s Cut featuring contemporary documentary footage and original narration • Special thanks to Bill Lustig and Blue Underground

Few films have the mixed legacy accorded to MONDO CANE, the first film by Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi. The box office smash was nominated for the Palme d’Or and nearly won an Oscar for Riz Ortolani’s song “More,” which became a staple at weddings. It invented it’s own dubious genre, shock anthropology, and transformed the common Italian word for “world,” mondo, into a neologism conjuring all that’s bizarre, outrageous, and stranger than the fiction it questionably purports not to be. It’s the international signifier for extreme international weird.

When critics caught up with the put-on, they were relentless in their assault on the duo. By the time they released AFRICA ADDIO, a lurid chronicle of violence in the wake of decolonization in Tanzania and Kenya, they were accused of every kind of ethical violation from flagrant racism to paying soldiers to murder people before their cameras. The duo was hurt, and felt they had to do something to dispel accusations of intolerance.

So they made GOODBYE UNCLE TOM — one of the most challenging, notorious, anti-American, and maligned films of all time.

At a glance, it has very little to do with mondo. Allegedly, the idea took root when Jacopetti suggested the duo make MANDINGO into a documentary — this being many years before Richard Fleischer’s own scintilating Hollywood adaptation. The result is like if Peter Watkins and Ken Russell adapted Kyle Onstott’s taboo-shattering pulp novel about slave breeding and deciding to drive the historically rooted horrors of slavery home further by cranking them up a notch.

Making the tongue-in-cheek claim of being an actual documentary about American slavery, the film charts the entire institution of slavery from arrival (it is widely acknowledged as being the first movie ever set significantly on a slave ship) through supposed emancipation. Pulling many of the least pleasant historical realities of American slavery out from under the rug and rendering them in unhinged expressionistic extremes, it presents the institution as a grotesque atrocity exhibition including rape, infanticide, bizarre medical experimentation, and even a Bathory-esque blood bathing. And it’s all framed with contemporary newsreel footage of present-day civil rights violations and quotes—many of them presented with wry-self critique—from leaders or controversial figures including Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, and Amiri Baraka, resulting in what Pauline Kael called “the most specific and rabid incitement of the race war” (while acknowledging that people of color seem to appreciate it much more than herself).

Or as Roger Ebert wrote, “They have finally done it: Made the most disgusting, contemptuous insult to decency ever to masquerade as a documentary.” Yet to be fair, one might point out that the “mockumentary” genre the film pioneers—Watkins is the only filmmaker who comes to mind who previously described such a patently fabricated scenario, i.e., one taking place before motion picture cameras were invented, as a “documentary”—was still an almost totally unfamiliar lexicon.

And with that barefaced claim, few movies are as gleefully, sadistically fixed upon a program of not-giving-a-fuck — which one might recognize as a front for a genuine core of outrage. It predates Pasolini’s canonical SALO, a like-minded piece of shock as an instrument of anti-bourgeois (an aim for which its privileged critical positioning might indicate it has failed), but is explicitly linked to the contemporary reality of American racism. Richard Corliss shouts out GOODBYE UNCLE TOM in his positive review of 12 YEARS A SLAVE — and yet one could not leverage the criticism that many, including Kareem Abdul Jabbar, made of 12 YEARS: that it stirs a rage that is compartmentalized into the past and portrayed as history without an acknowledgement of the human motivations that allow slavery to continue to exist around the world. Conversely, GOODBYE UNCLE TOM concludes with documentary footage of peaceful black protesters being brutalized by the national guard, followed by happy-go-lucky Southern Civil War re-enactors who restage history with an outrageously apparent disregard for the complexity and human debasement it represents. As the Italian narrator happily intones on the final line of the film, “It’s wonderful to return home on this splendid day in May and take a nice shower to wash away the past.”

Of course, part of the trouble of GOODBYE UNCLE TOM is that we can’t simply settle upon a simple, revisionist attitude. It’s undeniably an unpleasant, problematic, and troubling film—but one worth revisiting for those willing to confront tangled knots of history and their representation on screen.

WAVES OF MUTILATION

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Can’t make it to the beach this summer? This July, Spectacle invites you to snorkle in the depths of madness with three chilling features set by the sea. With a splash of carnage and psychological horror, WAVES OF MUTILATION will leave you shivering on the balmiest of nights.

Surf’s up—and it looks like a red tide.


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INTERRABANG
Dir. Giuliano Biagetti, 1969
Italy, 93 min.
In Italian with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 17 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, JULY 29 – 7:30 PM

“It’s a symbol made of a question mark plus an exclamation mark: it represents the uncertainties of our era”

Named after a punctuation mark that essentially translates to ‘WTF?’ in modern times, INTERRABANG is a proto-giallo thriller set on an island featuring cat-and-mouse murder games. Photographer Fabrizio sets sail with his wife, her sister, and a model to do some location shooting. When they have engine trouble leaving the island, Fabrizio hitches a ride on a passing boat and goes to seek help, leaving the women waiting… as word of an escaped killer comes in over the radio…

Playing like a low-key, b-side version of Polanski’s Knife In The Water, INTERRABANG mixes Antonioni’s sense of composition and ennui with some bizarre plot turns and double-crossings. If you’re the right amount of sun-drunk and vibing for some 60s Italian bombshells languidly discovering a murder plot, then you’ve struck gold. Bring a mojito while you’re at it.


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THE WITCH WHO CAME FROM THE SEA
Dir. Matt Cimber, 1976
USA, 88 min.

MONDAY, JULY 7 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, JULY 15 – 10:00 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 26 – 10:00 PM

Molly is a good-natured but troubled barmaid in a seaside town, haunted by repressed memories of the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her father. Her trauma manifests in a drinking problem and a twisted obsession with men; she dotes on her adoring nephews, idolizes her deceased father’s memory, and moons over burly football players like a lovestruck teen—even as she fantasizes about castrating them. During a night of particularly heavy binge drinking, Molly loses a few hours, and her grisly desires begin to leave the realm of fantasy.

Despite the dubious distinction of making the UK’s infamous ‘video nasties’ list, THE WITCH WHO CAME FROM THE SEA isn’t quite an exploitation flick. Surprisingly complex, and elevated by a truly inspired performance from lead actress Millie Perkins, this little film is too weird, and too bold to be anything but art.


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MARY, MARY, BLOODY MARY
Dir. Juan López Moctezuma, 1975
Mexico/USA, 101 min.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, JULY 7 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 27 – 7:30 PM

Juan López Moctezuma (ALUCARDA, THE MANSION OF MADNESS) directs this Mexican-U.S. shocker about a bisexual seductress artist with an insatiable bloodlust. Eerie beaches and surreal flamboyance make this a uniquely tingling seaside chiller that straddles the line between arthouse and grindhouse.

JULY MIDNIGHTS

FRIDAY, JULY 11: ATOM AGE VAMPIRE
SATURDAY, JULY 12: THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF
FRIDAY, JULY 18: MAGIC OF THE UNIVERSE
SATURDAY, JULY 19: PICK-UP
FRIDAY, JULY 25: BLOOD MANIA
SATURDAY, JULY 26: MAZES & MONSTERS



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ATOM AGE VAMPIRE (Seddok, l’erede di Satana)
Dir. Anton Giulio Majano, 1960
Italy, 87 min.
Dubbed in English.

FRIDAY, JULY 11 – MIDNIGHT

When singer Jeanette is horribly disfigured in a car accident, deranged scientist Dr. Levin uses miraculous healing agent Derma 28 to restore her beauty, falling in love with her during the process.

Having previously studied the effects of radiation on living tissue at Hiroshima, Dr. Levin originally developed Derma 25, an imperfect and mutative formula, before refining it to the rejuvenating Derma 28 . As the supply of Derma 28 runs out and Jeanette’s treatment begins to fail, Dr. Levin realizes he must kill to create more. Injecting himself with Derma 25, he mutates into the horrible creature called ‘Seddok’ by the Japanese refugees among whom he culls his victims, gathering glands to keep his obsession beautiful.

ATOM AGE VAMPIRE doesn’t  have a literal vampire, but it does feature typical French horror fixations on fading beauty, treatments born of brutality that only temporarily hold aging at bay, and villains pondering the nature of their own evil and the world around them (metaphorical vampires, that is).



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THE AWFUL DR. ORLOF (Gritos en la noche)
Dir. Jess Franco, 1962
Spain/France, 90 min.
Dubbed in English.

SATURDAY, JULY 12 – MIDNIGHT

Franco’s eleventh film (of at least 200), and his first proper horror film, demonstrates Franco’s love of traditional mad scientist tropes, mixing a bit of Eyes Without A Face and Frankenstein into one of the undisputed peaks of Franco’s career.

Howard Vernon is at his best as Dr. Orlof, who abducts beautiful women in order to transplant their skin onto his disfigured daughter’s face, we get plenty of Franco’s classic tropes: mirrors, nightclubs, deformed assistants (in this case, a shambling beast named Morpho) secret laboratories and (of course) a Franco cameo as a barroom piano player, it’s a film that satisfies on both the Expressionist-inspired classic horror level while giving hints of Jess’s more explicit material to come.

With Spanish horror legend Diana Lorys in a dual role as both a ballerina in love with a detective on Orlof’s trail (played by Conrado San Martín) and Orlof’s daughter Melissa, it’s a treat for fans of black and white 60s horror and an excellent introduction to Franco’s work.



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MAGIC OF THE UNIVERSE (Salamamgkero / The Magician / Monster of the Universe)
Dir. Tata Estaban, 1986/1988
Philippines, 84 min.
Dubbed in English.

FRIDAY, JULY 18 – MIDNIGHT

BELIEVE in MAGIC.  A wizard accidentally loses his daughter to an unimaginable evil.  He risks hat and wand to make things right.  Cast of tens includes humans and puppets.



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PICK-UP
Dir. Bernard Hirschenson
USA, 80 min.

SATURDAY, JULY 19 – MIDNIGHT

Trigger Warning: Church molestation, (implied) rape/murder.

“It’s sure gonna be a bad trip. I can feel it.”

Chuck is delivering a mobile home through Florida when he stops and picks up Carol and Maureen. Despite Maureen’s reservations, they board, only to get stuck in the Everglades, where they wander through the swamp, come across characters out of a Firesign Theater album, are visited by gods and clowns and, through a series of flashbacks, discover the plans fate has for them.

A definite rural Florida freakout and at times close to a drive-in Fellini film, PICK-UP was the only movie made by the majority of the cast (including all the main actors) and moves with the logic of a hash dream, combining tarot readings, modular synth and Indian percussion songs, a *lot* of nudity and a constantly shifting vibe moving between bucolic hippie love-in and exploitation dread.

PICK-UP covers a lot of ground during its 80 minutes and offers something for every midnight movie fan.



BLOOD MANIA

BLOOD MANIA
Dir. Robert Vincent O’Neill, 1970
USA, 88 min.

FRIDAY, JULY 25 – MIDNIGHT

“What am I gonna do with all that money?” “Well, you don’t have your own yacht.”

From the director who brought us Wonder Women (and would later bring us the Angel series), Robert Vincent O’Neill, comes a “who gets the inheritance?” thriller with all sorts of lurid 70s touches.

Blood Mania stars Maria De Aragon (Greedo from Star Wars) as Victoria Waters, who spends this film impatiently waiting for her sick husband to die and leave her his fortune while sneaking around having amyl parties with his doctor, who is also after daughter Gail (Vicki Peters of The Manson Massacre and ’72 Playmate), who might actually be getting the fortune after all, when a secret blackmail threat throws everything awry.

O’Neill takes this premise and loads it with the sort of drug-damaged dreamy quality seen in his film The Psycho Lover – from Victoria’s topless painting freakouts to poolside seductions to smeary-lens nightgown stalkings. It’s a perfect example of the Crown Films strategy of sleazed-up Peyton Place, and with a great score, a nice lawyer cameo by Alex Rocco and plenty of twists and turns, it’s not the gorefest the title promises, but absolutely delivers on the mania.


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MAZES & MONSTERS
Dir. Steven Hilliard Stern
USA, 120 min.

SATURDAY, JULY 26 – MIDNIGHT

In the 1980s, America was under attack. The forces of evil were constantly looking to infiltrate our youth through Communism, rock music, and – perhaps most insidiously – tabletop role playing games.

Author Rona Jaffe recognized these dangers and wrote “Mazes & Monsters”, a book about a group of troubled teens obsessed with pretending to be wizards and warriors and the one friend who took that obsession TOO FAR. The book was soon made into a television movie, where a young actor named Tom Hanks showed the world just how easily RPGs could blur the lines between fantasy and reality – with deadly results!

Join us for a fun filled and educational night featuring trivia, prizes, and commentary from a real life “Dungeon Master”!

INFINITY MARACAS: 75 DOLLAR BILL SCORES “MUSICA ETNICA VIVA”

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SUNDAY, JULY 20 – 7:30 – 10:00 PM

ONE NIGHT ONLY! BRING YOUR OWN BOWL FOR HOMEMADE GAZPACHO!
**75 Dollar Bill will be joined by Sue Garner and Andrew Lafkas on bull fiddle!**

75 Dollar Bill, which is percussionist Rick Brown and electric guitarist Che Chen, will perform with MUSICA ETNICA VIVA, an “expanded film work” composed by Chen. M.E.V. is “an amateur nature film which also attempts to posit connections between the development of capitalist, industrialized societies and the loss of both cultural and biological diversity. The film finds much of it’s philosophical basis in Jacques Attali’s Noise, a book in which he wrote that the mass production of music ‘is a powerful factor in consumer integration, interclass leveling, cultural homogenization…and the disappearance of distinct cultures.’ The sound and image [will] function as two distinct structures that are super-imposed.”

M.E.V. will be projected on Super-8 and digital video. 75 Dollar Bill will play throughout the evening, and audience members are encouraged to join or leave the room at their leisure. 75 Dollar Bill will be providing home-made gazpacho! Please bring a bowl if you want some.

About 75 Dollar Bill:

Rick Brown was born in San Francisco, CA and is a clerical worker at a law school in NYC. Che Chen was born in New Haven, CT and works for a cancer diagnostics company in Stonybrook, NY. They met via myspace and started playing together as 75 Dollar Bill approximately eight years later. Brown plays percussion and homemade horns and Chen plays electric guitar. Music from two self-released cassettes may be found here: http://75dollarbill.bandcamp.com/

THE PROUST OF THE SOFTCORE: THE CRIME FILMS OF JOSÉ BÉNAZÉRAF

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If John Ford is Homer, then José Bénazéraf is… Marcel Proust.
-Tagline for JOË CALIGULA

If cinephiles speak about Moroccan-born, French filmmaker José Bénazéraf today, he’s remembered mostly for his prolific direct-to-video, increasingly hardcore output from the 1970s and 1980s. Not a terrible legacy, but few people remember that Bénazéraf started out on the fringes of the French New Wave: a cameo in Breathless is one of his first screen credits. This July, Spectacle is proud to present two under-appreciated 1960s crime films from Bénazéraf that straddle the line between French New Wave and sexploitation: NIGHT OF LUST and JOË CALIGULA.


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NIGHT OF LUST
AKA Le concerto de la peur
Dir. José Bénazéraf, 1963
France, 71 min.
In French with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, JULY 1 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 6 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 26 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, JULY 29 – 10:00 PM

Less salty than its title might suggest, NIGHT OF LUST is a New Wave noir set at a string of Parisian strip clubs. Hans Verner and Jean-Pierre Kalfon star as two rival gang leaders, both fighting to rule the Parisian drug trade. Laboratory assistant Nora (Yvonne Monlaur) comes between the two gangs, and pays the price by getting kidnapped and held as a hostage in the war. The stakes are high, and the consequences become higher and higher until tragedy cannot be avoided.

A striking mix between a melodrama, a film noir potboiler, and a sexploitation film, NIGHT OF LUST was a hit upon its release in France in 1963, and was subsequently advertised in the United States as “Banned in over half the world!” The hazy, sometimes disjointed storytelling style echo the heroin-soaked plot, with dancers aplenty rolling around under the influence. There’s plenty of eye-candy, but it’s not for the trench coat crowd; a free jazz score by Chet Baker and Bénazéraf’s gorgeous shadowy photography that recalls Fritz Lang’s Hollywood best, make this film a curious, uncategorizable spin on the traditional gangster film.

Special thanks to Seth Sonstein at Independent International Films.


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JOË CALIGULA
Dir. José Bénazéraf, 1966
France, 88 min.
In French with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, JULY 6 – 5:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9 – 10:00 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 18 – 10:00 PM
MONDAY, JULY 28 – 7:30 PM

Called by Bénazéraf a story of “intellectual incest” between a brother and sister, JOË CALIGULA starts with a brilliantly tongue-in-cheel scene: a prostitute lures a man into her brothel by exhorting him, “Come, I’ll tell you about the New Wave!…You’ll see, Godard, Chabrol…it’s exhilarating!” This woman stands in for Bénazéraf, bringing the highbrow New Wave and the softcore genre audiences together for an experience that was sure to confuse both.

Joë Caligula himself is a small-time Parisian gangster who longs to make a name for himself in the Paris crime world, so pulls a series of heists with his small gang, which includes his sister. Eventually, the gang kills members of a powerful rival gang, and brings its leader to his knees, causing an all-out war.

Predating BONNIE AND CLYDE by two years, with the same moody stylistic flair, JOË CALIGULA was again banned by French censors because of Bénazéraf’s “apology for violence,” a decision that crushed Bénazéraf, as he considered it his finest film. The kinetic energy during the gang’s exploits is a loud, disruptive scream against the old guard, which, in 1966, was not quite ready to hear. The time is right for a rediscovery of this rebellious, ambitious softcore crime classic.

ANNA BILLER (VIVA & SHORTS)

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For over twenty years, Anna Biller has been casting herself in candy-colored films, borrowing from various genres and translating the aesthetic into her world view. As not only the writer, director and star, but also the costume designer and set decorator, she concocts scenarios that seem cut right out of Hollywood films then recreated at a ten year old girls’ slumber party.


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VIVA
Dir. Anna Biller, 2007
USA, 120 min.
Digital projection.

TUESDAY, JULY 1 – 10:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 25 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, JULY 28 – 10:00 PM

Anna Biller’s take on 60s/70s sexploitation is so spot on – the film’s texture, clothing and natural nude bodies aren’t things you find laying around in the 2000s. Here she plays Barbi, a naive housewife abandoned by her husband, venturing out into the modern world of the 70s only to find one perversion after another. Biller’s abilities are in top form – the set decoration is so intricately thought through, you’ll be able to feel the shag carpet between your toes.


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SHORTS PROGRAM

WEDNESDAY, JULY 23 – 8:00 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY! All titles on 16mm

THREE EXAMPLES OF MYSELF AS QUEEN
16mm, 1994, 26 min.

A DIY fairytale musical! With elaborate sets and costumes, Three Examples of Myself as Queen finds Anna Biller playing out three scenarios of female domination – as head of an Arabian Nights harem, queen bee and disco dancer.

THE HYPNOTIST
16mm, 2001, 45 min.

A twist on the “you get a huge inheritance, but here’s the catch” story, The Hypnotist (the only film to not star Biller) sets three mean-hearted siblings at each other’s throats as they are forced to live together to collect their father’s money. A humorous spin on Technicolor melodramas, it sends up the genre while also displaying full love for its tropes.

A VISIT FROM THE INCUBUS
16mm, 2001, 27 min.

In this horror western musical hybrid, Biller plays Lucy, a woman who is victim to nightly assaults from an incubus. She seeks to boost her confidence by taking a job in a saloon singing and dancing for a bunch of rowdy cowboys, only to find her demonic tormentor also has a stage act! All of this should sound weird enough to have you sufficiently intrigued.