NEW HARMONY

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THE NEW HARMONY
2012. 80 min.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 – 8:00 PM

The New Harmony is the story of a corporate ad writer who responds to a small voice deep inside himself and decides to do whatever he can to make the world a better place.  This film addresses questions such as: Is poetry useful?  Do people live too long?  And what happens when a liberal guy goes off the grid?  Made in Brooklyn, 2011-2012, 80 minutes long.  Starring John Christopher Morton, Mick Collins, Akiva Saunders, Forrest Gillespie, Edgar Oliver and a large ensemble cast.

AACHI & SSIPAK

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AACHI & SSIPAK
Dir. Jo Beom-jin, 2006.
South Korea, 88 min.
In Korean, with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, AUGUST 8 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, AUGUST 30 – 10:00 PM

Rude, but very smart and funny, with extremely fast-paced animation that’s slick and distinctive, Aachi & Ssipak (2006) follows its eponymous petty crooks as they try to get rich in a world where feces is money. Literally.

It’s an action “Buddy Movie” from another dimension—as if Gary Panter, Takeshi Miike and Paul Verhoeven collaborated on a Hope & Crosby flick: “The Road to Shit City.” Aachi is the short one, with more plans than brains, and Ssipak is the big, bald bruiser who thinks with his fists—and he’s fallen hopelessly in love with a wannabe-porn starlet, the very pneumatic Beauty (who’s much smarter than our heroes, and belongs next to Jessica Rabbit or Tex Avery’s Red Hot Riding Hood in the Sexy Cartoon Bombshell Hall of Fame). After her anal-chip is tampered with, Beauty becomes the “MacGuffin” of this movie, the object everyone will kill for.

It seems the rulers of the future need human excrement for both fuel and building materials, and in exchange for each dump, citizens with an implant get one delicious and mind-altering “juicybar.” But these yummy narco-popsicles are so addictive that some people are turned into blue mutant dwarves, the “Diaper Gang”—who cause chaos with their juicybar raids and demands to rule society. “Did they appreciate us for our crap!?!” bellows the megalomaniacal Diaper King rhetorically as he calls for rebellion.

A government that would stick ID-chips up people’s rectums would do anything to maintain power, and so have unleashed a sadistic and homicidal cyborg to enforce their draconian alimentary laws by slaughtering the Diaper Gang wantonly.

When sleazeball porno-producer Jimmy’s plan for Beauty’s “magical anus,” uh, backfires, all these forces are aimed at each other in a pulse-pounding climax that rips off—and totally improves on the coal-car chase from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.

Obsessed with defecation but tasteful enough never to show any brown ploppies,Aachi & Ssipak is lysergic speedfreak anime for the mayhem crowd—that’s surprisingly good natured (when it’s not willfully gross or gory). The violence is so excessive and over-the-top, it is hilarious, but (thankfully) explicit scatological scenes are nowhere in sight—which in itself may be a socio-political comment as well… But the movie also has heart: the two hoods care about each other; Ssipak’s love of Beauty is genuine; pathetic Jimmy is funny but human; and even the grotesque Diaper Gang deserves some sympathy—they didn’t ask to be mutated and addicted.

Almost an exhausting movie, and overloaded with delightful eyeball kicks, Aachi & Ssipak is packed with multiple cultural references (including graffiti—keep your eyes open for “Neckface”!), but especially to action films: Structurally, the film is much like Robocop (plenty of rewarding “media blasts”), with tributes/spoofs of John Woo, Hitchcock and Terry Gilliam—as well as countless anime—littered throughout.

This South Korean production combines a tight and twisty script (equal to the best episodes of The Venture Bros. or The Simpsons), with exciting animation (characters look hand-drawn; and the backgrounds are a combo of CGI and hand-painted) to create a crazy, non-stop, almost sacrilegious meta-movie: “An animator isn’t a real director!” screams a character before kicking someone’s face in.

Aachi & Ssipak is hyperactive, but hardly incomprehensible—even when trying to read the subtitles and keep up with frenzied cartooning at the same time—and looksreally good: The movie reportedly cost only $3.5 million—a low amount for an animated flick (Pixar’s Cars, also released in 2006, cost $120 million)—and every cent is on the screen. But aside from the anarchic 1970s work of Ralph Bakshi, it’s almost impossible to think of Pixar or any other U.S. animator making a film so, ummm, “earthy.”

Like all good B-movies, there’s a metaphorical political message here, but it’s surrounded by so much quasi-exploitative “good stuff,” that even action fans with one-track-minds will be satisfied.

Aachi & Ssipak is manic, unadulterated weirdness that deserves a massive cult following!

WARNING: If the synopsis didn’t give you a hint, this is not a movie for small children or easily-offended adults!

AUGUST MIDNIGHTS!

FRIDAY, AUGUST 2: BLOODSUCKING DOLL
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3: SPECTACLE ROULETTE

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9: CHARLIE’S BACK WEEKEND! and TROMA ENTERTAINMENT presents THE LOVE THRILL MURDERS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10: CHARLIE’S BACK WEEKEND! presents THE NIGHT GOD SCREAMED

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16: MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS presents HOLOGRAM MAN
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17: HOLLYWOOD BURN

FRIDAY, AUGUST 23: FIGHTING MADAM
SATURDAY, AUGUST 24: THE MEAT EATER

FRIDAY, AUGUST 30: BLACK SHAMPOO
SATURDAY, AUGUST 31: AND GOD SAID TO CAIN


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BLOODSUCKING DOLL
aka LEGACY OF DRACULA
Michio Yamamoto, 1970.
71 min. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 2 – MIDNIGHT

In the early 1970s, a little-known director named Michio Yamamoto made a series of three vampire films for Toho studio. A surprisingly effective mashup of Hammer Goth, psychedelia, and classic Japanese kaidan, his trilogy of contemporary vampire tales remains curiously overlooked and virtually unseen in the U.S.

The first and most nocturne entry of Yamamoto’s series takes place in a spooky house where a young man goes to visit his girlfriend after several months apart. When he meets her mother, he’s shocked to learn she was apparently killed in a car crash. And yet while staying the night, he begins to experience strange visions of her. When he suddenly disappears, his own sister (Kayo Matsuo of Gate of Flesh, Shogun Assassin, and Lone Wolf and Cub: Baby Cart at the River Styx) visits the house to pursue her own investigation. From there, things become exceedingly creepy. Of the trilogy, BLOODSUCKING DOLL has the most in common with traditional Japanese ghost stories. The searing yellow eyes of its vampire are truly unforgettable, as is her method of dispatching victims by slashing their throats with a dagger (if Quentin Tarantino makes another vampire movie…). Though bigger on moonlight, candles, and fog than violence, BLOODSUCKING DOLL builds to a wicked climax featuring geysers of gore.



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Spectacle presents:
SPECTACLE ROULETTE
Dir. ???, 19??/20??.
????. ??? min.
In any number of languages.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 – MIDNIGHT

Once again it’s time to spin the chamber! And this time you CAN be any geek off the street!

But wait…

What are we going to show?

Cooking shows hosted by puppets from Iceland? Italian dancefighting epics? Hologramsploitation? Hostage situation bloopers? Dog Wedding Massacre? Open heart surgery? Prison slime fights? Hip-Hop Pronunciation? Mustard eating contests? Secret footage of doctors giving terrible news to patients? Hot Dog factory tours? Space Vampires? Musicals with songs in made up languages? Motorcycle accidents? Unicycle accidents? Regional DOOM II championship temper-tantrums? Pizza noir?

Well, that’s up to you.

The first 6 people to show up with a movie will be given the chance to lobby by showing 5 minutes of that film. After all 6 are shown, everyone votes and that’s what we watch!

If you want to participate, please do the following:

1. Show up at least 15 minutes BEFORE midnight with your proposed film. (Either a DVD or digital copy!) 2. Be prepared to introduce your 5 minute clip and lobby hard for your candidate. 3. COME CORRECT. Bring the craziest thing you can find, no half-steps! 4. Tell your friends!


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CHARLIE’S BACK WEEKEND!

“From the world of darkness I did loose demons and devils in the power of scorpions to torment.”—Charles Milles Manson

The Summer of Love O.D.’ed and its body was tossed on the trash heap—and the basilisk that emerged from the dung was named Charlie…

While the brutal slaughters performed by the Manson Family, Charlie’s gaggle of drug-addled followers, didn’t bring down “Helter Skelter,” the murders and subsequent headlining-hogging trail captured the gruesome fascination of the U.S.—and Hollywood noticed.

Exploitation flicks based on the conman/musician/guru’s blood-drenched crimes were churned out, and added to the Hippie Fear the “Silent Majority” craved.

Watch some political piggies get creepy-crawled at the Spectacle, maaaaaaan!

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THE LOVE THRILL MURDERS
Robert L. Roberts, 1971.
92 min. USA.
English

FRIDAY, AUGUST 9 – MIDNIGHT

Troy Donahue as an acid slinging, anti establishment, messianic Charlie Manson surrogate who turns a bourgeois orgy into a freak scene slaughterhouse?! Yep, and the Spectacle’s got it for you. Made a little over a year after the Manson Family murders, THE LOVE THRILL MURDERS (formerly SWEET SAVIOR) comes on free and easy, propelled by mellow folk rock(provided by the legendary composer Jeff Barry) and montages of communal hippie bliss, BUT sex and drugs quickly turns into blood and guts when Donahue decides it’s time kick out the jams mamma jama.

Moon (Troy Donahue) is the bearded, motorcycle riding, charismatic, free love Jesus who leads a group of hippie freaks down on New York’s lower east side in the late sixties. Moon and his followers fund their free and simple way of life by providing “straight pigs” with freaky sex and drug parties for cash, but Moon’s got something a little different planned for their next orgy on demand—and it ain’t musical chairs.

THE LOVE THRILL MURDERS is a disarmingly pleasant, unhurried and well acted little gem which confounds the line between tasteless exploitation and earnest independent filmmaking. This straight forward slice of MANSPLOITATION features some precognitive editing borrowed from Easy Rider and a break neck psychedelic dance number with a golden cobra! Mr. Troma himself, LLoyd Kaufman, served as production manager for this New York lensed affair, and watch out for a young Lloyd as one of Moon’s long haired, freaky followers.

ADVISORY: This films contains scenes of sex, violence and torture which may act as triggers for some viewers.


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

SATURDAY AUGUST, 10 – MIDNIGHT

If you hate religion, goodness gracious, do we have a flick for you! Deliciously nasty old-school 42nd Street madness returns to South 3rd when this lost exploitation trash is given a midnight resurrection at the Spectacle!

1971’s The Night God Screamed is an almost forgotten, “ripped from the headlines” grindhouse flick about the dangers of uncanny Bible-quoting hippies and the generation gap that has only 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 perfectMichael Sugich) nor the “Squares” who spend their last dime on religious trinkets instead of necessities, are spared in The Night God Screamed: 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 themessianic nutjob in a way that will become a secret code between 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, also in 1967’sHot 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 college students.

Enlivened by some beyond over-the-top performances and 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! TheMansons 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 I ever mentioned).

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

Born and raised in Brooklyn, director Lee Madden also helmed these better-than-average biker movies: Hells Angels ’69 (1969) and Angel Unchained (1970).

Can your soul stand the theological implications of The Night God Screamed?

Find out at the Spectacle, Midnight, August 10th!


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MANDATORY MIDNIGHT

Feeling left out? Can’t find common ground with your kids during those long, awkward dinners of meatloaf and self-loathing? Criminally unversed in the works of David A. Prior? Missing all those CANDY SNATCHERS references around the water cooler? Be honest, would you even be able to recognize an INTREPIDOS PUNK if you saw one?

Feeling woozy, it’s getting dark, this is the end…

NOT QUITE.

The Spectacle Presents MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS (aka Turkish Netflix)! Fall in love for the first time or all over again with the best of Spectacle Midnights! Every month The Spectacle is showcasing one of our beloved midnight classics like ROCK N ROLL HOTEL, KILLER WORKOUT, HOLOGRAM MAN and so many MORE!!! Don’t yawn your way through another screening of Rocky Horror, half heartedly throwing rice and lip syncing through tears of boredom. Come get kicked in the chest by the AMERICAN HUNTER and lose a quart of blood to a BLOODSUCKER FROM OUTER SPACE!

You haven’t seen a Spectacle Midnight until you’ve seen it twice! Come Get Weird and Stay Weird at MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS!

THIS MONTH…

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16 – MIDNIGHT

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

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

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



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THE MEATEATER
(aka: BLOOD THEATER)
Dir. Derek Savage, 1979
USA

SATURDAY, AUGUST 24 – MIDNIGHT

You know, a lot of you have probably had this dream. The dream of leaving the hustle and bustle of your day job behind – let’s say your job is being a traveling shoe salesman for instance, let’s also say that’s it’s put such a strain on you and your family and your home life that it’s given you a “bleeding ulcer.” Selling shoes. Anyway, the next logical step in your dream would be to…open a movie theater, right? OF COURSE! It’s way easier than selling shoes. Well, friends, that happens to be the exact dream of a Mr. Mitford Webster. He’s had it! Through with the shoe game! So when “they” finally accept his bid on the old local theater – The Crest – (which, by the way, was shut down for showing PORNOGRAPHY!) he’s in there like swimwear.

Mitford gets the whole family together to clean up “pigeon BM”, hang decorations, stock the snack bar over and over and – naturally – talk about how much they love hot dogs at every chance they get. They hire a nerdly projectionist with the hots for Mitfords daughter and soon the bright lights of the marquee are setting the night ablaze as opening night is upon them! Keeping good on his promise to the townsfolk to show “nothing harder than a G” (coincidentally, the name of my new rap album) Mitford & Company come out swinging with GRIZZLY SAFARI WHOLESOME MOVIE. With nearly the whole town in attendance – what could go wrong? Well, after the electrocution of the aforementioned nerdly projectionist – a terrible skeleton is discovered hanging behind the screen. So much for wholesome. Enter Lt. Wombat (for real) to solve the mystery. Will the family heed the warnings of the crusty hobo telling them of their impending doom? Who is the even crustier rat-biting, Jean Harlow obsessive? Who really likes hot dogs this much? What happens at the end of GRIZZLY SAFARI WHOLESOME MOVIE?

While Derek Savage shows a clear love for old timey movies, THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, the family unit, rats, and more – the true star of this PG rated head-scratcher is, you guessed it, MEAT. Though not explicitly stated, not long into it’s 85 minute runtime it becomes clear that the Meat Council has sunk it’s claws deep into the banking of this film. On more than one occasion, all action stops to extol the virtues of hot dogs and their various nutrients. One has to wonder how good it can be for a shoe-selling-induced-bleeding-ulcer to have hot dog after hot dog piled on it, but, hey, we’re not doctors.

All told THE MEATEATER (aka BLOOD THEATER) is not a perfect film, though it is one you are not likely to forget anytime soon and certainly has that particular je ne sais hot dog that we find so endearing. In fact, once you’ve MUSTARD the strength to get your BUNS in the seat and watch it, you might find you actually RELISH it. I’ll show myself out.


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BLACK SHAMPOO
Dir. Greydon Clark, 1976
USA, 83 min.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 30 – MIDNIGHT

Old-school 42nd Street madness returns to South 3rd when this lost exploitation masterpiece about the dangers of being a stud hairdresser springs into action at the Spectacle! Enlivened by beyond over-the-top performances and excessive (but thematically integral) nudity, 1976’s Black Shampoo is blasexploitation at its height: Mr. Jonathon knows how to satisfy his customers!

Essentially a Russ Meyer flick that takes itself seriously, Black Shampoo is a cross between one of RM’s 1960s B&W morality tales, and one of his candy-colored 1970s romps. So you get the dangers of drug trafficking mixed with nude BBQs; violence is given a musical score better suited for the carnival; a goofy detour with the nympho swimming-pool sisters and disconcerting overdubbings; and any and all opportunities to show all-natural 1970s-era female flesh. So retro, it’s refreshing!

There’s total camp value in this flick, as well, with hair styles and clothing that’s now almost like something out of a sci-fi movie. Lead John Daniels (who did all his own stunts) struts his stuff well, and the flick is enlivened by location shooting around Los Angeles (without permits, of course) by young Dean Cundey, a couple of years before he began his long collaboration with John Carpenter.

Meanwhile, Brenda, the new receptionist at Mr. Jonathan’s hair salon, seems to be the only woman who has melted his Casanova’s stone heart. Their happiness is threatened by Brenda’s past as a Mafia mistress, though, as her old boyfriend wants her back.

Then, what started as a raunchy blaxploitation rip-off of Warren Beatty’s “Death of the Sixties” opus, takes a nasty turn, and ends with pack of mean-spirited goons and amotherfuckin’ chainsaw fight!

During the flick’s meaner segments, anything gets used as a weapon: cars, pool cues—and in a scene both ludicrously over-the-top and quite horrifying, a sympathetic gay hairdresser is sexually abused with a curling iron.

If you can enjoy this flick on a deeper, more philosophical level, good for you—otherwise Mr. Jonathon’s follicle follies will keep you happy with its parade of disrobing women—various Me Generation hotties of unique shapes and sizes—some low-budget thrills; and a super-soul soundtrack that’ll flip your wig.

A few years earlier, director Greydon Clark explored race relations in the U.S. with 1973’s highly recommended The Bad Bunch, a bleak and grim flick whose bitter message and utter social realism made it box-office poison.

With the much less socially conscious Black Shampoo, Clark eschews all politics: Playing up the legend of the Black Stud to the hilt while being weirdly post-racial in its depictions of social interactions, the movie spends half of its time being spicy and silly. Then the other half is menacing and serious—creating an overall schizoid vibe that keeps things jumping, even during moments of relative calm.

Black Shampoo—more bang for your B-movie buck!


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AND GOD SAID TO CAIN
Antonio Margheriti, 1970.
96 min. Italy/West Germany.
In German with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 31 – MIDNIGHT

In this macabre spaghetti western, the Duke of Delirium, Goth Kinski, gives a rare, heroic andunquestionably leading role as a man released after ten years of wrongful incarceration in a prison labor camp. Once sprung, he meanders his way back to town to get revenge on the men who framed him — one of whom has since become a wealthy and politically powerful land baron with dozens of hired guns on the payroll.

The plot may be traditional, but the movie is anything but: AND GOD SAID TO CAIN is notorious as of the darkest spaghettis ever made, and closer in tone to Italian horror films of the period than traditional westerns. It’s the most accomplished picture of underrated director Antonio Margheriti, best known for gothic horror films like CASTLE OF BLOOD and THE LONG HAIR OF DEATH. CAIN is an effortless synthesis of the two genres: in a largely wordless performance, Kinski assumes an almost phantasmagorical aura, and eerie shootouts take place under moonlight and in churches and candlelit quarters. The film’s baroque, blazing climax — think the of funhouse shootout of THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI restaged in Hell — validates the film’s German title, SATAN DER RACHE — “Satan of Revenge.”

Though AND GOD SAID TO CAIN frequently languishes in washed out transfers in YouTube andpublic domain purgatory, tonight we’ll show a pristine digital transfer with the German-language soundtrack that preserves Kinski’s original spoken dialog.

WHITE STAR

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WHITE STAR
1983. 92 min. West Germany.
In English.

FRIDAY, JULY 26 – 10:00 PM

BACK DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND! ONE SHOW ONLY!

“The emotionally most demanding film I’ve ever made, and therefore the most dangerous one — for me.” – Dennis Hopper

Blue Velvet? In the words of Frank Booth: Fuck That Shit. Dennis Hopper gives his most terrifying, unhinged performance as a seedy concert promoter in this dystopian synthpunk urban odyssey.

Hopper plays Kenneth Barlow, the sociopathic Colonel Tom Parker to fledgling New Wave artist Moody Mudinksy aka White Star’s Elvis. Ferociously asserting his credibility while getting beat up, pissed on, and sold out, Barlow orchestrates a series of increasingly dangerous schemes without Moody’s knowledge, culminating in a wretched stunt straight out of a mid-’70s Bowie concept album.

Made while Hopper was at the rock-bottom throes of addiction, White Star leads one to truly fear for the actor’s fellow performers, as if he’ll break role, snap their necks, and charge out of the screen at any moment. The experience of working with Hopper allegedly sent his director into early retirement and rural seclusion, where he has remained ever since. Miraculously, Klick has maintained the star’s performance wasn’t ad-lib’ed — you be the judge. Spectacle shows an uncut version previously mangled beyond recognition by Roger Corman for stateside non-release. This is a must-see.

THE PIRATES OF BUBUAN with MAMMY WATER

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THE PIRATES OF BUBUAN
Shōhei Imamura, 1972. 47 min.
Japan/Philippines. In Japanese with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 – 8:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28 – 8:00 PM

Presented in partnership with Icarus Films, a distributor of innovative and provocative documentary films from independent producers around the world.

In this gripping and poignant work of ethnography-cum-adventure-mystery, Imamura decides to visit the islands of the Sulu archipelago in the southwest Philippines, ostensibly out of curiosity to “see how people live on its sea.” In exploring islands ranging from populations of over 300,000 to others barely inhabited, he becomes enmeshed in religious and class conflicts between the politically and economically dominant Muslim Tausug people of the larger islands and the “godless” indigenous maritime Badjao, who are subject to discrimination and impoverishment despite their fishing activities driving the larger economy.

And yet above all, Imamura becomes intrigued by whispers of piracy, which he initially dismisses as overly romantic. Yet fascination grows as Imamura hears more of the Pirate King Asaali and his savage band of thirty-some men living on the previously-uninhabited island of Bubuan. Intrigued by the fear Asaali inspires among the city folk and sea-dwellers alike, and burning to investigate the way fear of piracy aggravates local class distinctions, Imamura and his crew set out on an intrepid mission to confront Asaali head-on.

Equally rich in anthropological insight, earnest reportage, stranger-than-fiction thrills, and moments of cerebral self-reflexivity, THE PIRATES OF BUBUAN packs a feature-length wallop and sends the imagination reeling.

Proceded by:

MAMMY WATER
Jean Rouch, 1956. 18 min.
France/Ghana. In French with English subtitles.

In the coastal village of Shama, at the foot of the Pra River in Ghana, expert teams of fisherman known as “surf boys” thrust into the ocean on large canoes and homemade sailboats, where they hone their catch for hours or days on end. Their fortunes are thought to be at the behest of water spirits, “Mammy Water,” and a bad catch must be addressed with a festive, ritualistic offering. In the course of the film, Rouch documents one such festival and the ensuing return to the sea.

A TRIBUTE TO LES BLANK

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 – TWO PROGRAMS

ALWAYS FOR PLEASURE/ CIGARETTE BLUES – 8:00 PM
IN HEAVEN THERE IS NO BEER? / GAP-TOOTHED WOMEN – 10:00 PM

JUST ANNOUNCED Special Guests! Son Beau Blank will be in attendance for discussion at the 8:00 PM show, and Harrod Blank at 10:00 PM.

Spectacle is honored to be among the New York venues participating in a citywide celebration of the late Les Blank, both one of documentary’s most rambunctious and sensitive artists.

Between 1960 and his passing this May, Blank made dozens of documentaries celebrating the cultures from around the world, especially the Cajun, Creole, Tex-Mex, Southern, Appalachian, and Hawaiian peoples. What he captures is a delight to the eyes, but might appeal foremost to the ear, the heart, and the stomach — cooking, dancing, drinking, and storytelling are the means by which Blank invites the audience into the world of his subjects. And though among the most respected artists in the field, Blank resists easy categorization as someone who is resolutely non-commercial, yet not falling easily into cinema verite, essay, or anthropological film making traditions. Ultimately, each of his films is a celebration, and one we cordially invite you to be a part of.

For more Les Blank, check out the other shows at The Academy Theater at Lighthouse International (Spend It All, July 30), BAM (Lightnin’ Hopkins & A Well Spent Life, August 1), and the Museum of the Moving Image (Dry Wood, August 2) and UnionDocs (Burden of Dreams, August 4).


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PROGRAM 1: SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 – 8:00 PM

Beau Blank in attendance for discussion!

ALWAYS FOR PLEASURE
Les Blank & Maureen Gosling. 1978.
58 min.

An intense insider’s portrait of New Orleans’ street celebrations and unique cultural gumbo: Second-line parades, Mardi Gras, Jazz Fest. Features live music from Professor Longhair, the Wild Tchoupitoulas, the Neville Brothers and more. This glorious, soul-satisfying film is among Blank’s special masterworks.

CIGARETTE BLUES
Les Blank & Alan Govenar. 1985.
6 min.

Oakland bluesman Sonny Rhodes sings “Cigarette Blues”: a musical warning that compares cigarette smoking with playing with a loaded gun.


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PROGRAM II: SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 – 10:00 PM

Harrod Blank in attendance for discussion!

IN HEAVEN THERE IS NO BEER?
1984. 50 min.

A joyous romp through the dance, food, music, friendship, and even religion of the Polka. The explosive energy and high spirits of the polka subculture are rendered with warmth and dedication to scholarship in this journey through Polish-American celebrations. Polka stars like Jimmy Sturr, Eddie Blazonzyck and Walt Solek are featured.

GAP-TOOTHED WOMEN
1987. 31 min.

A charming valentine to women born with a space between their teeth, ranging from lighthearted whimsy to a deeper look at issues like self-esteem and societal attitudes toward standards of beauty. Interviews were conducted with over one hundred women, including model Lauren Hutton and Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.

All descriptions by Les Blank/Flower Films

& OTHER WORKS: VARIOUS ARTISTS

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 6TH – TWO SHOWS – 8PM & 10 PM
(SOME) ARTISTS IN ATTENDANCE!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

“& Other Works” is a series of screenings focusing on works from contemporary artists organized by C. Spencer Yeh. “& Other Works” cools down in an informal communal viewing experience, away from the dry walls and passwords.

It’s August, and time for some SUMMER FUN. AUG!!! A selection of work from v-v-v-various artists are gathered up from under the sweltering sun and slobber-screened in the air-conditioned confines of the goth bodega. Think of the rockets launching in the distance, of ascension, isolation, vacation, summer whites. Wet air leaves us light on words, but heavy on excitement. Soooo load up the van and head to the extreme opposite of the beach – “& Other Works” at Spectacle Theater !

We welcome Rachel Mason, Frank Heath & JJ PEET, and Robert Beatty.

ECONOLINE 1
Dir. Frank Heath & JJ PEET, 2007.
27 min. USA.

Smearing a healthy grip of hardheaded mischievous streak across I-95 in the middling aughts, artists JJ PEET and Frank Heath (as seen on &OW earlier this year) suited up as visor-ly anonymoustronauts for their micro-epic lo-fi spaceplay fantasy Econoline 1. The half-hour vessel propelled by invention and ideals first launched at Videotage Gallery in Hong Kong, Econoline 1 has never landed on these shores…  until NOW:

“Traveling in a Ford Econoline van retro-fitted as a mock spacecraft, two astronauts journey to the surface of the moon and back. This depiction of space travel is superimposed over an actual trip down the east coast of the United States and an illegal speedboat jaunt to the Cuban coastline. The trip was made in eight days, mirroring the timetable of the first Apollo moon landing.” – courtesy of the artists

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WALL
Dir. Rachel Mason, 2001.
6 min. USA.

TERRESTRIAL BEING A TANGELO
Dir. Rachel Mason, 2001.
4 min. USA.

Rolling back to 2001 (the projected year of famed aspirational odyssey) artist Rachel Mason close-encountered a persona dubbed the Terrestrial Being. Ivory-white domed and bodysuited, the Being was first captured on video free-climbing a tall structure on the campus of UCLA (documented in the harrowing and succinct stunt titled Wall). Is the TB a superhuman? An alien? Harbinger? The accompanying 16mm feel-piece Terrestrial Being A Tangelo rears its rear; read the paper:

“Not long before planes attacked the World Trade Center in New York City, the twenty-one year old Rachel Mason was temporarily expelled from school after scaling an eight story building in Los Angeles. The building was Dickson Art Center at UCLA, a building which was thereafter replaced by the Broad Art Center. Mason scaled Dixon without ropes – in the character she would continue to work with for the next decade and beyond: the white helmeted figure called ‘The Terrestrial Being.’ Numerous videos and live performances exist but have rarely been shown. Wall, from 2001 and a 16mm film, also from 2001 entitled Terrestrial Being A Tangelo, a film which has not been presented publicly until now.” – courtest of the artist

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LANDLINE
Dir. Robert Beatty, 2011.
6 min. USA.

UNTITLED
Dir. Robert Beatty, 2011.
3 min. USA.

Who is Robert Beatty? His is a name known in a few circles – circles which he has perverted into his own Venn diagram spelling ROB for quite a few years. Here, &OW admits finding any excuse to show one of Beatty’s earliest forays into video, his own Untitled. Sure, it’s an edit – an aggregation based on simple formal guidelines (of a popular cartoon, no less); but to build such a haunted arc and atmosphere! Untitled is telling us that wind will blow, leaves will wilt, streets will empty – this moment isn’t forever.  As for the puzzle piece Landline, found loosely conspiring with visions of mask obstruction, let’s turn again to the copypaster:

“The terror of contamination through communication.” – courtesy of the artist

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Robert Beatty (b. 1981) is a Lexington, Kentucky based artist and musician. His multi-disciplinary work in the fields of drawing, digital art, sculpture, video, graphic design, and sound often use outmoded technology to yield organic results. Beatty performs experimental electronic music as Three Legged Race and is a founding member of psychedelic noise band Hair Police. He is also a frequent collaborator with artists as diverse as Takeshi Murata, C. Spencer Yeh, Ben Durham, and Robert Schneider of the Apples in Stereo. He has created album art and posters for countless artists in the worldwide underground, and was featured in the latest edition of Kramers Ergot, published by PictureBox Inc., for whom he is working on a book scheduled for publication in late spring 2014. Beatty has exhibited at Institute 193 in Lexington, Land of Tomorrow in Lexington and Louisville, and in group exhibitions in Baltimore and Los Angeles. He has performed at such places as the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing; Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin; the Gene Siskel Film Center at the Art Institute of Chicago in Chicago; the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati; the All Tomorrow’s Parties Nightmare Before Christmas Festival in Minehead, England; and numerous venues and institutions in New York including the New Museum, Deitch Projects, Issue Project Room, Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, and Canada gallery.

Frank Heath, born in St. Joseph, MO in 1982, lives and works in New York. Last spring, he made his first solo exhibition in New York at Simone Subal Gallery. Two-person shows include Bcc:, with Brendan Meara at Roots and Culture, Chicago (2011), and Econoline 1, with JJ PEET at Videotage Gallery, Hong Kong (2007). Past group shows and screenings include Matter Out of Place at The Kitchen (2012), Someone Has Stolen Our Tent at Simon Preston Gallery, New York (2012), Single Channel at Soho House, Miami FL (2011); Forcemeat at Wallspace, New York (2011); and Suddenly: Where We Live Now at Cooley Gallery, Reed College, Portland, OR; and Pomona College Museum of Art (2008, 2009).

Rachel Mason is an artist from Los Angeles who lives in New York. Her most recent project is a rock opera and film called, The Lives of Hamilton Fish. She is also currently a resident of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. She has toured, exhibited sculpture, video, and performance at galleries and museums internationally. Her work has been exhibited and she has performed at the Whitney Museum, Queens Museum, Detroit Museum of Contemporary Art, School of the Art Institute in Chicago, Henry Gallery in Seattle, James Gallery at CUNY, University Art Museum in Buffalo, Sculpture Center, Hessel Museum of Art at Bard and Occidental College, Kunsthalle Zurich, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, The New Museum, Park Avenue Armory, Art in General, La Mama, Galapagos, Dixon Place, and Empac Center for Performance in Troy, among other venues. Reviews include New York Times, Village Voice, Los Angeles Times, Flash Art, Art in America, Art News, and Artforum.

JJ PEET received his MFA from Yale University School of Art in 2006 and his BFA from the University of Minnesota in 1999.  Recent solo exhibitions include Redling Fine Art, Los Angeles, CA (2013); On Stellar Rays, New York, NY (2012); Gallery Diet, Miami, FL (2013). These exhibitions received numerous reviews, in publications such as Art in America, Artforum.com, ArtPulse, Bomb, Frieze, The Last Magazine, The New Yorker and TimeOut NY. PEET currently lives and work on Earth.

STAY TUNED: An Evening with SMASH TV

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 24 – 7:30 PM (Memorex) – 10:00 PM (Skinemax)

Join us on Wednesday, July 24th as Smash TV hijacks the Spectacle Theater for a night of AV insanity. We’ll be showing both Memorex and Skinemax, as well as debuting two new hour+ video mixtapes of our favorite videos after each.

A nostalgic night dedicated to the art of the edit: music videos, mashups, hilarity, terror, insanity, and more! If early 80s MTV and early 2000s Adult Swim had a baby, it would look something like SMASH TV.

Join us for this insane 5 hour marathon. If you’re an 80s kid that grew up glued to the TV set and have a sense of adventure, then STAY TUNED.

7:30 PM – Memorex is the advertising industry’s collective wet dream. A 50 minute VJ odyssey and a tribute to an entire generation who grew up with only a TV and a VCR for a babysitter.

Sourced from over forty hours of 80s commercials pulled from warped VHS tapes, Memorex is a deep exploration of nostalgia and the cultural values of an era of excess. It’s a re-contextualization of ads – cultural detritus, the lowest of the low – into something altogether more profound, humorous, and at times, even beautiful.

Digging up long forgotten memories for a generation who spent their formative years glued to the boob tube, Memorex is a veritable nostalgia nuke for children of the 80s. Endless beach parties,Saturday morning cartoons, claymation everything, sleek cars, sexy babes, toys you forgot existed, station idents, primitive computer animation, all your favorite sugary cereal mascots, and so much more. An ode to the hyper consumerism and sleek veneer of a simpler time.

10:00 PM – Skinemax is Koyaanisqatsi for a generation raised on late night television and B-movie VHS tapes. It’s long form entertainment for short attention spans. An hour long VJ odyssey, it will move your body and warp your mind.

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

EPHEMERA: SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU.

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EPHEMERA: SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU.
1947-1973.
Approx. 80 min. USA.

THURSDAY, JULY 11 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 25 – 10:00 PM

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Today these didactic artifacts are relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, all of whom freely lampoon such easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities.

Our monthly EPHEMERA program aims to present these documents to a contemporary audience in perhaps a more even light, ideally free from the ironic framing that can easily overwhelm some of their more interesting details. Fortunately… the humor is irrepressible.

July’s installment SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU focuses on the common themes of adolescent sexual education and awareness. After a program of didactic shorts that run the gamut from hand-holding to menstruation-training will be the mashup BOYS BE AWARE, a home-made combination of two infamous, classically-homophobic Sid Davis atrocities that use the exact same script: Boys Aware (1973) and Boys Beware (1961). This edit switches between the two liberally, providing an interesting look at how the same piece of undeniably dated writing is manifest in two markedly different eras.

Finishing up the program will be the entirety of the notorious 1964 paranoia-bomb THE CHILD MOLESTER, a PSA so dark and foreboding that it seems equally inappropriate for children, teens, parents and even child molesters.

*WARNING: ‘THE CHILD MOLESTER’ FEATURES EXTREME IMAGERY*

Sources for SEX, THE PREDATOR, AND YOU include: As Boys Grow (1957), Boys Aware (1973), Boys Beware (1961), The Child Molester (1964), Dating Do’s and Don’ts (1949), Going Steady (1951), How Much Affection? (1958), Human Reproduction (1947), Molly Grows Up (1953), Physical Aspects of Puberty (1953), Social-Sex Attitudes In Adolescence (1953), What To Do On A Date (1950).

Special thanks to the Internet Archive, Rick Prelinger and everyone at the Prelinger Archive.

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 4,439 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

Of course, the content of the Prelinger Archive’s films varies in accord with the variety of mankind. Historic newsreels, mid-century automobile infomercials, psychological experiments, medical procedurals, big oil advertisements, military recruitment videos, political propagandas, personal home videos, celebrity exposes, amateur narratives, scientific studies, war bulletins, instructional films, special interest op-eds, safety lessons, hobby guides, travel destination profiles and private industry productions all sit comfortably together in one marginalized category.

JULY MIDNIGHTS!

 See also our July J.R. BOOKWALTER Midnight Series!

SATURDAY JULY 13th

TNT JACKSON
Dir: Cirio H. Santiago, 1974.
72 min. USA.

A staple of the early 70s drive-in circuit, TNT JACKSON was schlock producer kingpin Roger Corman’s attempt to cash in on the blaxsploitation craze and remains a fitting example of the kung fu craze muscling its way into every 70s genre.

Martial arts expert Diana ‘TNT’ Jackson travels to Hong Kong to search for her brother’s killer. She soon discovers an underworld heroin smuggling operation that may lead her to the murderer.  Will she karate chop her way through an army of henchmen and come face-to-face with her brother’s assailant?

Starring afro-haired ass-kicker Jean Bell (the first African American Playmate) in a script originally written by legendary character actor Dick Miller (before Corman had it rewritten), the film makes zero attempts at production values and plot imagination (essentially the same setup as SISTER STREET FIGHTER) but does features a criminal amount of funky 70s wardrobes, cheesy kung-fu ‘whooshes’, and a completely illogical topless fight scene that ranks at the top of exploitation’s most gratuitous, trashy moments.

If Pam Grier is too expensive, then you best call TNT Jackson!


HATCHET-BANNER

SATURDAY JULY 20th

HATCHET FOR THE HONEYMOON (Il rosso segno della follia)
Dir. Mario Bava (1970)
88 min.
English dub (no subtitles)

Mario Bava was never one to stick to the rules, even rules he invented himself. Often overlooked due to the lack of murder mystery elements (the killer is revealed at the beginning of the film),Hatchet For The Honeymoon sidesteps giallo tropes in place of dark satire on Italian high society and supernatural elements, all among the backdrop of Bava’s trademark visual style. Stephen Forsyth’s portrayal of a wealthy bridal shop owner driven to murder has since been compared regularly to Christian Bale’s performance in American Psycho — while it may not be the gorehound’s favorite Bava film, it’s perfectly suited for fans of urbane sharp-dressed psychopaths as well as baroque late 60s set pieces. Newly remastered in high-definition from the 35mm print, the film has never looked better, as Bava is both director and cinematographer and the film shows his trademark use of color and symbolism in every frame.



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SATURDAY JULY 27th

MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS (aka MIND CURFEW)

presents

KILLER WORKOUT
David A. Prior, 1987
USA 85 min.
English

Feeling left out? Can’t find common ground with your kids during those long, awkward dinners of meatloaf and self-loathing? Criminally unversed in the works of David A. Prior? Missing all those CANDY SNATCHERS references around the water cooler? Be honest, would you even be able to recognize an INTREPIDOS PUNK if you saw one?

Feeling woozy, it’s getting dark, this is the end…

NOT QUITE.

The Spectacle Presents MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS (aka Turkish Netflix)! Fall in love for the first time or all over again with the best of Spectacle Midnights! Every month The Spectacle is showcasing one of our beloved midnight classics like ROCK N ROLL HOTEL, KILLER WORKOUT, HOLOGRAM MAN and so many MORE!!! Don’t yawn your way through another screening of Rocky Horror, half heartedly throwing rice and lip syncing through tears of boredom. Come get kicked in the chest by the AMERICAN HUNTER and lose a quart of blood to a BLOODSUCKER FROM OUTER SPACE!

You haven’t seen a Spectacle Midnight until you’ve seen it twice! Come Get Weird and Stay Weird at MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS!

THIS MONTH…

Summer is here and it’s time to feel the burn with KILLER WORKOUT.

The 1980s will always be remembered more or less for two major contributions toward the betterment of humankind: the slasher film and aerobic exercise-AND NOW MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS HAS BOTH. It took the genius of prolific, high-octane filmmaker David A. Prior(Sledgehammer, Deadly Prey) to make it happen! KILLER WORKOUT is a one stop, high impact cardio assault sure to turn your flabby midnight grey matter into a chiseled mental six pack.

After a freak tanning bed accident kills her sister, Rhonda decides to open Rhonda’s Workout- a fresh and fun aerobics studio where the buff get buffer and the beautiful get beautiful-er…that is until they start getting dead! There’s a killer loose and it’s up to a grizzled, world weary Detective (David James Campbell) to stop the maniac before Rhonda’s out of customers. What follows is a game of cat and mouse with more twists than a Zumba class, and an ending that you won’t ever forget!

KILLER WORKOUT is more insane and high energy than P90x and it’s got the infectious throbbing soundtrack and pelvises to ensure you’ll never look at your Bowflex the same way again. This is the ultimate oiled up, tanned, toned, aerobic slasher film with a message: hitting the gym can be hazardous to your health.

Come get RIIIIPPPPEEEDD at THE SPECTACLE, only at MIDNIGHT!