AN EVENING WITH PHIL TIPPETT Screening and Discussion
SATURDAY, MAY 4TH – 8PM & 10PM Second screening just added at 10PM! ONE NIGHT ONLY!
Over the course of the last 3 short years, Spectacle has played host to a great number of extremely exciting, important, and often rare events that leave keep everyone high-fiving and sometimes shaking their heads in utter disbelief. On May 4th of this year we welcome a man who has undoubtedly shaped the vision of animation, special effects, and filmmaking itself for cinephiles the world over. Phil Tippett will grace our humble theater for a night of shorts, stories, and presentations from his career.
As a young boy Tippett was taken with the effects work of Ray Harryhausen and THE SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD and over the course of the next 4 decades turned that passion into a jaw-dropping resume. Pioneering stop-motion/go-motion effects techniques on films like the original STAR WARS trilogy, ROBOCOP, DRAGONHEART, JURASSIC PARK, STARSHIP TROOPERS, THE HAUNTING, and more. While earning enough Academy Awards to stock a bandoleer, Tippett also found time to helm his own studio and to take a seat in the directors chair for STARSHIP TROOPERS 2 and countless short films. This barely scratches the surface of the illustrious career of this legendary wizard. Currently, Tippett resides in California and is working on a project called MAD GOD. He’ll be presenting some of that along with a personal history of stop motion animation.
THE DRIVER’S SEAT (aka The Three Lives of Identikit, aka Psychotic)
Dir. Giuseppe Patroni-Griffi
Italy, 1974
105 mins. English.
SUNDAY, MAY 5 – 10:00 PM SATURDAY, MAY 25 – 10:00 PM FRIDAY, MAY 31 – 7:30 PM
Of the many Euro arthouse B-pictures that didn’t make their way into the official story of Elizabeth Taylor’s career as she was eulogized in 2011, the variously titled Identikit – released in the U.S. under the original novella title The Driver’s Seat – is a bizarre curio from her Europhase, roughly 1968-74. During this period, Taylor — facing middle age and a mid-career slump, as well as an increasingly zaftig figure — took on roles from English and Continental directors offering riskier, more experimental work, which better accommodated her searching, passionate acting style like a muumuu. Among the menagerie of films were two in which she co-starred with her husband Richard Burton, Joseph Losey’s Boom! (1968, the film version of Tennessee Williams’ “The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore”) and Under Milk Wood (1972), both notoriously ill-begotten literary adaptations, if a hoot to watch. Losey’s underappreciated Secret Ceremony (also 1968), with a spooked and brunette Mia Farrow, typifies Taylor’s career during this period, in which she sinks her teeth into stark, enigmatic dialogue as she interprets characters of murky origin, motives and morality.
Identikit, adapted from Scottish novelist Muriel Spark’s (“The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie”) novella by Raffaele La Capria and Giuseppe Patroni Griffi (its director) sank like a stone at the box office when it was released in the U.S. in 1975 as an arthouse second bill. Its second life, as an Avco-Embassy video release in the 1980s, built up a new audience (when I first discovered it, dusty and rarely rented in a college town video store) as a Seventies relic that seemed to be the perfect accompaniment to box wine, marijuana and pizza. Now, in recent years, it seems to be entering a third, post-video phase of its cinematic life, as a number of gay critics have been dusting it off for a second look. Critics David Ehrenstein and Doug Bonner’s recent articles argue convincingly that its merits may add up to a film better than its historic “so-bad-it’s-good” reputation. It seems as though this orphan film is finally finding a home — and rightly so — within the queer canon.
Spark’s story, characteristically spare, is infused with Patroni Griffi’s outré sensibility as an Italian opera director and gay novelist famed for works that were known for their transgressive characters.
While Taylor certainly didn’t need any director to push her to lusty, emotionally naked performances (Suddenly, Last Summer had proved that 15 years earlier), it’s tempting to theorize that the combustible mixture of Patroni Griffi — an aristocratic, decadent figure of Italy’s literary scene whose own works pushed the envelope on sexuality and morality in post-war Italy — with Taylor, the definitive, volatile Hollywood diva — with a psychological thriller by the queen of the genre at the time, Muriel Spark — accounts to large degree the film’s abstract tone, theatrical direction and its subversive appeal to a gay audience.
Poster by Nate Dorr!
A lonely woman, Lise (Taylor) flies from her home in a cold, northern European city (Munich) to Rome on a quest to find a man. She’s not looking for love. Who that man is, or what she wants from him is not clear to any of the people who encounter her, from an elderly tourist from Nova Scotia (Mona Washbourne), to a macrobiotic and sexually frustrated businessman from England. As she navigates the sultry streets of Rome, dodging terror attacks, shopping in empty department stores and wandering through hotel lobbies, she rebuffs offers, and threats, of sex. When it becomes clear what purpose she has in mind for this man, when she does meet him, all the loose ends of the story tie up elegantly in this scattered jigsaw puzzle of a film.
Taylor gives a performance of barely controlled madness, maybe one of the most bizarre of her career, resembling mid-70s Divine in a gaudy, multicolored dress (itself a central character in the film). You can’t take your eyes off her, not that Patroni Griffi lets you. Scene after scene features a tight shot of her head, filling the entire frame with her Medusa-like hair and staring, kohl-rimmed eyes as she delivers her odd bits of dialogue. It’s as though she’s sleepwalking,but with her eyes fixed on a point in the distance. After watching it a few times, I realized it was her choice of communicating her single-minded quest for her killer. When she has to deal with irritating obstacles in her path, ie., shopgirls and hotel maids, she becomes a screaming drag queen on a rampage. It’s both jaw-dropping and hilarious.
Even though her quest seems to be an asexual one, her spirit is charged with eroticism. She screams at an airport security guard who undresses her to check for explosives: “I hate to be touched!” Then later, once alone in her hotel room, she squeezes her own breasts passionately, hinting that she alone can bring herself pleasure.
In fact, apart from dowdy but adorable Helen (Mona Washbourne) an elderly tourist, the film’s sole exemplar of conventional middle-class sexuality is Bill (the great character actor Ian Bannen), a traveling businessman obsessed with his macrobiotic diet and related “one orgasm a day.” His clumsy attempts to seduce Lise, whose unpredictable outbursts make him lick his lips like a confused dog, only drive home the point how in over his head he is with her, her mysterious quest, and the raw sensuality of Italy.
“When I diet, I diet. And when I orgasm, I orgasm,” she tells him flatly, as he tries to convert her to his yang-focused diet. When his bags of brown rice burst in his pocket, pouring grain all over the Roman pavement, she taunts him over his premature spill. Again, the influence of Patroni Griffi is seen here. Conventional sexuality and middle-class mores burst on contact with the decadent outlaws in his plays and films (Metti, una sera a cena, One Night At Dinner, 1969).
In another revealing scene demonstrating the collision of straight society and perverse Lise, a frumpy, bespectacled woman struggles to explain to a detective her impression of the madwoman: “That multicolored dress…there was something unseemly about her, something of a prostitute…it’s as though she wanted to be noticed!” She then reveals, despite herself, that she admired her for it as a woman. A whisper of feminism (Spark) in a film that is frank in its depiction of Italian male lust (Griffi). And again, the dress. It inspires a whole range of emotions, from derisive laughter, to fury, to bewilderment. Obviously it’s a symbol for the unreadable Lise herself, her taste and her choices, but Griffi’s sensibility makes it a character that is as central to the plot as the overcoat in the Gogol short story of the same name.
Finally, after Taylor herself, the best thing in this “bad movie” is Vittorio Storaro’s luminous cinematography. Seizing on the chiaroscuro of Lise’s mental world, he paints the film like a canvas in a range of light and shadow, all of it looking supernaturally beautiful.
Now that Identikit’s questionable legacy is being reassessed by queer critics and bloggers, and as a result discovered fresh by a new generation, let’s hope for the best — assuming Rizzoli Films
won’t be shipping a pristine, vault print of it to some New York repertory theater anytime soon (if one even exists). Let’s hope that someone undertakes a quality, definitive digital transfer of the film to preserve it for future generations as a shined up statuette in Giuseppe Patroni Griffi’s filmography, and an example of how good “bad” art films of the ‘70s look today.
– David Savage
David Savage has been a New York-based film journalist since 1989, specializing in films of the 1960s and ’70s. He wrote for Vanity Fair in the mid-90s and also was a contributing editor at index magazine from 1996-2005. Since 2006 he has been a columnist at the UK film magazine Cinema Retro (www.cinemaretro.com).
TEENAGERS FROM OUTER SPACE
Dir. Tom Graeff, 1959
USA. 86 min.
SUNDAY, MAY 5 – 7:30 PM FRIDAY, MAY 17 – 7:30 PM SUNDAY, MAY 26 -10:00 PM
In this 1959 pulpy sci-fi low-budget classic, a spaceship manned by human-lookalike teenage aliens lands on Earth to find a grazing ground for their food source the “gargons” (lobster-lookalike air-breathing monsters). One of the aliens in the crew, Derek, is secretly part of an underground rebel faction with “humanist” ideals; he doesn’t believe the aliens have a right to colonize this new Earth-land! He flees from his crew to warn the humans, and the rest of the spacemen led by bad-guy Thor search for him to protect their mission. Derek rents a room from Betty and her Grandpa Joe to blend in. When Betty discovers Derek’s mission she joins him to fight the spacemen who are armed with x-ray gun vaporizers! Can Derek, Betty, Grandpa Joe and Betty’s clueless boyfriend Joe Rogers (played by director Tom Graeff) save this community before it’s too late?
*Rumor has it that director Tom Graeff (who wrote, directed, edited, produced and acted in TEENAGERS FROM OUTER SPACE) employed guerrilla cost-cutting tactics to save money on the film such as posing as a UCLA student. Following the film’s total failure at the box office, Graeff suffered a breakdown and proclaimed himself as the second coming of Christ. After an arrest for disrupting a church service, Graeff disappeared from Hollywood and committed suicide in 1970.
THE TELEPHONE BOOK
Dir: Nelson Lyon. 1971.
80 min. USA.
Premiere of a New Restoration Shown in HD
FRIDAY, MAY 3 – 8:00 PM (LAUNCH PARTY) SATURDAY, MAY 11 – 10:00 PM SUNDAY, MAY 19 – 8:00 PM
Sexually frustrated gamine Alice (Sarah Kennedy) is freed from her apartment-bound malaise when she receives the world’s greatest obscene phone call from one “John Smith.” Setting out on picaresque journey through the Manhattan white pages in search of its maker, Alice encounters ego-crazed porn directors, perverted psychologists and priapic shut-ins. Her trip grows more and more deranged (interrupted by first-person interviews with phone freaks), climaxing in one of the nuttiest half-hours of 1970s cinema.
Directed by Saturday Night Live writer Nelson Lyon and produced by Merv Bloch, creator of some of the movie industry’s best ad campaigns, The Telephone Book is hilarious and disturbing in equal measure, featuring Warhol Factory regulars, a man with a never-ending erection, and a lurid animation sequence (that is mostly to blame for its X rating). This is the Everything You’ve Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid To Ask…for the porn-house crowd, with one caveat: it’s not porn and it never pretends to be.
Teaming up again with Vinegar Syndrome, Spectacle is excited to be hosting a sneak peek of the new digital restoration to be released this month.
Vinegar Syndrome is an exploitation film-focused distribution company founded by genre-film lovers for genre-film lovers. VS was developed to provide us with an opportunity to have a platform in order to cost-effectively restore and release the massive number of exploitation titles in their archive.
Dir: The Source Family, 1969-1974.
Approx. 90 min. USA.
Isis and E Aquarian of The Source Family and filmmakers Jodi Wille and Maria Demopoulos in attendance!
MONDAY, APRIL 29TH – 8PM JUST ADDED — 10:00 PM SHOW!! ONE NIGHT ONLY!
At the end of the 60s, The Source Restaurant was on everyone’s lips in every sense of the word. With an endless stream of celebrity clientele, good press, good food, and a heady vibe, they were pulling in $10,000 a day at its height. As the business grew, so did the staff.
At its helm was James Baker. Baker was born in Ohio and throughout his life dabbled in everything from a decorated military service to jiujitsu to being a stuntman to alleged bank robberies. After studying under Yogi Bhajan and ultimately settling on taking a higher path, Baker changed his name to Father Yod (and eventually Ya Ho Wha) and gathered his people together in a commune and formed The Source Family- devoted to a lifestyle based on other levels of consciousness through natural living, meditation, art, music, and communal utopia.
Meanwhile, a media circus and climate of fear was surrounding the Family in the wake of the Manson killings as folks were wary of another gaggle of longhairs with weird ideas and freaky jams. But The Source Restaurant flourished, and the Family grew. Following hours of meditation, spontaneous and lengthy jam sessions led to the recording of a purported 65 albums under an umbrella of different monikers and players – Father Yod and the Spirit of ’76 to Ya Ho Wha 13 to The Savage Sons of Ya Ho Wha, Yodship, and Fire Water Air.
As a jump off to a week-long celebration with events throughout the city- including the premiere of the new documentary The Source Family at IFC Center on May 1st- Spectacle is thrilled to welcome the filmmakers Jodi Wille and Maria Demopoulos as well as Isis and E Aquarian for an evening of rare archival interviews, live performances, deep cuts, cable access appearances, wisdom, and a wealth of stories from the people who actually lived it. Join us for a truly one of a kind evening.
WHERE’S ANTON is a movie around Gun Outfit, the band, and the persons individually. WHERES ANTON moves through the band, and the band through it. WHERES ANTON is a musical story, shot on 16mm, blending the shared narratives of document and artifice. The band acts, and the band is itself. Utilizing the writings of Dan Swire, who also plays drums in the band Gun Outfit, WHERES ANTON offers that oft-attempted but rarely achieved unique window into the dream states of collective creativity.
Playing in Decay – Abandoned Theaters and the Paris Underground
Slide show and video followed by brief Q&A
THURSDAY MAY 2 – 8:00 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY
Julia Solis (author of “New York Underground”) talks about her new book “Stages of Decay”, featuring photos of deteriorating theaters across the US and Europe. Lazar Kunstmann & Jon Lackman of the infiltration group Les UX – also known for setting up a secret cinema underneath Paris – will present the “Pantheon User’s Guide”, a video on their secret restoration of the Pantheon clock.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10 – 10:00 PM SUNDAY, MAY 12 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, MAY 24 – 7:30 PM
Two years before Easy Rider, Conrad Rooks created a meditation on addiction and self discovery in CHAPPAQUA, a formally restless time capsule which captures the entropic soul searching and self destruction which hung like a long shadow over the 1960s counter culture.
Conrad Rooks’ short filmography (Chappaqua and his 1972 adaptation of Hesse’s Siddhartha) is characterized by the dual journey, without and within. In Chappaqua Rooks plays Russel Harwick, a globetrotting( Chappaqua was filmed in 48 of the United States, France, Mexico England and India), hopelessly addicted young man who checks into a Paris clinic in order to undergo a “sleep cure”. What follows is a hallucinatory journey in the form of a richly textured film poem which reflects Rooks’ own battle with addiction and spiritual awakening.
Rooks’ film is bombastic and strung out, wild and somber. Chappaqua is a mind laid bare, a chronicle of addiction, and an adventurous film experience. In Chappaqua we enter a maze of experimental film techniques and raw improvisation that invites us into the fury of the present, the pleasure and pain of the past, and, after passing through the fire, the dream of a better future.
Chappaqua is the Cannonball Run of the 1960s’ counterculture, featuring such literary, musical, and beat luminaries as William S. Burroughs, Ravi Shankar (who also contributed the film’s unique and powerful score), The Fugs, Ornette Coleman, Moondog, Allen Ginsberg, and Herve Villechaize.
DREAMLAND: THE CONEY ISLAND AMATEUR PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY DREAM FILMS Presented by Zoe Beloff
USA, Approx. 80 minutes
Silent/English
THURSDAY, MAY 9 – 8:00 and 10:00 PM
In 1926, after returning to New York after World War I, Albert Grass assembled a group of his friends (largely working-class people), all of whom had an interest in Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis, into a society that met in an office on Coney Island to discuss their inner lives. A major project of the secretive Coney Island Amateur Psychoanalytic Society, as they were known, was making films of members’ dreams, in the service of understanding the life of the mind. Years later, with the Society all but an urban legend, multimedia artist and filmmaker Zoe Beloff discovered some mysterious, Freudian 16mm home movies at a flea market, and made it her mission to collect and preserve, as well as understand, the films.
Now, for one night only at Spectacle, Zoe Beloff will present the collected films of the Coney Island Amateur Psychoanalytic Society in their original 16mm format. Filmed between 1926 and 1972, the films present the uncovered dreams, fears, and desires of Society members throughout the decades. These nine short films are beautiful, poignant, and surprising by turns, and present the raw, unfiltered inner emotional lives of several generations of Brooklynites.
Though his film making career lasted only four short years before his death in 1917 at age 52, Evgeni Bauer is a relatively unknown giant in the world of silent Russian cinema.
Graduating from celebrated set designer to director, Bauer pioneered camera techniques and elegant set pieces that would become popular years later. Though he worked in a number of genres (comedies, political pieces, drama, and tragedy), he is best known for an unmatched eye for detail and the ability to blend the elegance and beauty into the ghastly and macabre. No subject was taboo and his pieces are as startling as they are beautiful. Opulent doesn’t even come close to describing it.
TWILIGHT OF A WOMAN’S SOUL
(aka Sumerki zhenskoi dushi)
Dir: Evgeni Bauer, 1913.
48 min. Russia.
Silent.
THURSDAY, APRIL 18TH – 8PM WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24TH – 10PM
One of the earliest of Bauers surviving films, Twilight of a Woman’s Soul is the story of a noblewoman named Vera (played by Vera Chernova) who, in attempt to break the mold of her class, vows to help the poor. This decision doesn’t come without a price.
While visiting the slums, she finds herself attracted to a handsome laborer. Their courtship is short lived and after he attempts to rape her, she defends herself and kills him. Though she escapes with her life, she is shunned by Prince Dolskij and cast out when she tells him what happened.
Defeated and alone, Vera pulls herself up and takes the stage, becoming the star of the opera. When the prince comes back around she must decide what path to take.
AFTER DEATH
(aka Posle smerti)
Dir: Evgeni Bauer, 1915.
46 min. Russia.
Silent.
SATURDAY, APRIL 13TH – 8PM TUESDAY, APRIL 23RD – 10PM
Released the same year as D. W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation, Bauer delved deep into not only this haunting tale of romance between the land of the living and that of the spirits, but also into new camera techniques and tints to elevate this film to another level entirely and often finds him referenced as “the Russian answer to Edgar Allen Poe.”
A young woman (played by Vera Karalli) falls hard for a man and, when she feels her desires are unrequited, she commits suicide. Racked with guilt over her death, the young man suffers both terrifying and sensual visions of a his lady love.
Bauers use of tints to denote time of day and the alternating worlds as well as his use of tracking shots is striking and unparalleled. This ghostly love story is a vision to behold and contains a violin-cello-piano score that is the perfect companion.
THE DYING SWAN
(aka Umirayushchii lebed)
Dir: Ebgeni Bauer, 1917.
49 min. Russia.
Silent.
TUESDAY, APRIL 9TH – 10PM SUNDAY, APRIL 28TH – 8PM
Perhaps the best known of Bauers work and far and away the most referenced, The Dying Swan is a classic story and Bauers treatment is nothing short of breathtaking.
When a mute woman, Gizella (again played by Vera Karalli) with a passion for dance finds herself deceived by the man she loves, she takes off in order to began a new life as a ballerina. While on tour performing The Dying Swan, an artist obsessed with death develops an unhealthy fascination with Gizella and goes to great lengths to garner her attention and trust. Needless to say, this ends badly.
In a film with a small cast, Bauer allows his sets and locations to act as characters in their own right. Melancholy reigns in Bauers world.