THE 12TH ANNUAL IMAGINE SCIENCE FILM FESTIVAL

The Imagine Science Film Festival has been melding art and science in interdisciplinary hybrid programming since 2008. While the festival travels throughout New York City each year, we always save some of the most audacious memorable reconfigurations of scientific themes for Spectacle. This year, this will extend over three full programs of recovered memories, post-anthropocene flicker film, and dystopian data massage.




ISFF 2019 PROGRAM 1: SELF CARE, ALCHEMY, AND OTHER LIFE HACKS

dir. Various, 2016 – 2019
83 mins.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

ONLINE TICKETS

How do we preserve ourselves in uncertain times, when even body and identity may become commercially harvestable data and threats take on unpredictable forms? Our annual wide-ranging program of animation and experimental film explores all this and more. Watch for: unsettling sociologies of social media, unconventional conversations on health, technological history informing personal visions, and a literal preservation process in the frames of stop motion.

Freeze Frame (Soetkin Verstegen | 5 min | Belgium | 2019)
Shalva (Danna Windsor | 3 min | USA | 2018)
Slug Life (Sophie Koko Gate | 7 min | UK | 2018)
Las del Diente (Ana Perez Lopez | 5 min | USA | 2018)
The Desert (Ben Bigelow | 14 min | USA | 2018)
Reverie of the Puppets (Kathy Rose | 5 min | USA | 2018)
Pwdre Ser the rot of stars (Charlotte Pryce | 7 min | UK | 2018)
Cyanovisions (Tiare Ribeaux & Jody Stillwater | 14 min | USA | 2019)
iBooks (Odile Postic | 4 min | USA | 2018)
Call of Comfort (Brenda Lien | 9 min | Germany | 2018)
Your Last Day on Earth (Marc Martínez Jordán | 13 min | Spain | 2019)

Content Warning: Male genitals undergoing wax strip hair removal.




ISFF 2019 PROGRAM 2: MODERN HAUNTINGS

dir. Various, 2018
65 mins.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 10 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY! 

ONLINE TICKETS

As the night goes on, we’ll allow some of the phantoms banished by science back into the discourse. Here, the psychiatric myth of the “recovered memory” drives the Satanic Panic of the early 1980s, ghosts are reanimated by 3D scan, and information itself haunts deep water and the margins of international law.

Demonic (Pia Borg | 29 min | Australia | 2018)
Tropics (Mathilde Lavenne | 14 min | France / Mexico | 2018)
Cablestreet (Meredith Lackey | 22 min | USA | 2018)



ISFF 2019 PROGRAM 3: TWILIGHT GEOLOGIES
dir. Various, 2018-2019
85 mins.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS

Otherworldly mineral landscapes glisten and flicker, sunset throws vast shadows across the clouds, craters dream, and the entire anthropocene Earth shivers and collapses in a deathly shimmer. This program collects four brilliant experiments in light, landscape, and perception, harnessing the luminous photochemical mechanics of film and projection itself to heighten the experience of climactic celestial and earthly events. These are films that demand to be seen splashed large and in the total darkness of a cinema, in their full apocalyptic and regenerative power.

CW: Viewers should be advised that several films in this program make use of strobe effects.

Altiplano (Malena Szlam | 16 min | Chile/Argentina/Canada | 2018)
Umbra (Johannes Krell & Florian Fischer | 20 min | Germany | 2018)
It Has to Be Lived Once and Dreamed Twice (Rainer Kohlberger | 28 min | Austria | 2019)
Volcano: What Does a Lake Dream? (Diana Vidrascu | 21 min | France / Portugal | 2019)

THE DIGITAL NIGHTMARES OF DAMON PACKARD

Damon Packard’s films are a singular experience, a genre unto themselves in a way that few filmmakers can achieve. Working with low budgets and limitless ambition, Packard has crafted some of the most visceral, hilarious, and abrasive films of the last few decades. Littered with breakneck pop culture references, glitchy editing, nightmarish sound design, and mind-bending special effects, Packard’s films feel like the cinematic equivalent of a late-night panic attack.

This October, Spectacle is proud to present PART 1 of a small retrospective of his films, leading up to PART 2 in November with the ~New York Premiere~ of his new four-year-in-the-making magnum opus FATAL PULSE aka NIGHT PULSE aka UNTITLED YUPPIE THRILLER – which will screening alongside SPACEDISCO ONE, TALES OF THE VALLEY OF THE WIND, and FOXFUR. Throw your brain in a blender and tumble down the wormhole with us.



REFLECTIONS OF EVIL
dir. Damon Packard, 2002
137 mins. United States.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY,  OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

The plot ostensibly follows Julie, who died of a PCP overdose in the 70’s, as she searches from ‘beyond the ethers’ for her brother Bob (played by Packard himself), now an overweight watch-salesman on the streets of LA dying of sucrose intolerance. In actuality, we spend most of the run time with Bob, alternately sheepish and rage-filled, as he eats and pukes and screams his way through the hell of downtown LA.

Strangely prescient of many viral internet-comedy tics – “bad” filter effects, digital distortions, pitched voices, looping audio – think Tim and Eric but more explicitly terrifying, the film is essentially a two-hour-plus panic attack with comic relief. REFLECTIONS OF EVIL dives headlong into the trauma and terror of America in the early aughts, and features one of the best on-screen uses of ET and Universal Studios, in an unauthorized sequence that famously earned Packard a lifetime ban from the park.

This one will shatter your brain and leave you puking on the sidewalk with joy. Buckle up.



GRIZZLY REDUX
dir. Damon Packard, 2005
91 mins. United States.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 5PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

Damon Packard’s re-work of William Girdler’s JAWS rip-off GRIZZLY is truly a labor of love. Expanding on the original with alternate cuts, added footage, and an “enhanced” mix, Packard adds a huge dose of hilarity and gore – most notably with a much louder guttural bear groan every time the classic Bear-POV cam appears, making its unnoticed approach on helpless campers even more hilarious.

Whether you’re a fan of the original or a newcomer to GRIZZLY, you’ll find something to love here. Crack a cold one, sharpen your pencils and don your camo for this “extra scary” redux.



THE UNTITLED STAR WARS MOCKUMENTARY
dir. Damon Packard, 2003
45 mins. United States.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 – 10 PM 
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

George Lucas and the STAR WARS prequels get raked over the coals for forty-five relentlessly hilarious minutes, using BTS production footage to expose the buffoonery that was Lucas’ attempt to bring his ‘immense vision’ (read: sell toys) to life. Packard inserts himself and a few cohorts into the madness that was production on EPISODE ONE: THE PHANTOM MENACE – a budget freak-out at the cost of CGI and a cult-initiation-chant at ILM studios (‘Digital characters rule. Digital characters rule.’) May the force be with you as you experience Lucas’ CGI-fueled nightmare through Packard’s eyes.

screening with

DAWN OF AN EVIL MILLENNIUM
dir. Damon Packard, 1988
20 mins. United States.

A fake-trailer for a non-existent 20 hour feature (“starring Jeff Bridges”), Damon’s first notable short film has all the trademarks that would come to mark Packard’s work – glitchy, manic editing, gross out sound effects + splatter effects, undead, aliens, LA street life – horror pastiche cranked to 11 and mutated into a twisted work of art. Think MAD MAX meets EVIL DEAD on PCP.

Clocking in at a mere 20 minutes that takes you to the ends of the universe and back, DAWN OF AN EVIL MILLENNIUM is sure to leave you wishing Netflix would dump Packard a bunch of money to create the full twelve-hour version we deserve.

ZACK NORMAN IS SAMMY IN CHIEF ZABU


“There are people through the decades who become regular fixtures in the pages of Variety – everyone from Al Jolson to Jimmy Durante to Michael Ovitz to Harvey Weinstein. But no one’s presence has been as constant as that of Zack Norman.”
Variety

🔥 NEIL COHEN & ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 15 🔥
🔥  ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 14 🔥
🔥 NEIL COHEN & ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 15 🔥

Filmed in the dead center of Reagan’s second-term, CHIEF ZABU was conceived as as a send-up of the get-rich-quick American mentality of the yuppie ’80s, following a couple of loudmouths who get themselves into an ill-conceived real estate venture in the fictional Polynesian island nation of Tiburaku. Zack Norman (of SITTING DUCKS and Robert Downey’s AMERICA) co-stars—and co-directs under his the name Howard Zuker—alongside the legendary Allen Garfield and Allan Arbus. Filmed over a two-week period at Bard College’s campus with a small indie crew (lensed by Frank Prizzi, who also DPed for SLEEPWALK and LIVING IN OBLIVION), it also enlisted a 22-student fleet of Bard interns padding out the shoot. The shoestring budget was so ludicrously scrappy, the production was profiled in a special “film centennial” issue of Life magazine.

Perhaps in an act of life imitating art, the production was subjected to its own comedy of errors, toiling for well over a year to find a distributor and eventually languishing after its would-be acquirer declared bankruptcy mere weeks before its planned premiere. But the story didn’t end there: the film achieved an unexpected second life as a running gag on MST3K, its hosts echoing the long-running page-3 ad ran in Variety for three years—”Zack Norman is Sammy in CHIEF ZABU”—every time a newspaper is shown on screen.

In October 2016, the political ascendancy of a certain real estate tycoon who rose to prominence in Reagan’s America—and whose own conquests had been a literal inspiration the film—motivated Norman and producer Neil Cohen to dust the film off, showing the film as a series of road show screenings across the US. Its influence is slowly but surely paying off: if you’re ever at Ft. Lauderdale tiki bar The Mai-Kai, you can order a rum speciality drink called “The Chief Zabu.” Indeed, it’s probably worth a revival—it’s a handsome 73 minute character-driven comedy, carried not only by its heavies Garfield and Arbus, but by Zack Norman’s gabby, desperate, puppy dog comedic ingenuity.

Norman, a real estate mogul in his non-celluloid life, is an actor, stand up comedian, and film financier (under pseudonym Howard Zuker), whose industriousness helped fund Spaghetti westerns, cult lesbian vampire film DAUGHTERS OF THE DARK, Peter Davis’s epochal Vietnam documentary HEARTS AND MINDS, and many of the films of Henry Jaglom. In honor of his forthcoming appearance at Spectacle and decades-long dedication to the seventh art, we also show selections from his on-screen career—the early ’80s buddy comedy SITTING DUCKS; the much-maligned Robert Downey Sr. film AMERICA; Henry Jaglom’s film festival send-up FESTIVAL IN CANNES; and a very odd, porno-chic parody of JAWS titled GUMS, directed by Robert J. Kaplan (director of the Holly Woodlawn midnight SCARECROW IN A GARDEN OF CUCUMBERS) and starring Brother Theodore .

🔥 ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 14 🔥
🔥 NEIL COHEN & ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 15 🔥
🔥 ZACK NORMAN (aka HOWARD ZUKER) IN PERSON ON OCTOBER 14 🔥

 




CHIEF ZABU
dirs. Howard Zuker and Neil Cohen, 1988/2016
73 mins. United States.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15 – 7:30 and 10PM
w/Zack Norman (aka Howard Zuker) and Neil Cohen in person for Q&As!
(These screenings are $10.)

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

The storied 1988 feature from Howard Zuker (Zack Norman’s film financier alter ego) and Neil Cohen, a fast-talking duo who met during the production of Robert Downey Sr.’s AMERICA. Finally resurfacing in a post-Trump America, it’s a romp on a shoestring, featuring appearances from heavies like Allan Arbus (GREASER’S PALACE, M*A*S*H), Allen Garfield (NASHVILLE, BEVERLY HILLS COP II), Norman himself, and Marianna Hill (THE GODFATHER PART II).




FESTIVAL IN CANNES
dir. Henry Jaglom, 2001
100 mins. United States.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13 – 5 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 5 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

Henry Jaglom’s early 2000s highlight, Festival In Cannes is both a love-letter and a denunciation of the Riviera’s most-coveted Croisette. In typical Jaglom style, the spotlight is set upon a wispy ensemble cast as they drift through Hollywood’s most seductive landscape, exchanging deceits and searching for meaning. Featuring Peter Bogdanovich, as well as glimpses of Faye Dunaway, Jeff Goldblum, and Holly Hunter.


SITTING DUCKS
Dir. Henry Jaglom, 1980
90 mins. United States.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 7:30 PM w/ZACK NORMAN in PERSON for Q&A!

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

Initially shown in May as part of our Jaglom ’80s series EMOTION TIME, SITTING DUCKS has Zack Norman and Michael Emil as neurotic petty criminals en route to Central America, caught up in a romantic carousel. An envoy of the eighties: self-help morphs into opportunism, the American landscape becomes a string of motels and strip-malls—the perfect pre-game for CHIEF ZABU.



AMERICA
(aka MOONBEAM)
dir. Robert Downey Sr., 1986
83 mins. United States.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 – 10 PM w/ZACK NORMAN in person for Q&A!
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

AMERICA (aka MOONBEAM) was filmed in 1982, released in 1986, and then rarely screened or talked about up. Featuring an ensemble of idiosyncratic newsman led by Zack Norman (an action reporter fashioning a woman’s dress), MOONBEAM, an arguable precursor to Adam McKay’s ANCHORMAN, is a puzzling offbeat relic from the clown Prince of cinematic crime himself. At times unquestionably funny, and at others frustratingly insensitive, Downey Sr’s absurdist satire tells the story of a local news station who accidentally “beams” its transmission to the moon. You kind of need to see it to believe it—and even then, good luck figuring out what to make of it.


GUMS
dir. Robert J Kaplan, 1976
70 mins. United States.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER  18 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

An endlessly odd relic from the age of porno chic, GUMS stars comedian and metaphysician Brother Theodore in a ribald, bad taste parody of JAWS. From Robert J. Kaplan, director of the Holly Woodlawn midnight classic SCARECROW IN A GARDEN OF CUCUMBERS.

BOOK WARS

BOOK WARS
dir. Jason Rosette, 2000.
79 mins. United States.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

Before Bloomberg completed Giuliani’s gentrification of the Village and before lap tops, smart phones and social media zapped our attention spans, a group of haggard but well-read men (and a few women) crowded the blocks of W4th St and 6th Avenue with scores of handsomely dilapidated tables of dusty and dog-eared used books. From a behind the table vantage point Book Wars (2000) captures the spirit of these open-air book markets while chronicling the turf wars the vendors fought with each other and their significantly greater adversaries of NYU, the NYPD and the Mayor’s office.

Book Thug Nation, which began as a street book table on W4th street in 2003, is celebrating its 10th year anniversary indoors (100 N3rd Street) the weekend of October 18-20. As part of the celebration they are screening BOOK WARS to pay homage to their predecessors and mentors.

PROPAGANDA MAGAZINE: The Videozines (1991-1994)

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 10 PM
w/Fred H. Berger in person for Q&A, moderated by goth historian and DJ Andi Harriman
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 10 PM
w/introduction by author Deirdre Coyle
(These events are $10.)

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS        FACEBOOK EVENT

From 1982 until the shuttering of its print publication in 2002, Propaganda Magazine was the resource for all things gothic. Beginning as a humble punk zine printed in downtown Manhattan copy shops by photographer Fred H. Berger, the magazine evolved with the whims and fancies of its creator, finding a massive audience when Berger was inspired to shift its focus to goth culture after a life-changing screening of THE HUNGER (1983). A prolific cinephile, Berger was further influenced by work such as THE NIGHT PORTER (1974), THE DEVILS (1971) and THE ROAD WARRIOR (1982).

While the magazine covered nightlife, music, and fashion, Berger followed through on his cinephilic inklings and produced, wrote and directed three companion “videozines” in the early 1990s. The videos starred Propaganda supermodels John Koviak, Scott Crawford and Tia Giles and sold around 20,000 VHS copies, as well as screening at parties and goth clubs such as Mother in NYC, Helter Skelter in Los Angeles, and House of Usher in San Francisco.

Loaded with iconic imagery, the tapes alternate between lush and stark, lo-fi and haute fashion, fetishistic and tongue-in-cheek. The Trilogy finds the gorgeous androgyne John Koviak roleplaying in a variety of historically fascist roles while suffering a crisis of conscience, Blood Countess depicts the noble serial killer Countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed, and The Ritual is suitably pagan. The tapes are as follows:

Volume 1, The Trilogy (1991)
Volume 2, Blood Countess (1992)
Volume 3, The Ritual (1994)

Spectacle is excited to present new high definition transfers of the tapes from the surviving BetaSP dubs in collaboration with Fred Berger in a celebrative look back at the subculture that swept the eighties and its aesthetic evolution, from Siouxsie and the Banshees to the Cocteau Twins, from Victorian vampiria to shocking iconography to heroin chic queerness.

CONTENT WARNING: The first tape contains a scene featuring offensive iconography — namely, an actor is dressed as an SS officer in a scene that also depicts dead bodies. While the programmers and Spectacle understand that these symbols, both in the film and in broader goth and queercore culture of the time, are being used to subvert and strip them of their power, we would like to take a moment to restate our policy: under no circumstances will fascists ever be allowed or tolerated in our space.

BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS


BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS

dir. Sam McKinlay, 1999.
Canada. 90 min.
Various.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 – 10 PM

This Spectober, we are “bloody” excited to present the legendary BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS by Sam McKinlay (who some know of for his long-running harsh noise project THE RITA, as well as acquaintanceship with the BARRIER KULT skate horde). Originally published and distributed on videotape, then recordable digital video disc, we are stoked to perhaps hold the first cinematic presentation in our ever-constricting Williamsburg g0th bodega walls.

“Now, for the first time, a collection of murder scenes from all your favorite Giallo films. More gloved stalkers and sharp objects than you can shake a stick at. The collection features scenes from many unreleased Italian thrillers including DEATH CARRIES A CANE, WHAT ARE THOSE STRANGE DROPS OF BLOOD ON THE BODY OF JENNIFER, SO SWEET SO DEAD, SEVEN MURDERS FOR SCOTLAND YARD, MURDER IN PARIS, REFLECTIONS IN BLACK, DEATH WALKS IN HIGH HEELS and many more (too many to list!). A must-have for fans of the genre and all its eccentricities.”

BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS was assembled by McKinlay in the pre-ripper old ways – VCR-to-VCR editing, the nth-generation VHS dubs being practically the only way for fanatics to access these films at that time. The degradation of the analog video image is well-known to the obsessed of the era – a built-in harrowing grime-en-scene, the vaseline on the home viewing lens, the fever dream of time, distance, and pursuit, burned in deeper with every dub. You could slice the tape in half and count the rings. BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS is a forensic exercise directed by a finessed methodical eye driving a coarse, brute hand –– an experience not quite that of the hyper-cadence narrative “supercuts” as we know today. The cadence of event and sensation is unrelenting and psychedelic; the original writeup mentions “eccentricities (of the genre)” –– a codeword for the vast ways in which a seemingly easily-read situation can explode into endless gush of sensation, thought and emotion, often after repeated exposure (and yes, something about true deep listening involved as key in the “harsh noise walls” left in the wake of McKinlay’s THE RITA).

The presentation of BLACK GLOVES AND RAZORS is the viewing of a relic lurking in the waters for many many years, swimming without an arc for many years more, wearing its scars and static as a necessity to stay on the move.

Please note: a lot of the material used in this work is incredibly violent and intense.

The original VHS sleeve by Kier-La Janisse was adapted for our banner graphics.

BURNING FRAME: A MONTHLY ANARCHIST FILM SERIES

CALLING ALL LEFTISTS! The past few years have been a whirlwind: exhausting, invigorating, and ripe with potential. It’s tremendously difficult, when in the thick of it, to pause, reflect, or even find a moment to catch a breath. Especially when “it” refers to the rise of fascism on a global scale, with any number of future cataclysms hovering just over the horizon. But we digress.

Join us, then, for a series that asks: if not now, when? Come for great works of radical political filmmaking, stay for the generative discussions, or even just to gossip and gripe. The hope isthat this forum for authentic representations of successes, defeats, and the messy work of political action, will be thrilling, edifying, and maybe even inspire your next organizing project. To butcher the title of a great film for the sake of a moderately applicable pun: “Throw away your dogma, rally in the cinema.”

NAGAI PARK ELEGY
(長居青春酔夢歌)
dir. Leo Sato, 2009
69 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

“In 2006, the Osaka Municipal Government forcibly evicted two major tent villages, one in Utsubo Park and another in Osaka Castle Park. After having confronted with the riot police for defending the dwelling space, we were sadly realizing the impossibility of competing with the state power. Now the remaining village was only in Nagai Park. The dwellers and supporters of the village knew that they were doomed to be kicked out sooner or later. In the following winter of 2007, the people in the park staged a collaborative play, while their village was being attacked by the riot police. This was a festive choice in desperation. The director Sato was shooting this entire process. The present documentary is thus centered on the confrontation/play at Nagai Park.

During the 1990s, Japan’s real estate bubble dramatically burst. The day-laborers lost their jobs in construction and most of them turned to be homeless. On riverbeds and streets, in stations and parks, many large-scale tent villages appeared across Japan. There was a construction boom for a short period, after the Hanshin Earthquake of 1995, when jobs for day-laborers increased and homeless population decreased. But in the 2000s, tent villages returned everywhere in Osaka. The homeless people sought to sustain their reproduction by building tents, earn living by collecting cans and wastes, thereby organize their autonomous community. We, the outside supporters, went in their village, seeking to find a way of symbiosis.

Eventually we were evicted from Sagai Park as well. The loss affected our relations nurtured during the communal life-in-struggle. Being unable to create a new base, we were dispersed. Some of us were badly depressed in devastation. But in the summer of 2008, a riot broke out in Kamagsaki, the day-laborers’ ghetto in Osaka. It was locals’ response to the police brutality against a day-laborer. The event was a sheer surprise for most of us, because the locals had not rose up against the police since 1992. Though the police oppression was tough, we were nevertheless empowered. It provided the opportunity to connect the older dispossessed and the younger precariats in Osaka. It gave us who had been disseminated after the eviction an ideal occasion to reassemble. While shooting the riot, some of us organized a film production collective the Nakazaki-cho Documentary Space (NDS). Therefore, the documentary connects the struggle of underclass across Osaka’s urban space, from the tent village defense in the park to the inner-city riot.”

LETTER TO OUTSIDE FRIENDS FROM THE KAMAGASAKI COMMUNE:

We want to share our struggle with you, who are fighting against capitalism and the state, somewhere on the planet. We are seeking to make the labor center a space of our encounter and cohabitation. That is the most substantial objective of our present occupation.

On the evening of March 31st, we began occupying Airin Labor Welfare Center in Kamagasaki, Osaka. The humongous building was originally constructed in 1970 to provide the space for a large-scale labor market where construction companies could buy the labor power of day laborers on daily basis. After the construction boom was gone, the need for labor market has diminished and the building has gradually come to function as a common space for the workers and homeless people, being used communally for cooking, sleeping, hanging out, playing shogi, etc.

In the summer of 2018, closure of the building was announced by the Osaka Municipal Government. The building was to be demolished for new development. Expecting the eviction, various forms of protests were attempted by different groups. However, nobody had thought that a physical occupation was possible, until it actually happened on March 31st, the date scheduled for the closure. At the moment when the dear and necessary space fell under attack, a crowd emerged as so many bodies ready to physically defend it. The ensuing struggle manifests how this space had become a part of their lives.

The occupation has begun and continues. We have been observing much passion of left leaning academics to analyze why and how the occupation had taken place. We would say: if you need bread for your career, here it is, take it! But to be honest, ex post facto analyses do not help our occupation. What we need is to exchange and share the ideas and aspirations for what we want to create out of this occupation. Since the remarkable Sunday evening, when many bodies spontaneously gathered and rose up — beyond the divisions of activists vs. workers/homeless — our common passion has been to ask each other on our future orientation: what we want to do, how we want to do it, … It is the questionings that are presently rearranging the power of our struggle, as the impetus to go beyond the stagnant frameworks of day-laborers’ movement and homeless movement.

We would like you, our friends, to know that the occupied space has openness and uncertainty at the moment. Although the space is managed by us to welcome everyone, homeless people and neighbors, many of them are still standing-by, hesitating to join. Although increasing number of friends are visiting, the space is far from being a common place for the locals.

The power (or genius loci) of Kamagasaki is made by a hybridization of various types of people, who are essentially outsiders. The majority of residents are social outcasts (clerics, activists, criminals, day-laborers, performers, street vendors, miners, migrant peasants, prostitutes, transvestites, all kinds of losers, …), who originally come from somewhere else. It has been the place of radical struggles and periodic riots. But there has been no single ideology leading them. If there is anything that has led them, it is the power of cohabitation of those others who come from different backgrounds.

The hybrid power is manifest in various dimensions. For instance, the communal kitchen – one of the most crucial projects there — has been sustained twice a week (Tuesday and Saturday) in the autonomous space of Sankaku Park, since the 90s, by various individuals: Christians, day-laborers, park dwellers, organizers of homeless movement, leftist radicals, anarchists, citizen volunteers, … This project has been made possible by everyone’s gesture that is equally forged by persisting in everyday troubles, rather than by the efforts of selected few.

In the present occupation, the moment of cohabitation with all locals has not yet been discovered. But with the incompleteness, we intend to experiment a new arrangement of cohabitation. Especially, we would like you, our friends who are outsider to Kamagasaki, to bring something different to our common space shared by the present occupies, in order to create a new arrangement of cohabitation with those homeless people and neighbors, who are standing-by. It is high time to fully employ the hybrid power of outsiders/social outcasts as the genius loci of Kamagasaki.

The conventional premise of the leftist movement in Kamagasaki has been to postpone the end of workers’ autonomous space, tacitly taking for granted that it is destined to be lost sooner or later by the development. It is high time to go beyond this fatalism with a flavor of nostalgia. What is crucial for us now is to take this event as an opportunity to experiment a new social relation that would maximize the power of our struggle. As To Our Friends keenly said, while the subject of strike was the working class, the subject of occupation could be anyone, namely, the heterogenous and hybrid crowds.
Since the beginning of center’s crisis, young precariat like us have been engaged in the struggle leading to the occupation, in order to construct the base for a communal life of the dispossessed. Thereby we have been seeking to create a new form of life-as-struggle against the capitalist-nation-state on the everyday basis. This is an ongoing attempt to realize what we would want to share, which entails much unknown factors at the moment. But what we would want to realize is clear: to create a new village of the dispossessed within the mammoth building.

To begin with, we want to improve the present state of our living, where tens of us are surviving only with several tents installed on the small area covered with blue sheets, in the center’s huge floor. We want to make a kitchen with which we can cook for a hundred people. We want to become a power that makes possible a safe and comfortable cohabitation for all genders. We want to organize the openness and uncertainty as flexible as possible, so that everyone of us can attempt to create what we all share in their own ways. We want to stop representing the oppressed by professing to be supporters/activists, and instead, nurture the power together with the locals through our common struggle. We want to think together with you all what this struggle can achieve, beyond our intention.

We call to all friends who are passionate to participate in this occupation: the success of this struggle is not in sustaining the occupation forever. We are well aware of the fact that we could be evicted by the police anytime. Our objective is not to beat them. It is a sheer impossibility today. It is not only impossible, but also undesirable. What we want to have is not the power rivaling the power that the state conceives. What we want is a totally different power, namely, the power of association that creates an yet unknown arrangement of planetary struggle against the capitalist-nation-state, by connecting our attempt for a new cohabitation of the dispossessed in Kamagasaki with the struggles of our friends outside Kamagasaki. We believe that today’s revolutionary potency exists in the power nurtured by the encounter among the struggles across the planet.


KAMAGASKI CAULDRON WAR
(月夜釜合戦)
dir. Leo Sato, 2018
115 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!


Kamagasaki is the town of day-laborers, homeless and social outcasts in Osaka Japan. Along with another urban ghetto, Sanya in Tokyo, the town saw periodic riots — even after the age of uprisings in the 60s — whose last manifestation was in the summer of 2008 during the G8 Summit. The town embodies all aspects of otherness to the country known for its near completion of social control and consumerist paradise.

During the economic growth, the resident workers were made to provide their blood and tears for massive developments, while excluded from nation’s civil society. After the construction boom dwindled, the town was disinvested and the impetus of all activities declined, but the exclusionary status has sustained, while the majority of residents have turned to be homeless. Today the area is the target of gentrification and the spaces of autonomy that the residents had achieved by their long-time struggles are being evicted one after another.

The town has been a center of political activism. The activists of liberal inclination work for welfare projects designed to domesticate homeless population, mostly, in collaboration with the government. Certain artists are mobilized to make the town look neater and more accessible to the general public. Labor organizers of different veins have long been working with the residents in the framework of their political organizations. Left leaning academics (mostly urban theorists) passionately study the history of labor militancy as well as the recent development of gentrification. And finally, young precariats (including those with anti-capitalist convictions) seek to create a cohabitation space with the older day-laborers and homeless by developing new autonomous zones. During the past two years, the annual gathering of Living Assembly was hosted by the community there.

On the evening of March 31st 2019, the residents of Kamagasaki began occupying the local labor center. This was the date scheduled by the Osaka municipal government for the center’s closure, in order to demolish it for a new development. At the moment when the existence of the center — dear and necessary in the minds of so many — fell under attack, a crowd emerged as so many bodies ready to physically defend it. The ensuing struggle manifests how the space itself had become a part of their lives.
Though originally constructed in 1970 as a massive labor marketplace where construction companies could buy the labor power of day laborers, the building had since come to function as a common space for the workers and homeless people, used communally for cooking, sleeping, hanging out, playing shogi, etc.

The occupation ended within twenty-four days. But the short-lived event broke the ice of powerlessness that had long been affecting the entirety of Japan, and opened a potency for the unknown. What was happening inside the occupied space was remarkable. It was an experimentation of cohabitation between the young and old dispossessed, outside the consumerist society. When the spring wind turned cold, heaters were brought in; when their stomachs got empty, a community kitchen was organized; when the night grew long, bedding was collected. The occupiers organized general assembly for sharing the prospect of occupation. They held various discussions for all decision-makings. They built a library. They invited authors to give talks. They had film screenings. Music concerts took place. Many outside friends in and out of Japan visited for support (…) These are manifestations of real capacity for a communal life in happiness, deriving from the power nurtured by the worker/homeless through their lives-as-struggle, that was reawoken by the new encounter between the older residents of Kamagasaki, young newcomers as well as friends from outside. The event created relations beyond the previously dominant duality between the activist (as savior) and the day-laborer/homeless (as victim); it surpassed the phase of leftists’ passive immersion in the nostalgia of good old days of labor militancy. The event created a new body of communal life-as-struggle.

This body is now charged with a question, that is shared universally among all of us living under the endless drive of capitalist/state mode of development. If every autonomous zone we create is destined to perish by violence, sooner or later, at some point in future, how can the autonomous zone and the communal relations nurtured therein sustain themselves and grow further? Is it possibly by creating a certain mobile form and synchronicity with others?

This film’s story takes place in various Kamagasaki locales, unfolding in the shadow of what its characters refer to simply as “Abeno.” This is the high-rise complex Abeno Harukas, Japan’s tallest building and the epitome of reckless development. Today, powerful and vested interests threaten to displace the old Kamagasaki dwellers and destroy the forms of life they created outside of civil society. The film maps this ongoing gentrification through the perspectives of a diverse cast of characters, representative of Kamagasaki’s real inhabitants: there are day laborers, prostitutes, homeless, a pickpocket, a street performer, a blind masseur, an orphan, a political activist and a priest. There is also a yakuza family called the Kamatari Gang who rule underground businesses, including the red light district Tobita Ukaku. Like real-life yakuza, the Kamatari regularly collaborate with the police and with developers. When the Kamatari’s prized possession — a kama emblazoned with the family emblem, used in pledging ceremonies — is stolen by a wandering performer, a great melee ensues, embroiling gangsters fighting for prestige, locals looking to make a few bucks, workers/homeless protecting their symbol of survival, and bystanders who can’t help but get involved. The countless kama being circulated around only complicate the situation, and confrontations multiply…

The cast includes only a few established actors. The majority of the characters are played by friends of the production team, and real people living in Kamagasaki. The film was shot in 16mm in attempt to capture the special atmosphere of Kamagasaki, its smells and its aura, as well as people’s breath and heartbeat. All in all, the real subject of the film is the town of Kamagasaki itself.

In the process of the film’s distribution, however, a conflict arose, between those who prioritize screening in political communities across the world and those who cherish major distribution, especially in national and international film festivals. This conflict is so idiotic, since there is no reason that these two stances have to oppose each other. On the other hand, however, in the context of Japan it embodies a recurrence of the important debate that surfaced in the late 60s among revolutionary film makers, between the film of movement (collectivity) or the film of author (director).

The production of KAMASAGAKI: THE CAULDRON WAR was made possible by the collaborative relations nurtured in the Nakazaki-cho Documentary Space (NDS), where all members contribute to making films directed by other members. This assumes a de-hierarchized collaboration among all, wherein all are directors and production assistants at the same time. But after the production ended, the drive for success in the capitalist mode of film making has come to dominate and a group led by the producer has come to monopolize the object and means of distribution. Meanwhile, another group persists in guerrilla screening across the world, focusing on small enclaves of radicals. It goes without saying that this screening is part of the latter.

All texts written by Living Assembly.

PUBLIC ACCESS, PRIVATE DESIRES

In the early 70s, a group of academics, documentarians and free-speech enthusiasts dragged the chairman of the FCC into the desert and threw soft, dusty pillows at him until he ceded a few bands of the commercial broadcast system for local use. They swore there and then that not all public-access would be coverage of town fairs and talent shows, but that hilarious and oddly beautiful things would be broadcast to audiences of tens, maybe even hundreds. This September, Spectacle brings you five public-access greats: David Liebe Hart, Job Matusow from Utah, Damon Zex from Columbus, Splendid Recipes out of Pittsburgh, and NYC’s very own Concrete TV.




THE DIABOLICAL DAMON ZEX / CHECKMATE
dir. Damon Zex, 1992-2004
84 mins. Ohio.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – MIDNIGHT
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 – MIDNIGHT

Special thanks to Damon Zex and Greg Smalley.

“Damon Zex wears his badge of Artistic Elitism as a warning to the bourgeoisie… a kindred spirit to innovators such as Georges Melies, Kenneth Anger and Ernie Kovacs.” – Alfred Eaker, 366weirdmovies

Although he was making films as early as 1984 and even had a few appearances on Toronto’s Much Music, Damon Zex found his home as the Patron Saint of Public Access in the sleepy little hamlet of Columbus, Ohio in 1992. Zex’s show aptly titled “Zextalk” crashed like a bolt of lightning amidst shows like “Bee B The Clown” and it wasn’t long until folks took notice. Assaulted by the likes of City Council and CNN alike, Zex weaved and dodged through the wagging fingers defending his ability to bring surrealism to the masses eventually landing spots on Geraldo, Jerry Springer, and more.

Zex’s love for silent film and German expressionism pours onto the screen while episodes featured himself and a few guests participating in things the suburbs simply couldn’t stomach. If you happened to land on Zextalk while channel surfing (or made it a point to leave a function to catch the show like some folks) it was possible to see a vampire eating used tampons, a chessboard made of drugs, a televangelist who claims God loves to watch you fuck, and more. In fact if you ask just about anyone who lived in Columbus at the time it’s safe to say they have at least one Damon Zex story. When the channel finally closed in 2004 Zex was thankfully able to get out with his collection of U-Matic tapes of his episodes.

A long time coming, this program features a sort of “Best Of” complied by Damon Zex and Greg Smalley from the original tapes and is paired with CHECKMATE.

FUCK FOR DRUGS.




JOB MATUSOW’S MAGIC MOUSE MAGAZINE

dir. Harvey Matusow, 199X
70 mins. Utah.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – 10 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 10:00 PM

Harvey Matusow had a pretty storied life—he was a fink during the House of Un-American Activities hearings, ratting out his comrades at People’s Song and leading to Pete Seeger’s unceremonious blacklisting. He later recanted his testimony, leading to a perjury conviction that landed him in Lewisberg (he was cellmates with Wilhelm Reich).

It turns out there are second acts in American lives, because after his sentence he ended up relocating to London and becoming a fixture in the experimental arts scene—he was briefly married to composer Annea Lockwood—most notably organizing a 7-day festival called ICES ’72 that brought together John Cage, AMM, Cornelius Cardew, and Gee Vaucher of Crass. It’s said that Matusow helped introduce John Lennon to Yoko Ono.

He relocated back to the US in 1974 and after some time flirting with the Elwood Babbitt commune in western Massachusetts, he settled west, first in Arizona then Utah, developing a clown character named Cockyboo and a set of children’s stories called Magic Mouse Magazine. In the ’80s he became active in the Church of Latter Day Saints, changed his name to Job, and established Utah’s first public access television station, bringing his Magic Mouse concept with him.




DAVID LIEBE HART’S JUNIOR CHRISTIAN TEACHING BIBLE LESSON PROGRAM

dir. David Leibe Hart, 1994-2008
70 mins. Los Angeles.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – 10 PM

Well before his memorable segments in Tim and Eric’s Awesome Show Good Job, David Liebe Hart was a showman in his own right, arriving in Hollywood in 1976 and soon after appearing with Robin Williams and working as an intern on Chuck Barris’ The Gong Show, among other stints.

JUNIOR CHRISTIAN TEACHING BIBLE LESSON PROGRAM was a Los Angeles public access program that ran for nearly 20 years, featuring biblical explications illustrated by puppet sketches, hosted by Hart, a life-long member of the Christian Science faith.

“I am the image and likeness of god, I am I am I am, I am the image and likeness of God, I am I am I am…” – Albert Hermann, first reader

“It’s the most bizarre, horrible, extraordinary piece of Christian puppeteering I think you’ll ever see.” – Andy Nyman on a episode of Charlie Brooker’s Screenwipe



SPLENDID RECIPES
produced by Chris Coleman, 2007ish
72 mins. Pittsburgh.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 – 10 PM

Time to take a trip and spend a holiday in Pittsburg! Certain cable access shows could be categorized as mixtapes, yet it’s especially apt here, given how it’s a collaboration between local hip hop & noise grind artists, along with their pals. But instead of being inside a studio or on-stage making music, they’re screwing around the neighborhood and making each other laugh, be it yelling at city buses or making a scene at a midnight launch for a video game. Splendid Recipes is a greatest hits of everyone’s shot on VHS antics from childhood, later refined attempts at sketch comedy as adults, experiments in Video Toaster, some good old-fashioned found footage, and a whole lotta love for the neighborhood. Spectacle is proud to present what is believed to be special editions/director’s cuts of the first two episodes, entitled “EPISODE THRICE” & “EPISODE 4REIGNER”, and which were sold on DVD-Rs at a local Pittsburg comic shop. As well as “EPISODE SCI-FIVE”, which may have never been released into the wild and instead only obtainable to the select few who managed to establish a relationship with the show on MySpace, back when that was still a thing.


CONCRETE TV
dir. Ron Rocheleau, 19XX-20XX
70 mins. New York City.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – 7:30 PM w/Concrete Ron in person for Q&A
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – 7:30 PM w/Concrete Ron in person for Q&A
(Both these events are $10.)

When Rolling Stone Magazine cited a local New York cable access program, Concrete TV, as the best thing on television across the board in 1996, everyone from MTV to NBC came knocking on creator Ron Rocheleau’s door. Network executives all wanted his keen eye and even sharper editorial chops for distilling plus remixing the pure nonsense and madness that is commercial television, Hollywood drivel, workout videos, car crash footage, professional wrestling, vintage porn, and even more car crash footage.

When it was explained that what he did could not be replicated on a corporate payroll, because the type of art that he produced has zero concern for trifling matters such as copyright and intellectual property, everyone tried their best to copycat. These pale imitations would evolve over time, and Concrete Ron’s style would ultimately be popularized over the years, albeit without the direct involvement of the creator himself. Hence why it is no exaggeration to say that the DNA of every single video collage effort over the past 20+ years can be directly traced to Concrete TV, which stands as perhaps the most influential forms of modern media to go unrecognized.

Concrete TV is still being produced today… you can catch episodes on the Manhattan Neighborhood Network every Friday night at 1:30am… and Spectacle is proud to present not only brand new, yet to air episodes, but to also have Ron Rocheleau in attendance, who will fully detail how he’s still using VCRs and nothing but VCRs in the year 2019.

Patrick Wang’s A BREAD FACTORY

Patrick Wang’s miraculous two-part feature A BREAD FACTORY has made theatrical rounds over the past year and change to rapturous acclaim. Spectacle is very excited to host A BREAD FACTORY for 3 special screenings in September leading up to the release of the blu-ray by Grasshopper Films, including multiple opportunities to watch the whole back-to-back. This is the story of a community arts center in the small (fictional) town of Checkford.

Patrick Wang is author of The Monologue Plays and Post Script. His films–In the FamilyThe Grief of Others, and A Bread Factory, Parts One and Two–have premiered at SXSW and Cannes and have been nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards.


A BREAD FACTORY
PART 1: FOR THE SAKE OF GOLD
dir. Patrick Wang, 2018
122 mins. United States.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 5 PM with writer-director Patrick Wang in person for Q&A!
(This event is $10.)

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 5:00 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 – 5 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

After 40 years of running The Bread Factory, Dorothea (Tyne Daly) and Greta (Elisabeth Henry) are suddenly fighting for survival when a celebrity couple—performance artists from China—come to Checkford and build an enormous complex down the street catapulting big changes in their small town.



A BREAD FACTORY
PART 2: WALK WITH ME FOR A WHILE
dir. Patrick Wang, 2018
120 mins. United States.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 7:30 PM with Patrick Wang in person for Q&A!
(This event is $10.)

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS        FACEBOOK EVENT

At The Bread Factory, they rehearse the Greek play, Hecuba. But the real theatrics are outside the theater where the town has been invaded by bizarre tourists and mysterious tech start-up workers. There is a new normal in Checkford, if it is even really Checkford any longer.

“A major new work by a singular American artist. A Bread Factory has an immense cast, a deliberate pace and thematic ambition to spare — but it also has a ground-level, plain-spoken modesty that renders it hypnotic. Critic’s Pick!”Bilge Ebiri, The New York Times

“My favorite film of the year by far. As of this writing, I’ve seen both parts three times. With each viewing, I notice new things and am more moved by the characters… This film is miraculous, and we are lucky to have it.”Matt Zoller Seitz, RogerEbert.com

“A richly absorbing portrait of a community theater at a crossroads. A wondrously moving, thoughtful and inventive new movie. Wang is an unusually gifted and criminally undersung talent.”Justin Chang, LA Times

“Endlessly warm, playful and lovable… Suggests the work of Richard Linklater, Christopher Guest, Robert Altman and Edward Yang. The film is utterly singular, though, the kind of work that will become a point of comparison itself.”Alan Scherstuhl, LA Weekly

TESSA HUGHES-FREELAND: Selected Video And Film Works, 1981-2013

TESSA HUGHES-FREELAND is a filmmaker, curator, and writer— a crucial downtown denizen by way of England, a scintillating vestige from the heady days of Danceteria and Club 57, and still one of the best we’ve got. Landing in the city in 1980 and beginning her film work with a super-8 camera gifted from David Wojnarowicz, her work spans four decades, tracing a unique arc that rubs elbows with many of the canonical figures and movements of NYC underground film culture. No Wave Cinema turns to Cinema of Transgression; expanded cinema bleeds into ‘multimedia’; the East Village descends and the underground breaks—Hughes-Freeland was there, camera in hand. Shifting in style and sensibility, ranging from 8mm scuzz to experimental documentary to elegiac film-portrait, her work in aggregate is difficult to summarize, better seen than described. Certain themes run through—sexuality, voyeurism, ritual, dream, and decay.

Spectacle is honored to host Tessa for two evenings in September screening and discussing her work. This series looks ahead to her solo exhibition at Howl! Happening titled Tessa Hughes-Freeland: Passed and Present, featuring multiple projections, an “interactive kaleidoscope,” sculptural fans, and the debut of her forthcoming, recently completed LOST MOVIE/THE BUG.


PROGRAM ONE (1981-1986)

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 – 7:30 PM with Tessa Hughes-Freeland in person for Q&A!
(This event is $10.)

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – 10 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS         FACEBOOK EVENT

Comprised of shorts ranging from 1981 to 1986, these films can be seen as collectively documenting the East Village prior to its unceremonious death in 1985 (as declared by her husband Carlo McCormick in a eulogy in the East Village Eye). Contained here are dispatches from downtown culture including footage of graffiti culture, the experimental Butoh group Poppo, and a verité portrait of topless go-go dancers from Tribeca club Baby Doll Lounge. Also seen are delirious collage of found-footage, performance by Butthole Surfers, freshly signed to Touch and Go, and filmic evidence of the infamous 1985 Richmond, Virginia exhibition that featured downtown artists Wojnarowicz, Marilyn Minter, Luis Frangella, and more painting naughty murals while on acid.

BABY DOLL
1981. 3 mins.

JOKER
1983. 3 mins.

GRAFFITI HALL OF FAME
1983. 9 mins.

POPPO I 1984. 10 mins.

RHONDA GOES TO HOLLYWOOD
1985. 24 mins.

THE VIRGINIA TRIPPING FILM (Korean version)
1985. 8 mins.

BUTTHOLE SURFERS FILM
1986. 17 mins.

Total runtime: 74 mins


PROGRAM TWO (1987-2013)

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – 7:30 PM with Tessa Hughes-Freeland in person for Q&A!
(This event is $10.)

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

Spanning 1986 to 2013, these heterogeneous shorts include a scandalous and indelible duo with Tommy Turner, featuring dead rats as metaphor for dope; a kaleidoscopic collaboration with downtown rock art-bruts the Workdogs; a Bataille adaptation with Annabel Lee; a tongue-in-cheek mythological parable with Holly Adams; and break-beat driven sojourns through appropriated and found footage, with nods to the verve of the live multiple projections of yore. It’s fitting that the most recent piece, HIPPIE HOME MOVIE, made for an exhibition on the Catskills, takes up as one of its themes the spectre of hippies and the counterculture—a loaded note to end on, for sure!

RAT TRAP
dirs. Tessa Hughes-Freeland and Tommy Turner
1986. 12 mins.

JANE GONE
1987. 7 mins.

DIRTY
dirs. Tessa Hughes-Freeland and Annabel Lee
1993. 16 mins.

NYMPHOMANIA
dirs. Tessa Hughes-Freeland and Holly Adams
1994. 10 mins.

WATCH OUT!
2007. 3 mins.

GIFT
2010. 6 mins.

INSTINCT
2010. 12 mins.

KIND
2013. 1 min.

HIPPIE HOME MOVIE
2013. 3 mins.

Total runtime: 70 mins