SURVIVAL RESEARCH LABORATORIES: SELECTED VIDEO WORKS

SURVIVAL RESEARCH LABORATORIES: SELECTED VIDEO WORKS

Founded in 1978 by inventor and engineer Mark Pauline, Survival Research Laboratories bring the concept of Industrial Performance Art to its most logical and extreme end. The bodies in a typical SRL happening are not breathing, but they’re certainly alive. Weapons-grade robotics and fresh carcasses find themselves engaged in a dangerous, cacophonous marriage of flesh, fire, steel, blood, oil, and electrocution. Tonight the field is filled with smoke, cannonballs, shattered glass, and hypnotized excruciating screams. The only institution that does mechano-mortal combat better is the U.S. Military.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 10 PM

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A BITTER MESSAGE OF HOPELESS GRIEF
Dir. Jonathan Reiss, 1988
United States. 13 min

A SCENIC HARVEST FROM THE KINGDOM OF PAIN
Dir. Jonathan Reiss, Joe Rees, 1984
United States. 46 min

THE WILL TO PROVOKE: AN ACCOUNT OF FANTASTIC SCHEMES FOR INITIATING SOCIAL IMPROVEMENTS
Dir. Jonathan Reiss, 1989
United States. 45 min

WAZAK! THESE ARE NOT SOME FILMS BY KHAVN

WAZAK! THESE ARE NOT SOME FILMS BY KHAVN

“One of underground digital cinema’s best-kept secrets: a prankster punk, an ass-kicking rebel priest.”
—Olaf Moeller, Film Comment

“Very likely the world’s most prolific major filmmaker, tethered to no genre or tradition except his own commitment to radical cinema’s capacity to change audiences.”
—Robert Koehler, Variety

With 52 features and 150+ shorts to his name, some of which were shot in a single day, the work of poet/musician/filmmaker Khavn De La Cruz is so voluminous and eclectic as to defy classification. From families that eat soil to kids that smoke cigarettes and fuck geese to innocent orphans caught up in historical massacres, the only guarantee that comes when you watch a movie by Khavn is that you’re going to get your senses rocked and your world turned upside down. These are films that embrace their own abrasive edges, delighting in imperfection as a symbol of artistic freedom and an iconoclastic struggle against the stifling order of things. More than characters or plots, Khavn builds his films on music, color, and grotesque non sequiturs, taking any and every opportunity to deviate from the expected and indulge in whatever odd detail or sequence strikes his fancy. With the Mad Max production design of ALIPATO and the aggressive transgressiveness of his lo-fi digital cinematography, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that his films have often been labeled as punk. Yet there’s a sensitivity and patience in these films, a contemplative openness to portraying the world in all its documentary messiness, that goes beyond any labels.

We’re proud to present a retrospective of his work, even if it is just a smattering of his total output, and will be showing five films throughout the month: THE FAMILY THAT EATS SOIL; RUINED HEART: ANOTHER LOVE STORY BETWEEN A CRIMINAL AND A WHORE; ALIPATO: THE VERY BRIEF LIFE OF AN EMBER; BAMBOO DOGS; and BALANGIGA, along with a handful of shorts selected to accompany every feature. Wazak!


THE FAMILY THAT EATS SOIL

THE FAMILY THAT EATS SOIL
Dir. Khavn, 2005
The Philippines. 75 min
In Tagalog and Spanish with English subtitles

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 10 PM

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“Soil again? Soil for breakfast, soil for lunch, soil for dinner. Even for snacks. Don’t tell me we’ll be having soil on my first birthday.”

An iconoclastic take-down of the Filipino family unit delivered in a spasm of manic gonzo energy, THE FAMILY THAT EATS SOIL is so vicious in its satire that at one point even the subtitles stop translating what characters are saying and start making fun of them instead. Based on Khavn’s prose poem of the same name, the titular family is just your average middle class five person unit – Dad sneaks into the hospital and turns cancerous children into vegetables, Mom hosts a reality show where she tours brothels and drug dens, Sis can’t stop thinking of rape, Bro tortures immigrants, and Baby smokes cigarettes and frequents cock fights.

“A hyper-condensed punk-trash take on Phillipine family politics. At times it plays like a de-Pasoliniized version of Takashi Miike’s Visitor Q, at others like an absurdist experimental Bomba flick. Yet it always feels like cinema is about to end and only no-holds-barred videomaking can save the world.”
—Olaf Moeller, Film Comment

Screening with:

GREASEMAN
Dir. Khavn, 2002
The Philippines. 13 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

PORNOMAN
Dir. Khavn
The Philippines. 3 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

THE PUSHCART FAMILY
Dir. Khavn
The Philippines. 4 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles


RUINED HEART: ANOTHER LOVE STORY BETWEEN A CRIMINAL AND A WHORE

RUINED HEART: ANOTHER LOVE STORY BETWEEN A CRIMINAL AND A WHORE
Dir. Khavn, 2014
The Philippines. 73 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 – 10 PM

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A punk noir opera lensed by Christopher Doyle, starring Tadanobu Asano, and set to the music of Stereo Total, RUINED HEART manages to be one of Khavn’s most ambitious and high-profile works without sacrificing any of his gonzo, free-form, DIY energy. As the title suggests, the set-up is purely archetypical, a gangster and his moll piss off the boss and have to hit the road, so much so that the characters are even introduced simply by generic monikers instead of names. Yet you don’t go watch a film by Khavn for the plot, you go for the visual poetry and upbeat spirit of rebellion and this generic template is an apt structure for a series of wild music numbers shot in a woozy, drunken camera-style and adorned with all sorts of decadent, punk-ish production design.

Screening with:

BARONG BROTHERS
Dir. Khavn
The Philippines. 10 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

SMALL ALI
Dir. Khavn
The Philippines. 8 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles


ALIPATO: THE VERY BRIEF LIFE OF AN EMBER

ALIPATO: THE VERY BRIEF LIFE OF AN EMBER
Dir. Khavn, 2016
The Philippines. 88 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 – 10 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – 10 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 – 7:30 PM

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Long live children. Fucking hope of the country and other bullshit. We are the priests. We are the fucking castrators. We are the fucking blood of rats. We are the fucking sweat of roaches. Here classrooms are wasted if they aren’t turned into whorehouses and drug dens.

Mondomanila, 2025. A landscape dominated by tombstones and trash heaps. A gang of child criminals are out for a big score. When they get their chance, the job goes wrong of course and the boss ends up in jail. 30 years later and he’s on the streets again, but everything seems to be exactly as it is. Nothing ever changes in Mondomanila, the kids still spend their days smoking cigarettes and beating each other up while the cops still hang out in the back of a pig slaughterhouse-cum-brothel, stuffing their faces and taking graft. Khavn colors this all with a vibrant, kaleidoscopic production design that combines a documentary eye for real places and people with punk apocalyptic costumes that would feel at home in a Mad Max movie.

Screening with:

CAN & SLIPPERS
Dir. Khavn, 2005
The Philippines. 2 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

A used can and a foot. A whole world and a garbage heap. All this and less in 2 minutes.

“It might be Khavn’s entire oeuvre’s symbolic focal point. Viewers might swoon over the bravura opening montage, be stunned by the realization that the film’s badass soccer player is actually a one-legged kid hobbling on crutches, and then be blown away when he bends it like Beckham, but there’s always a feeling that, for all it’s joy and playfulness, this is much closer to the ugly truth of the Pinoy condition then one would like to admit.”
—Olaf Moeller, Film Comment

RUGBY BOYZ
Dir. Khavn, 2006
The Philippines. 8 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles


BAMBOO DOGS

BAMBOO DOGS
Dir. Khavn, 2018
The Philippines. 81 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – Midnight
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – 10 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 – 10 PM

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Based on a real life 1995 execution of a group of prisoners at the hands of the police, BAMBOO DOGS crafts a sharp character study of the victims of this incident, shying away from the abrasive tone common to many of Khavn’s other works without blunting his ability to continually surprise. Set over the course of one long night, the film follows the prisoners as they are shuttled around Quezon City in the back of a police van while under the impression that their release is imminent. Khavn’s real masterstroke comes in the decision to depict this one fateful night as something rather ordinary and mundane, deflating most of the drama in favor of endless banter between criminals and cops about how great it is to be a gangster and the merits of circumcision. This is (not) a film by Khavn though, so expect some hypnagogic dream sequences and one hell of a musical number.

Screening with:

FILIPINIANA
Dir. Khavn, 2016
The Philippines, 13 minutes
In Tagalog with English subtitles

“history is a dead cow in a funnel pretending to be a detuned bassoon serenading the moon halved by expectations not so great that new emperors bow their decapitated heads but 3 cakes are always better than 3 cents in this madly turning world peeking pecking ducktards for a midnight snack on the run.”
—Khavn’s description of the film.


BALANGIGA: HOWLING WILDERNESS

BALANGIGA: HOWLING WILDERNESS
Dir. Khavn, 2017
The Philippines. 112 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 7:30 PM

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Set in 1901 during the American occupation of the Philippines, BALANGIGA: HOWLING WILDERNESS, is a hallucinogenic western road trip through a violent landscape. Fleeing the town of Balangiga, the site of a real massacre by the Americans, 8 year old Kulas, his grandfather, their ox, and the orphaned toddler whom they rescued, encounter all sorts of surreal figures in the wilderness. From chronically masturbating shamans (experimental Filipino animator Roxlee in a cameo) to desperate Americans lost in the forest to swooping drone shots over-saturated colors, Khavn crafts a unique blend of brutality, absurdity, childish reverie, and desperation.

Screening with:

ULTIMO: DIFFERENT WAYS OF KILLING A NATIONAL HERO
Dir. Khavn, 2006
The Philippines. 6 min
In Tagalog with English subtitles

“Khavn’s poignant, black-and-white riff on Filipino national hero Jose Rizal is reflective of the director’s restless experimentation and unmistakable energy. Shot in Spain (the Philippines’ former colonizer) in about a week, the abstract string of scenes of play and contemplation has a thrown-together feel but deepens with the intricate flamenco guitar score (the movie’s is otherwise silent) and the intertitles of Rizal’s proud-martyr verse.”
—Nicolas Rapold, Film Comment

MASTERS OF ITALIAN EXPLOITATION: RUGGERO DEODATO

MASTERS OF ITALIAN EXPLOITATION: RUGGERO DEODATO

This September Spectacle presents three underseen gems by the godfather of Italian shock and sleaze Ruggero Deodato!

CUT AND RUN

CUT AND RUN
(Inferno in Diretta)
Dir. Ruggero Deodato, 1985.
Italy. 90 min
In English

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – Midnight
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – Midnight 

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Miami, 1984. At the scene of a grizzly murder, news reporter Fran Hudson discovers a connection between a Jonestown survivor and a TV executive’s missing son. The lead sends her deep into the madness of the jungle and face-to-face with Colonel Brian Horn’s cult-like cannibal army.

CUT AND RUN serves as the final film in Ruggero Deodato’s cannibal trilogy following LAST CANNIBAL WORLD (1977) and CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST(1980). After his first two films were condemned for their depictions of genuine animal cruelty, Deodato appears to have taken pity on his audience (which is to say that no animals were harmed in the making of this film). However, CUT AND RUN is hardly a ride on Disney’s Jungle Cruise; this film is the coked-up loved child of APOCALYPSE NOW (1979) and ZOMBI 2 (1979).

The film began its life as a script written by Wes Craven, but his version never saw the light of day. Deodato eventually picked up the project and cast longtime Craven collaborator Michael Berryman, hot off the set of HILLS HAVE EYES PART 2 (1984). Berryman is joined by genre all-stars Richard Lynch, Lisa Blout, Barbara Magnolfi, and Karen Black.


THE WASHING MACHINE

THE WASHING MACHINE
(Vortice Mortale)
Dir. Ruggero Deodato, 1993.
Italy. 86 min
In English
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 – Midnight
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 – Midnight
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – 7:30 PM 

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Detective Stacev is called to investigate after three sisters discover a dismembered pimp in their washing machine. However, when the body goes missing, everyone’s a suspect. The detective puts it all on the line to untangle a web of secrets, seduction, and subterfuge or risks being left out to dry.

Don’t let the title fool you, THE WASHING MACHINE is not a killer appliance movie. Produced during the height of the erotic thriller boom of the late 80s and early 90s, THE WASHING MACHINE applies a typical giallo story to an erotic thriller framework. The result is a bizarre masterpiece dripping in questionable motivations, immoral characters, and insane twists. Accompanying the on-screen madness is an electrifying soundtrack by Goblin keyboardist, and longtime Deodato collaborator, Claudio Simonetti.


DIAL: HELP

DIAL: HELP
Dir. Ruggero Deodato, 1988.
Italy. 94 min
In English
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – Midnight
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 – Midnight
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 – Midnight
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – 10 PM 

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A psychic finds herself tapping into the “energy” of a deceased phone operator. She also finds that her friends soon begin dying mysteriously. An investigator determines to track down the cause.

Rounding out our trio of Deodato films is this extremely wacky English language supernatural thriller, based on a story by frequent Argento collaborator Franco Ferrini (PHENOMENA, OPERA, DEMONS, DEMONS 2). It follows a British model (Charlotte Lewis) after her recent arrival in Rome. A psychic presence begins to stalk her as a series of grisly and increasingly bizarre telephone related murders occur. Bursting with over the top 80’s absurdity, creative FX, and a perfectly dated ‘funky’ soundtrack.

CLEARCUT

 

 

CLEARCUT
Dir. Ryszard Bugajski, 1991
Canada. 100 min

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 – 5 PM

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Peter Maguire (Ron Lea) is a white lawyer from Toronto, representing an unspecified indigenous tribe in rural Canada against an encroaching paper mill’s thirst for profit. Maguire is unsuccessful in keeping the company from building a road and clear-cutting their way through the tribe’s land, but his frustrations only manifest as platitudes and fantasies of revenge. That is, until the arrival of Arthur (Graham Greene), a mysterious native, who kidnaps the mill’s owner and drags both him and Maguire into the forest to enact the lawyer’s once empty threats. As the Wisakedjak—a trickster of indigenous folklore—Arthur’s unrelenting violence is doled out with a sardonic stoicism. His actions upon the mill’s owner mimicking the treatment of the trees and land by the loggers and paper mill.

With a screenplay based on the novel A Dream Like Mine by M.T. Kelly, Bugajski’s film places white liberal pacifism in the cross hairs, and questions if violence is necessary and moral in the face of capitalism, the state, and environmental destruction. The answers, and the difference between right and wrong, may not be so… CLEARCUT.

UR-MUSIG

UR-MUSIG
Dir. Cyrill Schläpfer, 1993
Switzerland. 107 min

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29 – 7:30 PM

Meaning “Primitive Music”, UR-MUSIG is a journey into the world of traditional Swiss folk music. Presented without comment or narration, the film focuses on the sounds of Central Switzerland and Appenzellerland; such as yodeling, the alpine blessing, the ringing of cowbells, and more. Visually augmented by the lush, gorgeous landscapes of the Alps as seen in every season of the year, each more staggeringly beautiful than then the next. Showcasing the inherent relationship between the film’s subjects’ musical expression and the land in which it inhabits. The film has gained a cult reputation after screening as a continuous Sunday matinee for 2 years in Zurich.

BAPHTA: M. NIGHT SHYAMALAN

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

BAPHTA is a bi-monthly multimedia comedy show that celebrates legendary film directors with monologues, characters, and short videos. Special guests are invited to put their spin on these visionaries of the seventh art.

This month’s installment focuses on the enigmatic writer/director M. Night Shyamalan (The Sixth Sense, Signs, Unbreakable, Stuart Little)

Join BAPHTA as we explore the nuances of M. Night’s films. There will be spooks, capes, capers, a touch of the supernatural, Bruce Willis, and a surprise twist ending!

This month we welcome:

Lucy Augustine (The Ravishing of Lol Stein)

Spike Einbinder (Los Espookys on HBO)

Hayden Maxwell (Only the Best for Hayden Maxwell)

Devon Walker (Comedy Central)

Our October installment will focus on the enigmatic writer/director M. Night Shyamalan (THE SIXTH SENSE, SIGNS, UNBREAKABLE, STUART LITTLE).  We will dive deep into Shymalan’s body of work and will definitively decide whether he is the reigning master of suspense and supernatural or merely a charlatan.

Join us as we bring the sleepy suburbs of Philadelphia to Brooklyn for one night only. There will be spooks, capes, capers, a touch of the supernatural, Bruce Willis, and a surprise twist ending!

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.”

SOVIET PROPAGANDA: ANIMATED SHORTS
Dir. Dziga Vertov, et al., 1924–55
USSR. 85 min

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 7:30 PM

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“From 1924 to perestroika the USSR produced 41 animated propaganda films. Their target was the new nation and their goal was to win over the hearts and minds of the Soviet people. Anti-American, Anti-British, Anti-German, Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Fascist, some of these films are as artistically beautiful as the great political posters made after the 1917 revolution which inspired Soviet animation… The films feature some astounding animation techniques from stop-motion to paper cutout animation to impressively intricate puppetry. Includes interviews with the directors and commentary by the leading Soviet film scholars.”

“The animated film was another weapon in the Totalitarian war of ideas. In a Soviet Union where over a hundred languages were spoken, moving pictures communicated ideas better than words. Animated cartoons were also ideal to teach small children. The influential power of film is undisputed, even here.”

Text by Glenn Erickson