I, THE WORST OF ALL

I, THE WORST OF ALL
(YO, LA PEOR DE TODAS)
dir. María Luisa Bemberg, 1990
105 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, APRIL 2 – 7:30PM
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6 – 7:30PM
FRIDAY, APRIL 15 – 10PM
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27 – 10PM
SATURDAY, APRIL 30 – 11:59PM

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“I do no penance in order to reach Heaven. I am not very pious either. But I am here, doing the only work I can offer to God, without shame: my poetry.”

After the COVID-19 forced Spectacle to close last December, we’re honored to reprise our run of this lesbians of-the-cloth classic by Argentine filmmaker Maria Luisa Bemberg – another Latin American filmmaker whose renown in cinema culture is nowhere near where it should be.

Adapted from Octavio Paz’s The Traps of Faith, I, THE WORST OF ALL stars Assumpta Serna as Sister Juana Inés de la Cruz, a real-life nun in 17th century Mexico who, having been a poet, a playwright, a philosopher and a composer, is still widely considered the most prolific author of the colonial era. Bemberg’s film details Sister Juana’s persecution at the hands of the Archbishop of Mexico (Lautaro Murua), using the Spanish Inquisition as a lens by which too indict more contemporary misogyny and homophobia within Latin America.

Bemberg’s final work was misrepresented by distributors at the time of its release; vintage VHS packaging quotes the Boston Globe as follows: “Lesbian passion SEETHING behind convent walls… Engrossing, Enriching & Elegant!” Nevertheless, I, THE WORST OF ALL was Argentina’s official submission for the Best Foreign Language Film of 1991. Ripe for rediscovery, it is a lovingly detailed and introspective historical drama that rewards patient viewing in its analysis of against-the-wall feminism.

“A biopic that apprehends there is no unriddling how genius is made, only observing with delight a mind that receives all of the world’s pleasures and pains through the screen of an animating knowledge. to write is a fervid, inexplicable compulsion that need find its outlet and languishes without” – Film critic Kit Duckworth

“An erotically charged, impassioned work. Assumpta Serna is luminous!” – The Village Voice

“Charged with an ambiguity and an irony that is electrifying… Bristles with a spirit of feminism and has us pondering its inescapable implications for the Roman Catholic Church today: what of the status of its women, of freedom of expression and intellectual pursuit?” – Los Angeles Times

 

EARTH II

EARTH II
dir. Anti-Banality Union, 2021
97 mins. “United States”.
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 22 – 7 PM and 10 PM with Q&A!
(These events are $10.)

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Earth, present day. With human civilization facing ever-worsening climate calamities, the captains of industry set their sights on a new planet. Soon, a secret public-private partnership is selling tickets to Mars at a premium out of reach for the majority of the population, for whom the choice is either indentured servitude in the new offworld colony or perishing in the coming cataclysm. When the world’s governments decide to speed things up by declaring war on Earth and the rabble they’re leaving behind, the planet forges a strategic alliance with an unlikely partner: an underground luddite movement. Some will join the uprising, others will become fanatical defenders of entrenched power structures, while yet others will do everything in their power to continue living exactly the same way they always have. Its star-studded cast and astronomical production values — painstakingly purloined from some of the biggest blockbusters of the past three decades — make EARTH II the most expensive climate disaster epic to be produced for no money.

Starring Keanu Reeves, Will Smith, and Matt Damon, EARTH II reminds us that no matter how far into its final death spiral our species might be, life finds a way.

THE ANTI-BANALITY UNION is an anonymous collective who recut blockbusters to uncover their latent meaning, chiseling away at them to reveal Hollywood’s shameful, disavowed desires. The collective’s first compilation film was a reaction to the jingoism surrounding the tenth anniversary of September 11th, UNCLEAR HOLOCAUST (2011), which compiled every instance of New York City being destroyed in a Hollywood movie. They followed this up with POLICE MORTALITY (2013), which revealed the suicidal internal logic of the police apparatus by taking dozens of cop movies and cutting out the “bad guys,” leaving the cops free to massacre each other. STATE OF EMERGENCE (2014) was a zombie movie with no zombies, a distillation of the entire genre’s narcissistic immunopolitics into one gory feature. Now, the ABU has set its sights on climate collapse, scouring the past four decades of disaster movies and combining them into an action-packed analysis of Hollywood’s pathological climate grief in EARTH II.

NEIGE

NEIGE
(SNOW)
dirs. Juliet Berto & Jean-Henri Roger, 1981
91 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 1 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY DECEMBER 4 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 8 – 10 PM
THURSDAY DECEMBER 16 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 22 – 7:30 PM

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Set during the annual Christmas fair in Paris’ Quartier Pigalle, NEIGE stars French New Wave icon Juliet Berto (LA CHINOISE, CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING) as a hippie barmaid named Anita who looks after a loose network of bohemian down-and-outers: drag queens, homeless youths and wannabe tough guys. After the murder of a teenage drug dealer named Bobby, Anita becomes attached to a bereaved customer of his, going through the hell of withdrawal – and an underworld odyssey ensues. Featuring Robert Liensol (star of Med Hondo’s SOLEIL O) and codirected with Jean-Henri Roger (who had been a member of the Dziga Vertov Group), Berto’s bitterly humanist directorial debut shared the Contemporary Cinema Prize at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival.

“Indebted to the boilerplate romans de gare that are ubiquitous in France, NEIGE commingles danger with low-rent spectacle, never pretending to tamp down the carnival atmosphere of the drag where the vast majority of action unfolds. NEIGE is rife with details that would be absent from a more commercial-minded film: decrepit merry-go-rounds, smeared lipstick, a flickering neon windmill outside the Moulin Rouge, tea gone cold. It’s tempting to posit NEIGE as a hidden bridge between the Nouvelle Vague and the subsequent generation’s cinema du look: drunken street poetry shot through pop realism.”Daryl J. Williams, Cinema Scope

“Berto and Roger were grunge before grunge.” Dave Kehr, Curator, Museum of Modern Art

Special thanks to Jane Roger, JHR Films, Rialto Pictures and Adrienne Halpern (Studio Canal).

NOIRVEMBER AT SPECTACLE

Noirvember returns for an all day marathon event spotlighting 8 overlooked gems mined from the golden age of deep shadows and darkened moods.

Starring: Rock Hudson, Anne Gwynne, Lawrence Tierney, Warren William, Sam Wanamaker and more.

12:00pm
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Noirvember At Spectacle opens with some signature paranoiac delirium derived from the source text of Dostoevsky.
1:30pm
?????????
Hard-to-find gritty b-noir featuring a young Rock Hudson.
3:00pm
??? ????? ?? ????
Based on the same material as an early Fritz Lang crime film and featuring some direct post-WW2 blues and desperation.
4:30pm
??? ?????
Rare B-film that is part police-procedural and part sociopathic revenge-film.
6:00pm
????-???????
Penned by an acclaimed avant-garde poet who was buried in a pauper’s grave.
7:30pm
???? ?? ???? ???
AKA ?????? ?? ??? ????????
OR: ???? ?? ??? ????
A rarely-screened masterpiece that functions as a social(/-ist) -realist film disguised as film noir.
9:30pm
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A midnight-cheapie lensed by the singular master of noir, John Alton

FILM DIARY: NYC Festival of Home Video & Personal Documentary

 

FILM DIARY: NYC FESTIVAL OF HOME VIDEO & PERSONAL DOCUMENTARY
dirs. Anuj Malhorta, Cecil de Fátima, Chihiro Ito, Dro Watson, Gloria Chung, Jake Durham, Joie Estrella Horowitz, Paige Taul, Simonas Varvuolis, Violeta Mora, Jeff Preiss, 2021.
Program approximately 99 minutes.THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4 – 7 PM 
ONE NIGHT ONLY with Jeff Preiss in person!
(This event is $10.)

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Film Diary is a festival for experimental non-fiction that captures the personal history and daily experiences of filmmakers and the worlds they encounter. The festival’s name is a tribute to the legendary “film diarist” Jonas Mekas, and aims to expand on the genre of “diary film” and give films like his a place to be shared. The festival’s opening night at Spectacle will feature a diverse selection of short works by filmmakers from around the world including:Violeta Mora’s IMPOSSIBLE ENCONTRAR, a meditation on memory and seeing, shot through the lens of a toy telescope.THE PROMISE and 10:28:30 by Paige Taul, a pair of short personal documentaries that use home video and intimate film footage to form a deeply honest exploration of familial relationships, identity, and fate.

GREEN TURNS BROWN, Joie Estrella Horwitz’s beautiful Super-8 eulogy to the artist Luchita Hurtado, whose work was discovered at the age of 97 in a storage unit in San Bernardino, California.

The night concludes with Japanese painter and media artist Chihiro Ito’s LAST INTERVIEW FILM OF JONAS MEKAS in which Ito visits a 96-year-old Jonas at his apartment in October, 2018, shortly before his death.

XFR COLLECTIVE ZINE RELEASE PARTY

XFR COLLECTIVE ZINE RELEASE PARTY
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 6 – 12PM TO 7PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

XFR Collective is throwing a party to celebrate the release of our new zine Total Recall: A Robot’s Guide to Preserving Your Digital Born Media! From 12-5pm we’ll be transferring your home VHS and MiniDV tapes, talking about the magnetic media crisis, and selling XFR Collective swag. Tape transfer is available on a first-come, first-serve basis!

At 5 PM we’ll be screening an audio visual charcuterie board of bizarre clips from All Color News and Potato Wolf, peeled off, mashed up and served to you hot and fresh. (This event is $5.)

In the late 70s and early 80s cable access television was gaining a wider audience in New York City and the artists of Collaborative Projects (Colab) were all over it! All Color News (1977-1978) was the first Manhattan Cable TV show from Colab. Artists would bring segments to the studio which were mixed live, sometimes with live voiceover and comments from call in viewers. Potato Wolf, sort of like a sketch comedy show for C.H.U.D.s, was produced from 1979 to 1986. With loose scripts, biting sarcasm, and D.I.Y. sets made mostly of painted cardboard and other random junk, Potato Wolf will show you why you’ve never had one day of fun in your whole life.

POR EL DINERO: THE FILMS OF ALEJO MOGUILLANSKY

“Your music is not provocative, it is like a game for kids.”Margarita Fernandez to Helmut Lachenmann, THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL

Wedding narratives stolen from classical fantasy stories (Treasure Island, Swan Lake, Hans Christian Andersen) to documentary-based portraits of artists struggling both creatively and financially, the films of Alejo Moguillansky can be equal parts Marxist and childish. Thriving on a playful dialectical struggle between truth and fiction, reality and fantasy, comedy and tragedy, content and form, aural and visual space – Moguillansky’s films are in a state of constant exploration. From THE PARROT AND THE SWAN – wherein the main character is also the film’s boom operator and the idea of cinematic subjectivity is taken comically new heights – to FOR THE MONEY, where Moguillansky’s real-life entry into a Colombian theater competition is imagined as the harbinger of insatiable greed and, ultimately, his own death – the very process of filmmaking is often the jumping off point for the film itself, leaving the movie to discover and construct its own aesthetic terrain as it unfolds.

In addition to his work as a director Alejo Moguillansky is also one of the founding members of the Argentinian film collective El Pampero Cine with filmmakers Mariano Llinas, Laura Citrella, and Andres Mendilaharzu. Founded on a commitment to independence and collaboration the films of El Pampero are usually produced without institutional financing from grants or government funding using the collective’s own equipment and the founding members of the collective serve in important creative roles on each other’s projects. As part of this series we are proud to show a number of other films which Alejo Moguillansky worked on as an editor – Mariano Llinas micro-budget four-hour long Borgesian epic EXTRAORDINARY STORIES, Laura Citrella’s bitterly funny resort-set noir OSTENDE, and the first two films of Matias Pinero’s Shakespeare series, ROSALINDA and VIOLA. As evidenced by the prominent acting roles often given to his crew members, the films of Moguillansky thrive on collaborative creativity and these films feel as much a part of his body of work as his own.

Due to the number of films we will be screening this series will be split up into two parts. CASTRO, THE PARROT AND THE SWAN, THE GOLD BUG, EXTRAORDINARY STORIES and OSTENDE will play throughout November. Check back in December to catch THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL, FOR THE MONEY, ROSALINDA, and VIOLA.

Co-presented with Cinema Tropical.

CASTRO
dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2009
85 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25 – 7:30 PM CLOSED

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Part Langian conspiracy, part Chaplinesque comedy of work, and part city symphony – Alejo Moguillansky’s CASTRO is filled with a Nouvelle Vague-esque sense of endless playfulness and ingenuity. A mysterious man named Castro (Edgardo Castro) is wandering around Buenos Aires trying hard not to find a job (“Right now I have you, my body, and my head. If I get a job one, two, or three of those things might disappear,” he tells his girlfriend), while a gang of four comical crooks led by Castro’s ex-wife clumsily tail him. Filled with plenty of absurd comic asides (an inane secret code communicated through umbrellas, a mysterious and omnipresent upstairs neighbor who is always heard moving around the apartment, ominous job interviews that venture into the strangely personal); dusty, sun-drenched cinematography; and a silent movie worthy piano score, CASTRO is a startling and surprising debut that oozes charm.

THE PARROT AND THE SWAN
(EL LORO Y EL CISNE)
dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2013
100 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 – 5 PM followed by remote Q+A with filmmaker Alejo Moguillansky
(This event is $10.)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26 – 7:30 PM

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Starting off as a docu-fiction about a film crew making a movie about Argentinian ballet before veering off into a bemusing riff on Swan Lake and eventually settling into a deadpan romantic comedy, THE PARROT AND THE SWAN is continually surprising and filled with a keen sense of fun. Dealing with a rough, hate-mail filled break-up meek sound-mixer, Parrot, finds himself falling in love with a pregnant experimental dancer, Luciana (Luciana Acuna, Moguillansky’s wife) while in the middle of filming a documentary. Boom still in hand, Parrot quits his job and pursues her from crowded, bohemian Buenos Aires flats to odd corners of provincial Argentina.
While an endearing character study at heart, the film seems happiest when headed off into endless digressions like lengthy ballet rehearsals, Freudian dream analysis, and amusing sound jokes centered around Parrot’s refusal to ever put down his boom.

THE GOLD BUG
(EL ESCARABAJO DE ORO)
dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2014
Argentina, 100 minutes
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 – 7:30 PM followed by remote Q+A with filmmaker Alejo Moguillansky
(This event is $10.)
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14 – 7:30 PM

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They all struggle: European Filmmakers vs. South American Filmmakers; Independent Cinema vs. Cinema Funds; Wild vs. Civilisation; North vs. South; Pirates vs. Pirates; An old XIX Century Politician vs. an old XIX Century feminist Poet; Producers vs. Directors; Edgar Allen Poe vs. Robert Louis Stevenson; Long John Silver vs. Captain Smollet; Adventure vs. Money; Beauty vs. Greed; The search of truth and wisdom vs. hypocrisy and wickedness; The rich vs. the poor; Men vs. Women; Fiction vs. Facts. They all struggle, but only one wins.

Commissioned by a Danish film festival as a movie about 19th century feminist poet, Victoria Benidectssen, THE GOLD BUG instead became a literal and figurative adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic adventure novel Treasure Island. Moguillansky, producer Mariano Llinas, and actors Walter Jakob and Rafael Spregelburd play themselves in the film as a group of Argentine actors who’ve chanced upon a 17th century treasure map leading to the northern Argentine province of Misiones. using the commission to make a film about Benedictsson as cover, the ensemble sets out to find the buried treasure while convincing the European producers and co-director that their real aim is to also make a biography about 19th-century Argentine political radical Leandro N. Alem, so as to avoid being neo-colonialist. Directly riffing off of the real world circumstances in which the movie itself came into being, THE GOLD BUG is a metatextual questioning of the possibility of filmmaking in a capitalist, Euro-centric film ecosystem.

OSTENDE
dir. Laura Citrella, 2011
85 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 – 3PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20 – 5 PM followed by remote Q+A with filmmaker Laura Citrella
(This event is $10.)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – 5PM

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Thanks to a radio contest, a girl wins four vacation days in a huge hotel in Ostende, in the Buenos Aires province. It’s the low season, and she gets to the place alone. Her boyfriend will join her a few days later. On the beach there’s plenty of sun but also too much wind; and a not very sophisticated bar with a waiter that talks too much. In this place with no obligations or big attractions apart from a windy beach nearby and the not-so-tempting ocean, the girl starts to pay attention – maybe too much, maybe not enough – to the strange behavior of an old man who’s accompanied by two young women. Flirting with both Hitchcock and Rohmer from a light, feminine perspective, Laura Citrella demonstrates the entrancing possibilities of storytelling in her first film.

EXTRAORDINARY STORIES
(HISTORIA EXTRAORDINARIAS)
dir. Mariano Llinas, 2008
242 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28 – 5PM

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As though it was a sort of encyclopedia of adventure fiction, this film takes as a start three classically used triggers. One: A man who gets accidentally involved in a case of assassination. Two: another man (a smalltown bureaucrat) who gets obsessed with another man, whose life becomes a crescently problematic riddle. Three: A Jules Vern style challenge takes place in a sort of gentlemen’s club in the deep Argentine countryside; that challenge (a remotely scientific orientated challenge) involves a third man in an unexpected odyssey down a river that run through the lonely plains. Those triggers that, following the path of Borges, combine the universe of Stevenson and the universe of the pampas craft a complex and surreal plot, a plot that somehow includes, in the same Argentine universe, explosions that take place for no one in the middle of the plains, forsaken lions that die in forsaken buildings, remote World War II stories, stories of love and glory, stories of brilliant men and of forgotten men, and those of men both brilliant and forgotten. Hundreds of stories, altogether in a plot that, more than a film, becomes a sort of essay about fiction: How fiction works, where fiction comes from, and what the real purpose of fiction is.

YOU CAN’T KILL MEME

YOU CAN’T KILL MEME
dir. Hayley Garrigus, 2021
78 mins. United States.
In English.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5 – 7PM with filmmaker in person for Q+A moderated by Joshua Citarella
(This event is $10.)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – 7:30 PM

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YOU CAN’T KILL MEME follows a filmmaker’s three year descent into the anonymous internet underworld, tracking the spread of an insidious strain of extremist occult magic.

While investigating the influence of online misinformation on the 2016 election, the filmmaker infiltrates the shadowy corners of Internet forums 4chan and Reddit. There, she learns of the book Memetic Magic, a field manual for conjuring “thought viruses” capable of sowing global chaos and a seminal text for the internet trolls who claim to have harnessed this chaos magic to meme Trump into presidency.

After establishing a correspondence with Memetic Magic’s elusive author, Kirk Packwood, the filmmaker relocates to Las Vegas to further her research on his advice just one week before the mass shooting in October 2017.

Describes by many as a powerful vortex, the city is home to the country’s second-largest population of “light workers” – magicians seeking to spiritually transform the world from within, spanning every sector of community and industry, from New Age entrepreneurs to military cybersecurity personnel. As the filmmaker heads to Seattle for a showdown with the hermetic Kirk, she uncovers what is either a cover cyberwar between chaos magicians and the power elite or an incredibly idiotic conspiracy spanning modern-day shamans, Pepe the Frog, the ebola pandemic, and the blowback of cancel culture.

Special thanks to Utopia Films. 

TOXIC FAMILIES

This Thanksgiving season, Spectacle is proud to present three twisted and distinct visions of awful families. Werewolves, Southern Gothic intrigue, incest, beheadings – this series has it all! Special thanks to American Genre Film Archive. 

THE RATS ARE COMING! THE WEREWOLVES ARE HERE!
dir. Andy Milligan, 1972
91 mins. United States.
In English.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – MIDNIGHT

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“Crude and sleazy and distinctively Milligan.” Paul Corupe, Canuxploitation

Conceived as a cash-in on WILLARD and Hammer horror films, THE RATS ARE COMING! THE WEREWOLVES ARE HERE! is a dreamy, alt-Earth version of Dark Shadows from legendary queer filmmaker Andy Milligan. The Mooney family are struggling with secrets. When daughter Diana returns to the family’s gothic estate with a new husband, all seems well . . . until the full moon rises. Filled with Milligan’s patented blend of DIY costumes, atmospheric locations, and schizophrenic photography, RATS is a great example of ingenuity, necessity, and a genuine seething hatred of mankind joining forces to birth a unique exploitation gem.

SPIDER BABY
dir. Jack Hill, 1967
81 mins. United States.
In English.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – 10 PM

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“Though superficially similar to some of Charles Addams’ drawings, SPIDER BABY truly resembles nothing else in film.”Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

The first solo feature from exploitation legend Jack Hill (FOXY BROWN), SPIDER BABY remains one of the wildest and weirdest horror films of the 1960s. The credits dub this “the maddest story ever told,” a promise that’s well on the way to being fulfilled in the opening scene alone, when Virginia traps and kills a hapless deliveryman in her makeshift web. She’s one of three siblings, including exploitation wild man Sid Haig, who suffer from a unique genetic disorder that causes them to regress back to childhood while retaining the physical strength and sexual maturity of adults. Lon Chaney, Jr. (THE WOLF MAN) gives one of his most memorable late performances as Bruno, who manages to cover up the crimes of the “kids” until two distant relatives lay claim to their house. Blending elements of gothic horror and gallows humor, SPIDER BABY drops somewhere between THE ADDAMS FAMILY and THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE.

DEAR DEAD DELILAH
dir. John Farris, 1972
95 mins. United States.
In English.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26 – MIDNIGHT

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Back in 1943, Luddy (Patricia Carmichael, in a wonderfully, memorably nutty performance) viciously murdered her mother with an axe. Thirty years later and freshly released from the state mental hospital, deemed “cured” of her violent impulses, Luddy’s luck is turning around thanks to a chance encounter with the family of Delilah (Agnes Moorehead, Bewitched), the miserly matriarch of a large plantation estate.

She quickly finds herself hired as Delilah’s housekeeper, but no sooner than her arrival at the cavernous and secluded mansion, grisly murders begin to take place…

ZIA ANGER’S MY FIRST FILM



MY FIRST FILM
dir. Zia Anger, 2018-2021
70 mins. United States.
In English.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM in-theater only w/Zia Anger in person
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 – 7:30 PM in-theater only w/Zia Anger in person
(These events are $10.)

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The expanded cinema performance MY FIRST FILM began its gestation at Spectacle in June 2018 as (abandoned). It’s since played numerous film festivals, embarked on a world tour, and been called one of “62 of the Best Documentaries of All Time” by Richard Brody in The New Yorker. Following on our 2020 Spectacle in Exile zoom event (abandoned) 2, we once again welcome back filmmaker Zia Anger for a two-night run of My First Film.

“From memoirs to director’s commentary, the tradition of self-reflection in the film industry is nothing new. Self-reflection serves as a means for a director to further explain the significance of their work. In many cases, it functions as a distancing tactic—creating a dissonance between the filmmaker at present and their naïve former self. However, these reflections on the finished work are often as polished as the film itself, rendering the director’s ideas practiced and stale.

MY FIRST FILM repeatedly examines my first, and only, feature-length narrative film through an interactive live cinema performance. Each rendition contains new revelations and nuanced narrative shifts that build on both the original work and its accumulating commentary. The audience is encouraged to reconsider the formal limits of where a film begins and ends, to see that a film is only as fixed as the world around it.” —Zia Anger

ZIA ANGER works in moving images. Her most recent short, MY LAST FILM, premiered at the 53rd New York Film Festival. In 2015 her short I REMEMBER NOTHING premiered domestically at New Directors/New Films and internationally at Festival del film Locarno. She directed music videos for various independent artists including Angel Olsen, Mitski, Julianna Barwick, Beach House, Maggie Rogers, and Jenny Hval, the latter of whom she also toured with as a performer and stage director. Various online publications including Pitchfork, the Guardian, and NPR have featured her music videos.

MY FIRST FILM is produced by MEMORY.