STARTS WITH DAD: HALLOWEEN SCARY DADS

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STARTS WITH DAD: HALLOWEEN SCARY DADS!
One night only!

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 8:00 PM

STARTS WITH DAD is a loose group with two goals: shoot something, show something. No need to be a filmmaker, an artist, or an actor. It’s all about the impulse to create, no matter how unprofessional.

This month it’s Halloween, so expect a whole new slate of short films SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, AT 8 PM. All the spooky Dads will be out. The theme is Advance and Ascent… into hell, probably. We expect fright and other loathsome feelings to prevail. But, as usual, Starts with Dad is all about the unexpected.

You can see previous Starts With Dad films at www.startswithdad.tumblr.com. You will find human tissue obsessed housewives, deicidal squirrels, claymation testicles, jump rope gurus, blatant plagiarism, and lots else besides.

If you’d like to make something for our next screening contact Will at wswelles@gmail.com for additional details. Or just come and watch all the films. Some very well may be creepy, but all will be created by creeps, for creeps.

OCTOBER MIDNIGHTS!

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4: SPECTOBER ROULETTE: HALLOWEEN EDITION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5: SHINOBI INFERNO

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11: MANDATORY MIDNIGHT: BLOODSUCKERS FROM OUTER SPACE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12: HORROR BOOBS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18: DR. BLOODBATH (BLEEDING SKULL MIDNIGHTS)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19: OGROFF (BLEEDING SKULL MIDNIGHTS)

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25: A POLISH VAMPIRE IN BURBANK
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26: THE THIRD ANNUAL SPECTACLE SHRIEK SHOW


SPEC3_ROULETTE_BANNER_650x275 SPECTACLE ROULETTE: HALLOWEEN EDITION
Dir. ???, 19??/20??.
????. ??? min.
In any number of languages.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 – MIDNIGHT

If there are two things we love at The Spectacle they’ve got to be desperate games of chance where there can be no winner AND Halloween! So with that in mind…

IT’S SPECTACLE ROULETTE: HALLOWEEN EDITION!

Here’s how it works this time, similar rules EXCEPT, everything must be HALLOWEEN and or MONSTER related! Aerobics tapes for poltergeists, Yetti skate videos, Zbigniew Cybulski as Dracula, America’s Funniest Home Exorcisms – YOU BRING THE CRAZY, WE BRING THE CANDY CORN!

Here’s the the breakdown:

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

If you want to participate, please do the following:

1. Show up at least 15 minutes BEFORE midnight with your proposed film. (Either a DVD or digital copy!)

2. Be prepared to introduce your 5 minute clip and lobby hard for your candidate.

3. COME CORRECT. Bring the craziest (HALLOWEEN and or MONSTER related) thing you can find, no half-steps!

4. Tell your friends/ have a jack-o-lantern carved in your soul!

Come get HALLOWEEN STARTED EARLY at SPECTACLE ROULETTE: HALLOWEEN EDITION!


shinobibanner SHINOBI INFERNO (AKA THE SHINOBI INFERNO: NINJAS IN HELL)
Dir. Hibachi Chicken Films, 1997
USA. 57 min.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 – MIDNIGHT

“SHINOBI INFERNO tell(s) the tale of a man turned ninja who is forced to fight his way out of hell. Along with the ninja clan, he eventually must confront Satan in order to save the planet. These are the times of high adventure!” – courtesy HCF

They say “time heals all wounds.” They also say “beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” They clearly were thinking about the MIDNIGHT programming at the SPECTACLE THEATER as they etched those sayings into the sides of caves and temples – particularly when we unearthed (i.e. finally unpacked that last U-Haul box in storage) and presented DEVILHELM. Yes, DEVILHELM, only one of two shot-on-video epics about ninjas vs. demons to come out of pre-Y2K Southwest Ohio. Why one out of two? Because DEVILHELM has a damn PREQUEL and it’s COMING TO SPECTACLE THIS SPECTOBER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

ZOMG it totally makes sense we’re showing this. Because it’s like DEVILHELM except like it’s all way more scrappy crappy, but like they go apeshit even harder and like !!!. Dude it’s like some shirtless bro-cult suburban backyard ethnographer’s WET DREAM. Checklist: the rundown EP MODE image quality desaturates and dreamily smears like Gen X’s version of sepia-tone; the WTF sampling of various uncited genre films and popular music pops ecstatic dissonance between the homemade and the million-dollar made; the macabre chewed-paper duct tape panty hose costumes evoke Rebecca Horn armed with smokeless tobacco and Black Cat firecrackers.

Why bother spending your garbage-bagged precious teenage years raiding and re-enacting someone else’s magnum opus? Blow that shit up and CREATE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE. Just don’t call it THE SHINOBI INFERNO: NINJAS IN HELL because that shit is TAKEN.

Warning: Scenes contain use of strobe lights.


MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS

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

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

NOT QUITE.

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

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

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BLOODSUCKERS FROM OUTER SPACE
Dir. Glen Coburn, 1984.
USA. 79 min.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 – MIDNIGHT

In BLOODSUCKERS FROM OUTER SPACE a strange and eerie wind is blowing across the plains of Texas, and not the metaphorical kind. Local folks are being transformed into depraved, insatiable bloodsuckers by an extraterrestrial force found in the very air they breath and it’s up to a young would-be artist and his Camaro-driving cohort to stop them — in between hits of nitrous oxide, of course.

Texas has long been a hotbed for weird and inspired horror (Tobe Hooper) and low-budget insanity (Larry Buchanan) and BLOODSUCKERS FROM OUTER SPACE is no exception. Combining lonesome landscapes of Nowhere,
Texas, with parodic humor, sex, recreational drug use, martial arts, splatter, a rocking title song, and the occasional aside to the camera, Glen Coburn’s Bloodsuckers From Outer Space is low/no-budget regional horror at its finest. Come check out the film that put Texas on the map!


birthdayboobs_650x275 HORROR BOOBS BIRTHDAY BASH
Matt D’s 32nd Birthday

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 – MIDNIGHT

Spectacle Theater welcomes their favorite group of perverts back with open arms and full palms… we’re talking about us and we’re talking about jerking off, duh! This October 12th marks the 2 year anniversary of Horror Boobs Hosted Midnights at the Spectacle Theater as well as Horror Boobs main man Matt D’s 32 Birthday and this time we promise a viewing experience unlike none other! A loving tribute to one of our favorite forms of film the Horror Anthology with… The Ultimate Horror Anthology! We’ve taken some of our favorite segments from some classic (and some not so classic) horror anthologies and sewn them together into one big lumbering Franken-FILM! Monsters, Murder and Maybe a bunch of BOOBS… Who are we kidding? There will definitely be a bunch of BOOBS! So come down and celebrate the beginning of Horror
Boobs’ Terrible Twos at Spectacle with a never before seen mind melting original composite Horror Anthology. Bring presents or forever be a dick!


bleedingskullbanner BLEEDING SKULL WEEKEND!
Book Launch & Screening: DOCTOR BLOODBATH and OGROFF
October 18th & 19th! MIDNIGHT

This weekend’s witching hours are very special indeed, creeps! Spectacle is proud to team up with BLEEDING SKULL (BLEEDINGSKULL.COM), the authority on trash-horror cinema from the VHS gutters, as they host 2 special screenings to celebrate their new book, BLEEDING SKULL! A 1980s TRASH-HORROR ODYSSEY.

Join authors Joseph A. Ziemba and Dan Budnik in person as they present DOCTOR BLOODBATH and OGROFF, projected from VHS!

BLEEDING SKULL! A 1980s TRASH-HORROR ODYSSEY features 300 in-depth reviews of movies that have escaped the radar of people with taste and tolerance. BLACK DEVIL DOLL FROM HELL, A NIGHT TO DISMEMBER, HEAVY METAL MASSACRE, THE LAST SLUMBER PARTY — this book gets deep into no-budget horror, from shot-on-video revelations (DOCTOR BLOODBATH) to forgotten theatrical casualties (FROZEN SCREAM). Jam-packed with rare photographs, advertisements, and VHS sleeves (most of which have never been seen), BLEEDING SKULL! is an edifying, laugh-out-loud guide through the dusty inventory of the greatest video store that never existed.

DOCTOR BLOODBATH
Dir. Nick Millard, 1988
VHS

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 – MIDNIGHT

Gordon runs a health clinic that specializes in abortions. After each operation, Gordon visits the patient’s home and murders them. Nick Millard’s methods (terrible compositions, non-stop jump cuts, complicated plotlines about nothing in particular) reject convention and the world-at-large. This 60 minute SOV opus caps off a long legacy that repeatedly transformed mundane elements into exhilarating, anti-human events. Did you know that abortions are achieved by waving an ear-flushing kit in front of a vagina?

OGROFF
Dir. Norbert Moutier aka N.G. Mount, 1983
VHS

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 – MIDNIGHT

Ogroff is a WWII veteran who wears a metal mask and ski cap. He murders anything that enters his magical forest. This includes a lumberjack and a Volkswagen Bug. A plotless slasher perversion from the foothills of France, OGROFF is a benchmark in the halls of accidental, no-fi surrealism caught on Super 8/video/whatever. If you agree that the epitome of life-enhancing cinema may lie somewhere between Eric Rohmer’s MY NIGHT AT MAUD’S and Doris Wishman’s A NIGHT TO DISMEMBER, Ogroff is your man.


polishvampirebanner A POLISH VAMPIRE IN BURBANK
Dir. Mark Pirro, 1985
USA, 84 minutes.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 – MIDNIGHT

In the Mad Libs tradition of film titling, A _____ _______ in __________ is one that usually yields some great, or at least memorable, results ( A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, An American Werewolf in London). So it’s no surprise that A POLISH VAMPIRE IN BURBANK is about as memorable and great as a Super 8 feature film can get. Part early Woody Allen gag film, part Playboy cartoon, part Nathan Schiff and Nanni Morretti, and owing an openly expressed debt to the work of John “The Schlocktapus!” Landis, Pirro’s POLISH VAMPIRE is a Petrie dish full of horror film, B movie and comedic cross contamination which faces vampire cinema inundation and takes the next logical step: reflexive vampire film with vampire protagonist.

Oh, and it’s very, very cheap. Like $2,500 cheap. Like so cheap EDDIE DEEZEN walked off the set. Yeah, too cheap for Eddie fucking Deezen.

At first glance A POLISH VAMPIRE IN BURBANK appears to be another filmic curio so abominably cheap that it’s enough to stare at the big beautiful super 8 grain and contemplate the phenomenological there-ness
of it all (see DRACULA DIRTY OLD MAN for more). But like all great no budget films, the coarseness of the materials and method fuse with authorial ingenuity and passion, and quickly Pirro reveals himself to be a filmmaker with a voice and A POLISH VAMPIRE ends up being an oddly tender film experience. And maybe what’s even more odd, this film was seen by A LOT of people and made a A LOT of money (relatively speaking) owing to the then hungry and booming home video market.

Mark Pirro ( taking over after Mr. Deezen split) plays Dupah, a young vampire who’s content to watch TV all night in his bat spangled pajamas. Dupah’s hollow cheeked vampire daddy decides it’s time for Dupah to start fending for himself though and make that painful transition into vampire-adulthood. So Dupah cruises LA and meets a nice young lady, Delores, who just happens to LOVE vampire movies! But Dupah isn’t the old school lady killer his dad is, he’s sensitive and just can’t seem to bring himself to bite Delores. A gag-filled misadventure follows in LA’s moribund world of swinging singles as Dupah tries to follow his heart and his fangs, all before sunrise!

This is no budget super 8 horror comedy at its finest! The legendary A POLISH VAMPIRE IN BURBANK! Only at The Spectacle! Only at MIDNIGHT!

EPHEMERA: SAFETY FIRST!

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EPHEMERA: SAFETY FIRST!
1940s-2002
Approx. 95 min. USA.

MONDAY, JUNE 1 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, JUNE 14 – 5:00 PM
SUNDAY, JUNE 28 – 7:30 PM

Safety films are modern morality plays aimed at You, The Everyman! Without their stern guidance you would get your dumb self killed in short order. OSHA’s 2010 statistics list over 4,000 on-the-job fatalities and millions of productive hours lost due to accidents. Unfortunately, even when depicting very real dangers, safety films’ authoritative tone and stiff reenactments (not to mention terrible gore effects) elicit more laughter than concern.

These ephemeral films fill a social (and sometimes legal) need to educate the public on what it means to be ‘safe’. When society is confronted with new technology or changing environments, it is up to the safety film to show the proper path to tread. They want to save you from yourself – your wild emotions, lazy shortcuts, rule-bending and other human foibles all lead straight to your gory, violent death. Safety films want you to watch out, and whether by gentle caution or gruesome reenactment, they WILL get their message across.

So join us for an evening of well-intended threats, frights, falls and severed limbs! Bonus: a US Postal Safety Rap featuring young Justin Timberlake!

LIVE AND LEARN (1951)
TIME OUT FOR TROUBLE (1961)
ON EVERY HAND (1969)
COOKING – KITCHEN SAFETY (1949)
ONE GOT FAT (1963)
WHY TAKE CHANCES? (1952)
RANGE SAFETY (1990)
DANGER IS YOUR COMPANION (1940s)
OFFICE SAFETY (1970)
SAFETY IN OFFICES (1944)
CHRISTMAS TREE HARVEST (2002)
SHAKE HANDS WITH DANGER (1970s)
HAZARDS AROUND BINS AND HOPPERS (1978)
DOMESTIC DISTURBANCE (1976)
STAIRWELL SAFETY (2001)
GUNS ARE DIFFERENT
HALLOWEEN SAFETY (1985)
POST OFFICE SAFETY RAP (1990s)
HAZARDS IN MOTION (2001)
SAFETY: IT’S YOUR RESPONSIBILITY (1982)
WILL YOU BE HERE TOMORROW? (1998ish)
SAFETY: IN DANGER OUT OF DOORS (1970s)
A SAFE DAY (early 1940s)
HOSPITAL SAFETY (1979)

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

Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (archive.org), where 5,336 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

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

& OTHER WORKS: TOM THAYER

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23RD

TWO SCREENINGS – 8 AND 10 PM – ARTIST IN ATTENDANCE

MORE DETAILS TBA!

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

Maybe you don’t know the particular shadow that the October moon casts for us here at the Spectacle, but in its quaint darkness we like to call it Spec3ber – the numerical affectation being that it’s the third in our fledgling history. Nothing is ever easily defined or agreed upon with us, except that Halloween is a month-long event. And since & Other Works is even younger, we like to learn by watching and following along with our guardian – stealing make-up, smoking pretzel sticks, and pretending our shoe is an iPhone. So, it’s with great pleasure that this Spec3ber we have the fantastical works of the inimitable Tom Thayer.

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Let’s start off by saying that really in order to get the whole picture, you may need to attend one of Thayer’s fully three-dimensional performances or installations. However, in keeping with the &OW ethos, we’ll be focusing on JTV – Just The Video. Nothing will be lacking however, as all the unsettled lanky angles and smeared colors of his paintings, sculptures, music and his etcetera and ephemera are fully in effect and incorporated. In fact, as &OW hopes, being served by the flat faceful will put you even further in the zone.

Thayer_screencap_2The program will survey Thayer’s video works from his earliest animation “Phantasmagoria” on through music videos for both his own music as well others (e.g. NYC’s finest No Neck Blues Band), and on to later works regularly incorporated into aboveplugged performances and installations. We’re pretty excited to give them the proper &OW “microcinematic” attention and reception.

Thayer has gone on record more-or-less saying his methods and materials are decidedly kept to a period of time in which he feels comfortable and connected working within. So, that’s masking tape and cardboard, crude cuts and jagged circuits; Thayer coaxes every bit and blurp of curdle and mist out of his tools. Though a particular unplaceable nostalgia may be provoked in sampling his work, Thayer is no more a retro-fetishist than you would be using your great-grandparents’ armoire, because that shit is built to last.

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It’s hard to really describe the vibe without getting into some words like “haunting,” “playful” and “surreal” but those words are loaded with blanks these days. Likewise, we can get into talking about collage, stop-motion, marionettes, analog video, oscillators, and drum machines. Then there’s the thin gaunt birds, rainbow omelette mountains, and children with crushed faces only mothers with crushed faces could love. Or we can just say there’s something about how every element just lands beautifully and properly in Thayer’s hand and vision that we had no choice but to use “inimitable” earlier.

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EPHEMERA: POPULUXE

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EPHEMERA: POPULUXE
1956-1964.
Approx 78 min. USA.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 – 10:00 PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – 10:00 PM

EPHEMERA: POPULUXE from Spectacle Theater on Vimeo.

No outlet served post-war American culture’s ebullient pride and prosperity better than that of the now-infamous educational film. Today these didactic artifacts are relegated to sideshow status by the likes of Pee-Wee’s Playhouse, Weird Al, MST3K and Adult Swim, all of whom freely lampoon such easy targets for their comically dated sensibilities. Our monthly EPHEMERA program aims to present these documents to a contemporary audience in perhaps a more even light, ideally free from the ironic framing that can easily overwhelm some of their more interesting details. Fortunately… the humor is irrepressible.

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September’s installment POPULUXE is the first all-color edition, celebrating the  Golden Age of America via the lavish advertisement culture of late-50s/early-60s. This is the Space Age, the Atomic Age, the age of car and kitchen culture, of the nuclear family, of modern design, of leisure, wealth, empowerment, ideals and commerce. In the luxurious world of the future, everything is going to be gorgeous, sleek and perfect and we would like to sing and dance and dazzle all that money out of your pocket. The sky is the limit.

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Films featured in POPULUXE include: Aluminum On The March (1956), American Look (1956), Century 21 Calling (1964), Design For Dreaming (1956), The Golden Years (1960), A Touch Of Magic (1961) and The Wonderful New World Of Fords (1960).

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

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Rick Prelinger began collecting “ephemeral films”—all those educational, industrial, amateur, advertising, or otherwise sponsored—in 1982, amassing over 60,000 (all on physical film) before his Prelinger Archive was acquired by the Library of Congress in 2002. Since then, the collection has grown and diversified: now it exists in library form in San Francisco and is also gradually being ported online to the Internet Archive (http://archive.org), where 5,336 of its films are currently hosted (as of this writing).

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

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SEPTEMBER MIDNIGHTS!

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6: EL ÚLTIMO KAMIKAZE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7: MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS presents THE CANDY SNATCHERS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13: SHAKMA
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14: THE PYX

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20: SHATTER DEAD
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21: INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27: SIXTEEN TONGUES
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28: SFX RETALIATOR


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EL ÚLTIMO KAMIKAZE
Jacinto Molina, 1984.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 – MIDNIGHT

NOCHES DE NASCHY is dedicated to showcasing the films of Spanish horror icon and horror cinema’s most prolific Wolf Man, Paul Naschy.

The beloved, barrel chested Naschy was a renaissance man who turned his childhood love of gothic horror and fantasy into his life’s work. Naschy painted his monsters with a sense of romantic tragedy, leaving behind a wonderfully rich and surprisingly personal filmography.

In the 1980s Paul Naschy made his way to Japan where he directed and produced a number of well received documentaries for Japanese television, eventually leading to some unique and interesting Spanish, Japanese co-productions, most notably The Beast and the Magic Sword and El Último Kamikaze – a gritty, hyper-violent action thriller which explores a different kind of monster: a ruthless, psychologically tortured contract killer.

Paul Naschy plays El Kamikaze, a Spanish killer whose methods and body count are the stuff of legend.  Danton, a suave, leather gloved (just one!) rival hit man is contracted to snuff out the Kamikaze; a bloody, globe trotting chess game follows between the world’s two top killers, and these vicious combatants will use every trick in their sadistic books to ensure they’re the last killer standing.

El Último Kamikaze is Naschy at his super-violent and melodramatic best and as always he imbues his tragic antihero with a sympathetic sadness in order to pose the question: what’s a monster’s capacity to love and be loved? El Último Kamikaze is a unique transposition of familiar Naschy themes to an uncharacteristically non-supernatural scenario which in the end helps create maybe the writer-director-star’s most complex and painful statement on the nature of love and redemption. BUT the pathos don’t get in the way of granny disguises, poolside massacres, dirt bikes and Nazi flashbacks! An unmissable and unique treat for Naschy fans and fans of violent, low budget Euro action!



MANDATORY MIDNIGHTS

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

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

NOT QUITE.

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

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

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THE CANDY SNATCHERS
Dir. Guerdon Trueblood, 1973
USA, 94 minutes.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – MIDNIGHT

You know, we’re all about fun here. Good fun. Pie-in-the-face fun. But, to be honest, we’ve got a bit of a mean streak too. And this Mandatory Midnight is one of the meanest films we can come up with. Vicious, even. In fact, let’s just get this out of the way right now:

Trigger Warning: This film contains scenes of sexual violence, child abuse, and an adult contemporary theme song.

Still with us?

Three would-be criminal masterminds decide to kidnap Candy (Susan Sennett) and blackmail a diamond merchant named Avery (Ben Piazza), and though they try to cover all their bases – they didn’t count on one thing: he doesn’t want her back. If Candy dies, Avery (who isn’t Candy’s father but her stepfather) stands to inherit quite a chunk of change. So he tells the thugs to keep her. Now they’re in real jam so they do the only sensible thing they can – bury her in a hole with an air tube and plan their next move. Paranoia sets in and things go from bad to worse to…well…even worse than that. There was a witness to this crime, but they’re also trapped in a different way and things are looking bleak for Candy.

We love a good heist movie and we love it even more when a heist goes wrong and absolutely nothing goes right for anyone in this film. As dark and venomous as any Jim Thompson material, THE CANDY SNATCHERS escapes the trappings of other mean-for-the-hell-of-it grindhouse outings by keeping you on your toes…or at the very least – the edge of your seat.


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SHAKMA
Dir. Tom Logan / Hugh Parks, 1990
USA/UK, 101 minutes.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 – MIDNIGHT

“The world’s angriest primate just got mad!”

What better time than midnight for a failed experiment? Moments after using a power drill to graft a microchip onto a baboon’s heart, it’s Friday – and so a plucky group of horny and misguided researchers decide to go after-hours LARPing in the lab. Trouble is, the baboon’s heart has been flooded with steroidal enyzmes, and he’s out for revenge!

Leading a sundry cast of lowercase-E expendables, Roddy McDowell lends simian blessings to a guesome, hardheaded terror-romp equal bits “man vs. nature” and haunted house. But the real star is the indestructible Shakma, played by a small company of real (and presumably authentically angry) baboons.

SHAKMA (Logan / Parks, 1990) from Spectacle Theater on Vimeo.


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THE PYX
Dir. Harvey Hart, 1973
Canada, 108 minutes.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 – MIDNIGHT

“You know my name.”

Somewhere between Rosemary’s Baby and Klute, this Canadian supernatural mystery offers plenty to satisfy police procedural fans as Dr. Sgt. Jim Henderson (played by Christopher Plummer) investigates the murder of Elizabeth Lucy (Karen Black), and as the film moves back and forth between Henderson’s investigation and Lucy’s last days we learn of her connection to a cult of devil worshipers.

While other films would try to drive up the tension, there’s a quiet, sullen feel to this film, from the grubby rain soaked streets of Montreal to Lucy’s manipulative madam to the minimal orchestral score, supplemented by Karen Black’s songs, all of which build a slower sense of inescapable dread.

Lucy’s conflagration of sex, heroin and Catholicism drifts through the entire film, a counterpoint to the increasing paranoia and futility of the detectives seeking to understand what remains beyond them as both storylines mirror the downward spiral of the other. Concluding with a backwards-chanting black mass and Henderson’s showdown with cult leader Keerson (Jean-Louis Roux), it’s a film that perfectly showcases the late Karen Black’s singular presence.


MIDNIGHTS WITH SCOOTER MCCRAE!
Scooter McCrae in attendance September 20 & 27!

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SHATTER DEAD
Dir. Scooter McCrae, 1994
USA, 84 minutes.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 – MIDNIGHT

The Zombie sub-genre has been been tired for decades. Back in 1994 a young filmmaker named Scooter McCrae brazenly assaulted that tired template when he combined his obsession with the sublime, obscure euro-sleaze of filmmakers like Jess Franco, the cold art-house visions of Andrei Tarkovsky, and his own disenchantment with humanity in general, to create one of the ’90s most transgressive works, SHATTER DEAD. From scene one, wherein The Angel Of Death impregnates a human woman, causing planet Earth’s dead to rise, it’s clear Shatter Dead is a non-stop kaleidoscope of fresh, uncompromising imagery. A no-budget, shot on video, apocalyptic nightmare-world where trust and humanity’s desire to understand the meaning of its existence is constantly subverted, SHATTER DEAD is a milestone in both the the Zombie genre and the world of SOV.


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INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS
Dir. Denis Sanders, 1973
USA, 85 minutes.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – MIDNIGHT

TRIGGER WARNING: Scene of attempted rape and a lot of gratuitous nudity.

“The doctor’s diagnosis in each case is that the men seemed to be suffering from extreme sexual fatigue at the time of their deaths. I am not entirely sure how this diagnosis is made in an autopsy, but then perhaps I do not really want to know.” -Roger Ebert

A series of scientists at Brandt Laboratories are turning up dead from heart failure. State Department agent John Agar follows the clues to a secret laboratory where women are turned into bee girls and sent to kill all male enemies through “overexertion”. Whether you take it as drive-in sleaze or a knowing satire on 70s relations between the sexes, INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS offers an update to 50s style mad science and government paranoia with big-ass sunglasses, bloopy modular synths and more compound lens shots than The Hellstrom Chronicle. Written by Nicholas Mayer (who later wrote the even-numbered Star Trek films) and directed by Denis Sanders (best known for 1964’s Shock Treatment) and starring William Smith (from pretty much every TV show ever) and Anitra Ford (Messiah of Evil, The Big Bird Cage), INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS offers plenty for exploitation fans, from angry mobs to secret sex rooms to a transformation scene that’d make Matthew Barney buzz. That said, the science-gone-mod approach never gets overly tongue in cheek; it has the same pacing and construction as a made-for-TV movie of the same time (if such films had an uncredited cameo by porn legend Rene Bond).


MIDNIGHTS WITH SCOOTER MCCRAE!
Scooter McCrae in attendance September 20 & 27!

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SIXTEEN TONGUES
Dir. Scooter McCrae, 1999
USA, 80 minutes.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 – MIDNIGHT

WARNING: Explicit sexual content and violence

So many films claim to address the oversexed, technological nature of our modern age, but barely any ever take their content to the extreme necessary to actually communicate a serious, original idea. SIXTEEN TONGUES, Scooter McCrae’s follow-up to his classic SHATTER DEAD, is perhaps the most significant film ever made on the subject of porn and technology – it’s certainly the most intense and the most original. Made in 1999, SIXTEEN TONGUES takes place in a make-shift future world where graphic, dehumanizing, porn is constantly at our fingertips (seems unbelievable, right!?). In a dream-like blur we follow our hero and villains down their action-film trajectory, witness to as well as their harrowing dreams and visions. This is an inspired, low-budget work so aggressively personal and visionary that we’re essentially forced to redefine the overused term “transgressive art.”


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SFX RETALIATOR
Dir. Jun Gallardo (as “John Gale”), 1987.
Philippines. 84 min.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – MIDNIGHT

The American Hunter himself, Chris Mitchum, makes his triumphant return to Spectacle’s screen on September 28 as the SFX RETALIATOR.

Steve Baker (Mitchum) has it made as one of the Filipino film industry’s go-to special effects and demolition artists. And yet his own world suddenly explodes one day when he’s chillin’ riding around in his sweet Special Effects Van and runs into (literally — it’s hilarious) none other than Linda Blair, also slumming it in the Southeast Asian action film industry. Blair has just made out with a shitton of cash from her mobster boyfriend’s safe, and it’s revealed that she had been two-timing him all along as the true girlfriend of his competitor. After Baker does the right thing and drops her off at the Filipino Motel 6 ‘cause her own car was destroyed in pursuit, her crazy ex-boyfriend decides it would somehow be simpler to hunt down Baker, kidnap his wife, and hold her hostage in order to force Baker — who is basically just a Jimmy Buffet fan with fireworks — to track down Blair and recover the cash rather than simply apply his resources to locate Blair himself.

Anyway, even obvious reasons aside, this is a BIG MISTAKE, because Baker is certifiably PISSED and he doesn’t QUAKE, he RETALIATES. Instruments of retaliation include a house rigged with creepy remote-controlled skeletons, a shitty van that shoots missiles (it’s like some kind of second-hand Batmobile), a spring loaded cobra-in-a-basket with a discreet machine gun turret inside its mouth, some sort of gun that can take down a helicopter with a single shot, fake grenades, real grenades, remote controlled whatsits and more. The dude is basically an electric wizard of spectacular vengeance with lots of SWEET Hawaiian shirts. Which will be your favorite? Come to the screening to find out!

And did we mention the sweet power ballads whose lyrics basically explain what’s happening on screen? The aimless labyrinthine dockyard shootout that plays as an unintended homage to the classical Trance Film tradition of avant-garde cinema? The scene where two random people get shot for no apparent reason, and the camera lingers way too uncomfortably long on their awkwardly crying daughter? Chris Mitchum’s irrepressible parrothead charm? THE SCENES OF RIGHTEOUS SPECIAL EFFECTS RETALIATION?

FATHER, SON AND HOLY WAR

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FATHER, SON AND HOLY WAR
Dir: Anand Patwardhan, 1994.
133 min. India.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 8:00 PM
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 – 8:00 PM

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

In the politically polarized world, universal ideals are rare. In India, as in many regions, the vacuum is filled by religious zealousness. Minorities are scapegoats of every calamity as nations subdivide into religious and ethnic zones, each seemingly eager to annihilate the others, or to extinguish itself on the altar of martyrdom.

But why? FATHER, SON AND HOLY WAR explores in two parts the possibility that the psychology of violence against “the other” may lie in male insecurity, itself an inevitable product of the very construction of “manhood.”

Part 1: TRIAL BY FIRE

TRIAL BY FIRE, a reference to the ordeal Hindu god-king Lord Rama tested his wife Sita’s fidelity with, looks at the communal fires which have consumed India in recent years. “Sati,” a rite by which Roop Kanwar was thrown on her husband’s funeral pyre; the upper castes’ “purifying” fire rituals and the communal fires that ravaged Bombay after the demolition of the mosque in Ayodhya are set against a small group of fire fighters: a Rajasthani woman who, against the odds, condemns Sati; a Muslim woman who battles gender discriminatory laws; and a band of Hindus and Muslims who march for communal harmony in the riot-torn streets of Bombay.

Part 2: HERO PHARMACY

HERO PHARMACY examines “manhood” in the context of religious strife. The Hindu majority has been raised on stories of marauding Muslim invaders who raped their women, destroyed their temples, and forced religious conversions. Today, some Hindus demand revenge for crimes committed centuries ago. They reject non-violence as impotence and set out to be “real men.”

In this context, the Muslim minority – despite fears of genocide – will not take things lying down. They too are driven by the imperative to be “real men.” The result is carnage.

Is violence inherent in the human condition? Historically, people have co-existed for over 50,000 years in relative harmony. Wars began less than 5,000 years ago. But today the “macho” man rules in every land. Where do we go from here?

“Rampant machismo is never a pretty sight, and this two-part video contains a lot of excruciating imagery and some brutal truths: these are not pretty pictures… For showing to courses on current Indian politics, on religion and ethnicity, on women’s issues, the sociology of violence, or popular culture, FATHER, SON AND HOLY WAR is powerful stuff, but the faint of heart should be forewarned of its harrowing content.”—Gail Minault, Journal of Asian Studies

“FATHER, SON AND HOLY WAR, through a careful layering of images, views and counter-views takes you far beyond the generally superficial vision of Indian politics that the standard television documentary delivers.”—Pervaiz Khan, London Film Festival

Spirit of Freedom Prize Winner, 1995 Jerusalem Film Festival
Best Investigative Documentary, 1995 National Awards (India)
Special Jury Prize Winner, 1995 Bombay Film Festival
Special Jury Prize Winner, 1995 Yamagata Documentary Film Festival
1995 Human Rights Watch Film Festival
Special Jury Prize Winner, 1994 Vancouver Film Festival

FIST CHURCH

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A bi-monthly, mystery kung-fu matinee.

 

The 70’s, 80’s, and even into the early 90’s were a wonderful time when a boy or girl could sit down in front of their TV set after Saturday morning cartoons and tune into their local UHF station to catch a helping of hundreds of Kung Fu Matinees, or if you were a bit older and lived in the New York City area, you could go to one of the many infamous Times Square theaters and do the same (while “enjoying” some PCP if that was your thing).

Unfortunately due to the increasing popularity of cable TV, the decline of poorly dubbed and retitled VHS fare, and the slightly decreased popularity of openly smoking PCP in a movie theater, the Kung Fu Matinee tradition has withered on the vine. Luckily, Spectacle and Kissing Contest believe a revival of this tradition is long overdue, with a bit of a spin of course.

Every other Sunday we’ll be mining the depths of VHS, VCD, DVD, and the darkest corners of the internet to bring you the wildest post-brunch experience you’re likely to have. So, get faded on Bloody Mary’s (leave the PCP at home) and come kick your feet up while we play fast and loose with the rules and witness people fight hopping vampires, ninjas, swordsmen and more. The movies won’t be announced, but trust us – on this one we wouldn’t steer you wrong.

A cinematic haymaker to the face on this day of rest. Well…every other day of rest.

WOMEN MAKE MOVIES PRESENT: MADAME X

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Spectacle and Women Make Movies, the celebrated non-profit organization and distributor of independent film and video by and about women, are proud to host a new series of collaboratively programmed screenings that will delve widely and deeply into WMM’s diverse catalog, showcasing noted classics and underscreened gems, including both works of radical feminism and documentary journalism by established and emerging filmmakers.

THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 26th – 8PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

MADAME X: EINE ABSOLUTE HERRSCHEIN
(Madame X: An Absolute Ruler)
Dir. Ulrike Ottinger, 1977

Madame X, the cruelest and most successful pirate of the Far Eastern seas, puts out a call to all women seeking a world full of gold, love, and adventure to join her crew and become marauders on the high seas. But even after their first pitiless attack on a yacht carrying hilarious caricatures of bourgeois male hegemony leaves them awash in plunder, the increasing assertion of the new pirates’ identities and desires leads an already chaotic journey into absolute bedlam.

This first feature effort by Ottinger – whose work in both fiction and documentary has since won wide acclaim – is an exhilarating experience both for its righteous appropriation of a genre often rife with casual misogyny and for the director’s irresistible invitation to revel in the visual beauty and surreal discontinuity of her film’s world. An opportunity to see this rarely-screened work is not to be missed!

THE FUTURE WEIRD: THE BLACK ATLANTIS

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MONDAY, AUGUST 26 – 8:00 PM

The Future Weird is a bimonthly series exploring contemporary film from the global south – with an African bias. Our title, “the future weird”, is inspired by The State’s ongoing documentation of non-western futurisms: http://www.thestate.ae/

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According to Afrofuturist legend, Drexciya is a sunken land inhabited by the children of African women who were drowned during the Middle Passage. Since they were never born, these children continued to breath underwater: first through amniotic fluid, then through lungs better suited to the new world. Join us as we go in search of the “Black Atlantis”.

Water is a cleansing force through which our bodies may be reborn, but it is also a site of memory where disappeared and suppressed things resurface, wash up, or return to us as detritus. Through myths that traverse the Black diaspora we meet a beautiful and dangerous sea goddess named mama wata. Following tourists and then refugees fleeing Europe, we consider stories concerning identity, slavery and commerce, high seas adventure, and the joint appeal and terror of being visited by ancestors or haunted by an unknown past.