CONTOURS PRESENTS… VALI: THE WITCH OF POSITANO

Vali: The Witch of Positano
dir. Sheldon Rochlin & Flame Schon, 1967
United States / United Kingdom / Italy, 62 mins
In English.

ONE-NIGHT ONLY!

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30 – 7:30 PM

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This April, Spectacle is pleased to host the Toronto-based film critic and curator Saffron Maeve, who programs CONTOURS—a screening series dedicated to examining films that thematize the world of visual art: painting, sculpture, sketching, and performance. Tonight, she will introduce a rare presentation of Vali: The Witch of Positano, a documentary portrait of the famed “creatrix.”

It is in the bohemian’s nature to be a multi-hyphenate, or, in the multi-hyphenate’s nature to be bohemian. Take Australian artist, dancer, occultist, and self-proclaimed “creatrix” Vali Myers, the captivating subject of Sheldon Rochlin and Flame Schon’s 1965 documentary Vali: The Witch of Positano. Instantly recognizable by her shock of red hair, facial tattoos, gold teeth, and kohl-lined eyes, Myers procured art that was relational to her many talents: surreal, fluid paintings and drawings which revolved around primogenial magic and femininity, often depicting arcane supernatural figures. Myers was born in Sydney, Australia in 1930 to a merchant navy officer and a violinist, and by age 14, she had moved out to St. Kilda, where she worked in factories and as an artist’s model to pursue dance—her main passion beyond drawing. By 17, she became the leading dancer of the Melbourne Modern Ballet Company and, two years later, boarded a ship to Paris. The city was ravaged by the war and Myers, unable to find work, fell into a subculture of refugees, writers, and artists. (During this time, Dutch photographer Ed van der Elsken photographed Myers for his seminal roman-à-clef Love on the Left Bank, and made her the lead of a 1972 film titled Death In Port Jackson Hotel.) Myers was imprisoned multiple times for vagrancy and eventually expelled from Paris, only to return years later legally, at which point her artwork was discovered by the writer and founder of The Paris Review, George Plimpton (a portfolio of her drawings ran in the magazine’s Spring 1958 edition).

Flitting between Europe, Melbourne, and New York, Myers developed an artistic network, where she associated with figures like Abbie Hoffman and Patti Smith, and was encouraged to exhibit her talents by Andy Warhol and Salvador Dalí. After leaving Paris to quell her opium addiction, Myers settled in Positano, Southern Italy, where her cottage by the sea became a wildlife sanctuary, as if plucked from a fairytale. Several films were made about Myers and her artistry, including Death in Port Jackson Hotel, Vali’s World (1984), Vali’s Diary (1984), The Tightrope Dancer (1989), and Painted Lady (2002), but none were as local to the most earnest slice of her life as Vali. In Rochlin and Schon’s hour-long experimental documentary, we visit Myers at her Positano dwelling, where she is seen dancing, chatting with friends and visitors, rolling around in bed with her lover, tending to animals, engaging in occult rituals, and, very briefly, painting. The film hop-skips between reality and phantasm, acting as an affective archive for this nonconformist artist to play within; dreams are indulged, fantasies are taken as fact, and oblique rituals make for hyperreality. It’s clear Myers’s flavor of celebrity is unusual, but the filmmakers tend to both her worldview and public perception, keeping in mind that art is rarely made consciously.

Special thanks to programmer Saffron Maeve, as well as filmmaker Flame Schon.

¡Aoquic iez in Mexico!

CONTENT WARNING: These films contain flashing lights which may not be suitable for photosensitive epilepsy in addition to explicit images of violence.

¡Aoquic iez in Mexico!
(Mexico Will No Longer Exist!)
dir. Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco, 2024
Mexico, 80 mins
In Nahuatl and Spanish with english subtitles

THURSDAY, APRIL 3 – 10 PM

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ONE NIGHT ONLY – FILMMAKER IN ATTENDANCE!

Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco’s feature debut ¡AOQUIC IEZ IN MEXICO! explores the many violences and contradictions at the heart of Mexican history. Divided in five chapters, this quicksilver experimental documentary combines an analytical framework with an exploded cinematic grammar to probe the origins of several Mexican myths and their relationship to the nation’s identity. Per visual artist and film programmer Byron Davies, ¡AOQUIC IEZ IN MEXICO! was inspired by the films of Dziga Vertov and Teo Hernández. While the film’s breakneck speed feels inspired by the aforementioned filmmakers — although, such speed is also an extension of its punk ethos — Quagliata’s penetrating visual commentary on Mexican scenes and traditions also feels like a natural continuation of the famed experimental filmmaker Rubén Gámez’s unique, and under-appreciated, cinematic missives against Mexican culture. Her work directly challenges foundational texts on Mexican identity — from that of Spanish friars first trying to make sense of the nation-to-be to the more recent musings of Octavio Paz. The film does not present Mexico’s heart, insomuch as it shows all of its bleeding wounds.

Special thanks to Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco and Byron Davies.

SAUL LEVINE: WHAT HEART HEARD OF, GHOST GUESSED

CONTENT WARNING: These films contain flashing lights which may not be suitable for photosensitive epilepsy.

Saul Levine does not stop. He is an uncompromising and relentless film-maker whose work reflects his experimental verve. As far back as the ’60s, he has shown that film is a material object––and thus, it can be twisted, warped, chopped, and stretched to produce immersive and challenging cinematic experiences. On April 4, we are pleased to host Levine––alongside a troupe of filmmakers and thinkers close to him––for a night honoring his legacy.

In addition to the impressive body of work that Levine has assembled over the decades, he has also imparted a love and understanding of experimental filmmaking to a new generation of filmmakers through his teachings at The Massachusetts School of Arts and Design (MassArt); among them, Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco. Her work championing his films, alongside Byron Davies and Lumia Lightsmith, led to the presentation of Saul Levine Retrospective that toured Mexico last year. Tonight, we present an abridged version of said retrospective, with Levine in person to discuss his work.

FRIDAY, APRIL 4 – 7 PM

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STAR FILM
1969. 15 mins. 16mm.

A hand-made emulsion film in which a star is reprinted over the course of 15 minutes. Across colors and shadows, Levine creates a simple interstellar experience, as though the screening room is lost in space.

BIG STICK / AN OLD REEL
1973. 10 mins. 16mm.

Between 1967 and 1973, Levine cut up and re-edited Charlie Chaplin’s IN THE PARK and EASY STREET. His dramatic reinvention of both films––with footage of police arresting protestors interrupting the comedian’s antics––stresses Chaplin’s routine pratfalls and thematic interests.

NEW LEFT NOTE
1982. 27 mins.

In addition to his practice as a filmmaker, Levine also worked as the editor of the NEW LEFT NOTES, the official newspaper of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). This short film chronicles the group’s activities, providing a history of the antiwar movement and its after-waves from 1968-1982.

FIVE-MINUTE INTERMISSION

IS AS IS
1991. 3 mins. 16mm.

Levine films the artist and scholar Marjorie Keller with a baby in her arms. A family film, documenting time spent together under the sun.

AS IS WAS
1995. 4 mins. 16mm.

Marjorie Keller and Stan Brakhage walk by the beach. A quick snapshot of a lovely day––a seabird swoops in at the end.

FALLING NOTES UNLEAVING
2013. 13 mins. 16mm.

After Anne Charlotte Robertson, filmmaker and friend of Levine, passed away, he decided to honor with a film. This is that film.

NOTE TO PATI
1969. 7 mins. 16mm.

A quick and powerful example of Levine’s filmmaking, mixing personal storytelling with furious editing. Also, a wistful portrait of a snow day in New England.

LIGHT LICKS: PARDES: COUNTING FLOWERS ON THE WALL
2018. 13 mins. 16mm.

A series of flowers in bloom, lit up for all to see. Levine, whose tireless approach to filmmaking has been much discussed already, provides evidence of his constant search for new ways of finding beauty through simple means. This film is part of his Light Licks series, which he began in 1999 and continues to build upon.

LIGHT LICKS: AMEN
2017. 6 mins. 16mm.

A portrait of Levine’s father, as well as a subtle and improvisational dance of light inspired by jazz. Also part of Levine’s Light Licks series.

NOTE TO TETSUA
2018. 1 min. 16mm.

The moon floats in front of a light. From the stars to the moon.

Special thanks to Saul Levine, Byron Davies, Lumia Lightsmith, Stephen Cappel and Kathy Del Beccaro. Davies has provided all of the graphics accompanying this series. His research project “Materialism and Geographic Specificity in the Philosophy of Film” forms the basis for these screenings, which are supported by Salón de Cines Múltiples. Additional support was provided by Laboratorio Experimental de Cine (LEC).

 

AN EVENING WITH ANNALISA D. QUAGLIATA BLANCO

CONTENT WARNING: These films contain flashing lights which may not be suitable for photosensitive epilepsy in addition to explicit images of violence.

Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco has built an impressive body of filmic work over the last two decades. Her frenetic and direct cinematic practice melds an interest in formal experimentation with political intervention. Although her feature debut, the audacious and refreshingly unusual ¡AOQUIC IEZ IN MEXICO! will be the focus of a subsequent screening here at Spectacle, her previous short films constitute their own powerful block of cinematic assault: on the traditions of the medium, on Mexican society writ-large, and on the passive spectator.

With Quagliata Blanco in-person, we present her entire body-of-work, from work she developed at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design under the tutelage of experimental film luminaries like Saul Levine and her more recent films, which anticipate the political fury of her feature debut.

THURSDAY, APRIL 3 – 7:30 PM

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LA OTRA PIEL Reel
2015 – 2017. 9 mins. 16mm

A collection of 7 handmade short films made toward the beginning of Quagliata Blanco’s career. Demonstrating an emphasis on texture and material, these films reflect Quagliata Blanco’s incipient interest in film as material, and material as an inherently expressive matter.

CALYPSO
2016. 5 mins.

Inspired by Homer’s Odyssey, Quagliata Blanco renders a cinematic portrait of the nymph calypso. Not beholden to the myths specifics, she offers a queer reinterpretation of the myth –– a sensuous and surprising intervention upon the classics.

SE BUSCA (un mar de ausencia)
(Searching For) (a sea of absence)
FIN ES UNA PEL2016. 2 mins.

“Se Busca” roughly translates to “Wanted” in english, although “Searching For” is perhaps more fitting within the context of Quagliata Blanco’s film and the ongoing crisis of missing women in Mexico. This film compiles 50 images of missing women whose “Se Busca” posters are circulated in the efforts of finding them.

FIN ES UNA PELÍCULA MEXICANO
(The End –– A Mexican Movie)
2016. 3 mins.

Juan Bustillo Oro’s Dos Monjes (Two Monks) –– a classic of Mexican cinema –– is an expressionist film about fraternal hate and masculine violence. Quagliata Blanco’s short film The End –– A Mexican Movie focuses explicitly on the murdered female protagonist at the heart of the latter film. What emerges is a work of direct criticism, and a revelation of Mexico’s age-old violence against women.

CRISÁLIDA
(Chrysalis)
2017. 3 mins.

A short, handmade film about metamorphosis. Typical of Quagliata Blanco, the film’s content is as shapeshifting as its formal basis.

A NUESTRO TIEMPO
(Closer to Our Time)
2018. 6 mins.

Like in The End –– A Mexican Movie and Se Busca, Quagliata Blanco turns to the archive once more. Here, she samples images from Leobardo López Arretche’s landmark protest documentary El Grito to stress the unresolved promises of 1968’s cultural revolution in Mexico.

MY cell phone
2018. 2 mins.

A fun –– and troubling –– investigation into people’s attachment to their phones.

Special thanks to Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco.

Tribute to Saul Levine, Luther Price and the MassArt Film Society

CONTENT WARNING: These films contain flashing lights which may not be suitable for photosensitive epilepsy.

Saul Levine has taught at MassArt for the last 40 years, ushering in new generations of filmmakers into making experimental films and teaching alongside contemporary luminaries in the field. This program––adapted from a similar showcase that was presented at kindred microcinema La Cueva as part of last year’s “Retrospectiva Saul Levine” in Mexico––collects films by Levine alongside those of his contemporaries and forebears, highlighting the unique methods of study and practice championed at The Massachusetts School of Arts and Design (MassArt).

Films in a state of decay and reinvention make up this program. From Tom Rhodes and Luther Price’s bleak and beautiful WARM BROTH (1988), to Saul Levine and Pelle Lowe’s cheeky READY-MADE (1992), this showcase presents the multifacetedness of the MassArt filmmakers. Aware of film as a material and always willing to push the medium’s limits in terms of form and narrative, MassArt’s filmmakers demonstrate a radical, perhaps waning, approach to experimental filmmaking in the United States. Within this short presentation exists a universe of filmmaking, held together by personal idiosyncrasies and uncompromising experimentation.

FRIDAY, APRIL 4 – 10 PM

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WARM BROTH
dir. Luther Price & Tom Rhodes, 1988.
35 mins. Super 8mm.

Working with Tom Rhodes, the late Luther Price creates a winding work of memory, calling back to childhod––all its distress and poetry. With its mechanical voice-over and stirring images, WARM BROTH details the emotions and knick-knacks that make up a broken home.

WHY THE LONG FACE
dir. Laurie McKenna, 1997.
26 mins.

Former student of Luther Price and Saul Levine offers her own tribute to their teachings with this shapeshifting short. Using old photographs, toy models, and off-the-cuff footage, McKenna creates a spellbinding film––as daring and personal as the work of her teachers and peers.

GOODTIME CHARLIE BIRTHDAY
dir. Laurie McKenna, 1997
2 mins.

A film of stuffed animals, haunted by a lullaby. Much like Price, McKenna makes visible the horror hiding beneath the surface of known American scenes.

AGGREGATE
dir. Laurie McKenna, 2020
6 mins.

A tribute to Luther Price, as well as all of McKenna’s lost loved ones. With her simple pairing of personal reminiscences and well-honed cinematography, McKenna conjures a film of instincts with care at its heart.

OUTCRY (for Luther)
dir. Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco, 2015
1 min.

Handmade and slowed down, a siren’s call made in tribute to Luther Price.

WAS ONCE ONE
dir. Linnea Nugeant, 2023
3 mins.

A vulnerable conversation between Luther Price and filmmaker Linnea Nugeant forms the basis of this short work. Along with this conversation, shifting shades of blue draw viewers in.

CRESCENT
dir. Saul Levine & Pelle Lowe, 1993
5 mins. Super 8mm.

Another conversation, this time between Saul Levine and Pelle Lowe. The moon shines as they speak.

SCHMATEH IV & SCRAPE
dir. Saul Levine, 1986
8 mins. Super 8mm.

Two portraits, of Pelle Lowe and Laurie McKenna, respectively. According to Levine, he was “desperately in love” with both of them.

READY-MADE
dir. Saul Levine & Pelle Lowe, 1993
4 mins. Super 8mm.

Rock n’ Roll and the Paris Commune. Saul Levine and Pelle Lowe recreate Édouard Manet’s Olympia in this quick and humorous experiment in filmmaking.

Special thanks to Annalisa D. Quagliata Blanco, Saul Levine, Byron Davies, Lumia Lightsmith, Stephen Cappel, Nicolas Cadena, Mono No Aware, and Kathy Del Beccaro.

Davies and Lightsmith co-curated this program. The latter also formatted all of the graphics for this series. The banner and poster image for this program come courtesy of David Michael Curry, who participated in the filming of WARM BROTH. Davies’s research project “Materialism and Geographic Specificity in the Philosophy of Film” forms the basis for these screenings, which are supported by Salón de Cines Múltiples.

 

TALES FROM THE RED DRAGON

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 15 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, APRIL 18 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, APRIL 25 – 10 PM

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Welsh-language film and television have historically been fraught with challenges, including persistent underfunding and a lack of effective infrastructure, compounded by the British government’s reluctance to support Welsh culture in media. There has also been a notable hesitation among British distributors to handle Welsh films, further restricting their exposure to international audiences. Director Wil Aaron stated in the Welsh magazine Barn: “There will be no further developments in Welsh-language film until the BFI is persuaded that the Welsh have as much right as the English to their own celluloid culture.” This sentiment drove Aaron to create the independent television company Ffilmiau’r Nan in 1976.

In 1952, when the BBC launched a transmitter in Glamorgan, Welsh-language television programming was minimal, peaking at just half an hour per week by 1957. The establishment of BBC Wales in 1962 allowed a slight increase, but the struggle for substantial recognition and funding persisted. Throughout the 1970s, a campaign for a dedicated Welsh-language channel gained traction, driven by groups like Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg and Plaid Cymru. However, political pledges often went unfulfilled, with Thatcher’s Conservative government backtracking on commitments made during the 1979 elections. This led to significant unrest, culminating in a protest by Gwynfor Evans, who threatened to fast until the promise of a Welsh channel was realized (dramatized in the 2023 film Y SWN).

During this period, Welsh-language films were virtually nonexistent, prompting the establishment of the Welsh Film Board (Bwrdd Ffilmiau Cymraeg) in 1971. Unfortunately, the British Film Institute perceived the WFB as a “language activity rather than a film project,” and its initiatives were underfunded. Aaron, a member of the WFB, produced four films with their support, including the two featured in this retrospective, but he remained disillusioned with the organization’s approach, famously stating, “The board has no expertise, no experience of the film.”

In 1982, the Welsh language television channel S4C (Sianel Pedwar Cymru – Channel Four Wales) was finally established, broadcasting 22 hours a week and prioritizing Welsh programming over English-language shows. Through Ffilmiau’r Nant, Aaron started producing for the channel very early on, including shows such as ALMANAC (1982-1986), C’MON MIDFIELD! (1988-1994) and DERYN (1986-1992). In his book Wales and Cinema: The First 100 Years, David Berry writes: “Ffilmiau’r Nant has become one of S4C’s most prolific independent suppliers of films.”

Today, S4C continues to thrive, broadcasting 115 hours of Welsh programming each week, including news broadcasts and original programming. Despite this robust, Welsh-language cinema remains underrepresented, with films still struggling to receive widespread distribution and filmmakers often facing challenges securing adequate funding. Nevertheless, there have been notable recent successes, particularly with the critically acclaimed THE FEAST (2021). This underscores the vibrant creativity in Welsh cinema and the appetite for it when it is supported effectively. This April, Spectacle proudly presents two of Aaron’s Welsh-language films produced through the WFB.

O’R DDAEAR HEN
(FROM THE OLD EARTH)
Dir. Wil Aaron, 1981
Wales, 47 min
In Cymraeg with English subtitles

William Jones discovers an ancient Celtic stone head in his garden, with horrifying consequences. Can the local archeologists help him shake an ancient curse?

O’R DDAEAR HEN is steeped in Welsh folklore and tradition, and is probably the first true horror film to be produced in the Welsh language. In Wales and Cinema, Berry calls the film “a work of undoubted flair.” The plot echoes the classic ghost stories of M.R. James, featuring an unsuspecting character who unearths an ancient artifact, only to find that the past has come back to haunt them. Although the quality of films from the WFB was often scrutinized (even by Aaron himself), O’R DDAEAR HEN would seamlessly fit into the BBC’s original run of A GHOST STORY FOR CHRISTMAS (1971-1978).

The film was one of Aaron’s first works showcased on S4C. While it received acclaim, not all screenings were met positively. One mission of the WFB was to expose children to the Welsh language, which involved organizing school trips to view their films. The trip to watch O’R DDAEAR HEN has become notorious for traumatizing a generation of kids. Mari Williams, one such child now in her 40s, reminisced about her experience in a BBC article, stating, “I remember lying in my bed that night numb with fear, certain that a man with horns was standing outside the bedroom.”

GWAED AR Y SER
(BLOOD ON THE STARS)
Dir. Wil Aaron, 1975
Wales, 60 min
In Cymraeg with English subtitles

Welsh celebrities from all over are scheduled to perform at a local talent show. Then, one by one, they turn up dead in increasingly bizarre ways.

Aaron masterfully walks the line between horror and the blackest of comedy in this equally charming and deranged film. Berry wrote that it “delivers the robust gags, the shameless ironies and the shocks with such gusto.” This is even more remarkable given the meager budget of only £6,000 and the shooting schedule of just ten days. Many of the actors are Nantperis locals, with most of the celebrities played by Aaron’s friends from his years in broadcast TV.

The WFB also screened this film for schoolchildren in 1975. While it did not provoke the same outcry as O’R DDAEAR HEN, it still managed to traumatize viewers and get multiple complaints from parents. Aaron commented, “The problem with Welsh films at that time was that everyone assumed they were the kind of thing that was shown in Sunday School. Did no one consider that there might not be a little bit of sex and a little bit of fear in them…”

This 2K restoration was produced by Severin Films with the support of Matchbox Cineclub. It was restored using the original camera negative and original mono track negatives. All the elements were provided courtesy of the Bwrdd Ffilmiau Cymraeg/Welsh Film Board collection at the National Library of Wales Screen and Sound Archive.

THE TRAGEDY OF MAN

THE TRAGEDY OF MAN
(AZ EMBER TRAGÉDIÁJA)
dir. Marcell Jankovics, 2011
Hungary, 166 mins
In Hungarian with English subtitles

SUNDAY, APRIL 6 – 5 PM
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16 – 7 PM
SATURDAY, APRIL 26 – 10 PM

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Adam, Eve, and Lucifer search for the meaning of life and humanity while witnessing mankind’s history and inevitable demise.

In 1957, Pannónia Film Studio was established, marking the beginning of the golden age of Hungarian animation. Cartoons received less scrutiny from state censors than live-action work, letting them travel easily beyond the Iron Curtain and reach prestigious Western film festivals like Cannes and ceremonies such as the Academy Awards. Pannónia became one of the top animation studios in the world, alongside Disney and Toei.

Marcell Jankovics is probably the most internationally recognized Hungarian animator. He started working at Pannónia as a stage manager at age 19 in 1960, becoming a director in 1965. In 1973, the Hungarian government commissioned the country’s first feature-length animated film, JOHNNY CORNCOB, which Jankovics directed. In 1981, he released his most famous work, SON OF THE WHITE MARE, to international success, though it ran into censorship issues because of its non-Marxist interpretation of time. Both films have enjoyed tenures at Spectacle, in 2016 and 2022.

In 1983, Jankovics finished writing his magnum opus, THE TRAGEDY OF MAN, based on the dramatic poem by Imre Madách. This epic tale chronicles the journey of Adam, Eve, and Lucifer across the full breadth of human history. It began production in 1988, just a year before the fall of communism in Europe. In an interview with Cartoon Brew, Jankovics said, “There were political changes in Hungary which made me freer to express myself and communicate my ideas more clearly.” But this also led to the denationalization of the country’s film industry, resulting in the loss of state funding which Jankovics and other golden-age animators depended on.

Jankovics spent the next 23 years in a pattern of securing funding, creating one of the film’s 15 segments, then hunting for more funding. The film, finally finished in 2011, stands as one of the longest animated features ever made. Some notable funding came after Jankovics’ Oscar-nominated short SISYPHUS (1974) was used in a GM commercial aired during the 2008 Super Bowl. Another batch came after Disney animator/director Roger Allers watched a bootleg copy of SON OF THE WHITE MARE and convinced the studio to hire Jankovics to work on KINGDOM OF THE SUN, the project that would ultimately become THE EMPEROR’S NEW GROOVE (2000). Jancovics left amid the film’s heavy retooling, stating, “What I had made wasn’t used in the ruined, stupid, kitschy final version.”

Each chapter of THE TRAGEDY OF MAN showcases a unique visual style, reflecting various moments in history. The shifting animation enhances the film’s grand scope and deepens its emotional resonance, allowing viewers to experience a broad spectrum of human experiences and philosophies. Despite its critical acclaim, the film has rarely screened in the United States outside its original festival run in 2011. This April, Spectacle invites you to embark on an epic journey through mankind’s past, present, and future with Jankovics’ 20th-century masterpiece.

THE MARIJUANA AFFAIR

THE MARIJUANA AFFAIR

THE MARIJUANA AFFAIR
Dir. William Greaves, 1975
Jamaica, 82 min
In English

SUNDAY, APRIL 20 – 7:30 PM

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A tale of international intrigue from Trinidad to Jamaica, from Harlem to Kingston. United States narcotics agent Dick Farrington (Calvin Lockhart) is on leave in Kingston, his hometown, after inadvertently gunning down a youth on the streets of New York. But there’s no rest for the wicked, because this is a working sabbatical. The higher-ups have sent him to look into the marijuana trade—specifically, what sort of illicit activities are going on in US intelligence operations. But everyone keeps telling Dick that marijuana isn’t where the action is; cocaine and heroin are where things are really happening. But the higher-ups aren’t interested in those, and just want to break up the ganja ring. Corruption abounds, from the government to the local cops and back again.

THE MARIJUANA AFFAIR was long thought lost, but was recently unearthed from a storage unit in the form of a low-quality U-matic cassette tape. Greaves was purportedly unhappy with the film, and his widow Louise wasn’t interested in a potential rerelease in 2018. We are very thankful to the Greaves family for allowing this one-time screening.

BRIGHTON WOK: THE LEGEND OF GANJA BOXING

BRIGHTON WOK

BRIGHTON WOK: THE LEGEND OF GANJA BOXING
Dir. Gabriel Howard, 2008
United Kingdom, 90 min
In English

SUNDAY, APRIL 20 – 5 PM with Q&A ($10)
FRIDAY, APRIL 25 – MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY, APRIL 27 – 5 PM
TUESDAY, APRIL 29 – 10 PM

SPECIAL EVENT TICKETS

REGULAR TICKETS

Ninjas, ganja, kung fu.

Terror has befallen the English coastal city of Brighton in the form of Italian ninja Vafan Cuolo and his army of kung fu warriors. The people’s fate lies in the hands of one man, Ryu, who is recently out of a care home and not exactly up to the task. Ryu must find the Ganja Master, learn the ways of ganja boxing, uncover Cuolo’s origins, and defeat Cuolo to save Brighton before it succumbs to tyranny.

Low in budget but high in action (and just high in general), BRIGHTON WOK is 4/20’s answer to the Spectacle Saint Patrick’s Day classic FATAL DEVIATION. A completely DIY affair, filming began in 2004 and wrapped in 2006, and the feature was finally released in 2008 after postproduction was split up over a couple years between other responsibilities—work, school, and of course, ganja. The production was all hands on deck and entirely Brighton-based, with fight choreography and even stunts taken care of by a local martial arts instructor and his pupils. It’s an impressive ragtag labor of love.

To celebrate one of our favorite holidays, on April 20th, director Gabrial Howard, producer Saul Howard, writer (and Vafan Cuolo actor) Samson Byford-Winter, and editor/cinematographer John MacDonald will  join us for a very special virtual Q&A after the screening.

BLOOD BRUNCH

BLOOD BRUNCH

EVERY OTHER SUNDAY AT 3 PM
$5 CASH AT THE DOOR. FIRST COME, FIRST SEVERED.

A bimonthly mystery horror matinee.

Calling all blood eaters, love butchers and neon maniacs! The lights go down, the screen lights up, and every one of your senses is flooded with ghastly terror from beyond the fetid grave. Spend your Sundays drenched in blood and quivering in fear with a mystery movie (as in, we don’t tell you what we’re showing until you see the title on the screen) that is at least 20 years old.