WORSE THAN JAIL PRESENTS: WORSE THAN TINDER

Worse Than Jail is the internet alias of Kentucky-based artist Matt Minter. Minter is most notable for his horror-centric B&W illustrations, as well video work and association with the noise-rock group Wretched Worst. Worse Than Jail Video is a two part series amassing the celluloid inspirations for Minter’s work. Expanding on Minter’s curatorial contributions to Los Angeles’ Cathode Cinema, the series will check off a list of exceptionally psychotronic obscurities that have never been seen before and are unavailable anywhere else. Czech music videos, homemade puppet theater, and public access Star Trek parodies will all get prominent airtime for this special midnight block.

Spectacle will present the first part of this program with the film “Worse than Tinder” which is about ill-fated hookups and damned dates! Be sure to check back later this Fall, during our Halloween programming, for more of Minter’s insanity.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 05 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, AUGUST 25 – 10:00 PM

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TWO FILMS BY JAZMIN LOPEZ

This summer, Spectacle is pleased to host multidisciplinary artist and filmmaker Jazmín López for a special engagement of her first two feature films. On August 26th, the Roxy Cinema will host a special screening of López’s haunting debut LEONES on its original subtitled 35mm print with Q+A, to mark the film’s tenth anniversary as well as the New York City premiere of her second feature IF I WERE THE WINTER ITSELF (2020).

LEONES
(LIONS)
dir. Jazmín López, 2012
83 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 5 – 7:30 PM with Jazmín López in person for Q+A moderated by curator Anthony Chassi
(This event is $10.)
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, AUGUST 14 – 5 PM
TUESDAY, AUGUST 23 – 7:30 PM

Deep in the forest a group of five friends wander around like a lion herd. Lost in their word games, they play and seduce each other while going back and forth into adulthood territory, in a desperate search to avoid their already written story.

LEONES is a fairy tale drawn in sinuous, long Steadicam takes which call to mind similar hypnotic camerawork in films by Michaelangelo Antoioni or Max Ophuls. Widely celebrated on the festival circuit, the film curiously never received proper distribution in the United States despite López’s preternatural command of mood and image, and copies have become hard to track down in the ensuing decade. Ten years later, the spontaneity of its teenage performers and its insinuating psychological texture have become unforgettable. Inspired by both avant-garde literature and real-life grief, López depicts youthful listlessness as a kind of festering, with the characters’ disjointed conversations rarely lining up in an equal exchange. LEONES is a work of pure cinema – surreal, melancholy, macabre, impossible to pin down but never obscure for its own sake.

IF I WERE THE WINTER ITSELF
(SI YO FUERA EL INVIERNO MISMO)
dir. Jazmín López, 2020
92 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12 – 7:30 PM with Jazmín López in person for Q+A moderated by Josh Siegel
(This event is $10.)
SUNDAY, AUGUST 21 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, AUGUST 30 – 10 PM

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Four friends meet on a remote estate to create a cinematic re-enactment of three iconic works that embodied the social and artistic revolution of 50 years ago.

López’s second feature tackles its artistic influences head-on (specifically, works by Harun Farocki, Ana Mendieta and Jean-Luc Godard) while expanding on the uncanny assurance of filmmaking demonstrated in LEONES. Like that film, SI YO FUERA EL INVIERNO MISMO is an odyssey traversing the physical world and an unknowable afterlife, but López’ signature operatic themes are undercut by the film’s sly sense of humor and an unerring eye for tedium – not just of collectively workshopped art/performance, but also of heartbreak and grief.

Special thanks to Scott Macauley (Forensic Films), Mitchell Mailloux Glidden and Ilyse Singer (Roxy Tribeca).

JAZMIN LOPEZ
is a filmmaker, visual artist, and a professor. She graduated from the Universidad del Cine in Buenos Aires. She has also an MFA in Visual Arts from NYU and MFA in Visual Arts from Universidad Torcuato Di Tella. She participated in the WhitneyISP. Her work is represented by Ruth Benzacar gallery and has been featured in venues like Fondation Pernod Ricard, San Jose Museum, OCAT, Tabacalera, Kadist, Istanbul Biennial and KW. She works as professor for NYU and as an assistant professor of Boris Groys. 

JOSH SIEGEL is a Curator of Film at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). He has organized more than 150 film, media, and gallery exhibitions, many of which have appeared on Best of the Year lists in the New York Times, Artforum, Film Comment, Cahiers du cinéma, and the New Yorker. He serves on the selection committees of the annual festivals New Directors/New Films and Doc Fortnight, and he is the founding director of To Save and Project: The MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation, now in its 20th edition. He serves on the executive boards of MacDowell (as well as its nominating, admissions, and DEAI committees), Light Industry, Cinema Tropical, and the Maurice Sendak Foundation.

ANTHONY CHASSI is a writer and curator based out of Queens, NY. His writing has been featured in Hyperallergic, Film Comment and Screen Slate; his curating has been featured at Spectacle as well as at the Lenfest Center for the Arts at Columbia University.

THE CRIMES OF INSPECTEUR LAVARDIN – 2 FILMS X CLAUDE CHABROL

“In my entire career, I’ve never met such a nervous actor.” – Claude Chabrol on Jean Poiret 

This summer, Spectacle is proud to present our first investigation into Claude Chabrol’s off-beat murder mystery series starring Jean Poiret as Inspecteur Lavardin, an unconventional detective, who is sometimes referred to as the French Columbo (if Columbo broke laws indiscriminately and brought his suspects out back to beat them to confession).

While traditional in their portrayals of the murder mystery subgenre, these skillfully directed films told through Chabrol’s voyeuristic lens are actually, at their core, comedic satires aimed at the deep-rooted hypocrisies of bourgeois provincialism. Filmed in the mid-1980s and later reprised as a short-lived French television series in 1988, POULET AU VINAIGRE (1985) and INSPECTEUR LAVARDIN (1986) are perfect murder-mystery fare for cooling off during the late summer heat.

Special thanks to Arrow Video and the American Genre Film Archive.


POULET AU VINAIGRE
(aka COP AU VIN)

dir. Claude Chabrol, 1985
110 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 03 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, AUGUST 26 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, AUGUST 29 – 7:30 PM

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A deliberately-paced dark comedy/murder mystery whodunit which begins as a tale of class struggle when a group of three wealthy land-developers try pressuring a young postman and his handicapped mother (played by Chabrol’s real-life wife) to sell their family home. Filled with conspiracy, blackmail and pranks gone too far, POULET AU VINAIGRE is an indictment of the wealthy starring an eccentric ensemble cast, each with their own duplicitous intentions.

INSPECTEUR LAVARDIN
dir. Claude Chabrol, 1986
110 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 11 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, AUGUST 14 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, AUGUST 29 – 10 PM

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Reprising the role of the morally dubious cop, Claude Chabrol’s follow up is an ode to the Hitchcockian thriller focusing on a powerful religious writer who is murdered and defamed after shutting down a scandalous avant-garde theater performance. INSPECTEUR LAVARDIN stars French heavyweights Jean-Claude Brially (CLAIRE’S KNEE, LE BEAU SERGE) as the queer widower who spends his time crafting replica eyeballs, and Bernadette Lafont (THE MOTHER AND THE WHORE, A VERY CURIOUS GIRL) as the enigmatic Hitchcockian blonde (who also happens to be the ex-lover of our titular detective, Lavardin.)

 

ROBERTO FARIAS’ SELVA TRÁGICA

SELVA TRÁGICA
(TRAGIC JUNGLE)
dir. Roberto Farias, 1964
104 mins. Brazil
In Portuguese with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12 – 10:00pm
THURSDAY, AUGUST 18 – 7:30pm – Special Event – Post screening conversation with film scholar Fabio Andrade + Isaac Hoff
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28 – 5:00pm – Special Event – Post screening conversation with Glênis Cardoso & Thotti Cardoso 

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“SELVA TRÁGICA was not an American imitation, it was a Brazilian social criticism film, a strong and sad film, more Brazil than the United States.” – Glauber Rocha

Spectacle Theater is excited to present our latest collaboration with Cinelimite, focusing on Roberto Farias’ (director of the early 60’s classic, ASSAULT ON THE PAY TRAIN) lyrical and gut-wrenching social melodrama, SELVA TRÁGICA.

Set between the border of Brazil and Paraguay, in a space that exists seemingly outside of reality, SELVA TRÁGICA tells the tragic story of the abuse and exploitation of captured slaves in a gloomy yerba mate plantation where the only way out of imposed oppression is cruel death and harrowing humiliation.

Farias spares no one in the vast hazy jungle which reverberates with lonely silences and an endless smell of mate. Rigorous in his depiction of cruelty as he is with his sense of framing, juxtaposition, and montage, SELVA TRÁGICA stands out for being a formalist work of beauty while the emptiness of the depicted void is as infinite as the hope for any kind of liberation.

Praised by Glauber Rocha upon release but still too often neglected for its historical significance, Spectacle Theater and Cinelimite are proud to screen SELVA TRÁGICA, a vital film from one of Brazil’s greatest auteurs.

Special thanks to Marise Farias & Produções Cinematográficas RF Farias LTDA

WIZARD’S CURSE

WIZARD’S CURSE
(妖怪都市)
dir. Cheung-Yan Yuen, 1992.
91 mins. Hong Kong.
In Cantonese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, AUGUST 19 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31 – 10 PM

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Part groan-inducing sex comedy rife with castration anxiety, part Hong-Kong supernatural thriller in the Black Magic mold, WIZARD’S CURSE follows the postmortem adventures of two evil sorcerers who are inexplicably fused into a quasi-vampiric entity with a glowing eight-foot phallus. A Taoist priest (played by Ching-Ying Lam, partially reprising his role from 1985’s MR. VAMPIRE) pathologically obsessed with shielding his daughter from lecherous suitors must redirect his attention to the task of saving his family and a dimwitted cop from the undead dyad.

ARMY OF LOVE + OCEANO DE AMOR


ARMY OF LOVE

dirs. Ingo Niermann and Alexa Karolinski, 2016
40 mins. Germany.
In German with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 6 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 17 – 5:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 21 – 7:30 PM


OCEANO DE AMOR
dirs. Ingo Niermann and Alexa Karolinski, 2020
90 mins. Germany.
In German with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 6 – 8:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 8 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 17 – 6:30 PM

Originally created for the 9th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art, ARMY OF LOVE is a short film created by Ingo Niermann and Alexa Karolinski that premiered at The KW Institute (Germany) in 2016. Ingo Niermann is a German author and artist, and Alexa Karolinski is a German filmmaker, known for her work on the television series Unorthodox. OCEANO DE AMOR is a follow-up set on the beaches of Cuba. Both films explore the impact of alienation and how to solve it. We, the audience, are asked: what do we need beyond the redistribution of money? According to Niermann and Karolinski, it is the redistribution of love, which the films present as a remedy for loneliness. An all-encompassing, deep, and profound sense of love – that does not exist in a marketplace.

You might ask, who gets this “love?” Those who need it the most; those who society deems unlovable, due to their appearances, health status, or age. Ultimately, the directors seek to highlight the struggle between the mind and the body (i.e., how we want love but the way our body looks prevents it in society) and how such dynamics play out in contemporary economic systems and in our interpersonal relationships.

DEATH OF A BUSINESS JERRY

DEATH OF A BUSINESS JERRY
dir. Jeremy Finch, 2019
90 mins. United States.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 13 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 16 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 21 – 9:30 PM with special musical introduction courtesy The Timewolf Order
(This event is $10.)
FRIDAY, JULY 22 – 7 PM with filmmaker Jeremy Finch for Q+A! 

(This event is $10.)
SUNDAY, JULY 24 – 5 PM

Business Jerry is done with the business of life. Working at a cafe and music venue in Brooklyn feels like spiritual death. Each night Jerry returns home to confide in his dog Linda. As Jerry tries to keep his band together, PRIIVLEGE, a menacing media start-up wants to appropriate all the New York venues, and life itself, into it’s brand. The only hope for Jerry and Linda is the natural world. Can Jerry and Linda escape the grip that PRIIVLEGE now has on New York City, or will Jerry sign away their lives altogether? Shot on miniDV mostly in Ridgewood and Bushwick, DEATH OF A BUSINESS JERRY features a large community of artists including Juan Wauters, Sophia Lamar, Masma Dream World, Bobby Puleo, Trouble Troupe, Timewolf Deluxe, Mysterease, Sage Sovereign, Champdope, Yairms and more.

JEREMY FINCH is a seasoned food service worker. He has seen many faces consuming various food items. In 2018, Mr. Finch was struck by some ominous recurring situations around the neighborhood. He decided to write a movie, and with the help of many friends it was made. That movie, DEATH OF A BUSINESS JERRY, cultivated a beautiful community and inspired Finch to make more films. His next LA BUFADORA is due out soon.

DEATH GAME


DEATH GAME

dir. Peter S. Traynor, 1977
87 mins. United States.

SATURDAY, JULY 2 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, JULY 8 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JULY 16 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, JULY 22 – MIDNIGHT

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On a dark and stormy night, while his family are away, two strangers ring George Manning’s doorbell. He probably shouldn’t have answered it, he really shouldn’t have invited them in, and he definitely shouldn’t have slept with them. Now George must fight for his life and escape their DEATH GAME…

Staring academy award-nominated actors Sondra Locke and Seymour Cassel, DEATH GAME is a home invasion fever dream about a man’s poor decision-making.

Off-screen tension between neophyte director Peter Traynor and actors Locke and Cassel added organic chaos to the scripted mania. Producer Larry Spiegel agreed, saying that “the onscreen madness of DEATH GAME was fueled by the behind-the-scenes volatility.” Traynor’s inexperience as a director frustrated the cast, with Locke writing, “whenever the director didn’t know exactly what he was doing, which was all the time, he would suggest that either Colleen or I eat something or break something.” This sentiment was likely shared with actor, Seymour Cassel, who refused to loop his lines in post-production after filming a particularly brutal food-based scene. Cinematographer David Worth ultimately lent his voice to the film by painstakingly dubbing all of Cassel’s lines himself.

Eli Roth later remade the film, KNOCK KNOCK (2015), which was executive produced by DEATH GAME director Peter Traynor and lead actors Sondra Lock and Colleen Camp.

Special thanks to Grindhouse Releasing.

DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF MIDNIGHT FLICKS?

This July, come to Spectacle for a double heaping of early-90s straight-to-video android-midnight-madness from Japan.

MIKADROID: ROBOKILL BENEATH DISCO CLUB LAYLA
(ミカドロイド)
dirs. Tomoo Haraguchi, Satoo Haraguchi, 1991
73 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, JULY 2 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 9 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JULY 23 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 29 – 10 PM

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During World War II, the Japanese military established a secret underground laboratory in Tokyo. Three Olympic-level athletes were selected to undergo a process that would turn them into Jinra-go, superhuman armored soldiers. By March 1945, one of the soldiers had been completely transformed into the half man/half machine ultimate soldier called MIKADROID.

But American B-29’s firebomb the city and, while the two super soldiers manage to escape, Mikadroid and the lab are apparently destroyed. 45 years pass, Tokyo is rebuilt, and old secrets are forgotten. The site is now home to a complex that includes the Discoclub Layla. The disco’s patrons dance late into the night, unaware that a faulty basement generator has reactivated Mikadroid and the cyborg now prowls the basement levels, killing anyone in its path…

Part of a low-budget line of Toho movies shot on 16mm and released directly to video, MIKADROID was originally conceived as a zombie film (MIKADO ZOMBIE) before being retooled as a killer android – supposedly because shortly before production, a serial killer was arrested and found to have a massive horror-movie collection, causing a brief public backlash.

Moodier than your average DTV fare, the film makes great use of its meager budget + locations to create a palpable sense of uncanny dread between bursts of insanity, including a memorable parking garage sequence involving a skateboarding disco club attendee. Also features a performance by a young Kiyoshi Kurosawa – not to be missed!

BATTLE GIRL: THE LIVING DEAD IN TOKYO BAY
(バトルガール)
dir. Kazuo ‘Gaira’ Komizu, 1991
73 mins. Japan.
In Japanese with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JULY 1 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JULY 9 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 15 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, JULY 28 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 30 – MIDNIGHT

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A meteor lands in Japan and the fallout creates a “shield” around Tokyo, encasing the city in a foggy darkness. A state of martial law is declared. People are in a panic as violent crime and corruption spreads throughout the region and punk gangs are ruling the streets. As if things weren’t bad enough, a chemical reaction from the meteor unleashes a deadly virus and now the dead are coming back to life as flesh-eating zombies!

Okay… so this isn’t technically about an android. But it might as well be!

Far less coherent than the synopsis suggests, BATTLE GIRL: THE LIVING DEAD IN TOKYO BAY plays like a live action Saturday morning cartoon for the midnight crowd – a smattering of vibes and aesthetics cobbled together from decades of sci-fi and horror movies, lovingly shoved into a meat grinder + sprinkled with fantastic(-ally cheap) and impressive practical effects.

MADE FOR THE DREAM: Six Films Starring Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez

For fans of 21st century Mexican cinema, Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez (or Gabino, as he was colloquially known throughout most of his career) holds a special and unique place. His credits as a leading man may make for a short list heavy on Nicolás Pereda films, but he has also been there at the margins of the frame in some of this century’s most important Mexican films, stealing scenes as a supporting player with his distinct physical presence. In his work with Pereda he is something else, a brusque and enigmatic face grounding Pereda’s bewildering structural experiments with a quiver of the lip or tilt of the head that lends an ordinary immediacy to what is otherwise a typical atmosphere of ambiguity. In addition to those films, this retrospective also encompasses work Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez did with international filmmakers working in Mexico. Showcasing different sides of his screen persona – LA ULTIMA PELICULA demonstrates a distinct, improv-heavy casualness, while LUCIFER takes the gestural elements of his art to the extreme, bringing him closer to the subject of a Flemish painting – these two films capture something of his range and ability.

Beyond his acting work Lázaro is also a writer and director in his own right. Besides co-directing the film MY SKIN, LUMINOUS, which plays in this series alongside FAUNA, his theater company Lagartijas Tiradas al Sol has presented work all over the world and his book on acting has been translated into four languages so far. We are proud to present a new translation of this book into English as part of this retrospective. It will be on sale in the box office for $2.00 and given for free to anyone who attends the post-screening Q&A following FAUNA and MY SKIN, LUMINOUS on July 23rd.

There will be a special zine by Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez on sale during the series featuring his aphoristic writing on acting. It will be available in the booth for $2.00 and distributed for free during the Q&A on July 23rd.

Co-presented with Cinema Tropical. Special thanks to Lucrecia Arcos.

LA ULTIMA PELICULA 
dirs. Mark Peranson, Raya Martin, 2013
88 mins. Canada/Mexico.
In English and Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JULY 1 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 3 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 7 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 23 – 10 PM

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In this documentary within a narrative (and vice versa), grandiose filmmaker (Alex Ross Perry) arrives in the Yucatán to scout locations for his new movie, a production that will involve exposing the last extant celluloid film stock on the eve of the Mayan Apocalypse. Riffing off of Dennis Hopper’s THE LAST MOVIE, which was originally set to take place in Mexico, Mark Peranson and Raya Martin create a hypnotic meditation on the many predicted deaths of cinema which have never come to pass. As Perry wanders around tourist sights, snarkily bemoaning the superficiality of the gringos, he’s led by his friend and assistant, Lázaro Rodriguez, who seems as equally confused by this whole endeavor as he is. Using a veritable cyclone of film and video formats, genres, modes, and methods, Martin and Peranson create an unclassifiable work in LA PELICULA ULTIMA that mirrors the contortions and leaps of the medium’s history and present.

LUCIFER
dir. Gust Van Den Berghe, 2014
108 mins. Mexico/Belgium.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, JULY 3 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 9 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 15 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 22 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 28 – 10 PM

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Filmed in Tondoscope, a format specifically created for this film which uses a high-sensitivity circular lens that creates a circular image with an eerily luminous quality, and often using mirrors to craft 360 degree images, LUCIFER is a film of well-crafted beauty that owes a lot to renaissance painting and literature. Lucifer, Lázaro Rodriguez, passes through the earthly paradise of a village in Mexico on his downfall from Heaven to Hell. There he meets elderly Lupita and her granddaughter Maria. Lupita’s brother Emanuel pretends he’s paralyzed so he can drink and gamble while the two women tend to the sheep. Lucifer senses an opportunity and plays the miraculous healer, forcing Emanuel to walk again so as to seduce Maria and makes Lupita doubt her faith.

PERPETUUM MOBILE
dir. Nicolás Pereda, 2009
87 mins. Mexico.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, JULY 2 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JULY 15 – 7:30 PM 
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 – 10 PM

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Gabino (Lázaro Rodriguez) is a 24-year old man who still lives with his mother and works as a moving truck driver in Mexico City. His mother, Teresa, worships Gabino’s older brother, Miguel, who never visits them. Gabino and his mother have a distant relationship that comes to a climax when they stumble upon an unexpected discovery.

SUMMER OF GOLIATH
(VERANO DE GOLIAT)
dir. Nicolás Pereda, 2010
75 mins. Mexico.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JULY 8 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 14 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 24 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 30 – 10 PM

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His real name is Oscar, but his friends call him Goliath because he is alleged to have killed his girlfriend. That is what Oscar and his little brother Nico tell an interviewer offscreen at the start of SUMMER OF GOLIATH. This fifth film by Nicolás Pereda starts as a documentary, only later to change into a feature film when we see the housewife Teresa trudge across a field with a heavy suitcase. She has just been deserted by her husband, Eduardo. With an intriguing mixture of fiction and documentary, Pereda sketches a picture of a small rural town where it seems fairly common for husbands to desert their families (often to go and work in the United States), where there is little work and where soldiers stroll around and combat boredom by intimidating people. It’s a community where the outcast Oscar and a lonely Teresa have difficulty keeping their heads above water.

“Pereda’s ambitious but willfully puzzling SUMMER OF GOLIATH (2010) tells a number of stories, none of them fully developed. Set in a rural environment, in which woods, fields, and rivers bear oppressively on the action, the film consists of stories that are juxtaposed with each other, scene by scene, in the fashion of a patchwork quilt. Once again, Teresa Sánchez and [Lázaro] Gabino Rodríguez are mother and son, their problems compounded by the husband-father’s abandonment; once again, [Lázaro] lacks a proper job, this time as he plays soldier with a pal. Pereda’s inclusion of interviews with minor characters whose situations are unconnected to the main one lends a documentary air to the entire work, blurring the line between fabrication and what seem to be actual events. The film’s title refers to a young man accused of killing his girlfriend. Though we hear no more about this after the interview that begins the film, it hangs over the movie as a specter of hopelessness and irresolution.” Tony Pipolo, Artforum

FAUNA
dir. Nicolás Pereda, 2020
70 mins. Mexico.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JULY 1 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, JULY 10 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JULY 14 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, JULY 23 – 7 PM with remote Q+A with Lázaro Gabino Rodriguez
(This event is $10.)

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In a run-down Mexican mining town, Luisa brings her boyfriend Paco home to meet her family including her brother (Lázaro Gabino Rodriguez) and mother (Teresa Sanchez). Luisa and Paco are both actors, and the visit grows increasingly (and hilariously) awkward as Luisa’s father becomes fascinated by Paco’s minor role in a big television show. FAUNA’s exploration of performance deepens as the film reinvents itself halfway through, recasting Lázaro Rodriguez  as the protagonist of a mystery plot set in a nearby roadside motel. Scenes and characters begin to repeat and revise each other’s earlier incarnations, with each actor taking on new roles.

screening with

MY SKIN, LUMINOUS
(
MI PIEL, LUMINOSA)
dirs. Lázaro Rodriguez and Nicolás Pereda, 2019
40 mins. Mexico.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

Originally commissioned by the Mexican Ministry of Education, Nicolás Pereda and Gabino Rodríguez’s hypnotically mysterious hybrid object unravels and metamorphoses within the walls of a school. This oneiric journey from light to darkness is a gorgeously abstracted tale of childhood and healing. Having lost the pigment in his skin, Matias, an infirm orphan at a Michoacán primary school, has been quarantined from his classmates. Meanwhile, the presence and words of novelist Mario Bellatin offer the prospect of healing to his ailing body.