COLLAGE HORREUR

As our dear bodega is serenaded in shrieks and showered in gore this SPECTOBER, we are excited to exhume COLLAGE HORREUR, an accompanying series of contemporary experimental horror films that reanimate, reuse, and remix found materials to summon novel sensations and dreadful meta-epiphanies from the genre.

In the case of Péter Lichter and Bori Máté’s THE PHILOSOPHY OF HORROR, celluloid itself becomes the object of both bodily and psychic slaughter as a pair of iconic horror film prints are brutalized into nightmarish abstraction. Aristotelis Maragkos’ THE TIMEKEEPERS OF ETERNITY takes a similarly hands-on approach through the volatile manipulation of a cosmic horror miniseries that has been entirely printed and re-edited on paper. Charlie Shackleton’s FEAR ITSELF sees the filmmaker’s grasp of the video essay form stitch together a daunting and diverse filmography to reflect upon the complications of horror film connoisseurship.

Preceding THE PHILOSOPHY OF HORROR will be two vampiric shorts by the Croatian collage animation maestro Dalibor Barić: the upbeat and bloodthirsty THE HORROR OF DRACULA and ALL CATACOMBS ARE GRAY, an interpretation of Sheridan Le Fanu’s sapphic 19th century novella CARMILLA. Barić’s sonic reworking of TWILIGHT ZONE clips paired with comic book cutouts, MY GAME OF LONGING, will also play before THE TIMEKEEPERS OF ETERNITY. For the non-Q&A screenings of FEAR ITSELF, audiences will have a chance to see Ben Rivers’ short film TERROR! as another complementary meditation on the joys of being afraid.

Alongside remote Q&As with many of these filmmakers, the local found sound DJ duo, Vampÿrates, will climb aboard the theater on Friday the 13th for a special one-night performance to sink their fangs into the willing eyes and ears of spectators through the wee hours.

THE PHILOSOPHY OF HORROR: A SYMPHONY OF FILM THEORY
dirs. Péter Lichter and Bori Máté, 2020
60 mins. Hungary.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 9 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 3 PM FEATURING REMOTE DIRECTOR Q&A / THIS EVENT IS $10

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Deriving its name from Noël Carroll’s seminal book on the poetics of horror, Lichter and Máté use excerpts from the text as framing devices to move from scholarly taxonomy to visceral affect as a pair of film prints are cut, scratched, painted, overlapped, and recombined to a point of mesmerizing and indecipherable grisliness. The victims of choice? A certain 80’s classic concerning a vengeful monster that kills teenagers in their dreams, and its sequel.

Screening with:

THE HORROR OF DRACULA
dir. Dalibor Barić, 2010
5 mins. Croatia.

ALL CATACOMBS ARE GRAY
dir. Dalibor Barić, 2013
20 mins. Croatia.

THE TIMEKEEPERS OF ETERNITY
dir. Aristotelis Maragkos, 2021
64 mins. Greece.
In English.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 9 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 3 PM FEATURING REMOTE DIRECTOR Q&A / THIS EVENT IS $10
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 10 PM

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In a painstaking process that calls to mind the Library of Congress Paper Print Film Collection (an initiative that ended up giving many films an afterlife beyond their initial celluloid deaths), Maragkos printed each frame of a 3-hour 1995 miniseries adaptation of a novella by the world’s most famous horror writer onto black and white paper to then rephotograph them back into motion with many artistic liberties taken along the way. Visible crinkles, cuts, and tears inflicted on the paper images create both dramatic emphasis and nihilistic resonance as ten passengers aboard a night-time flight awaken to realize everyone aboard has vanished.

Screening with:

MY GAME OF LONGING
dir. Dalibor Barić, 2013
10 mins. Croatia.

FEAR ITSELF
dir. Charlie Shackleton, 2015
88 mins. United Kingdom.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7 – 3 PM FEATURING REMOTE DIRECTOR Q&A / THIS EVENT IS $10
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 5 PM

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GET TICKETS FOR DIRECTOR Q&A SCREENING HERE!

Recovering from the grief of a lost sibling, a woman in voice-over reflects on her paradoxical repulsion and fixation with viewing horror films in seclusion. Shackleton’s visual track takes us through a century-spanning tour of the genre, eclectically sampling hundreds of well-known and obscure gems from around the world. While its essayistic qualities are squared confidently in the foreground, FEAR ITSELF never lets intellectualizing overcome an ever-present sense of impending fright.

Screening with:

TERROR!
dir. Ben Rivers, 2007
24 mins. United Kingdom.

ONE NIGHT ONLY! FRIDAY, 10/13 AT MIDNIGHT

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“Featuring, our music videos & video music, stolen treasures & unburied graves,
detournèd objects & cultural corpses, including:

BELA LUGOSI’S DEAD,
DAHLIA NOIR,
BIOMUTANTEN,
HEART OF (SHATTERED) GLASS,
VAMPYR/BLOOD,
ULTRAVIOLET CATASTROPHE,
& LES VAMPIRES (in inverse~reverse~negative).

With these (ab)original works by Vampÿrates, aka, Richard Sylvarnes & Bradley Eros.”

Special thanks to Mackenzie Lukenbill, Nate Dorr, the Vampÿrates, and Wouter Jansen.

KETCHUM ON THE SCREEN

Born Dallas Mayr in Livingston, New Jersey, Jack Ketchum arrived on the horror scene with his debut novel Off Season in 1981. Off Season, an updating of the Sawney Beane story, drew the outrage of the Village Voice, which publicly scolded the novel’s publisher for printing violent pornography. Over the next 37 years, until his death in 2018, he would write over 20 novels and novellas, five of which have been adapted for the silver screen. A protégé of horror writer Robert Bloch, Ketchum’s novels eschewed the supernatural for unflinching and unsettling studies of man’s capacity for evil, often drawing on true crime for inspiration. While never failing to deliver the genre goods, weaving provocative scenarios pushing the boundaries of the macabre and twisted tales of sex, murder and torture for hardened extreme horror gore-hounds, Ketchum’s writing distinguishes itself from that of his Splatterpunk contemporaries for its sobriety, restraint and empathy which lend a tragic and mournful tone to the carnage.

THE LOST
dir. Chris Sivertson, 2006
United States. 119 min.
In English.

THURSDAY, 10/5 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, 10/20 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, 10/24 – 7:30 PM

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Once upon a time, a boy named Ray Pye put crushed beer cans in his boots to make himself taller.

These words open both Jack Ketchum’s novel and Chris Sivertson’s cinematic adaptation of THE LOST, introducing us to Ray Pye, a teenage psychopath played with narcissistic glee and murderous male fragility by Marc Senter. Jack Ketchum drew his inspiration for the character of Ray Pye from the real life convicted serial killer Charles Schmid and Senter’s interpretation is a nightmare vision of suburban rot and everyday evil.

When 19-year-old Ray, with the help of his two lackey friends, murders two innocent campers for kicks, he becomes the target of Detective Charles Schilling. Unable to gather enough evidence to bring charges, four years pass, but Schilling won’t give up the chase. When Katherine Wallace, a seductive and mysterious new girl arrives in town, Ray’s reign of power is challenged and his wall of secrecy begins to crumble, leading to an explosive violent finale.

“The narrative moves along at a slow grind, taking its time developing each of the characters and their unsettling relationships. But it works and the threads all come together with a truly savage and unforgettable finale… THE LOST is a triumph of independent cinema – a bold novel turned equally bold film that will haunt you for a very long time.” – Dread Central

“Far more unsettlingly savage than many horror thrillers… undeniably fascinating and deadly serious from start to finish” – Variety

THE WOMAN
dir. Lucky McKee, 2011
United States. 101 min.
In English.

THURSDAY, 10/12 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, 10/20 – 10 PM
MONDAY, 10/23 – 10 PM

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The last survivor of a cannibalistic cave-dwelling clan from Ketchum’s earlier work OFFSPRING is hunted and captured by a country lawyer in THE WOMAN, co-written by Ketchum with the film’s director Lucky McKee (MAY, ALL CHEERLEADERS DIE). Imprisoning the eponymous feral woman (Pollyanna Mcintosh, returning in a powerhouse performance) in the family’s cellar, the all-American dad (a loathsome Sean Bridges) commences a program of domestication, attempting to tame the ferocious female while turning his family into accomplices to her subjugation . THE WOMAN is an unbearably tense, gruesome, provocative and disturbing experience, whose scenes of cotidian domestic abuse will haunt and outrage the viewer as much as its scenes of savage animalistic violence.

“THE WOMAN picks right up where 2009’s OFFSPRING (also an adaptation of a Jack Ketchum book) left off. It’s a totally different beast though, and it is as much infused with Ketchum’s DNA as it is with McKee’s. That should come as no surprise at all since they collaborated on both the book and the screenplay. Ketchum’s predilection for tales of the inherent savagery in man, and McKee’s for the role women play in our patriarchal society, come to a head in the brutal and visceral masterpiece they created together.

What differentiates both adaptations, though, is that, unlike OFFSPRING, THE WOMAN plays with the notion of who the real monsters are. Now, “the savages are not the monsters” might seem like a tired cliché, and to a certain extent it is, but in the hands of McKee and Ketchum it becomes fresh, even poignant, and regains its status as an uncomfortable universal truth. This becomes even more true to the extent that THE WOMAN is not so much about the divide between civilization and savagery as it is about how men try to “civilize” women or to expel the savagery perceived within them.”  -Simon Cogen, Horror HomeRoom

COVENS, CULTS, AND CABALS

Covens, Cults, & Cabals

There’s something diabolically attractive about being in a cult. The acceptance, the belonging, the fun new name they give you. But there’s also something horribly distrustful about them. Their secrecy, their brainwashing, and what they must get up to behind closed doors. The horrors they must be perpetuating upon the good people of this planet. At least that’s what we assume, they wouldn’t let us join the fun. We can only expect (and showcase) the worst…

This Spectober, join us as we carve out a small selection of international films surrounding one our most beloved macabre subjects: the evil ritualistic conspiracy.


THE PYX

THE PYX
(aka THE HOOKER CULT MURDERS)
Dir. Harvey Hart, 1973
Canada. 107 min
In English

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26 – 7:30 PM

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This October is the 50th Anniversary of Harvey Hart’s diabolical thriller THE PYX. In order to honor the occasion, we’ve decided to resurrect this Spectacle Classic, which originally screened in 2015 and subsequently streamed as part of SPECTOBER IN EXILE following the onset of the Covid-19 Pandemic.

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). 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 THE PYX, 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 slow 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.


EL MONTE DE LAS BRUJAS

EL MONTE DE LAS BRUJAS
(THE WITCHES MOUNTAIN)
Dir. Raúl Artigot, 1972
Spain. 86 min
In Spanish with English subtitles

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 – 5 PM

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After an opening that a written description would only spoil, Carla shows up unannounced at the home of her (ex?)boyfriend, Mario, who wants little to do with her. To avoid Carla, Mario forgoes his vacation time and heads north to the mountains on assignment as a photojournalist. Arriving at a beach, Mario, and his godlike handlebar mustache, luridly comes across a young sunbather named Delia. Smitten, Delia decides to join Mario on his assignment and the two head deep into the mountains. What follows is a sequence of bizarre and unsettling events: strange cloaked men lingering outside the windows of a mountain inn, the theft of Mario’s car by an unknown entity, unexplainable photographic anomalies, and a nighttime funeral procession. What or who is behind these strange occurrences? What fate is in store for Mario? And what does it have to do with Carla?

What the film may lack in plot and coherence, it more than makes up for in its ethereal mood and striking atmosphere. The true star being the mountains of northern Spain, who’s ancient harsh landscape coated in lush vegetation already feels haunted in its appearance alone. Raúl Artigot’s career was more often spent in the role of cinematographer, having worked on such features as CANNIBAL MAN, THE GHOST GALLIEN, THE EROTIC RITES OF FRANKENSTEIN and many more. WITCHES MOUNTAIN would be his directorial debut, and only one of his 3 total features. Knowing this, the film’s tendency for style-over-story makes perfect sense (as well as Mario’s profession). If you enjoyed Spectacle’s summer screenings of LE ORME, and the vibes it exuded, WITCHES MOUNTAIN may be right for you.

Similar to LA PAPESSE, WITCHES MOUNTAIN was banned in its home country (fuck you Franco), and gained an undeserved reputation for being violent and misogynistic due to its censorship. However, it should be noted that the film only appeared in front of investigators/censors because some of the actors in the film felt they were being shortchanged on night shoots and in wanting fair compensation snitched to the review board. In light of the recent and ongoing SAG and writer’s union strikes, we must point out that this could be your film’s fate if you skimp on paying your workers. Languishing in obscurity for decades, and then having a short run at an ex-bodega in Brooklyn for $5 tickets. Chilling.

Special thanks to Mondo Macabre.


LA PAPESSE

LA PAPESSE
(THE POPESS or THE HIGH PRIESTESS; aka A WOMAN POSSESSED)
Dir. Mario Mercier, 1975
France. 94 min
In French with English subtitles

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7 – MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30 – 10 PM

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CONTENT WARNING: This film contains violence against animals and depictions of rape.

Laurent and Aline are newlyweds. Laurent is a self-described artist who pines for a life of hedonism amongst the local sex cult, and to learn the teachings of its Popess. Aline? Not so much. They squabble over the direction of their lives. To Laurent’s dismay, the cult isn’t interested in only him, they want his wife as well. In order to overcome Aline’s reluctance, the cult begins a process to break her down including, but not limited to: flogging, drugs, imprisonment, branding, the male gaze, animal sacrifice, and a poison challenge akin to THE PRINCESS BRIDE’s Battle of Wits. A tale of warning for those who seek acceptance from the right crowd to further their art careers.

The cult’s Popess, from whom Laurent seeks absolution, is a dark-haired woman named Géziale, played by—get this—a mysterious woman named Géziale. She has no other on-screen credits and is purported to be an actual occultist leader. Is she real? At what point does the film blur between fiction and documentary? Are we seeing a retelling of the occult dabblings of director Mario Mercier and his initiation into a magical sect lead by the very same Géziale? Or is this just BLAIR WITCH levels of marketing and promotion?

With a firm grasp of the ritual practices of esotericism and occult magic, LA PAPESSE finds itself sitting comfortably within the venn diagram of psychedelica and S&M/fetish/power and domination play. Featuring quite inventive lo-fi camera and editing work that may be the film’s most redeeming and inspiring qualities. Mercier achieves beautiful images and sequences, some of which bring fellow magician Kenneth Anger’s oeuvre to mind.

Despite some of its more extreme contents, LA PAPESSE is often unfairly derided as euro-sleaze trash. This assessment was fueled by the French government’s censorship of the film upon its release. Originally pulled in its first week and re-released with an X rating (or the French equivalent?) back into the pornography theater circuit where it was not well received. Not sleazy enough for the porn theaters, but too sleazy for the general public. This censorship process seemingly ended Mercier’s short filmmaking career, with him choosing to shift his focus back to writing, painting and practicing shamanism.

And is it just me, or does the film’s theme music bear a remarkable resemblance to Wendy Rene’s After Laughter?

SPECTOBER 2023

CAMPFIRE TALES
dir. William Cooke, Paul Talbot, 1991
United States. 86 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 5 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 – 7:30 PM

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Once Upon a Time…You’re Dead

A grizzled derelict tells a quartet of horror tales to a trio of young campers.

Not to be confused with the 1997 anthology film also titled CAMPFIRE TALES, this original edition stars the infamous Gunnar Hansen as the grizzled derelict in question telling scary stories to the three teens he finds gathered around a campfire.

Each tale is prompted by something one of the teens does – oh you have a knife? How about a hook-handed killer story? Is that weed you’re about to smoke? Get ready for the only body-horror anti-weed story you’ve ever heard – and while the pacing is a little wonky (as it frequently is in anthology movies), Gunnar’s presence and some ingenious practical effects are more than enough to make this worth any horror freaks while.


CRYPTIC PLASM
dir. Brian Paulin, 2015
United States. 80 min.
In English.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 – MIDNIGHT

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Absorb the plasm…

The story is about David Gates, a cryptozoologist who is hired to film his investigations. One of them being a mysterious town where all of its inhabitants have vanished without a trace. David uncovers far more than he anticipated and puts his own life at risk. Afterwards David begins to feel the bizarre effects from the town within his own biology. Meanwhile he is sent by his investor to film an exorcism. Something that is completely outside of his expertise. Already suffering from unnatural symptoms, David, who is now reluctantly in the presence of pure evil, fears that multiple inhuman forces are tearing him apart from inside.

Cryptic Plasm takes the tired ‘ghost hunter reality show encounters actual ghost’ premise and turns it on its ear. When a cryptozoologist is hired by a sleazy TV producer to film his research into the paranormal, we’re treated to a series of escalating close encounters of the spooky kind, including a swamp monster, a ghost town, and one of the worst exorcisms this programmer has ever seen, all culminating in an otherworldly gore soaked climax that has to be seen to be believed.

Brian Paulin has been cranking out homemade bloody epics from the Massachusetts area since the mid 90s, and his love of the craft is evident in every frame. The effects work is truly fantastic, working with his limitations to create something truly nightmarish and memorable in a sea of shot-on-DV crud.


RICHARD LAYMON’S IN THE DARK
dir. Clifton Holmes, 2000
United States. 106 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15 – 5 PM
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18 – 10 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 23 – 7:30 PM

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Play a game with only one rule … keep playing

*NEW YORK PREMIERE*

We are very excited to screen this never-officially-released adaptation of the never before-or-since adapted Richard Laymon novel, IN THE DARK.

The novel follows librarian Jane, who finds a note one day from the unseen and unheard ‘Master of Games’, daring her to complete increasingly more drastic challenges for money as she gets drawn further into the perverse world of the game.

Laymon’s writing typically leaned toward the extreme and the splatter, but Clifton’s adaptation focuses on the discomfort of what goes unseen, steeping us in Jane’s mundane world as she sinks deeper into the game, seemingly unable to stop herself, and brilliantly tapping into the human impulse to find out what happens if we go just a little further. IN THE DARK feels like an art-house slow burn SAW without the on screen torture.

Shot on mini-DV on a miniscule budget, what Clifton Holmes’ Chicago-set adaptation lacks in budget, it more than compensates for in pure mood and dread, entering the rare pantheon of films that manage to improve upon their source material.

Spectacle is proud to present this early oughts lost gem – you won’t regret catching this on the big screen!


THE LAKE
(บึง/กาฬ)
dir. Lee Thongkham, 2022
105 mins. Thailand.
In Thai with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21 – 5 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30 – 7:30 PM followed by remote Q+A with filmmaker Lee Thongkham!
(This event is $10.)

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As part of our annual Halloween programming, Spectacle is thrilled to offer a limited engagement of Lee Thongkham’s giant kaiju thriller THE LAKE (never before shown on the big screen in New York City.)

A young girl finds an egg near a lake in Bueng Kan (“black marsh”), near the northernmost part of Thailand facing the Mekong River. Not long after she’s brought the egg back to her home village, an amphibious monster over thirty feet tall emerges, terrorizing the town in search of its young. Designed by SFX maestro Jordu Schell (of NEMESIS, STARSHIP TROOPERS, Tim Burton’s PLANET OF THE APES, CLOVERFIELD and many many others), this monster is a triumph of combined practical and computer-generated effects, hulking and menacing like a shapeshifting mutant dinosaur. Cut off from the rest of the outside world, the residents of Bueng Kan must band together to stop the carnage before it’s too late.

Visceral, moody and drenched in darkness, THE LAKE foregoes the slow-burn exposition of more traditional monster movies. It’s a kaiju lover’s feast of a film, equally indebted to Godzilla and Gamera as to Spielberg’s original JURASSIC PARK. In an interview with PopHorror, director Lee Thongkham emphasized THE LAKE as a loving homage to the creature feature as well as “a story about religion, the human spirit, and science… But most importantly, it’s about finding one another through the chaos that one does not understand.”


LAURIN
(aka LAURIN: A JOURNEY INTO DEATH)
dir. Robert Sigl, 1989
83 mins. Germany.
In (dubbed) English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13 – 5 PM
MONDAY, OCTOBER 16 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29 – 7:30 PM followed by remote Q+A with filmmaker Robert Sigl!
(This event is $10.)

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Robert Sigl’s debut feature LAURIN takes place in a small port town in Germany at the turn of the 20th century, where children have begun to go missing. After her pregnant mother is murdered, nine year old Laurin (Dóra Szinetár) must contend with visions both dreamlike and nightmarish – and laced with possible clues towards the mystery encircling the village.

Made when Sigl was just 25 years old, LAURIN is a gothic fairy tale of ethereal beauty, evenly evoking Fritz Lang’s M., Victor Erice’s SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE and Richard Blackburn’s LEMORA: A CHILD’S TALE OF THE SUPERNATURAL. Shot on location in Hungary and heavy on ambience (abetted greatly by the work of cinematographer Nyika Jancsó, son of Miklos), the film barely qualifies as horror; it’s more of a gothic fairy tale, ruminating on innocence lost, suppression of sexuality and the concentric nature of abuse handed down across generations.


THE MIDNIGHT HOUR
dir. Jack Bender. 1985.
United States. 94 mins.
In English.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20 – MIDNIGHT
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 – 7:30 PM

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It’s Halloween night in Pitchford Cove, Massachusetts. When five high school friends accidentally summon an undead army, the teens must rectify their mistake and save the town before the midnight hour.

An early effort by legendary TV producer and director Jack Bender (LOST, UNDER THE DOME, MR MERCEDES), THE MIDNIGHT HOUR is a bewitching comedy horror with incredible production value, by TV standards. Criminally underseen and effortlessly nostalgic, THE MIDNIGHT HOUR is the perfect movie for Halloween.

Although the film can be tonally cacophonous, switching between slapstick comedy and dramatic violence on a dime, Bender masterfully toes the line between absurdity and horror. THE MIDNIGHT HOUR will provide a healthy dose of Halloween nostalgia this October, featuring zombie dance numbers, vampire transformations to The Smiths, and even a GREASE (1978) callback.


PIN
dir. Sandor Stern. 1988.
Canada. 104 mins.
In English.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 5 PM – FEATURING REMOTE Q&A WITH DIRECTOR SANDOR STERN AND AUTHOR ANDREW NEIDERMAN – THIS EVENT IS $10
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 – 7:30 PM

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Leon, a troubled child, befriends his father’s lifesized medical dummy, Pin. Leon’s reality crumbles following the death of his parents, and his obsession with Pin takes a dangerous turn.

The best way to describe PIN is by its full title, ‘PIN: A PLASTIC NIGHTMARE.’ Although the film might seem like a classic killer doll movie, à la PUPPET MASTER (1989), the true terror of PIN comes from within. Pin explores themes of childhood trauma, authoritarian parenting and object attachment in this emotionally driven psychological horror.

Based on the novel by the author of THE DEVIL’S ADVOCATE, Andrew Neiderman, and directed by Sandor Stern, screenwriter of THE AMITYVILLE HORROR (1979). Together, they have reimagined the killer doll subgenre without the comfort of childhood nostalgia. The result is a harrowing film starring David Hewlett (STARGATE: ATLANTIS, CUBE) and Terry O’Quinn (LOST, THE STEPFATHER).

For one night only, join us on October 22nd for a remote Q&A with director Sandor Stern and author Andrew Neiderman!


PLAYROOM
dir. Manny Coto, 1990
United Kingdom. 90 min.
In English.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22 – 7:30 PM

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“Where the terror is child’s play”

An archaeologist is haunted by a nightmare in which his family is murdered.

The debut feature of director Manny Coto (DR. GIGGLES, STAR KID), PLAYROOM follows the increasingly unhinged Chris (played by Christopher McDonald aka Shooter McGavin in a rare leading-man role) as he revisits the archaeology site in search of a mythological place his father was looking for before he was killed.

Is it his imagination, or is something supernatural at work?! Will unaddressed childhood trauma come to a happy conclusion?! Only one way to find out!

Also features niche 90’s child actor Aron Eisenberg (PUPPETMASTER III, HOUSE III, AMITYVILLE: THE EVIL ESCAPES) and the dinosaur pajamas from DON’T PANIC. Don’t miss this!

Sidenote: googling this title pulls up some late-movie moments that are best experienced ice cold, so avoid that if you can!


RED SPIRIT LAKE
dir. Charles Pinion, 1993
United States. 69 min.
In English.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 – MIDNIGHT

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After a vengeful sorceress is tortured and killed by a corrupt industrialist looking to harness the spectral powers of Red Spirit Lake, her niece arrives in snow covered Angel Falls to settle her aunt’s estate.

The sleazy crown jewel of this month’s Spectober is the SOV trashterpiece RED SPIRIT LAKE. Directed by Charles Pinion (Twisted Issues, We Await) and featuring a who’s-who grab bag of late 80s/early 90s underground NYC talent (including Spectacle favorite Tessa Hughes-Freeland in a blink and you’ll miss it cameo) Red Spirit Lake is the rare SOV flick that manages to transcend its scuzzy trappings into something more than the sum of its parts.

Not for the faint of heart (almost every content warning applies – no animals harmed though!) and borderline actively repellent, it’s a fever dream of a movie that lands somewhere between a snuff film and Picnic at Hanging Rock, featuring aliens, angels, witches, nymphs, 80s workouts, nude galavanting in the snow, Victorian flashbacks and a killer soundtrack featuring Cop Shoot Cop, Lydia Lunch, Clint Ruin and The Lunachicks.

Special thanks to Saturn’s Core Video


TALES FROM THE QUADEAD ZONE
dir. Chester Novell Turner, 1987
United States. 62 min.
In English.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 – 11 PM

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3 Tales of Evil Beyond Belief

A woman reads two spooky tales to the ghost of her dead son, Bobby: the first, about a poor family who takes drastic measures to allot more food to their members; the second, about a pair of adversarial brothers and what happens when one of them dies and the other attempts to humiliate his corpse.

The follow up to Black Devil Doll from Hell, Chester Novell Turner’s Tales from the Quadead Zone has achieved a deserved cult status over the years as one of the more unsettling and esoteric horror anthologies ever assembled (some video stores refused to carry the tape because they were so uncomfortable with its lo-fi nightmare aesthetics).

Legends aside, the lean 62 minute run time packs in a breathtaking amount of creativity and ingenuity – including one of the best anthology theme songs this programmer has ever heard. The hand crafted effects and props, occasionally inaudible dialogue, warped tracking, and messy rotoscoping all combine to create a transportive, chaotic stew of SOV derangement that miraculously manages to pack an emotional punch as well.


TIME OF MOULTING
dir. Sabrina Mertens, 2020
Germany. 82 min.
In German with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 – 10 PM

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In 1970s West Germany, young Stephanie (Zelda Espenschied) lives with her emotionally stunted parents, sequestered from life outside their cluttered home. Her father oscillates between ignoring and denigrating her, while her unstable mother’s cloying affection may actually be the most sinister thing happening within their walls. Discouraged from playing with the neighborhood children, Stephanie’s only friend is her own imagination, which absorbs every decrepit family “heirloom” in the house, from the grandfather’s old butcher’s tools to her grandmother’s dentures. Years later, the curious little girl has matured into a cold, frightening young woman (Miriam Schiweck) whose oppressive surroundings cultivated in her a disturbing erotic life. She is an animal growing up in captivity, unable to molt.

Described by director Sabrina Mertens as a “still life of a family in 57 pictures,” TIME OF MOULTING creates a Gothic portrait out of a series of vignettes, private moments from which we can construct a murky idea of what went wrong with Stephanie. Unable to crawl out from under the rubble of her parents’ repression, she also cannot escape the shadow of violence wrought by the country’s previous generation. Dark fantasies and isolation coalesce in one girl, building to an unforgettable conclusion. While the film lets the viewer in on plenty of secrets, the most disturbing parts of this family’s life are perhaps what we do not see.

ОСЕНЬ (FALL)


ОСЕНЬ (FALL)
dir. Vadim Kostrov, 2022
109 mins. Russia.

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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 5PM
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 10PM

SPECIAL EVENT TICKETS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 7:30PM – w Q+A!
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 5PM – w Q+A!

Therefore remove sorrow from your heart,
And put away evil from your flesh,
For childhood and youth are vanity.

Spectacle and UnionDocs partner again to observe the start of autumn with the second entry of KOSTROV’S SEASONS, a recurring series spotlighting Russian experimental documentarian Vadim Kostrov’s growing corpus of diaristic and meditative work. In the interim between last June’s introductory mini-retrospective and Kostrov’s stunning array of winter films later on, we are drawing special attention to FALL, one of the three completed works in the filmmaker’s seasons tetralogy and his last feature before leaving his home in protest of the invasion of Ukraine.

Straying from the beaming, youthful, and dialogue-driven conceits of SUMMER (2021), Kostrov’s FALL marks an ambivalent crossfade in tempo and tone for a return to Nizhny Tagil through the eyes of 10-year-old flaneur Vadik (reprised by Vova Karetin) as he wanders amongst the colossal scale of billowing smoke stacks, housing blocks, and humming sunsets. The patient exploration of Kostrov’s autobiographical stand-in eventually highlights the city’s historical contribution to Russia’s war machine. This realization and the absence of the previous entry’s supporting cast of characters suffuse FALL with a far more lonely and worrisome quality, paradoxically rendered in calm, sumptuous fashion by Kostrov’s ever-developing talent for composing enrapturing miniDV landscapes that are as celestial as they are lo-fi.

Presented in partnership with UnionDocs Center for Documentary Art. Special Thanks to Vadim Kostrov, Jenny Miller, and Mal de Mer Films.

 

 

SCOTT BARTLETT: THE MEANING OF THE UNIVERSE

This September, Spectacle is proud to present a retrospective of the luminary American experimental filmmaker SCOTT BARTLETT in collaboration with The Film-Makers’ Cooperative. Thank you to the generosity of the Co-Op and joint programmer Robert Schneider, the films in this program will be projected on 16mm.

Scott Barlett (1943 – 1990) was a traveling man with a fancy for strobing lights and fast motion. His films are pure psychedelia. Patching together philosophical ramblings on mystic traditions, hit songs from the ‘60s and ‘70s, and wobbly light patterns, Bartlett creates pithy works of genius. To this day, he remains best known for 1968’s OFFON, a gleaming vision of the cosmos that tested the limits of early video technology and set Bartlett down a path of stalwart experimentation within the cinematic tradition.

After OFFON’s success, Bartlett relocated to San Francisco where he became a light-show pioneer, creating flicker films for concerts and art shows all over the city. His films caught the attention of Stanley Kubrick (who took inspiration from OFFON for 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY), Ken Russell, and Movie Brats George Lucas and Francis Coppola who tried but failed to get his science fiction epic INTERFACE off the ground. Nonetheless, his keen graphic sensibilities are sprinkled throughout many Hollywood films, including ALTERED STATES and MORE AMERICAN GRAFFITI. But his true talent is best displayed throughout his unbridled directorial ventures which combine his fascinations with psychedelics, mysticism, and outer space into visual portals that open gateways into unseen dimensions of cinematic splendor.

PROGRAM ONE: To the Moon and Beyond

MAKING OFFON. 1981. 10 mins.
METANOMEN. 1966. 8 mins.
SERPENT. 1971. 14 mins.
MOON 1969. 1969. 10 mins.
OFFON. 1968. 9 mins.

Total runtime approx 50 mins.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 3:00 PM, this event is $10
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Scott Bartlett was haunted by outer space throughout his life. In a lecture at the Carnegie Museum of Art, he said he wanted to express “the meaning of the universe” by depicting visions of the cosmos that surpassed the limits of human consciousness. His crowning achievement, OFFON, might represent the zenith of these ambitions, but Bartlett’s intense curiosity in space is shared across many of his short films.

Made in 1981, while Bartlett was teaching in Los Angeles, MAKING OFFON dives back into his origins as a filmmaker and sets the scene for his artistic mission. His first film, METANOMEN, still sees him stuck on Earth. Collaging images of skyscrapers into a rollicking city tour, the film foretells Bartlett’s consuming interest with worlds beyond our own. SERPENT — a magic mushroom-inspired retelling of the Eden myth — finds Bartlett playing with recycled imagery in an attempt to link various historical narratives into a short parable about humanity’s destructive tendencies. MOON 1969 and OFFON take Bartlett elsewhere and are best described by film critic Gene Youngblood as “the cosmos in continual transformation” and explorations of the “fundamental realities below the surface of normal perception” respectively.

PROGRAM TWO: It was the ‘70s

1970. 1972. 30 min.
A TRIP TO THE MOON. 1968. 32 min.

Total runtime approx. 62 mins.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 3:00 PM, this event is $10
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Bartlett’s longest works are also the most emblematic of his era. The tragicomic 1970 is a city symphony unlike any other. Moving between personal documentary and city portrait, 1970 displays Bartlett’s incredible ability to shift between the world’s micro and macro elements in his artistic practice. In A TRIP TO THE MOON, he films a conversation between seven artists discussing astrology and I Ching. Bartlett’s effortless control of the edit complements the artists’ metaphysical conversation, as he superimposes talking heads and cuts away to abstract images that illustrate their heady ideas.

PROGRAM THREE: Cultural Studies

LOVEMAKING. 1970. 13 min. (Not on 16mm; New Restoration from BAMPFA)
GREENFIELD. 1977. 13 min.
HEAVY METAL. 1979. 13 min.
MEDINA. 1976. 15 min.
SOUND OF ONE. 1976. 11 min.

Total runtime approx 65 mins.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – 3:00 PM, this event is $10
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Always absorbed by his surroundings, Bartlett made exceptional ethnographic works and personal portraits throughout his life. In LOVEMAKING, he tackled his eponymous subject matter head on, creating an anti-sexploitation film that luxuriates in its romantic imaging of sex. GREENFIELD sees him venture to a commune in Northern California where he becomes absorbed in the free rhythms of its residents’ work and leisure. For HEAVY METAL, Bartlett used elaborate optical techniques to explore early gangster films. MEDINA and SOUND OF ONE both center Bartlett’s interests in non-Western traditions. Here, Bartlett surrenders himself to his environs, letting their patterns and actions guide his camera’s movement.

>Special thanks to Robert Schneider at The Film-Makers’ Co-Op.

BLUE FIRE

 

BLUE FIRE
Dir. Antero Alli, 2023
United States. 90 min.
In English.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 – 7:30 PM (This event is $10)

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“A CYBER-FI FEVER DREAM”

Flexing an extensive body of work spanning three decades, Finnish-born artist and actor Antero Alli has frequently explored the bleeding edge of technological paranoia. Beginning with his stark predictions for 2023 in 1995’s THE DRIVETIME, expanding into “video poems” and experimental theater, and finally culminating in his return to 2023 with the AI and VR warnings of BLUE FIRE. Throughout his career, Alli has never been afraid of putting his personal mindscape in front of an audience. We invite you to join us for the New York premiere of his latest Cyber-Fi masterpiece, BLUE FIRE followed by a remote Q&A session with the director. Moderated by Philip Ginley.

An elite A.I.coder faces a head-on collision between the algorithms of the VR worlds he’s creating and the archetypal dimensions of the greater Collective Unconscious.

 

LETTRIST CINEMA

LETTRIST CINEMA

“If the desire of the Nouvelle Vague’s protagonists was to take over the industry and make it more pliable (notably by creating independent economic structures, in the manner of Eric Rohmer and François Truffaut), then the Lettrists’ strategy, by contrast, entailed resisting the least compromise with the film industry, just as with the art market” —Nicole Brenez, Introduction to Lettrist Cinema

Beginning in 1951, Lettrist filmmakers set out to destroy all of cinema’s existing rules. The art movement which sought out chiseled, infinitesimal, and imagined cinema, was short-lived and remains under-researched barring a few key texts by art historians Nicole Brenez and Kaira M. Cabañas. Among its members were Jean Isidore Isou, whose unfinished 9-hour cut of TRAITÉ DE BAVE ET D’ÉTERNITÉ caused a ruckus at the 1951 Cannes Film Festival. Isou’s scratched images and complimentary discordant soundtrack set the tone for future experiments in Lettrist Cinema: Guy Debord weaponized the black-screen in his feature debut HURLEMENTS EN FAVEUR DE SADE (1952), Gil Wolman created a flickering and vanishing film with L’ANTICONCEPT (1952), and François Dufrêne abandoned images altogether by projecting an imaginary film, TAMBOURS DU JUDGEMENT PREMIER (1952).

This September, Spectacle Theater is thrilled to present a small selection of Lettrist films as they were originally intended to be screened. As noted above, Isidore Isou’s TRAITÉ DE BAVE ET D’ÉTERNITÉ remains the most well-known film to come out of the Lettrist Movement, as its sustained lashing out against cinema’s conventions in all manner of offensive aesthetic and narrative gestures have made it a lodestar for filmmakers looking to reimagine the seventh art. Released around the same time is Maurice Lemaître’s LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ?, a self-destructive instructional film that the director cheekily described as “a boring jumble of commonplace ideas.” HURLEMENTS EN FAVEUR DE SADE and L’ANTICONCEPT continue the Lettrist investigation into a counter-cinema, engaging a negative image that bestows creative authority to the audience. In counterpoint, Marc-Gilbert Guillaumin’s (aka Marc’O) CLOSED VISION (1954) brings together an excess of images in a Joycean attempt at creating a stream-of-consciousness film. In GRIMACE (1967), Gudmundur Gudmundsson Ferro (aka Erró) returns to the Lettrist mission to separate cinema from its stars, stitching together amusing portraits of artists including Andy Warhol and Marguerite Duras into a playful visual poem.


TRAITÉ DE BAVE ET D’ÉTERNITÉ

TRAITÉ DE BAVE ET D’ÉTERNITÉ
(VENOM AND ETERNITY)
dir. Isidore Isou, 1951
France. 123 mins.
In French with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 – 7:30 PM

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“Isou turns pictures upside down, scratches on them arbitrarily and does everything he can think of to spit upon and destroy the film image” —Stan Brakhage

To invoke Lettrism is to call on VENOM AND ETERNITY. Also known as SLIME AND ETERNITY, Isidore Isou’s sole feature is a film full of scratches that chisels its way to the beating heart of cinema. “If we can’t get past the photographic screen and reach something deeper, then cinema just doesn’t interest me,” he said. Looking to break away from the regressive sanctification of representation upheld by theorists like André Bazin, Isou’s film revels in its obscene and destructive character, tearing up the traditions of the medium to dream up a new alternative.

After premiering at Cannes Film Festival in 1951 and causing a scandal among festival attendees, VENOM AND ETERNITY was awarded the “Prix des spectateurs d’avant-garde” by Jean Cocteau. The award placed it in the same category as Maya Deren’s similarly lauded MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON (1943), marking it an essential text in the canon of experimental cinema that would have a lasting influence on filmmakers ranging from Jean-Luc Godard to Stan Brakhage. Isou would later remark that Godard and Debord ripped him off.


LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ?

LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ?
(HAS THE FILM ALREADY STARTED?)
dir. Maurice Lemaître, 1951
France. 62 mins.
In French with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM, this event is $10

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After working on Isou’s VENOM AND ETERNITY as an assistant director, Maurice Lemaître set out to make a film that not only attacked the conventions of filmmaking, but of filmgoing too. LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ? is a film that spills from the screen, as instructed by its script which expands upon the body of the film to include what should occur in the viewing room as it’s projected. Hellbent on provocation, Lemaître thought up LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ? as a way to shake up the moviegoing experience. Throughout the film, he directly addresses the audience with questions such as “Why are you here?” while they sit in the dark watching the movie also subject to the insults of “extras” taunting their ability to watch the whole thing through.

The film is made up of a series of kaleidoscopic images. Unlike Debord and Wolman, Lemaître stresses the visual quality of his cinema. LE FILM EST DÉJÀ COMMENCÉ? is colorful, fun, and wholly unruly, reflecting the spirit of a passionate young filmmaker meddling with the rules of his craft.


HURLEMENTS EN FAVEUR DE SADE

HURLEMENTS EN FAVEUR DE SADE
(HOWLINGS IN FAVOR OF DE SADE)
dir. Guy Debord, 1952
France. 64 mins.
In French with English subtitles.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 10 PM

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In his first film, Guy Debord abandons the photographic image. Over the course of HURLEMENTS EN FAVEUR DE SADE, Debord along with fellow Lettrists Isou, Gil Wolman, Serge Berna, and Barbara Rosenthal speak over each other in aphorisms. The screen is white when they talk and black whenever there is silence. The film’s refusal to represent foretells Debord’s future critiques of image-culture, most notably the text from which this theater derives its name: SOCIETY OF THE SPECTACLE (1967). Eventually, Debord and Wolman would break away from the Lettrist Movement to carry out new acts of detournement as Situationsists. As such, their goals were more directly aligned with a Communist agenda. Yet, in their early works resides a conceptual spark that they would build upon throughout their careers as artists. This would become clearer in a Lettrist bulletin from 1956, in which Wolman declared their objective to be the creation of “a unitary urbanism” that synthesizes “arts and technology” in accordance “with new values of life.”


L’ANTICONCEPT

L’ANTICONCEPT
(The Anticoncept)
dir. Gil J. Wolman, 1952
France. 60 minutes
In French. An English Transcript will be provided.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 – 7:30 PM, this event is $10

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“Wolman is one of the great inventors of negative forms after Hegel” —Nicole Brenez, Introduction to Lettrist Cinema

L’ANTICONCEPT is a sound film that alternates between black and white flickers. The film is projected on a helium-inflated balloon approximately two meters in diameter. A year after the film premiered at the Ciné-Club Avant-Garde 52, Debord declared L’ANTICONCEPT was “more offensive… than the images of Eisenstein, which frightened Europe for so long.” Although the Lettrists shared a proclivity for hyperbole, Debord’s statement accounts for Wolman’s incredible ability to leave behind all of cinema’s precepts and create a frightening alternative to the medium with his film.


CLOSED VISION

CLOSED VISION
dir. Marc’O, 1954
France. 65 mins.
In English.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 01 – 10:00 PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 03 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 09 – 10:00 PM
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 – 10:00 PM

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Marc-Gilbert Guillaumin aka Marc’O played a major role in the history of Lettrism. With close ties to Jean Cocteau, Marc’O convinced the Cannes Film Festival in 1951 to screen Isidore Isou’s VENOM AND ETERNITY. He similarly organized screenings for his colleagues’ work, encouraging them to adopt new approaches to cinema and agitate audiences in viewing rooms to create more visceral encounters with the medium. Many of his suggestions—aquarium-cinema, aquatic-sports cinema, carousel cinema—were never actualized, yet his genius pervades in the work of his contemporaries.

Funnily enough, his own feature debut CLOSED VISION might be the film with the clearest narrative to come out of the Lettrist Movement. A consciousness collage in the style of James Joyce, CLOSED VISION works its way from a series of disparate images into a straightforward denouncement of cinema’s calcified classical form. At the time of its release, the film was praised by Luis Buñuel and Jean Cocteau, who called it “the most important experimental work since his own BLOOD OF THE POET.”


GRIMACE

GRIMACE
dir. Erró, 1967
France. 45 mins.
Gibberish.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 – 5 PM, this event is $10

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“GRIMACES is just what it says: grimaces. You see 180 internationally known artists making faces. The soundtrack is Lettrist poetry.” –Jonas Mekas

The Icelandic artist Erró’s GRIMACE was made over several years as he toured the globe snapping vignettes of famous artists. Edited together with a Lettrist poem in which Erró phonetically plays around with each artist’s name as its soundtrack, the film becomes a meditation on stardom and identity. Warping and renegotiating the relationship between the viewer and the celebrities on screen, GRIMACE’s simple premise proves effective.


Special thanks to RE:VOIR, Light Cone, Barbara Wolman and Hedy Wolman, Cristina Bertelli, Marc’O, Ed Halter and Thomas Beard at Light Industry, Julia Curl and Robert Schneider at the Film-Maker’s Cooperative, Connor Keep, Steve Macfarlane, and Isaac Hoff.

GOTHIC KING COBRA

GOTHIC KING COBRA
dir. Joel Patrick (aka trappped), 2014.
United States. 63 min.
In English.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 – 7:30 PM (This event is $10)

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“The daily pursuits of metal musician, YouTube personality, and Wendy’s employee Josh Saunders in his hometown of Casper, Wyoming.”

Frequently argued to be the best YouTube documentary ever made, GOTHIC KING COBRA transcends the oft-misaligned genre and creates a stunning, lonely portrait of life in Fly-Over Country, USA while capturing the exploits of the ever eclectic and strangely charming outsider musician/vlogger Josh Saunders AKA KingCobraJFS.

Join us for a one-night screening of GOTHIC KING COBRA, featuring a rare appearance and Q&A with director Joel Patrick (aka trappped). Only at Spectacle.

 

FLUID DYNAMICS: FILMS BY MAXIMILIEN LUC PROCTOR

This September, Spectacle is thrilled to welcome avant-garde filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist Maximilien Luc Proctor for two consecutive nights of films and discussion, including the first-ever NYC screening of Proctor’s 16mm works. This program was organized in collaboration with Phil Coldiron, who prefaces Proctor’s work as follows:

Lately, it can feel like a bleak joke to apply the adjective “independent” to anything related to the movies. Criticism mostly exists as content marketing for VC-backed corporations. The world of the indie narrative film is a dispiriting swamp of calling cards, and the spaces that once housed the historical avant-garde are clotted with interlopers from the blue-chip art world making work that often feels like sitting through a grant proposal. Still, there are scattered reasons for hope, chief among them the new small-scale lyricism that’s recently blossomed across Europe: films shot on 8- and 16mm with Bolexes passed between friends, processed on the cheap in cooperative labs, and shown in venues that make no promise of anything besides an audience that actually cares.

This is the context from which the Oklahoma-born, Berlin-based Maximilien Luc Proctor has emerged. Over the last few years, beyond running Ultra Dogme, a gratifyingly scrappy platform for criticism and streaming, and playing in the decidedly algorithm-unfriendly band Two Nice Catholic Boys (alongside UD editor Ruairí McCann), Proctor has produced a few dozen films, most of them single rolls of celluloid edited in camera. Ranging from the Arcadian village of Raftis to the American Southwest, he records oblique impressions with a sharp eye for composition and an intuitive sense of rhythm, gently arguing in favor of the minor and the fleeting. This early-career survey brings together a selection of his shorts along with the digital feature, SREĆAN PUT, and offers a rare opportunity to chart the ongoing refinement of a young artist’s craft in real time.

PROGRAM ONE: NESTED FOCUS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 – 7:30 PM with Maximilien Luc Proctor in person for Q+A!
(This event is $10.)

ONE NIGHT ONLY! ADVANCE TICKETS

ALL THE BEST
2022. 3 min. 16mm.

CRUCES
2023. 6 min. 16mm.

WASHINGTON (UNTITLED)
2022. 4 min. 16mm.

FLUID DYNAMICS: STEADY FLOW
2022. 4 min. 16mm.

FLUID DYNAMICS: UNSTEADY FLOW
2022. 2 min. 16mm.

RAFTI(S)
2022. 2 min. 16mm.

(against interpretation)
2023. 4 min. 16mm.

FLUID FRAGMENTS
2023. 4 min. 16mm.

PROGRAM TWO: HAPPY TRAILS
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 – 7:30 PM with Maximilien Luc Proctor in person for Q+A!
(This event is $10.)

ONE NIGHT ONLY! ADVANCE TICKETS

the sound of the sky reflected in water
2021. 3 min. Super 8mm-to-digital.

summercycle iii
2022. 3 min. Super 8mm-to-digital.

summercycle iv
2023. 3 min. Super 8mm-to-digital.

SREĆAN PUT
(HAPPY TRAILS)
2021. 93 min. Digital.

MAXIMILIEN LUC PROCTOR is a French-American filmmaker, critic and curator. He graduated from the University of Oklahoma with honors in Film and Media Studies in 2014 before moving to Heidelberg, where he shot his first feature film, FRAGMENTS OF A MEMORY OF A FILM, while working as a barista and karaoke host. In 2017 he moved to Berlin and completed his second feature film, SREĆAN PUT, in 2021. He records music in the band Two Nice Catholic Boys and co-hosts a monthly analog screening salon with Christian Flemm. He is the founder and co-editor of Ultra Dogme, and the avant-garde instructor for Berlin’s Art-on-the-Run film school.

The filmmaker would like to give special thanks to the people who helped make these films possible: phili c, Christian Flemm, Ruairí McCann, Martin Bremer, Malkah Manouel, Florian Weigl, Nicholas Christenson, Tijana Perović, Oath, Valentin Duceac, Bali Govindarajan, Big Waves of Pretty, Bobi, and my families

SREĆAN PUT poster by Đorđe Vidojević