DUDES

DUDES
dir. Penelope Spheeris, 1987
90 mins. United States.

MONDAY, JANUARY 24 – 7PM with remote filmmaker Q+A!
ONE NIGHT ONLY – FREE with RSVP

Penelope Spheeris directed the punk-western DUDES about six years after SUBURBIA and soon before she helmed THE DECLINE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION PART II: THE METAL YEARS. Part revenge drama, part road comedy, DUDES follows Jon Cryer, Flea, and Daniel Roebuck as they travel cross-country to get revenge on disgruntled vigilante Lee Ving. Featuring music by the Little Kings, the Tail Gators, and the Vandals, and shot by Robert Richardson (JFK, NATURAL BORN KILLERS).

This FREE screening (with RSVP) will be preceded by a Zoom Q&A with director Penelope Spheeris to celebrate DUDES’ 35th anniversary, as well as Q&A moderator/film critic Simon Abrams’s birthday (also released in 1987).

Special thanks to screenwriter Randall Johnson and producer Miguel Tejada-Flores.

THE PILL

The Pill
Dir. Franco Clarke
81 mins., 2021, USA

FRIDAY, 2/11 – 10PM
SATURDAY, 2/12 – 7:30PM WITH Q&A! (this event is $10)
FRIDAY, 2/18 – 10PM
SUNDAY, 2/27 – 5PM WITH Q&A! (this event is $10)

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Filmmaker Franco Clarke’s feature debut The Pill premiered at the 2021 Indie Memphis Film Festival, where it nabbed a much-deserved award for Best Narrative Screenplay. Now Spectacle is excited to bring Clarke’s darkly comedic, deeply poignant dystopian family sci-fi to New York!

Clarke’s family portrait follows the Brooklyn-based Burdens – father Stanley, mother Monica, and their son Jeremy – as they navigate their respective day-to-days of a corporate boardroom, culinary academy, and a tony private school. As the only black executive at his job, Stanley is on the verge of a mental breakdown. That is, until he gets ahold of “The Pill”, a mind-altering drug that shields him from racism throughout the day with an eight-hour dose of soothing R&B. When Stanley offers Jeremy a supply of his own, the family’s tenuous bubble is thrown into turmoil.

Spectacle is thrilled to present the NYC theatrical premiere of THE PILL.

A BLACK RIFT BEGINS TO YAWN

A BLACK RIFT BEGINS TO YAWN
dir. Matthew Wade, 2021
102 min. USA
In English

FRIDAY, 2/4 – 7:30PM WITH REMOTE Q&A! (this event is $10)
SATURDAY, 2/12 – 10PM
SATURDAY, 2/19 – 10PM
FRIDAY, 2/25 – 10PM WITH REMOTE Q&A! (this event is $10)

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A BLACK RIFT BEGINS TO YAWN (Matthew Wade, 2021) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

Two scientists come into possession of their recently-deceased professor’s set of cassette tapes. As the former classmates dig into the recordings, they begin to feel memory, time and their identities slip into obscurity.

A no-budget feature filmed entirely in Idaho by a small group of friends, A Black Rift Begins to Yawn is a tone poem that drifts through perceptions of identity, one’s place in the universe, and how we contextualize ourselves and those around us. It follows two former classmates-turned-scientists who dig back into the mysterious work of a former professor after he has left them his archives: tapes that may contain recordings of ancient signals from beyond the stars.

The film premiered at Slamdance ’21, where it took home an Honorable Mention from the jury who noted the film’s strong esthetic choices and specifically the collaboration between director, Matthew Wade and first-time cinematographer, Lila Streicher. It also won best Pacific Northwest Film at the Tacoma Film Festival and was the feature film selected to screen at the first live event back at NewFilmmakers Los Angeles in January 2022.

Matthew Wade is an illustrator, animator, filmmaker & musician from the Northwest United States. He studied Classical Animation at Vancouver Film School before working as a freelance commercial animator in LA for brands such as Footlocker, Vans, Apple, Target, SyFy Channel, Whole Foods, Patagonia, the NFL, and on music videos for the bands Good Times Ahead (formerly G.T.A.), Brockhampton, and more.

Matthew’s short films have premiered in Oscar-qualifying festival competitions including Slamdance (4 times) and San Francisco International Film Festival, as well as having screened around the world, including ExGround, Alchemy Film & Arts, Oak Cliff Film Festival, Maryland Film Festival, Sun Valley Film Festival, GIRAF, and at the Hollywood Arclight Cinema’s (R.I.P) Slamdance Presents series.

Matthew’s work has been covered in Filmmaker Magazine, Film Threat, Screen Anarchy, NoBudge, Cartoon Brew, Hammer to Nail, Brooklyn Magazine, Horror Buzz, The Journal of Religion & Film, Moviemaker Magazine, and more.

Matthew currently lives with his wife/producing partner, Sara Lynch, in the Pacific Northwest, USA.

BEST OF SPECTACLE 2021


beDEVIL

dir. Tracey Moffatt, 1993
90 mins. Australia.
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 – 10 PM

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beDEVIL (Tracey Moffatt, 1993) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

Like a playful, lavishly-composed Australian folk horror triptych, beDEVIL tells three ghost stories unfolding along cultural fault lines in far-flung corners of the outback and offshore islands. In Moffatt’s Australia, though, it is modernity and not antiquity that threatens: her specters are trains, UFOs, and American soldiers. Through lavish stylization and kinetic editing (and embracing all artifice, even bits of digital manipulation), interviews are transformed into performance and memory into heightened drama, as the film blurs the lines not only between Aboriginal and immigrant (or colonial) worlds but also between modes of film and narrative. The resulting tableaux, fanciful and deeply saturated, will haunt not only for their brushes with the uncanny but their many-layered approach to the deeper questions of post-colonial life. At the time of its Cannes debut, beDEVIL was the first feature directed by an Aboriginal woman.

THE BLACK BEYOND TRILOGY
dir. Steven Toriano Berry, 1992
73 mins. United States.
In English.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 14 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, JANUARY 23 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 – 7:30 PM

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THE BLACK BEYOND TRILOGY (S. Torriano Berry, 1986-1992) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

“What really lies beyond this world? A vast void of nothingness? Or a place where the justice and retribution not realized in this life becomes a governing force? Who really knows? When your turn comes, who will be waiting for you?”

Our original plan last Spectober was to invite S. Toriano Berry – a renown independent filmmaker and longtime scholar of African-American cinema – for a special 25th anniversary presentation of his hood classic THE EMBALMER (1996), a surprisingly earnest (and disgusting!) slasher thriller shot on a shoestring budget in Washington, D.C. Bureaucratic matters hindered the screening – for now – But Berry had an irresistible ace up his sleeve: a new digitization of his BLACK BEYOND TRILOGY. Shot on video, THE BLACK BEYOND anthologizes three tales of terror in a style clearly indebted to The Twilight Zone; per Berry’s voiceover introduction, the Black Beyond is a place where “darkness is more than nothingness, and justice is not blind…”

The trilogy consists of three episodes. In “Deathly Realities”, a serial killer hiding behind a rubber mask receives comeuppance from his victims, beyond the grave; in “The Coming of the Saturnites”, a space alien (played by Berry!) struggles to ingratiate himself among humans without blowing his cover; and in “Money’ll Eat You Up!!!” a rogue dollar bill (or “dirty green”) makes its victims disappear – a brutal riposte to Gordon Gekko’s then-popular mantra of “greed is good”. Shot in part as Berry was completing his film production studies at UCLA (and, later, teaching film at Howard), THE BLACK BEYOND combines trenchant social commentary on the African-American experience with lovingly lo-fi videographic and prosthetic effects, as terrifying as it is hilarious. Spectacle is thrilled to include this hidden gem of 1980s phantasmagoria in our annual BEST OF SPECTACLE 2021 program.

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

SUNDAY, JANUARY 16 – 7:30 PM

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

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

SUNDAY, JANUARY 16 – 5 PM

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THE GOLD BUG (dirs. Alejo Moguillansky and Fia-Stina Sandlund, 2014) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

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

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

CRIME WAVE
dir. John Paisz, 1985
80 mins. Canada.
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, JANUARY 27 – 10 PM

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CRIME WAVE centers on an awkward loner, Steven Penny (John Paizs), who turns out bizarre scenarios for color crime movies. Steven wants to turn in the best colour crime movie ever, but he has a problem – he can only write beginnings and ends to his scripts. No middles! Living above a family garage in suburbia and befriended by the landlord’s ten-year-old daughter (Eva Kovacs), we see excerpts from a number of Steven’s scripts, zany ideas based on get-rich-quick schemes. Finally frustrated by his creative block, he sets out for Kansas to meet Dr Jolly (Neil Lawrie), the script doctor.

EMPTY METAL
dirs. Adam Khalil, Bayley Sweitzer, 2018
85 mins. United States.
In English.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 9 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 21 – 7:30 PM WITH Q&A!

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Set in the abusive police state of the contemporary United States, EMPTY METAL follows five groups of characters, each emblematic of a different extreme political ideology, as they attempt insurrection against the status quo: a queer noise band is coerced into a dangerous assassination plot by a family of militant Native Americans who are aided by a Rastafarian computer hacker who is old friends with a Buddhist hermit whose son is a local militia leader. This tangled web of marginalized voices is as diverse and contradictory as the nation that spun it, but there is a common thread: all the characters teeter on the dull knife blade that is contemporary American politics, but they refuse to fall right or left. Instead, they lash out from the soul, and under the radar, in an attempt to achieve what their mainstream predecessors have yet to accomplish.
And all the while, the drones are watching…

FLIGHT TO HELL
Dir. Alvaro Passeri, 2002
86 min. Italy.
In English.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 21 – MIDNIGHT
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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The obnoxious inhabitants of a flying casino face an infestation of parasitic bugs in Passeri’s followup to MUMMY THEME PARK. Abandoning the latter’s near-exclusive reliance on practical effects, FLIGHT shows Passeri experimenting with digital animation – his trademark visual style translates surprisingly well to the medium, offering a unique take on the sub-ILM polygonal creations which were rife among direct-to-video horror offerings in the early 2000s.

As per the DVD box:

Don screams out as a horrific monster is about to eat him alive! But then he wakes up. It’s only a dream! That day he boards his private plane, a flying casino, that caters to the needs of fantastically rich clients who want to play for high stakes at high altitudes. But then the plane is engulfed in a strange thick fog that seeps into the cabin. The evil mist transforms the passengers and crew one by one into monstrous half human, half insect creatures with a ravenous appetite for human flesh. Don realizes that it is his nightmare come true – it is his FLIGHT TO HELL!

MUMMY THEME PARK
Dir. Alvaro Passeri, 2000
86 min. Italy.
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 22 – MIDNIGHT
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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“It would not be too bold to declare this film the Francis Ford Coppola’s BRAM STOKER’S DRACULA of Italian mummy movies.”Senseless Cinema

A garish amalgam of Westworld and The Mummy, Passeri’s 2000 masterpiece addresses the controversial practice of planting microchips in mummies in order to staff fantasy theme parks. Transcending its influences, the film boasts a uniquely queasy visual style crafted from greasy animatronics and a painfully saturated color palette. The plot concerns two dimwitted American journalists caught in the meltdown of the titular Mummy Theme Park – this, of course, is of secondary significance aside the exercise in discount worldmaking achieved through Passeri’s fabric-store scenography and a script rife with non-sequiturs.

HEAVEN IS ONLY IN HELL
dir. Wim Vink, 1994.
Netherlands, 86 min.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 7 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 – MIDNIGHT

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WIM VINK: UNDEAD KING OF THE NETHERLANDS from Spectacle on Vimeo.

There is no Heaven. There is Hell. Therefore, Heaven is only in Hell.

Wim Vink’s first and only feature length film, Heaven is Only in Hell is a no budget murderdrone masterpiece. It loosely follows Michael and Sharon (played by Angelique Vink, who also composes the incredible title theme) as their lives are slowly enveloped by a cursed well containing a demonic portal in Michael’s basement. The score is uniformly awesome, and the gore is homemade and sporadic, all tied together by nearly dialogue-free bizarre and hilarious performances. You won’t regret seeing this with a crowd!

WIM VINK SHORTS BLOCK

SATURDAY, JANUARY 15 – MIDNIGHT
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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HALF PAST MIDNIGHT
dir. Wim Vink, 1988.
Netherlands, 35 min.
A short and brutal SOV blast of splatter, Half Past Midnight follows a chronically bullied highschool student as she takes revenge on her classmates after a prank goes too far. Opening with a title card sequence that borderline recaps the short in trailer form, and featuring another absolutely stellar homemade synth score (this time by Rob Orlemans), this is a singular piece of insanity that you don’t want to miss.

INVITATION TO HELL
dir. Michael J Murphy, 1982.
UK, 42 min.
A young woman attends a high school reunion that turns out to be a cover for a Druid occult ceremony, requiring the blood sacrifice of a virgin. Slightly more coherent than the average Vink (and definitely a lot more dialogue), but the same spirit (and synth) energy runs through this film.

DANCE MACABRE
dir. Wim Vink, 1986.
Netherlands, 22 min.

Vink packs nearly every horror trope and then some into 22 minutes in a brain melting blast of pastiche and loving homage (including bits of score directly lifted from Goblin’s work with Argento and Fabio Frizzi, among others). From blood sacrifices to zombies to possessions, this short really does have it all and then some.

I WANT MORE, I WANT LESS
dir. Bryce Richardson, 2019
87 mins. United States.
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 – 5 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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Having hosted premiere runs for idiosyncratic filmmakers like Juan-Daniel Molero, Lev Kalman & Whitney Horn and Jean-Gabriel Periot, Spectacle is proud to re-screen filmmaker Bryce Richardson’s debut feature I WANT MORE, I WANT LESS.

An accountant in Queens rents out the front of her store to a young man who repairs cell phones…and sometimes pickpockets them. She tries to mentor him, but is tested by his unscrupulous opportunism. Though the film explores how two people attempt to survive and thrive despite gentrification and the isolating, transactional nature of modern life, I Want More, I Want Less lingers on quiet moments, and never veers into didacticism.

Set against the backdrop of the 2016 elections (with scenes shot at real-life community board meetings and anti-Trump demonstrations), Richardson’s quotidian, sparse style evokes arthouse influences like Tsai Ming-Liang, but the film never belabors the distance between the audience and the characters. Semi-improvised, the screenplay instead allows Girma and Abbas to talk the way everyday people actually talk, a perfect match for Richardson’s unwavering eye for the details of how they manage to eke out a living in De Blasio-era NYC.

BRYCE RICHARDSON is a filmmaker originally from Houston, Texas, now based in New York. Richardson’s short films 2580 (2015) and ECLECTIC BRACKETS (2016) have played at festivals such as Slamdance, Woods Hole, Antimatter, and others. In 2011, the Metropolitan Playhouse produced “Baby Marty,” his one-act play. He currently serves on the board for Mono No Aware, a community-focused organization that teaches celluloid film production. I WANT MORE, I WANT LESS was shot over the course of nine weekends at real locations, including a very cluttered CPA’s office in Queens. The film won best screenplay at the Tacoma Film Festival.



LAUGHTER IN THE DARK
dir. Tony Richardson, 1969
United Kingdom & France. 104 mins.
In English.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 13 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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Adapted from Vladimir Nabokov’s novel of the same name, LAUGHTER IN THE DARK deals with the obsession of a middle-aged man (Nicol Williamson) and his younger cunning mistress Margot (Anna Karina)– think Scarlet Street meets the British new wave. Tony Richardson trades Nabokov’s 1930’s Berlin for the Swinging 60’s of London in this lustful thriller of deceit which was never released on home video and has rarely-screened since its 1969 release. Anna Karina shines in her all-English role as the charming irresistible seductress who cultivates something mysterious behind her delicate, wide eyes.

RENDEZVOUS À BRAY
(aka APPOINTMENT IN BRAY)
dir. André Delvaux, 1971
France/Belgium/Weat Germany, 86 min.
In French with English Subtitles

THURSDAY, JANUARY 13 – 10 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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“As much as I revere some of the Belgian films of Chantal Akerman, if I had to choose only one Belgian film to take with me to a desert island, I’d have a pretty rough time forsaking this 1971 masterpiece by André Delvaux.” – Jonathan Rosenbaum

Paris 1917: a young pianist (Mathieu Carrière) receives a note from an old friend in the Air Force to join him at his lush country estate that happens to be close to the front lines of World War I. He arrives but his friend is nowhere to be found, with only the quiet, beautiful housekeeper (Anna Karina) present. While he spends days waiting for his friend’s arrival, his mind wanders to past events. At night, the mysterious woman appears again…

Based on a short story from surrealist Julien Gracq, Belgian auteur André Delvaux marries his trademark amalgam of fantasy and reality to Gracq’s shape-shifting text. Much like the film protagonist, Delvaux got his start by playing the piano to silent films in 1950s Brussels, and his musicality is on full display in the film’s sonata-like form, weaving variations of memories and moments into an ambiguous, intriguing mood piece. Cloaked in dense Gothic atmospheres and muted colors, RENDEZVOUS À BRAY gives off a melancholy, dream-like aura, subtle in approach but haunted by unspoken desires and half-imagined nostalgia.

Working with Delvaux’s daughter, we’re honored to re-introduce this classic of Belgium cinema.

LITAN
dir. Jean-Pierre Mocky, 1982
France, 87 min

THURSDAY, JANUARY 6- 10 PM
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20- 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28 – MIDNIGHT

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LITAN (dir. Jean-Pierre Mocky, 1982) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

Nora and Jock arrive in the strange village of Litan during the Festival of the Dead.
Co-written, produced, edited, directed by and starring Jean-Pierre Mocky, Litan loosely follows Nora, who is deeply concerned about her husband, Jock (actual spelling), after she has a nightmare he’s been killed. Soon, townsfolk are wandering around as if hypnotized, and a boy scout drowns in an underground cavern.
The ‘plot’ quickly devolves into a Boschian nightmare, drifting between a mad scientist and a bumbling police chief, among others, but plot is not really the point here, spinning ever further into a foggy dreamworld. Part art-house fever dream, part giallo, and yet entirely its own thing, Litan is as darkly comedic as it is unsettling and grotesque.

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

THURSDAY, JANUARY 6 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, JANUARY 15 – 10 PM

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

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

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

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


PANELSTORY

dir. Věra Chytilová, 1979.
Czechoslovakia. 100 min.
In Czech with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 7 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28 – 10 PM

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Věra Chytilová’s 1966 DAISIES may be her best known work of radical cinema, but it’s neither her last, nor arguably most significant. A decade later, at time when most of her Prague Spring contemporaries had fled Czechoslovakia or drastically reigned in once-experimental visions, she came back with the equally daring and essential PANELSTORY. Framed as a sort of ensemble comedy circulating among the many lives contained within a new Soviet-bloc housing complex, the film is actually a scathing satire shredding every available ideal of home and family. The whole film can be understood by its audaciously critical setting: lost in a wasteland of debris and stalled construction, still incomplete yet already falling into disrepair, riddled with half-functional elevators, the housing complex precisely mirrors the disintegrating families contained within, whose individual stories form a catalogue of bleakly hilarious dysfunction and despair. It might have been all too believably familiar to those living under similar conditions in Czechoslovakia at the time, but Chytilova’s disillusionment, as always, extends far beyond her immediate surroundings to call into question the thwarted utopian hopes of an entire industrialized world.

As with all of Chytilová’s best work, form here deftly follows function. The urban malaise is caught near-entirely in verité-style hand-held camerawork decades ahead of fashion, and rhythmically fragmented under anarchic editing that mixes apartment interiors with dystopian architecture and massive earth-moving operations. Even the sound design follows suit, as the characters are beset by cataclysmic atonal score (contrasted against a synth-funk interlude straight out of an aspirational 70s home furnishings showroom). What PANELSTORY may lack from the sheer stylistic invention of DAISIES, it makes up for in thematic cohesion.

After the collapse of the Prague Spring, Chytilová was among those directors cut out of the studio system for their brilliant excesses, which meant that she spent the years from 1970 to 1976 secretly directing commercials under the name of her husband (Jaroslav Kučera, her frequent cinematographer and collaborator). Pressures from international film festivals and a bold letter from directly to the president restating her sincere Socialist values allowed Chytilová to release THE APPLE GAME in 1976. But if that work seemed comparatively restrained, she pulled out all the stops for PANELSTORY. It’s unbelievable that such a film could have been produced under the noses of the state censors, and following its release, Chytilova found herself banned for another two years for her troubles. Seeing it again all these years later, PANELSTORY seems well worth the risks of getting it made.

Having considered PANELSTORY our “lodestar film” since opening in 2010, Spectacle is thrilled to host this one-night-only engagement of Chytilová’s unsung classic as part of our reopening festivities.

Special thanks to Troy Swain and Janus Films.


SEX DEMON
dir. J.C. Cricket, 1975
USA. 60 min.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, JANUARY 14 – 10 PM

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SEX DEMON (dir. J.C. Cricket, 1975) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

“A non-stop shocker that both sizzles and chills. A totally daring new dimension in male erotica!” – Michael’s Thing

All hell breaks loose when John’s last-minute anniversary gift inadvertently causes his younger lover Jim to become possessed by a SEX DEMON in J.C. Cricket’s all-male horror film. Openly inspired by both The Exorcist and its Blaxploitation cousin, Abby, SEX DEMON is a ferocious mix of the erotic and the grotesque that’s primed and ready to shock audiences again after being lost for the past forty years. In the words of Gay Scene critic Bruce King, “the squeamish may not want to watch, but if you do, you won’t forget it!”

SEX DEMON was the first film effort by actor, erotic dancer, and gay television pioneer J.C. Cricket. After the release of this film, he’d go on to direct over a dozen more under various pseudonyms before cofounding and directing the gay public-access programs Christopher Street After Dark, Diversions, Connections, and Gay Morning America. Cricket passed away from AIDS-related complications in 1992.

Last screened theatrically in 1981 and never given a home video release, SEX DEMON is a crucial — yet long-lost — piece of queer horror history. Presented in a new 2k preservation from a recently discovered 16mm theatrical print.

Elizabeth Purchell is a queer film historian and archivist. Her Instagram project, Ask Any Buddy, explores the gay adult film industry’s role in both the development of queer cinema and the spread of gay culture at large.

CONTENT WARNING: This film contains a scene of sexual violence.

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

SUNDAY, JANUARY 9 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 14 – MIDNIGHT

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

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

TERROR NULLIUS
dir. Soda_Jerk, 2018
53 mins. Australia
In English.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, JANUARY 22 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, JANUARY 27 – 7:30 PM

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Part political satire, eco-horror and road movie, TERROR NULLIUS is a political revenge fable constructed entirely from samples pirated from the Australian cinema cannon. Binding together a documentary impulse with speculative muckraking, Soda Jerk’s revisionist history opens a queer narrative space where cinema fictions and historical facts permeate each other in new ways. The apocalyptic desert camps of Mad Max 2 become the site of refugee detention, flesh-eating sheep are recast as anti-colonial insurgents and the women of Australian cinema go vigilante on Mel Gibson. Working within and against the official archive, Soda Jerk’s feature remix offers an incendiary un-writing of Australian national mythologies.

Funded by the Ian Potter Moving Image Commission in 2016, TERROR NULLIUS was notoriously disowned by the organisation just days prior to the film’s premiere in 2018. Offended by its politics, the Ian Potter’s conservative Board of Trustees described the work as “a very controversial piece of art” and “unAustralian”. The Guardian named the “dizzyingly ambitious satirical work” one of the best Australian films of the decade.

TERROR NULLIUS was commissioned by ACMI (Australian Centre for the Moving Image)

TO SLEEP SO AS TO DREAM
(夢みるように眠りたい」フィルム修復)
dir. Hayashi Kaizô, 1986
73 mins. Japan.
Silent.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 15 – 5 PM
THURSDAY, JANUARY 20 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, JANUARY 30 – 7:30 PM

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For those who remember Hayashi Kaizô’s MAIKU HAMA: #1 PRIVATE EYE trilogy we screened in 2018, a reprise of one of our favorites from this summer’s outdoor screenings in a gorgeous 2k restoration.

Born from the vestiges of some long forgotten dream, TO SLEEP SO AS TO DREAM is a hauntingly beautiful ode to the silent era that yearns for a distant past—back to an illusory world teeming with new excitements, novel invention and cryptic riddles. Under the faint glimmer of an electric lamp, an aging silver-screen starlet seeks the aid of two steadfast detectives when her darling daughter, the ethereal Bellflower, is kidnapped for ransom. The sleuths find themselves caught in a heady game of cat and mouse as they journey deeper into a sleepless realm of benshi performers, archetypal villainy and never-ending serials. Transposing the silent era’s cinematic language into a work that walks the line between antiquity and fantasy, dream and waking state, TO SLEEP SO AS TO DREAM casts a spell over the spectator in dream-like fashion, harking back to the magical, early days of cinema.

Special thanks to K.F. Watanabe, Tetsuki Ijichi and Arrow Films.

WHEEL OF ASHES 
dir. Peter Emanuel Goldman, 1968
95 mins. France. 
In French with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 23 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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“Every morning i ask myself, how was i going to live?”
“I am nothing but passion and sex and pathetically chaotic poetry” 

Photographed with a distinctive lyrical purity and funded in part with a grant awarded by Jean-Luc Godard, WHEEL OF ASHES serves as a gut-wrenching portrait of the tormented and solitary.

Pierre Clementi – then between starring roles for Buñuel and Pasolini – wanders aimlessly through the temptations of Saint-Germain-des-Prés as he attempts to relinquish himself from the corrupted urges of lust and desire and search for meaning through the teachings of Eastern and Western mysticism. Pierre’s tortured eyes reflect directly into Goldman’s lens, fully encapsulating Goldman’s visceral style as an instinctive and intuitive formalist of beauty. This is poetry as filmmaking and filmmaking as poetry.

Sleepwalking through beatnik cafes and underground nightclubs, Pierre is determined to walk until he has nowhere else to go. Rarely screened and often neglected, WHEELS OF ASHES was Goldman’s last completed narrative feature and is ripe for rediscovery.

screening with

POSITANO
dir. Pierre Clementi, 1968
25 mins. France.
Silent.

“The reconciliation of the visual with the colorful psychedelic impulses of these luscious times… To find again the chant of origins, images that inscribe themselves in us like a double and that wave to us. To grope for… In the dark room of multinational ideas, I quiver and I mumble.” Pierre Clémenti

Featuring some of the most beautiful double/triple/etc exposures ever committed to film, POSITANO features Pierre Clementi’s family and friends (including Nico & Philippe Garrel) on their holiday trip in Italy. The footage is silent, colorful and seductive. 

WHO KILLED VINCENT CHIN?
dir. Christine Choy, 1987
87 mins. United States.
In English

FRIDAY, JANUARY 28TH – 7:30 PM + Q&A WITH DIRECTOR CHRISTINE CHOY (this event is $10)

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On a hot summer night in Detroit, Ronald Ebens, an autoworker, killed a young Chinese-American engineer with a baseball bat. Although he confessed, he never spent a day in jail. This gripping Academy Award-nominated film relentlessly probes the implications of the murder in the streets of Detroit, for the families of those involved, and for the American justice system.


THE YEAR OF THE PLAGUE

(EL ANO DE LA PESTE)
dir. Felipe Cazals, 1979
109 mins. Mexico.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 7 – 10 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

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Ten years after we showed his anti-anti-communism horror masterpiece CANOA, Spectacle is thrilled to reprise living master Felipe Cazals’ THE YEAR OF THE PLAGUE: a little-seen adaptation of Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year transposed to 1970s Mexico. Working from an original idea proposed by his friend Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Cazals uses the outbreak of a pandemic to diagnose the ills of Mexican society as he saw it: political corruption, snake-oil pundits on television, municipal apathy to the basic needs of lower-income citizens. The result is a bracing, terrifying vision of life out of junct 40 years ahead of coronavirus.

“Gabo (Marquez) is known as the creator of magical realism, but there is no magic to this film. We inserted a plague to create a different reality, in order to reveal problems within society. What can change is the way authorities will react to a crisis of this nature. To hide the truth is a power move, essentially linking all forms of power together. The president must say whatever is convenient for private interests. The whole reason he is in power is to create a distorted reality. The president, the private interests—their form of reality becomes the official truth. To take the pandemic seriously would necessitate destroying preexisting forms of power.” – Felipe Cazals, Filmmaker Magazine

Special thanks to Felipe Cazals, Herandy Goytia and IMCINE.

ZOO ZÉRO
dir. Alain Fleischer, 1978
France. 96 min.
In French with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 15 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 21 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, JANUARY 30 – 5 PM

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ZOO ZÉRO (Alain Fleischer, 1978) from Spectacle on Vimeo.

During a cataclysmic rainstorm in a Paris largely reduced to ruins and rubble, guests in baroque animal masks crowd a smokey nightclub called Noah’s Ark. Here, Eva (Eden and After’s Catherine Jourdan) takes the stage to perform a riviting song of illicit interspecies desire and a formative erotic experience involving a lion mauling at the Berlin Zoo. It’s the last number, of the night, and maybe of the city — “an accident or a disease” has ravaged the streets as trucks trundle over cobblestones with news of the military government in crisis and the animal world seems poised to reclaim lost ground from a waning humanity. But an encounter with a stranger at the club (a tuxedoed, stammering Pierre Clementi) sends Eva out into this city of crumbling bordellos and verdant parks to a series of fateful meetings with a fragmentary family — a mother ogre, a ventriloquist chauffeur who narrates the failure of the Spanish revolution with a Donald Duck puppet, twin foley artists, and, narrating from a vocoder organ at the heart the liminal human-animal space of the city zoo, a mournful Klaus Kinski. But like other pulp peaks of the 70s, this is less a film that suggests tidy synopsis than a true cinematic dream, where nocturnal correspondences between Mozart, escaped large cats, and the grasping of all-too-temporary human edifices override the logic of the waking world and categories become blurred by their own mysterious logic.

Exquisitely shot in oneirically shadowed day-for-night (and night-for-night) by Bruno Nuytten (of such Spectacle essentials as INDIA SONG, MON COEUR EST ROUGE, and POSSESSION!), and with assistant direction by Claire Denis, ZOO ZÉRO has been all but unseeable outside of messy bootleg transfers for far too long. Now, at last, artist and director Alain Fleischer’s masterpiece has been newly restored from 35mm, in a gorgeous HD transfer.

Newly restored HD print courtesy of Alain Fleischer, with English subtitles newly corrected and custom retimed by Spectacle volunteers.

CORMAN’S EYEDROPS GOT ME TOO CRAZY

CORMAN’S EYEDROPS GOT ME TOO CRAZY
(O COLIRIO DO CORMAN ME DEIXOU DOIDO DEMAIS)
dir. Ivan Cardoso, 2020
18 mins. Brazil.
In Portuguese with English subtitles.

COMING AT THE END OF 2021… ONLINE ONLY!

“Cinema films death at work, it’s the only art form which shows death devouring actors; the characters made immortal remain stronger in our memory than the memory of living souls.” – Jean Cocteau, Entretiens sur le cinématographe

Shock maverick Ivan Cardoso (THE SECRET OF THE MUMMY, THE SCARLET SCORPION) is one of the titans of Brazilian cinema, and so we are honored to platform his new short film CORMAN’S EYEDROPS GOT ME TOO CRAZY to conclude another year spent freaking out in front of screens in the dark.

CORMAN’S EYEDROPS GOT ME TOO CRAZY is the end product of a decade Cardoso spent scratching, drawing on and staining various dribs and drabs of 35mm film – many of them taken from tail and foot leaders, cigarette burns and minus-ten countdowns. The resulting freakout is hilariously staged as the consequence of a congenial (and obviously pre-pandemic) visit to Cardoso’s home from another living legend of cine-sploitation, his 95-year old friend Roger Corman (whose feel-bad classic X: THE MAN WITH X-RAY EYES is included in Cardoso’s psychotronic bricolage.) The film becomes a lettrist anti-history of Brazilian cinema and a spectral memorial to Cardoso’s mentor José Mojica Marins (COFFIN JOE), who passed on in 2020. CORMAN’S EYEDROPS must be seen to be believed, but even then you’ll ask if it really happened: a screeching, ecstatic eulogy party for the eternal death and rebirth of cinema.

“This is an excellent piece of work. The combination of the abstract imagery with the direct reality on the camera, in which sometimes one blends into the other and in other times one contradicts and fights the other. It’s fascinating. The cutting, the imagery, the whole examination of various forms of art combined with a very good musical score, it is one of the best I’ve ever seen.” – Roger Corman

Special thanks to Ivan Cardoso and William Plotnick.

DECEMBER MIDNIGHTS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18 – MIDNIGHT

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WINTERBEAST
dir. Christopher Thies, 1992
92 min. USA

“In this movie, reality is devoured, digested, and recreated for our benefit.” — Joseph A. Ziemba, BLEEDING SKULL!

A film which truly justifies the term “unclassifiable,” WINTERBEAST was shot on and off for nearly half a decade and with a mix of super 8mm and 16mm, resulting in a one of a kind piece of outsider art-horror filmmaking that must be seen to be believed. When The Wild Goose Lodge is overrun with mutilation-minded beastoids, it’s up to Sergeant Whitman and Forest Ranger Stillman to take care of business! But what about the creepiest lodge proprietor who ever creeped around in a plaid suit, Mr. Sheldon? And what about Whitman’s shape-shifting mustache?! Loaded with surreal dialogue, mind-blowing stop motion animation, homemade gore effects, and more than a few genuinely creepy moments, this forgotten cult gem has been newly restored and reconstructed from its original film elements.

Restoration courtesy of Vinegar Syndrome and the American Genre Film Archive.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17 – MIDNIGHT

TICKETS

THE MASK OF SATAN aka DEMONS 5: THE DEVIL’S VEIL
dir. Lamberto Bava, 1989
94 min. Italy.
In Italian with English subtitles.

Seven Italian teens on a ski trip fall into an icy crevasse in the mountains, where they discover a corpse with a strange mask. One of them immediately removes the mask (of course), releasing an ancient curse.

A (very loose) retelling of Mario Bava’s classic BLACK SUNDAY set at a haunted ski lodge in the 80s, MASK OF SATAN aka DEMONS 5 makes the most of its clearly meager budget and delivers a heaping dose of wintery WTF.

 

MATCHBOX CINE PRESENTS: TALES FROM WINNIPEG

We are pleased to partner with distributor and subtitler Matchbox Cine to present an updated version of the Tales From Winnipeg series they debuted earlier this year. This series features three features from Winnipeg directors as well as a number of shorts.

Matchbox Cine is an independent film exhibitor, specializing in the outcasts, orphans and outliers of cult cinema, and an award-winning subtitler, specializing in access provision for film exhibition & distribution. From Glasgow, Scotland, and currently based in Bristol, England, they program, curate and promote cult film events across the UK.

Matchbox Cine’s Tales From Winnipeg debuted as an online-only program in 2020, celebrating the work of renegade Canadian film co-op the Winnipeg Film Group. John Paizs’ seminal CRIME WAVE (1985) in its TIFF 2K restoration, Guy Maddin’s COWARDS BEND THE KNEE (2003) with new, director-approved score by Ela Orleans and Dave Barber and Kevin Nikkels’ documentary on the WFG, from inception to present day. All Films Will Be Screened With Subtitles.

CRIME WAVE
dir. John Paisz, 1985
80 mins. Canada.
In English.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10 – 7 PM – previously lost 16mm print! (this screening is $10)
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11 – 5 PM – previously lost 16mm print! (this screening is $10)
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15 – 10 PM – new restoration!
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23 – 10 PM – new restoration!

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CRIME WAVE centers on an awkward loner, Steven Penny (John Paizs), who turns out bizarre scenarios for color crime movies. Steven wants to turn in the best colour crime movie ever, but he has a problem – he can only write beginnings and ends to his scripts. No middles! Living above a family garage in suburbia and befriended by the landlord’s ten-year-old daughter (Eva Kovacs), we see excerpts from a number of Steven’s scripts, zany ideas based on get-rich-quick schemes. Finally frustrated by his creative block, he sets out for Kansas to meet Dr Jolly (Neil Lawrie), the script doctor.

COWARDS BEND THE KNEE
dir. Guy Maddin, 2003
64 mins. Canada.
In English.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11 – 7 PM – Q&A with Guy Maddin and Rhayne Vermette! (this screening is $10)
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22 – 10 PM

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NEW SCORE FROM ELA ORLEANS!

It’s time for hockey! There’s no telling what will happen when the Winnipeg Maroons’ own star player Guy becomes embroiled in the twisted lives of Meta, a vengeful Chinoise, and her hairdresser/abortionist mother Liliom. Innocent Veronica, caught in the middle, is treated to both services! Meanwhile poor, dithering, cowardly Guy can only stand by and watch.

“This wild, gorgeous and almost insane new score by Ela Orleans has completely reinvented COWARDS. She understood at musical levels the depths of shame, heights of hysteria, and quivering viscous ick I felt while shooting it; she drew out from the film every dark strand of soiled soul unravelling within and hung it in a new moonbeam for all the appalled to see.” – Guy Maddin

preceded by

DOMUS
dir. Rhayne Vermette, 2017
15 min. Canada.
In English.

“The block of marble is the most beautiful of all statues”Carlo Mollino

This is the story of the godlike architect, Carlo Mollino, animated within the desk space of failed architect, Rhayne Vermette. Made, with love on 16mm, 35 and Super 8, this classic tale of Pygmalion investigates intersections between cinema and architecture.

and

CATTLE CALL
dirs. Matthew Rankin & Mike Maryniuk, 2008
3 mins. Canada.
In English.

A high-speed animated documentary about the art of livestock auctioneering, structured around the mesmerizing talents of 2007 Man-Sask Auctioneer Champion, Tim Dowle.

TALES FROM THE WINNIPEG FILM GROUP
dir. Dave Barber, Kevin Nikkel, 2017
85 mins. Canada.
In English.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 10 – 10 PM – Introduction from Matchbox Cineclub! (this screening is $10)
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11 – 10 PM – Introduction from Matchbox Cineclub! (this screening is $10)
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23 – 10 PM

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TALES FROM THE WINNIPEG FILM GROUP is the explosive story of how a stubborn band of independent filmmakers started a film co-operative that became the most highly respected film centre in Canada.

preceded by

WILL THE REAL DAVE BARBER PLEASE STAND UP?
dir. Dave Barber, 2014
4 min. Canada.
In English.

In April of 2013 long time Winnipeg Cinematheque programmer Dave Barber was invited to receive the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee medal. It was a remarkable occasion. The awards ceremony was in a packed hall at the Legislative Building. Everything was going fine until…

POR EL DINERO: THE FILMS OF ALEJO MOGUILLANSKY

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

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

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

Co-presented with Cinema Tropical. Special thanks to El Pampero Cine and Itala Aguillera.

THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL
(La Vendedora De Fósforos)
Dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2017
Argentina. 70 mins.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5 – 7:30 pm
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15 – 7 PM w/remote Q+A!
(This event is $10.)
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 – 7:30 PM

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Andersen’s matchstick saleswoman who dies of cold on New Years Eve.

Bresson’s donkey from AU HASARD BALTHAZAR who changes its owner time and time again with the tragic fate and finale of a workhorse.

The impossible reconciliation between a German soldier from the Red Army Faction and a delicate Argentine pianist who plays the piano without striking the keys.

The modernist composer Helmut Lachenmann, veteran of the vanguard wars of the XXth century, trying to put together a demented opera with the orchestra of the Colon Theatre.

A transportation strike in Buenos Aires. Politicians trying to negotiate with the orchestra.

In the middle of this, Maria Villar and Walter Jakob inhabit this comedy trying to maintain their young daughter (Cleo Moguillansky) with nothing but the improbable salary that music provides them. They rehearse ideas for the staging of Lachenman’s opera where they work and complete the frieze of marginal figures to which this ode to resistance is dedicated.

plays with

ALEJO MOGUILLANSKY TO MICHAELANGELO ANTONIONI
Dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2021
Argentina. 17 minutes.
In Spanish and Italian with English subtitles.

Garbiñe Ortega, the artistic director of Punto de Vista, devised the creation of a collective audiovisual project called Las cartas que no fueron también son in which several filmmakers will make a filmed letter addressed to another filmmaker in the history of cinema that they did not know personally and who was as far away as possible from their own cinema. For Alejo Moguillansky’s submission to this series he created a letter to the iconic Italian filmmaker, Michelangelo Antonioni.

FOR THE MONEY
(Por El Dinero)
Dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2019
Argentina. 79 minutes.
In Spanish and French with English subtitles.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16 – 7 PM with remote Q+A
(This event is $10.)
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19 – 5 PM

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“We were workers of luxury. And nobody was rich enough to pay us. We had to be at the same time the actor and the cameramen. We had to be at the same time the painter and their muse. The poet and the landscape. The rifle and its prey. The rider and the horse. Don Quixote and Cervantes all at once.”

Invited by the Argentinean government to make a short documentary about the staging of his independent play, Por El Dinero, Moguillansky took the money and equipment and instead made an absurd heist film about the vicious allure of money. Casting the actors of the original production as themselves (including Moguillansky himself), the film follows a critically-lauded theater troupe stuck wallowing in obscurity and financial debts until a theater festival in Colombia invites them to perform their play. While the show mainly consists of each actor giving a long rundown of everything they have ever made or spent while the rest of the ensemble perform silly dances and sing punk songs about how much they hate money, as soon as the troupe discovers that the festival has a big cash prize for the best play, greed predictably sets in. Tragedy, comedy, and bare-bones reenactments of Asterix and Obelix ensue.

ROSALINDA
dir. Matías Piñeiro, edited by Alejo Moguillansky, 2011
43 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5 – 5 PM
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9 – 10 PM
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 – 10 PM

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The first in Matias Piñeiro’s series of films inspired by the female roles in Shakespeare’s comedies, Rosalinda delves deep into games of desire and romantic roleplaying. Following a group of young actors rehearsing As You Like It on an idyllic island during the summer, the film stars María Villar as Luisa who plays the character of Rosalinda who, in Shakespeare’s play, pretends to be the male Ganymede to escape persecution and play romantic games with her lover Orlando who is played by Gabo (Alberto Ajaka). Yet who’s playing who seems to shift endlessly as all the actors try on various parts, ceaselessly hop from romantic partner to romantic partner, and go for bucolic swims that feel removed from time. All while Luisa waits for a phone call from her lover who may or may not be coming and who she may or may not be breaking up with.

plays with

UN DIA DE CAZA
dir. Alejo Moguillansky, 2021
32 mins. Argentina.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

Manic tourists face off with camo-clad hunters all while real vacationers watch in the background in this Tatiesque piece of complete, cartoonish absurdity.

VIOLA
dir. Matías Piñeiro, edited by Alejo Moguillansky, 2012
Argentina. 60 minutes.
In Spanish with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11 – MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19 – 7:30 PM

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The second film in Piñeiro’s ongoing Shakespeare series takes an abstracted, dreamlike approach to desire and romantic entanglement. Piñeiro regular Agustina Muñoz plays Cecilia, an actress playing Viola in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night who hatches a plan to seduce the actress playing Olivia, Sabrina (Elisa Carricajo) so that she can prove her own theories around desire and romance. Meanwhile Viola (María Villar, Piñeiro’s other leading regular) bikes around Buenos Aires delivering packages of pirated DVDs to various men who each have an ambiguous attraction to her. How these two Violas are related is never elaborated, yet chance and the inexplicable flow of Piñeiro’s wavy narrative weave them together in an elegiac riff on longing and seduction.

“[A] sensation of pleasant confusion recurs throughout VIOLA, which might be described as an ensemble romantic comedy but at the same time doesn’t seem beholden to any genre. Argentinean director Matías Piñeiro’s sophomore feature dares to disorient its audience from the first scene onward. But it’s not an obtuse film. Although it is filled with mysteries, it is not asking to be decoded. Instead, Viola invites us to submit to its pleasures, which are ample and ultimately very simple. In lieu of stylistic fireworks or some sort of grand thesis statement, Piñeiro offers us nothing less than a window on extreme beauty, which radiates through the faces of his actresses and the Shakespeare plays that they intermittently recite in a variety of contexts: as dialogue in stage productions, as lines being rehearsed in private, and as words interpolated into everyday conversation.”Adam Nayman, Reverse Shot

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

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12 – 5 PM

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

AN EVENING WITH LISA CRAFTS

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4 – 7 PM with Lisa Crafts in person for Q+A
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
(This event is $10.)

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The films of New York animator Lisa Crafts display an artist’s engagement in a unique dialogue with the world. Our career-spanning program opens in 1976 with the exuberantly sex-positive cel animated optimism of DESIRE PIE. GLASS GARDENS, from 1982, depicts a hopeful vision of a quiet apocalypse, one in which artists are left to glean inspiration from abandoned landscapes. 2015’s Season Of Wonder presents a darkly surrealist vision of the ominous dread of life during the climate crisis. And current ongoing series Chimeric Portraits presents a bittersweet hope for life during and beyond of the Anthropocene era. Throughout, the animation techniques Crafts deploys, and often invents, in her filmmaking are as essential to the work as the themes they express.
Drawing from Crafts’ complete body of work, we’ll also present rare pieces previously seen only in gallery settings and whimsical shorts made for Sesame Street, followed by a conversation with the artist.

SHORT FILM PROGRAM:

GLASS GARDENS
1982. 7 minutes. Music by Laraaji

SESAME STREET SHORTS
1990s. 9 minutes. Co-director Ken Brown.

THE FLOODED PLAYGROUND
2005. 20 minutes.

4 NATURES MORTES
2011-2013. 4 minutes.

LANDSCAPES
2009-2013. 7 minutes.

SEASON OF WONDER
2015. 8 minutes.

CHIMERIC PORTRAITS
2021. 10 minutes.

DESIRE PIE
1976. 5 minutes.

I, THE WORST OF ALL

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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