EYES OF FIRE


EYES OF FIRE
dir. Avery Crounse, 1983
90 mins. United States.

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8 – MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 – MIDNIGHT

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Set in the 1750’s, EYES OF FIRE follows a group of colonial pioneers who narrowly escape persecution after their preacher (Dennis Lipscomb) has an affair with a married woman. Exiled from the small settlement, they make their way deeper into the wilds of future-America, haunted by the spectral threat of attack by Native Americans, until they find their way to a valley the natives avoid due to superstitions about the sinister nature of the land.

A sort of Protestant riff on AGUIRRE: THE WRATH OF GOD and potentially the first “western horror” hybrid film, EYES OF FIRE is a startlingly original and effective independent film that slipped largely under the radar on release in the early 80’s. It conjures a genuine sense of dread and tackles its colonial subject matter in a surprisingly modern way, and boasts some deliriously good and unsettling low-budget practical effects.

Showing in a less-than-stellar VHS rip but losing none of its potency, this is a real Thanksgiving horror treat.

BACK TOGETHER AGAIN: The Films of Milton Moses Ginsberg

Hailed in cinephile circles for its audacity and economy, Milton Moses Ginsberg’s 1969 debut COMING APART, starring Rip Torn, anticipated both the imminent porno chic mainstream of DEEP THROAT, and the rawness and transgression of ’90s American independents.

Unfairly panned by Andrew Sarris, COMING APART nosedived in attendance after its first week, its static-camera faux-documentary intimacy presaging the zeitgeist by just a hair, and its subject matter, including mental illness, sexuality, and misogyny, too real for the nudie-cutie crowd. Its box office misfortune would follow Ginsberg for the remainder of his career, complicating the production of his 1973 follow-up THE WEREWOLF OF WASHINGTON; in 1975, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. For the following decades, he would work in relative obscurity, primarily as a commercial editor for television—until the ’90s, in which a Museum of Modern Art repertory screening of the debut drew renewed interest in Ginsberg leading to a favorable New York Times profile and a Kino Lorber distribution deal. Much like the trajectory of fellow traveller Mark Rappaport, Ginsberg would eventually return to moving image in the form of video-essays, made in a similarly minimal spirit as COMING APART, tackling issues such as mortality, end times, the history of noir, and more.

Now, as COMING APART celebrates a half-century, feted at Metrograph on the anniversary of its debut, Spectacle presents a retrospective of these post-debut works.




THE WEREWOLF OF WASHINGTON
dir. Milton Moses Ginsberg, 1973
90 mins. United States.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4 – 10 PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29 – 7:30 PM

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A Watergate-era horror-comedy starring Dean Stockwell as a reporter bitten by a werewolf, assigned as a press assistant for the president of the United States (Biff McGuire).




THE MIRROR OF NOIR
dir. Milton Moses Ginsberg, 2015
120 mins. United States.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7 – 10 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26 – 10 PM

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THE MIRROR OF NOIR describes the journey of several filmmakers who invented German Expressionist Cinema – and, forced to flee Germany, helped invent American film noir in Hollywood. The film focuses not on their physical journey – but on the journey of their cinematic style and the darkness of their vision. It also tells the story of a boy growing up in the Bronx who develops an obsession with haunted heroes and a fatal attraction to femmes fatale.




KRON
dir. Milton Moses Ginsberg, 2011
45 mins. United States.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 7:30 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 – 5 PM

Preceded by:
DARK MATTER
Dir. Milton Moses Ginsberg, 2018
16 mins. United States.

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Earning his living photographing tiny objects – faceted diamonds for gem dealers, the architecture of insects for biologists – Kron decides to turn his close-up lens on the intricate movements of the watches he’s been obsessively collecting his entire life. As he magnifies their tiny gears and spinning wheels, Kron feels himself being drawn into their microscopic universe – and becoming increasingly haunted by re-found memories, his own mortality and time itself. Let’s call his Proustian journey ‘The Private Life of Time.’




THE END
Dir. Milton Moses Ginsberg, 2017
85 mins. United States.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 5 PM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22 – 10 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25 – 10 PM

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Several haunting questions have taken on a sudden immediacy: Is humanity facing extinction in this very century? Have we already turned corners from which there is no turning back? And do sci-fi films merely offer us distraction, or have they been accurately describing the end of our existence? THE END collects the most prescient clips from past and present sci-fi films – and asks members of the scientific and political communities to assess whether these fantasy films that have been entertaining us for decades have actually been correct in predicting our total demise as a species – and soon!

THE FILMS OF MICHÈLE ROSIER

Michèle Rosier (1930-2017) was a pioneering fashion designer (she created the vinyl-intensive V de V sportswear label), a journalist who worked as editor of the women’s lifestyle magazine Le Noveau Femina, and an avowed leftist. She also had a 40+ year career behind the camera, directing several documentaries for French television as well as a handful of theatrical features, most famously the George Sand biopic GEORGE QUI?, starring Anne Wiazemsky. Rosier’s cumulative body of work is staggering, and the movies bely an utterly idiosyncratic filmmaking sensibility: wryly funny, curious about people, jazz-suffused (with scores by Mal Waldron, Keith Jarrett and Aldo Romano) and forever interrogating the limits of liberation in post-1968 France. While she’s a known quantity in France, Rosier has never before been given a proper retrospective in the United States; we’re honored to show these works in a two-part series spread over November and December, with her signature work MON CŒUR EST ROUGE (MY HEART IS RED) screening in a brand new digitization with fresh subtitles translated and timed by Spectacle volunteers.

Hervé Boulliane, rightsholder to a number of Michèle’s films, has made them available for free online (without English subtitles.) You can learn more about the filmmaker here, and access the official Vimeo page here.

This series is part of Brooklyn Falls for France, a cultural season organized by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy and FACE Foundation in partnership with Brooklyn venues. Special thanks to Go Films, Hervé Boulliane, Bernard Payen (Cinematheque Francaise), Nathanaël Arnould (Institut National de l’Audiovisuel) and Amélie Garin-Davet.




GEORGE QUI?
(GEORGE WHO?)
dir. Michèle Rosier, 1973
106 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 – 10 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4 – 7:30 PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24 – 7:30 PM
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13 – 7:30 PM with introduction from Hervé Boulliane, longtime friend of Michèle Rosier
MONDAY, DECEMBER 23 – 10 PM

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Rosier’s extraordinary feature debut is a buried gem of post-New Wave French filmmaking, starring the inimitable Anne Wiazemsky as the scandalizing writer George Sand (1804-1874). Born into nobility as Aurore Dupin, Sand was the most prolific female author of the 19th century, notorious for smoking cigars and flouting laws banning women from dressing as men. While her life is storied (she was close friends with Balzac, Delacroix and Flaubert, as well as one of Frederic Chopin’s lovers; he described her gaze as “like a fiery flood” in his journal), Rosier’s approach mischievously and anachronistically engages the limitations of the staid and stale drawing-room biopic. GEORGE QUI? juxtaposes current-day discussions about Sand’s proto-feminism (as well as her militant opposition to the Paris Communards) with the very real movement for gender equality raging outside the cinemas. Beyond Wiazemsky’s coy leading turn, the film features delectable discussions about sex, love and literature, with a supporting turn from Bulle Ogier as stage actress Marie Dorval, and Gilles Deleuze in a bizarre cameo as pioneering Catholic philosopher Hugues-Félicité Robert de Lamennais – Rosier’s idea.



( poster by Stephanie Monohan )



MON CŒUR EST ROUGE
(MY HEART IS RED)
dir. Michèle Rosier, 1976
110 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 – 5PM
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24 – 5PM
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5 – 7:30 PM with introduction from Hervé Boulliane, longtime friend of Michèle Rosier
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18 – 10 PM

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MON CŒUR EST ROUGE stars Françoise Lebrun as Clara, a market research analyst hired by a big cosmetics company to interview women from different walks of life about their makeup-purchasing habits. (Rosier’s original treatment for the film put it like this: “What began as research for better ways to lie to women becomes a quest for truths only women can reveal.”) The process sees her probing questions of femininity in a Paris that’s modernizing at a rapid rate; while Clara strikes up a spur-of-the-moment romance along the way, much of the film concerns people’s embrace of (and resistance to) the new freedoms of the Sixties and Seventies. MON CŒUR EST ROUGE is a bruisingly funny cross-examination of second wave feminism and its discontents – ending in an extraordinary finale at a “Women’s Fair”, with a murderer’s row of Rosier’s collaborators playing luminaries such as Freud, Sartre, Aristotle, Marx and Shakespeare in drag – provoking dreams of an alternative history away from masculine supremacy. Screening with brand-new English subtitles translated by Claudia Eve Beauchesne.


UN CAFE, UN!
(ONE COFFEE, ONE)
dirs. Michele Rosier & Jacques Kebadian, 1982
40 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

screening with

LA FEMME, L’HOMME
(THE WOMAN, THE MAN)
dir, Michele Rosier, 1975.
54 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13 – 10 PM
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21 – 5 PM

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These two short documentaries (both made for French television) demonstrate Rosier’s abiding interest in the lives and careers of ordinary people, her keen eye for human foibles and her undergirding focus on gender inequality. Part of the series grands jours et jours ordinaires (big days and ordinary days), UN CAFE UN details a small coffee shop and bistro in Paris over the course of one long working day, carefully registering small moments (like one businessman’s very long gulp of his first beer, or a bored child soliciting the attention of the various old ladies who flock to the espresso counter on the regular.) With a sly nose-thumbing attitude for the tired rigors of documentary sociology, LA FEMME, L’HOMME sees the filmmaker asking women from a variety of personal backgrounds for their opinions on the future of femininity – anticipating the interviews with working-class women that formed the backbone of her second theatrical feature MON CŒUR EST ROUGE. Screening with brand new English subtitles translated by Natalia Espinoza. 



SMILE, YOU’RE HAPPY TODAY

(SOURIS, T’ES HEUREUX CE JOUR-LA)
dir. Michele Rosier, 1978
76 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21 – 3PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22 – 5 PM

screening with

SORAYA OF AUBERVILLIERS
(SORAYA A AUBERVILLIERS)
dir. Michele Rosier, 2004
50 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

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In 1978, Michèle Rosier filmed the marriage of Soraya and Pascal Alvarez in the working-class suburb of Aubervilliers – resulting in a humanist, warmly funny documentary surveying the the entire community and pageantry of the wedding. Thirty-six years later in SORAYA OF AUBERVILLIERS, she wanted to see how their marriage – and the city – had evolved. Screening with brand-new English subtitles translated by Djata Doumbouya.



AH! LA LIBIDO

dir. Michele Rosier, 2009
83 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3 – 10 PM
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14 – 3 PM

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Whether by intent or coincidence, Rosier’s final feature seems a French riff on Sex and the City, about a quartet of women, working for the newspaper Liberation, as they endure the ecstasies and tribulations of singledom (or not). The film culminates in a bizarre twist ending – after each of the group has hired a sex worker to spice up their dull dating life – and whereby one of them realizes she may be happier in a bad relationship with a middle-aged slimeball. Screening with brand-new English subtitles translated by Claudia Eve Beauchesne.


EMBRASSE-MOI
(HUG ME)
dir. Michèle Rosier, 1987
93 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 – 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 – 10 PM

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The first film shot by legendary cinematographer Darius Khondji (CITY OF LOST CHILDREN, SE7EN) and anchored by a heartbreaking performance by Sophie Rochut, EMBRASSE-MOI is a slice-of-life drama about Louise, an 12-year-old girl left to her own devices over the summer following her parents’ divorce. Her mother (Dominique Valadie) is a renowned concert pianist, anxious to begin a second life free of entanglements. Her father (Patrick Chesnais) is a workaholic industrialist, distracted to the point of denial about the collapse of his marriage. Rosier’s command of her cast is impossible to deny, as is the brave unsentimentality of EMBRASSE-MOI’s approach: Louise clocks her mother’s newer, younger lover in one brazen panning shot across his naked body. While Rosier denied any autobiographical interpretations of EMBRASSE-MOI, it’s hard not to read at least a kinship between Louie’s solitude and the filmmaker’s own relationship with her famous mother Hélène Gordon-Lazareff (founder of Elle) and stepfather Pierre Lazareff, who adopted Michèle as his own.


PULLMAN PARADIS
dir. Michèle Rosier, 1995
99 mins. France.
In French with English subtitles.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 – 10PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 – 7:30 PM

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A cross-section of tourists, Parisians and daytrippers board a Pullman bus on a 48-hour journey to Normandy; along the way they all become friends (or enemies) and fall prey to a mass burglary. A multi-character dramedy in the vein of Robert Altman, PULLMAN PARADIS again affords Rosier an opportunity to expose the contradictions (and the comedy) of postwar French society, without casting her participants into facile molds of good and evil. The result is a warmly compassionate, drolly hilarious depiction of multiple anxieties (class, race, etc) crisscrossing at once – and a revealing ensemble portrait.

“Traveling is not just going places, but meeting people, remarks a character in Michèle Rosier’s refreshing human comedy. The actors (who hail from the stage) make up a troupe that revels in repartee — it may not be Musset, but Rosier, who made a movie on George Sand, has a sense for sharp dialogue and the subtle pacts that spring up between strangers. So a kind of spell is cast on these mere mortals, shaken from their moorings, who quit their banality and take off from the big bus into another space, outward bound.” – Janet Dupont, The New York Times

DIGITAL NIGHTMARES OF DAMON PACKARD PT TWO


Continuing last month’s stellar run of Packard madness, we are pleased to bring you the ~NEW YORK PREMIERE~ of FATAL PULSE aka NIGHT PULSE aka UNTITLED YUPPIE FEAR THRILLER, along with a few choice older offerings.



FATAL PULSE
(aka NIGHT PULSE)
(aka UNTITLED YUPPIE FEAR THRILLER)
dir. Damon Packard, 2018
114 mins. United States.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 – 5 PM – Q&A via Skype with Damon Packard! (This event is $10.)
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 – 7:30 PM – Q&A via Skype with Damon Packard! (This event is $10.)
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS

A powerful corporate mogul advisor for President Bush is trapped in his own home by a deranged deadbeat roommate named Tobo, the brother of his wife, who is plotting to kill him and everyone else in the movie. Meanwhile, everyone else is plotting to kill everyone else.

A psychotic stew of late 80’s / early 90’s pop culture chaos, Packard’s four year in the making magnum opus defies easy description, imagining an alternate early 90’s hellscape where reality caves in on itself and time breaks down.

One of those rare movies that truly has to be experienced to be believed. Starring Major Entertainer, and featuring cameos* by Janet Jackson, Sade, Bono, Dick Cheney, William Friedkin, and many more!




FOXFUR
Dir. Damon Packard, 2012 / 1999
60 min / 7 min (67 min total), USA

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 – 5 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – 3 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS

A mentally unbalanced, oversensitive young girl obsessed with Billy Meier, the Pleiadians, crystals, dolphins, Richard C. Hoagland, David Icke and all manner of new age-isms rarely leaves her room due to her ability to see “the dead zone,” a living sentient energy which is the materialization of a time not meant to exist. When she is finally evicted after a shocking visit to the Bodhi Tree Bookstore (where David Icke is found working at the register after his reported disappearance) she wildly murders her landlady, ends up homeless and transforms into a female Robin Hood after donning a new set of donated wardrobe. She finds herself in Malibu Creek State Park in the year 1982 after a violent bus crash with Richard Hoagland and embarks on adventures beyond description.

Packard’s truncated sci-fi epic still packs more of a wallop on a per-minute-basis than any independent sci-fi feature you will ever see, diving headfirst into conspiracy theories, alternate dimensions, UFOs, chemtrails, new-age philosophy, and the occult – plus guest appearances by David Icke and Bob Ellis! It’s a fascinating, hilarious trip you won’t soon forget.

SCREENING WITH:

The Early 70’s Horror Trailer (1999)

Another fake-trailer for the ages – this one shorter and constrained to the early 70’s as the title suggests. Packard employs his encyclopedic knowledge of all things pop-culture-and-horror into another gleeful celebration of the movies, particularly schlocky horror movies.




SPACEDISCO ONE
Dir. Damon Packard, 2007 / 2009
45 min. United States.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS

A loose sequel to both LOGAN’S RUN and 1984, the official synopsis goes something like ‘Winston Smith runs into the daughters of Logan 5 and Francis 7’, but more accurately it plays like a long-trailer and making-of, in the best way possible.

Set in a roller-disco rink inside a space station, SPACEDISCO ONE blurs the line between documentary and fiction, satire and farce, the film ricocheting between fragments of scenes, dumping loads of plot between rants about chemtrails and how hard it is to make a movie with no resources from someone who looks to be a parody of Packard himself.

A love letter to sci-fi, movies and making movies.

SCREENING WITH:

TALES OF THE VALLEY OF THE WIND (2009)

A live-action tribute to Miyazaki made with little to no money, but per usual, what it lacks in budget it more than makes up for in charm and ingenuity. Packard avoids white washing and leans into the no-budget aesthetic, using actual stuffed animals as stand ins for Miyazaki’s creatures.

More a collection of scenes from Nausicaa than a cohesive narrative, fans of Miyazaki, Packard, either, or neither will find something to enjoy here.

NOVEMBER MIDNIGHTS



CARDS OF DEATH
Dir. Will MacMilan, 1986
94 mins. United States.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20 MIDNIGHT

A sort of cop-thriller-turned-horror film, CARDS OF DEATH follows a cop and two brothers as they try to track down the leaders of a murderous underground card game, in which masked players are forced to kill the loser or be killed themselves. When a cop on the case disappears, things get personal.

Shot on VHS, this accidental gialli ping pongs between the demented villains who run the card game (in what appears to be an empty warehouse with plastic bags + neon lights stuck to the walls) and the oafish cops trying to catch a lead. A truly out-there sleazy midnight gem.




NIGHTWISH
Dir. Bruce R. Cook, 1989

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9 – MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 – MIDNIGHT

A team of grad students studying lucid dream states in an attempt to die inside a dream without waking up (whoaaaa). As a final project, the lead research scientist drags the co-eds to a haunted house built on top of a former mine whose ‘magnetic waves’ will make their experiments easier to conduct (naturally), but the movie quickly unravels into a batshit maze of twists and turns.

Frequently referred to as a FLATLINERS ripoff despite coming out a few years prior, NIGHTWISH manages to be both dumber and more fun to watch than Schumacher’s (glorious) trainwreck.

Seances, mad scientists, zombies, aliens, booms-in-frame, glowing snakes – this movie has literally everything you could want in a genre flick and more.

Screening a brand new blu-ray remaster, courtesy of Unearthed Films.


MADMAN
Dir. Joe Giannone, 1981

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 – MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22 – MIDNIGHT

Gather round the campfire and hear the tale of Madman Marz, who legend says is summoned if you say his name too loud in his woods, says an old man to a group of teens who will absolutely yell his name into the woods Candyman-style first chance they get.

Alternately dreamy and goofy, creepy and hilarious, this-meat-and-potatoes slasher is way more fun and stylish than it has any right to be. Starring Gaylen Ross (DAWN OF THE DEAD, CREEPSHOW) and the goofy guy who sings the opening campfire shanty (Tony “Fish” Nunziata), and 6’5’’ behemoth Paul Ehlers as the titular MADMAN (fun fact: he was originally hired to design the poster art but was upgraded to Madman when the original actor dropped out).

Screening a new remaster from the original negative courtesy of Vinegar Syndrome.

SIGNS OF CHAOS: THE FILMS OF ROGERIO SGANZERLA

“I will never deliver clear ideas, eloquent speeches, or classically beautiful images when confronted with garbage, I will only reveal, through free sound and funereal rhythm, our own condition as ill-behaved, colonized people. Within the garbage can, one must be radical.” — Rogério Sganzerla

“Make films to occupy run down, low class theaters and be subsequently forgotten” — Rogério Sganzerla

Spectacle Theater is proud to present a near-complete retrospective of the films of Rogério Sganzerla, an independent master who challenged the institutionalized filmmaking of Brazil in the late Sixties to create a transgressive, intertextual, cinema of instability.  Sganzerla’s films which were a product of the Cinema Marginal movement (which also featured filmmakers like Ozualdo Candelas, Julio Bressane, & João Callegaro) are bold, dense, radical experiments that opposed the dogmatic aesthetics of Glauber Rocha’s Cinema Novo and shifted towards a new kind of cinematic liberation, one that was rich in atonality, dialectical reflection, and fragmented deconstruction.

Described as “a kind of cinematic writing in quotations”, Sganzerla’s films employ a reflexive depth and creative intuition that is likely unparalleled. Though miscast as “The Brazilian Godard” (La Monde, 2004), Sganzerla’s sense of cinema is uniquely his own. In reference to his dialectical approach to overcome modern cinema he explains he “had to film Godard in order to get rid of Godard.” In 2010, after a retrospective of his work was held at the BAFICI, Quintin – esteemed film critic and former head of the festival – referred to Sganzerla’s work as “much more important than Godard.” Canon aside, Sganzerla’s films perhaps have more to do with the theatricality of space and Artaud’s theatre of cruelty than with anything else in the history of cinema.

Part One of this two-part retrospective begins with 1968’s O BANDIDO DA LUZ VERMELHA (THE RED LIGHT BANDIT), made by Sganzerla at the age of 22 (three years younger than Orson Welles was when he made CITIZEN KANE), and which was manifested as an assemblage of genres ranging from the American B-picture to the surrealistic and parodical experiments of post-world War II. It had a profound impact on Brazilian filmmaking and became the quintessential film of the Cinema Marginal movement (alternatively labeled as the Cinema of Invention or the Cinema Udigrúdi – Rocha’s term, used almost mockingly, to bastardize the English word “underground”), which applauded films made with low-budgets and technical imperfections. Shooting on location in the Boca do Lixo (translated literally as “Mouth of the Garbage”, in downtown São Paulo),  Sganzerla exposed reality for all of its cruelties with his expansive discursive collage that was self-described as “a Western of the third world.”

Sganzerla followed up his well-received debut with 1969’s A MULHER DE TODOS (THE WOMAN OF EVERYONE), which will be featured in Part Two of the retrospective and stars Helena Ignez, his partner and muse, who plays, in the director’s own words, “the number one enemy of men.” It is an absurdist first-rate comedy that “undoubtedly reveals, without false modesty, the greatest work of a Brazilian cinema actress.”

Then in 1970, when censorship was high and the military dictatorship was getting stronger in Brazil, Sganzerla united with Julio Bressane to form Belair films in Rio. It was there that they made seven films in the span of three months. Acting as anti-cultural activists they produced three of Sganzerla’s most daring films (one of them forever lost to history, CARNAVAL NA LAMA) further blurring the line between art and reality, exploiting a caustic humor that literally explodes on the screen, breaking free from clear psychological or anthropological categorization. COPACABANA MON AMOUR (1970)  and SEM ESSA ARANHA (NO WAY, SPIDER, 1970) represent cinema as the “art of the present” with a deeply rooted internal structure and logic that exists on its own defiant terms. These deconstructive masterpieces turned the camera to the Favelas, usually in a series of long takes which stimulate visual contemplation over time while actors dip in and out of frame repeating the same words over and over again until the words become meaningless or inversely create new meanings from language itself. These radical polemical works are chaotic and contradictory and reveal a political horror that is both messy and awe-inspiring in their execution.

After the disbandment of Belair, Sganzerla and Ignez travelled through Europe and North Africa, working in exile and making short experimental works, some of which were completed while others were left abandoned. It was during this time that their daughters Sinai & Djin were born, both of whom would have a profound impact on preserving Sganzerla’s archive. In fact, Sinai Sganzerla’s most recent short EXTRATOS (2019) will be presented in Part Two of the retrospective, featuring images from the short documentary FORA DO BARALHO, shot in the Sahara desert and left unfinished in 1971.

It was also in the Seventies where Sganzerla developed a deep fascination with Jimi Hendrix, who he declared “America’s number one genius”. He began filming Hendrix in 1970 at the Isle of Wight Festival and a few years later in 1977, he would dedicate an entire film to him. O ABISMO (Or ABISMU) served as a return to feature-film making for Sganzerla. It is a film about “the abyss”, or an endless search for the infinite. Fusing archetypes, spaces (both past and present), cryptograms, treasure maps, symbols, phrases, ideograms, experimental imagery, and most spectacularly, Jimi Hendrix, all coalesced into a structuralist mind-fuck that is both mythical and enigmatic.

In part two of the retrospective we will feature NEM TUDO E VERDADE (IT’S NOT ALL TRUE, 1985) – the first of four films made by Sganzerla about Orson Welles’ Pan-American trip to Brazil told through an amalgam of archival images, re-enactments, interviews, faux documentary, pastiche, and film essay. The title is a pun on Orson Welles’ unfinished film IT’S ALL TRUE, filmed during his stint in Brazil in 1941. We will show the complete tetralogy of films which includes a short-length Eisenstienian montage film A LINGUAGEM DE ORSON WELLES (THE LANGUAGE OF ORSON WELLES, 1990), the follow up feature, TUDO E BRASIL (ALL IS BRAZIL, 1998) and Sganzerla’s closing thoughts on the matter – which also marked his final film – SIGNS OF CHAOS (2003). It it is through these fascinating documents that we begin to understand not only Sganzerla’s obsession with Welles and his great experimentalism, but the harsh reality of Brazilian politics and the forces of suppression.

Lastly we will feature the short and medium-length works of Rogério Sganzerla which possess relentless experimental energy, innovative image-play, and spectacular uses of montage. These films are just as important as the features. We will be playing his debut short, DOCUMENTARIO (1966) which follows two teens who are looking to see a movie, HQ (1969), a unique collaboration with Brazilian journalist Álvaro de Moya on the history of comics, ISTO é NOEL ROSA (1980), an imaginative medium-length film devoted to the tragic samba musician Noel Rosa, PERIGO NEGRO (1992) produced with a script by Brazilian polemicist Oswald De Adrade, and a special tribute film entitled BRASIL (1981) which has João Gilberto, Caetano Veloso, Gil Gilberto, & Maria Bethania making the aforementioned record in a recording studio.

Rogério Sganzerla’s cinema is one that demands to be seen in order to be experienced.

“Those with shoes will not survive!” 

Long live Brazil and long live Rogério Sganzerla’s cinema of instability.




THE RED LIGHT BANDIT
(O BANDIDO DE LUZ VERMELHA)
dir. Rogerio Sganzerla, 1968
92 mins. Brazil.
In Brazilian Portuguese with English subtitles.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 – 10 PM with introduction from film critic Pablo Gonçalo!
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17 – 7:30 PM

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“My film is a western about the Third World. That is to say, a fusion and blending of various genres…a western, but also a musical, a documentary, a cop film, a comedy (Or is it slapstick?), and science fiction. It has documentary honesty (Rossellini), the violence of a cop film (Fuller), the anarchic pace of a western (Sennett, Keaton), and the brutal simplification of conflict (Mann).” – Rogério Sganzerla

“Who are we?”

THE RED LIGHT BANDIT stars Paulo Villaça as the crude and existential bandit on the loose in downtown Sao Paolo’s, Boca do Lixo. Sganzerla refers to the bandit as a repressive “political character… an impotent rebel”; who speaks in revolutionary rhetoric and torments society into mass delirium. This is a revolutionary film and by some accounts, one of the greatest Brazilian films ever made.




COPACABANA MON AMOUR
dir. Rogerio Sganzerla, 1970
85 mins. Brazil.
In Brazilian Portuguese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 – 7:30 PM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6 – 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21 – 10 PM

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“First kill your ego then come with me.” – Rogério Sganzerla

“Hunger, Thirst, Dance.”

COPACABANA MON AMOUR follows Sonia Silk, a sex worker troubled by visions and spirits, who walks around Copacabana dreaming of being a big-time radio singer. The first Brazilian film shot in Cinemascope (or “Stranglescope”, as the film puts it), COPACABANA MON AMOUR points its lens (as if shooting the south of France in the summertime) towards the favelas of Rio where reality crumbles right before your eyes.




O ABISMO
(THE ABYSS)
dir. Rogério Sganzerla, 1977
80 mins, Brazil
In Portuguese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 – 3:30 PM
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7 – 7:30 PM
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 – 7:30 PM

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“Jimi Hendrix is a thinker and to him I dedicate all my travelings, panoramic and fixed plans. With him I discovered the need to say everything at once no matter what.” – Rogério Sganzerla

“What I wanted was to destroy my ego…”

O ABISIMO is a sensory mind-trip that forges a dialog between the music of Jimi Hendrix, the land of Fusangs, the power of MU, and the story of an Egyptologist, who is searching for an ancient emblem while being pursued by a woman named Madame Zero (Norma Bengell). The film also features director José Mojica Marins as the professor, Ze Bonitinho as some-sort of deconstructive archetype, Edison Machado (Bossa Nova legend) as a drummer who plays loud and intermittently, & Wilson Gray – who shoots a gun in the middle of nowhere while making references to Edgar Allen Poe. O ABISIMU is possibly Sganzerla’s freest film.




THE SHORT FILMS OF ROGERIO SGANZERLA: PROGRAM ONE
dir. Rogério Sganzerla, 1966-1992
110 mins. Brazil.
In Brazilian Portuguese with English subtitles.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 – 10 PM
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11 – 10 PM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20 – 10 PM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 – 10 PM

ONLINE TICKETS        FACEBOOK EVENT

DOCUMENTARIO
1966. 10 mins.
Featuring cinematography by Andrea Tonacci, Sganzerla’s debut short-film follows two teens walking around, killing time, and talking about movies.

HQ
1969. 10 mins.
A unique collaboration with Álvaro de Moya (who is considered to be the foremost Brazilian expert on comic books) on the history of the comic.

BRASIL
1981. 13 mins.
João Gilberto receives Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil and Maria Bethania during the recording of his legendary album Brasil.

ISTO E NOEL ROSA
1990. 47 mins.
A fascinating collage filled with animation, reenactment, montage, and samba dedicated to the tragic Brazilian musician, Noel Rosa.

PERIGO NEGRO
1992. 29 mins.
A bitter comedy based off the only screenplay left by the great Oswald de Andrade which follows the career of a rising soccer player in Rio.

MATCH CUTS PRESENTS: Y2K STALKERS – FEAR


FEAR
dir. James Foley, 1996.
USA, 97 min.
English.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20th
ONE NIGHT ONLY

MATCH CUTS PRESENTS closes out the year (and their three-year [!] Spectacle run) with a series titled Y2K STALKERS, taking place October thru December. Presented in reverse chronological order, the series looks at, well, stalker movies before and after the year 2000 (aka Y2K). First up is 2002’s SWIMFAN, followed by FEAR in November, and finally THE CRUSH in December.

“When Nicole (Reese Witherspoon) met David (Mark Wahlberg); handsome, charming, affectionate, he was everything. It seemed perfect, but soon she sees that David (Mark Wahlberg) has a darker side. And his adoration turns to obsession, their dream into a nightmare, and her love into fear.” – IMDB

MATCH CUTS is a weekly podcast centered on video, film and the moving image. Match Cuts Presents is dedicated to presenting de-colonialized cinema, LGBTQI films, Marxist diatribes, video art, dance films, sex films, and activist documentaries with a rotating cast of presenters from all spectrums of the performing and plastic arts and surrounding humanities. Match Cuts is hosted by Nick Faust and Kachine Moore.

BAPHTA: M. NIGHT SHYAMALAN

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24 – 7:30 PM
ONE NIGHT ONLY!

BAPHTA is a bi-monthly multimedia comedy show that celebrates legendary film directors with monologues, characters, and short videos. Special guests are invited to put their spin on these visionaries of the seventh art.

This month’s installment focuses on the enigmatic writer/director M. Night Shyamalan (The Sixth Sense, Signs, Unbreakable, Stuart Little)

Join BAPHTA as we explore the nuances of M. Night’s films. There will be spooks, capes, capers, a touch of the supernatural, Bruce Willis, and a surprise twist ending!

This month we welcome:

Lucy Augustine (The Ravishing of Lol Stein)

Spike Einbinder (Los Espookys on HBO)

Hayden Maxwell (Only the Best for Hayden Maxwell)

Devon Walker (Comedy Central)

Our October installment will focus on the enigmatic writer/director M. Night Shyamalan (THE SIXTH SENSE, SIGNS, UNBREAKABLE, STUART LITTLE).  We will dive deep into Shymalan’s body of work and will definitively decide whether he is the reigning master of suspense and supernatural or merely a charlatan.

Join us as we bring the sleepy suburbs of Philadelphia to Brooklyn for one night only. There will be spooks, capes, capers, a touch of the supernatural, Bruce Willis, and a surprise twist ending!

THE 9TH ANNUAL SPECTACLE SHRIEK SHOW

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 – ONE DAY ONLY
ONLINE TICKETS        FACEBOOK EVENT

In numerology, the number 9 represents wisdom and responsibility and here at Spectacle we take our responsibilities very seriously. As such – this year, in our infinite wisdom, we are pleased as punch to offer up a trick-or-treat’s pillowcase lineup so chock full of goodies, so dense, so decadent – you’re bound to get a mouthful of cavities. Nine years of marathons culminate this year with seven screenings (plus featured shorts!), twelve(ish) hours, and zero survivors!

As always, tickets are $25 for the full day or $5 per film.

NOON: THE PHANTOM CARRIAGE (w/ score by Stephanie Neptune)
1:30: ALISON’S BIRTHDAY
3:00: PREMONITION
5:00: LUKAS’ CHILD
7:30: GRANDMOTHER’S HOUSE
10:00: NIGHTMARES IN A DAMAGED BRAIN
MIDNIGHT: VAMPIRE HOOKERS


THE PHANTOM CARRIAGE
dir. Victor Sjöström, 1921
107 mins. Sweden.
Silent w/ a new score by Stephanie Neptune.

On New Years Eve a dying Salvation Army Sister named Edit has one humble request, to speak to a man named David Holt for a final time. David, a graveyard drunkard, wiles away the hours telling stories he heard from his friend Georges, who had died the year before. David weaves a tale of a carriage helmed by the last person to die each year who is then tasked with roaming the countryside ferrying the souls of the departed for the following year until the torch is passed. When a colleague finds him and tries to take him to the dying woman a fight breaks out and David struck over the head just as the clock strikes 12. David arises to find the carriage in front of him driven by his deceased friend Georges who takes him on a tour of his life showing him those he hurt or abandoned.

A technological marvel in the early 20’s that still looks incredible almost 100 years later, THE PHANTOM CARRIAGE makes expert use effects wizardry by renowned cinematographer Julius Jaenzon. This years marathon festivities kick off with this classic film wrapped in an all new score from Stephanie Neptune (Sweat Equity).

ALISON’S BIRTHDAY
dir. Ian Coughlin. 1981.
97 min. Australia.
In Australian.

While fooling around with a Ouija board with some friends on her 16th birthday, Alison’s receives some cryptic advice. Speaking in Alison’s dead father’s voice, her possessed friend Crissy tells Alison she has to get away from “them” before her 19th birthday just before a bookcase falls on Crissy and kills her. Flash forward a few years later and Alison is about to turn 19 when her “aunt and uncle” invite her to their country home for birthday celebrations. In an effort to move the plot along, Alison agrees despite all signs pointing to this being exactly what the ghost of her father was talking about (RIP Crissy). Rounding out the mix of colorful characters that you can tell are “definitely not a cult” is Alison’s 104 year old great grandmother who wants to transfer her spirit from the withered husk where it currently resides to a fresh-faced youth. Alison’s friends manage to piece this together but can they get there in time to stop the ceremony??

A nod to Satanic Panic films (maybe a dingo ate Rosemary’s Baby) like THE OMEN with a tense atmosphere, ALISON’S BIRTHDAY is sure to get your cloven hooves stomping. Fans of ENTER THE DEVIL, BLACK CANDLES, and Inside No. 9’s show-stopping Series 1 finale “The Harrowing” take note – this one is for you, it’s all for you!


PREMONITION
(aka HEAD)
dir. Alan Rudolph. 1972.
83 min. United States.
In English.

A heady group of musicians set up camp outside of town in sunny California. There they smoke dope, play some jams, and experiment with a strange red flower they found growing on some nearby indigenous territory that causes strange hallucinations. These experiments lead to vivid nightmares where they foresee their own deaths and things get even weirder when these nightmares begin to bleed into reality.

Alan Rudolph’s first feature coming out of a stint as assistant director on a bunch of episodes of “The Brady Bunch.” This film (along with his follow up, 1974’s TERROR CIRCUS aka BARN OF THE NAKED DEAD) were the only horror entries in the directors long list of films. A gauzy slow burn about the perils of addiction with a soundtrack featuring flourishes from then little-known electronic artist Harold Budd, PREMONITION is the perfect chaser to 2019’s psilocybin-soaked full-sun freakout – MIDSOMMAR.


LUKAS’ CHILD

(aka NIGHT OF THE BEAST)
dir. Eric Louzil. 1993.
92 min. United States.
In English.

Special thanks to director Eric Louzil and Echelon Studios!

Lured by the limelights of Tinseltown (Hollywood) a cavalcade of wannabe starlets are kidnapped by a cult helmed by the nefarious Lukas Armand who want to sacrifice them to his “child.” After being baited with fake auditions the woman are locked in his makeshift prison and left to await their grisly fate. Luckily, detectives Steve Anderson and Susan Wesley are on the case. Can they penetrate the cults lair and get the babes out before the child must feed again?

The blood-sacrifices-and-cult-action train keeps on chugging along with a quick pitstop into Fredrick’s of Hollywood for our fourth film of the day. Day-glo undergarments and Satanic go-go dancing abound as Eric Louzil’s early-90’s sect-ual slasher ramp things up for the second half of our day.

GRANDMOTHER’S HOUSE
dir. Peter Rader. 1988.
90 min. United States.
In English.

Special thanks to producer Nico Mastorakis!

After the death of their beloved father, Lynn (Kim Valentine, Mr. Belvedere / Family Matters) and her younger brother David (Eric Foster, The Wonder Years / CRY WILDERNESS) are sent to live with their grandparents. At first everything seems quaint enough but soon after they arrive David begins having vivid and troubling dreams that his grandparents are up to no good. It seems this normal family may have some (literal) skeletons in the closet…

A tense, oddball thriller that feels like a made-for-TV-movie (in the best possible way), everything about GRANDMOTHER’S HOUSE is slightly askew. Great performances by Len Lesser as Grandather (best known as Uncle Leo in Seinfeld) and a surprise pop-up from Scream Queen Brinke Stevens (NIGHTMARE SISTERS) remind viewers that you can travel the wild world over but home is indeed where the heart is.

NIGHTMARES IN A DAMAGED BRAIN
(aka NIGHTMARE)
dir. Roberto Scavolini. 1981.
97 min. United States.
In English.

Special thanks to David Ginn & Jim Markovic at Films Around The World!

A mental patient named George Tatum (played by a turned-up-to-11 Baird Stafford) is on the loose and fueled by nightmares of his childhood trauma and an unstoppable bloodlust George leaves a trail bodies in his wake on a coastline rampage with his former doctor and investigators hot on his tail. Meanwhile down in Florida, single mom Susan Temper has her hands full with one of her brood. Young CJ is a menace – acting out, pulling pranks on his siblings, and generally causing his poor mother to tear her hair out. Susan gets a night out of the house for a date leaving her kids with a babysitter. Things go from bad to worse on the homefront as creepy phone calls escalate into a home invasion and a devastating ending that has to be seen to be believed.

A pitch-perfect, bloodcurdling hellscape – NIGHTMARES IN A DAMAGED BRAIN is nothing short of astonishing with wonderful camerawork and some incredible effects. Not to be missed!

VAMPIRE HOOKERS
dir. Cirio H. Santiago. 1978.
82 min. Philippines/United States.
In English.

Special thanks to Joe Rubin and the fine folks at AGFA.

Two horndog sailors (Bruce Fairbairn of “LA Law” and Trey Wilson of RAISING ARIZONA) are on shore leave in the Philippines and looking to bone down when they run into one Richmond Reed (John Carradine) and a bevy of bodacious bloodsuckers who take the duo out on the town. They go out for Bloody Mary’s, have a few laughs, and try to get everything other than their blood sucked.

Director Santiago (director of EBONY, IVORY AND JADE, and producer of last year’s marathon entry THE BLOOD DRINKERS) really lets this cast sink their teeth into this film. A phenomenal theme song, hambone antics, some unsurprisingly un-woke jokes, and plenty of farts slam the casket on another years festivities.

BURNING FRAME: A Monthly Anarchist Film Series

CALLING ALL LEFTISTS! The past few years have been a whirlwind: exhausting, invigorating, and ripe with potential. It’s tremendously difficult, when in the thick of it, to pause, reflect, or even find a moment to catch a breath. Especially when “it” refers to the rise of fascism on a global scale, with any number of future cataclysms hovering just over the horizon. But we digress.

Join us, then, for a series that asks: if not now, when? Come for great works of radical political filmmaking, stay for the generative discussions, or even just to gossip and gripe. The hope isthat this forum for authentic representations of successes, defeats, and the messy work of political action, will be thrilling, edifying, and maybe even inspire your next organizing project. To butcher the title of a great film for the sake of a moderately applicable pun: “Throw away your dogma, rally in the cinema.”

SOVIET PROPAGANDA: ANIMATED SHORTS
Dir. Dziga Vertov, et al., 1924–55
USSR. 85 min

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 – 7:30 PM

ONLINE TICKETS       FACEBOOK EVENT

“From 1924 to perestroika the USSR produced 41 animated propaganda films. Their target was the new nation and their goal was to win over the hearts and minds of the Soviet people. Anti-American, Anti-British, Anti-German, Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Fascist, some of these films are as artistically beautiful as the great political posters made after the 1917 revolution which inspired Soviet animation… The films feature some astounding animation techniques from stop-motion to paper cutout animation to impressively intricate puppetry. Includes interviews with the directors and commentary by the leading Soviet film scholars.”

“The animated film was another weapon in the Totalitarian war of ideas. In a Soviet Union where over a hundred languages were spoken, moving pictures communicated ideas better than words. Animated cartoons were also ideal to teach small children. The influential power of film is undisputed, even here.”

Text by Glenn Erickson