|
TAMALA 2010: A PUNK CAT IN SPACE
D. ToL Japan 2002 92min. 35mm
View Trailer
Buy Trailer
"a baffling
and exhilarating piece of art-damaged anime...looks like
Hello Kitty and acts like Harmony
Korine" (Jason Anderson, Eye Weekly)
"It's the year 2010 on the planet of cats, wherein
lies Meguro City, a megalopolis entirely controlled by the
super-corporation Catty & Co. The nefarious influence
of this corporate empire extends malignantly across the feline
galaxy. Tamala, a carefree, one-year-old kitten, decides
to flee this cruel reality and boards her spaceship in search
of her planet of origin. On the way, however, an outer-space
accident leaves her on the barbaric planet Q, a world where
cats and dogs have been at war for longer than any can remember.
There, she encounters a multitude of bizarre characters,
some friendly, some most decidedly not. Strange events transpire
during her stay on Q and a mysterious, ancient conspiracy
with supernatural overtones starts to reveal itself. What
is the cryptic relationship between sweet little Tamala and
the corporate juggernaut Catty & Co.?"
(Mylene Cabana
et Francis Theberge)
What upon first glance seems a typical Japanese paean to
cuteness soon reveals itself to be a dark, biting satire
that leaves no cultural stone unturned. Conceptually rich
and wild, symbolically and iconographically dense, shamelessly
perverse and violent, Tamala 2010 is like no animated film
you've ever seen. We learn many of the same things we learn
in other films - cops can't be trusted, old men will ramble
on forever if you let them, corporations are conspiring against
you, everyone's a whore for something, and only cats truly
understand the order of the universe. But it's all in the
telling. And Tamala tells it with a lot of oddly-placed expletives
and a shitload of style. (Kier-La Janisse)
PRECEDED BY:
KRISTY
D. Stephanie Gray USA 2003 6min.
It's 1980: you're a kid with a tragic crush on Kristy McNichol
and parents who know better than to let you anywhere near
Little Darlings. Cut to just a couple years later, when cablevision
and that chain-smoking, Toni Basil-cranking babysitter who
always disappears with her boyfriend join forces to make
the long-fantasized screening a reality. The plot confuses,
the R-rating disappoints, and Tatum O'Neal brays, but the
True Icon delivers.
RICK TREMBLES' GOOPY SPASMS LIVE CARTOON SHOW
D. Rick Trembles Canada 2004 9min. DVD
In a bracingly honest, revealing, revolting and hilarious monologue,
Montreal comic artist Rick Trembles (creator of Motion Picture
Purgatory) spills the beans on his sexual peccadilloes, touching
on masturbation, crossdressing, coprophagia and pretty much
every cavity, protrusion and fluid the human body has to offer.
Goopy Spasms blends animation and live action to adapt Trembles'slideshow
performance of the same name, itself adapted from his early
How Did I Get So Anal? comic strip -- a forerunner of the reflexive
autobiographical movement in comics that sprang up in the late
'80s. The music in Goopy Spasms comes care of Montreal's One
Two Three Go! And Trembles' own band American Devices. (Rupert
Bottenberg)
SATAN'S LITTLE
HELPER
D. Jeff Lieberman U.S.A. 2004 99 min
JEFF LIEBERMAN IN PERSON!
JEFF WILL JUDGE A COSTUME CONTEST BEFORE THE FILM!
View Trailer
Buy Tickets
ay this for Jeff Lieberman: He hasn't mellowed with age. If it's hard to
believe that he hasn't directed a genre feature in the over two decades since
JUST BEFORE DAWN, his new SATAN'S LITTLE HELPER doesn't feel at all like the
work of someone with 30 years in the movie business -- and I mean that in a
good way. It plays like a movie made by an upstart young newcomer anxious to
show off his rebellious, anti-politically correct streak, and the result is
the first film I've seen in a while that seems tailor-made for the midnight
circuit, without the pandering that afflicts so many wannabe cult movies. Among
other things, SATAN'S LITTLE HELPER is the most original Halloween-themed horror
film to emerge since the ill-fated, underrated HALLOWEEN III: SEASON OF THE
WITCH; like that movie, HELPER incorporates a dark satire of mass media and
has no compunctions about involving children in the mayhem. In this case, the
focus is on a little boy named Douglas (Alexander Brickel), who is obsessed
with the titular video game, and plans to dress up as its title character on
Halloween night. And who should he encounter near his suburban New England
home as the evening approaches but Satan himself -- or rather, a hulking killer
(Joshua Annex) wearing a grinning devil mask. Douglas, who'd like nothing more
than to punish Alex (Stephen Graham), the new boyfriend who has accompanied
his college-age sister Jenna (the appealing and flat-out gorgeous Katheryn
Winnick) home for the holiday, appoints himself as the murderer's right-hand
kid, not realizing that the mayhem that ensues isn't part of a game come to
life. Lieberman posits Halloween as a night when a celebration of the darker
impulses can erupt into real terror, with the Satan Man (as he's called in
the credits) an even more explicit embodiment of the bogeyman than HALLOWEEN's
Michael Myers. There's no escape-from-the-asylum prologue, or a Donald Pleasence
type around to deliver exposition about e-vil; the Satan Man simply turns up,
first seen by us at the same time Douglas initially spots him, dragging a body
out of a house. It's as if he's an embodiment of the spirit of Halloween itself,
a ghastly celebrant whose idea of a prank is to spike a party's punch with
drain cleaner, and run down babies and blind folks with indiscriminate glee.
It's perhaps no surprise that SATAN'S LITTLE HELPER feels more like a product
of the confrontational '70s than a typical modern genre piece. It's good to
have him back, and one can only hope it won't be such a long wait for his next
horror exercise.
(Mike Gingold, Fangoria)
PRECEDED BY:
YOU'RE INVITED and (e) (p) (m)
D. Josh Richmond Canada 2004 approx. 8min total DVD
When my roommate of ten years ago emailed me out of the blue
claiming to have shot some films for my festival, my first
thought was, since when does Josh make movies? A career engineer
who makes robots for a living and the first guy I ever knew
who liked Stereolab, Josh was as unlikely a candidate as
any for horror film director. Imagine my surprise when his
two short films turned out to be my favorites of all those
submitted! Grotesque and meticulous with tongue planted firmly
in cheek, Josh's films could see him on a new career path
in no time flat...
(Kier-La Janisse)
EXPLOITATION ALL-NIGHTER!
ONE TICKET PRICE ($10, $14 with breakfast) FOR A WHOLE EYE-OPENING NIGHT OF CINEMATIC
MADNESS!
(Latecomers
welcome - tickets $5 after 2:30am)
See Ticket Details
ROJO SANGRE
Director Christian Molina in Attendance
Spain 2004 90min. 35mm subtitled
View Trailer
Buy Tickets
Spanish horror icon Paul Naschy (born Jacinto Molina) proves
he is still a powerhouse acting talent in Christian (no relation)
Molina's feature debut about a veteran actor who is driven
to desperate measures when faced with a fickle industry that
sees him as obsolete. Pablo Thevenet was once the Marlon
Brando of Spanish cinema. With hundreds of films and plays
under his belt, he is nevertheless faced with mockery by
a new generation of spoiled young directors and talentless
actors whose belligerence reaffirms daily his assertions
that the Spanish film industry has gone to pot. When he finally
gets a degrading job as a 'living statue' outside an S&M
nightclub, he loses his mind, sells his soul to the Devil
and goes on a murderous rampage disguised as the various
villains he portrayed throughout his career. If this story
sounds naggingly familiar to fans of Naschy's career, that's
because it should be: the story is largely autobiographical.
Often called the Spanish Lon Chaney, Paul Naschy has had
a long and enduring career in cinema since first appearing
as an extra in Nicolas Ray's KING OF KINGS (1960). His work
in the fantastic genre began in 1968 with LA MARCA DEL HOMBRE
LOBO (AKA FRANKENSTEIN'S BLOODY TERROR), a film he not only
starred in, but scripted. Thereafter, Naschy portrayed several
classic monsters of the screen-- Count Dracula, Mr. Hyde,
the mummy, the hunchback -- as well as a host of villains
real and imagined. His most popular characterization is the
wolfman Waldemar Daninsky. The Daninsky series comprises
ten completed films, the last being LICANTROPO in 1996. His
autobiography, Memoirs of a Wolfman, is truly heartbreaking.
Written a good ten years before his recent revival in the
Spanish horror scene, the book's closing chapter sees him
dejected and bitter, and insisting that his entire film career
had been a mistake. It's true that Naschy has never gotten
the respect he deserved, either as an actor, writer or director,
but to sum up his career as worthless is a baffling and sad
miscalculation. Naschy is one of the greatest actors the
genre has ever known, and with Rojo Sangre, North American
audiences finally have the chance to hear him speaking with
his own voice.
Guest Bio: Christian Molina
When an injury forced him into early retirement from his
career as a professional tennis player, Christian Molina
enrolled in film school and has been active in the Spanish
industry ever since. Along with Marivi de Villanueva,
his producing partner on the slasher film School Killer,
Molina is head of Canonigo Films of Barcelona. He previously
worked in the camera department on the acclaimed Spanish
films as Airbag and Memoirs of the Fallen Angel,
and has directed numerous television commercials. Rojo
Sangre is his feature directorial debut.
PRECEDED BY:
UNWELCOME
D. Gentry Smith USA 2004 Beta SP 14min.
Unwelcome is the story of a young painter who moves into a haunted house. The
evil presence won't leave her in peace, but she can't afford to move. Her only
choice is to exorcise the ghost by avenging his murder. Or so she thinks...
ONE MISSED CALL
D. Takashi Miike 2003 112min.
A group of Japanese college kids are out for a night on the town. All seems well
until Yoko's cel rings with an unfamiliar tone. Unable to answer in time, she
checks it to find the readout "one missed call"-from her own phone,
three days in the future. More disturbing is the message: the sound of her own
screams! No big deal is made of the matter, until three days later, when, at
the exact time of the call, Yoko plunges to her death from a bridge.
Things get scarier when Kenji gets a similar call. Three
days after, he too is dead. Then it's Natsumi who gets the
call, except this time it's worse. Her phone's video display
shows her turning to see an ominous figure creeping around
a corner, behind her. Natsumi's scared witless and, as word
of the curses have spread and broadcasters jump on the chance
of a live, on-air exorcism, Natsumi agrees to go on TV at
the appointed hour. Meanwhile, Yumi, a companion of all the
victims, summons up the courage to delve into the terrifying
mystery and find out who-or what-is killing her friends.
One Missed Call brings together two of the hottest things
happening in Asian cinema -- renegade director Takashi Miike
and the post-millennial horror wave, best exemplified by
The Eye and of course the massively-influential Ring cycle.
The hallmarks of this new horror scene are a tragic Asian
gothic, filled with eerie ghosts and subtle chills, and the
modern technology these dreaded spirits are all too ready
to use. This is all putty in the hands of the hyper-productive
and entirely unpredictable Miike, known for his vicious yakuza
flicks, his stunningly cruel thrillers (Audition, Visitor
Q) and his ultra-violent, manga-style movies (the Dead or
Alive trilogy, Ichi the Killer). Miike handles this latest
move masterfully, bringing to Asian horror-fantasy his stylish
originality, his clever wit and philosophical bit and, naturally,
his bursts of shocking cruelty. (Rupert Bottenberg)
PRECEDED BY:
THE CLEARING (icon - moi?)
D. Dandi Wind Canada 2004 3:41min. DVD
A gorgeous stop-motion piece in the dark vein of the Brothers Quay, Vancouver
east-side Industrial/Performance set Dandi Wind's latest animated piece is a
haunting ode to degeneration and rebirth.
POOR PRETTY EDDIE
D. Richard Robinson USA 1973 92 min. 35mm Rated R
"Best described as Genet's The Balcony as filtered through
the warped narcissism of a third-rate Elvis impersonator." (Sleazoid
Express)
Variously released as Black Vengeance, Redneck County Rape
and Heartbreak Hotel, Poor Pretty Eddie is a curious entry
into the rape-revenge cycle that was rampant in the 70s.
Populated by legit actors like Leslie Uggams, Shelley Winters
and Slim Pickens (although the credit is conspicuously absent
from Uggam's website) and support by powerhouse character
players Ted Cassidy (Lurch) and Dub Taylor (a man who listed "prairie
scum" as his occupation on IRS forms), Poor Pretty Eddie
remains one of the most nightmarish examples of backwoods
horror in the exploitation film canon.
When a famous black singer's car breaks down in nowheresville
USA, she attracts the unwanted attentions of Eddie (Michael
Christian), a psycho Elvis-wannabe who makes his living 'performing'
(in various capacities) for the aging Shelley Winters. Winters
runs a motel -- "a demented hillbilly stronghold" (Sleazoid
Express) -- and keeps the much-younger (and did I say psychotic?)
Eddie by her side with flattery and the promise of financial
stability. But Eddie sees Uggams as his way out. And she's
going to be his girl whether she likes it or not. After being
knocked about and raped (I never thought I'd say this, but
the rape scene in this film is one of the most stunning sequences
you'll ever see), Uggams goes to the local authorities for
help. A bad move, since they're dim-witted good 'ol boys
who see her as nothing more than fresh dark meat. The seething
sexual repression in this town about to explode - and manifests
itself as misplaced race-hate. Financed by homicidal porn
mogul Mike Thevis and warped even by 42nd Street standards,
Poor Pretty Eddie is nevertheless elevated to high art by
the masterful editing of frequent Donald (Performance) Cammell
collaborator Frank Mazzola.
(Kier-La Janisse)
PRECEDED BY:
EXPERIMENT: 17
D. Matt O. Canada 2004 17min. DVD
Matt O's ode to the contemporary horror fan's plight is both twisted and enlightening
-- and host to a few surprises. A guide for the neophyte: There are 4 kind of
horror fans: 1)Weekend horror fans who buy every new edition of Zombie and Dawn
of the Dead but rarely venture beyond the classics; 2)Rabid fan-boys who collect
every DVD that comes out, pour over the commentaries and annoy you with their
competitiveness; 3) the real collectors who only mail-order and lose interest
in something as soon as it becomes domestically available; and 4) People who
think they're horror fans but consider snuff films to be the real Holy Grail.
Experiment: 17 acknowledges the different levels of horror fandom while self-reflexively
questioning the ethics involved in obsessively seeking the ultimate in cinematic
gore. Protagonist Tom is an unemployed horror junkie who mail-orders a tape from
an unidentified PO Box only to discover -- to his horror -- that it may be a
bona fide snuff film. His friend (type #2) thinks he's deluded and waxes poetic
about the scarcity of real snuff films, but Tom is convinced...and now he's scared...
(Kier-La
Janisse)
VIDCANADA presents
LADY TERMINATOR
D. Jalil Jackson 1988 82 min. 35mm
View Trailer
Buy Tickets
"Quite simply the greatest, most over the top exploitation
film ever made." (Mondo Macabro)
Who's in the mood for
an atrociously dubbed Indonesian ripoff of overblown American
action movies? Lady Terminator is an
awful awful movie. Truly stunning. But it may also be the
funniest movie of its kind ever made. If you're reading this
you've probably seen your share of "bad movies".
And if you're honest with yourself you'll have to admit that
most movies touted as "so bad it's good" are just
plain bad. But Lady Terminator is a kind of bad movie "perfect
storm". All the requisite elements cohere into an impossibly
sublime souflee of good/badness that has few if any peers
in all of moviedom.
The plotline straddles eastern and western myths of violent
retribution as an ancient myth about a south sea goddess
of destruction moves into the modern
era. The spirit of the goddess (a kind of variant of the Indian Kali) possesses
a vapid bikini-clad "anthropologist" who dares to trespass on her
undersea sanctuary. The method in which the goddess takes possession of her
unsuspecting victim (a luminescent sea snake magically penetrates her vagina)
gives viewers a pretty clear tip-off that Lady Terminator is not like other
movies, despite the film-makers' flailing attempts to make a highly commercial
movie for worldwide consumption. It's patently clear that director Jalil Jackson
was trying to follow Hollywood action formulas to a 'T'. The effects are downright
deconstructive. Thus part of the fun of watching Lady Terminator is the giddy
thrill of recognition you get from seeing all the familiar action cliches through
a convex mirror.
As the possessed title character marches through the streets of Jakarta (or "J-town" as
it's referred to in the movie) machine-gunning everyone she encounters, the
nihilistic excess of it all is convulsively hilarious. Funniest of all though
are the American cop-hero's ex-paratrooper buddies who show up to help him
defeat the evil with an impressive array of military hardware, as if all Americans
own rocket-propelled grenade launchers and attack helicopters. One of the troopers,
named Snake, is a kind of lethal Jeff Spicoli, as envisioned by Indonesians.
Snake has an amazing peroxide mullet hairdo and is always ready with the ludicrous
one-liners ("Eat it bitch!", "If it bleeds it dies!"),
in between drags on a joint. The dialogue in this movie is pure gold. After
watching this recently my abdominal muscles were sore for two days from laughing
so hard. So approach this movie cautiously. And eat your wheaties.
(Lars Nilssen)
FRANKENSTEIN: THE TRUE STORY
D. Jack Smight USA/UK 1973 194 min. 16mm Unrated
Buy Tickets
I
n the wake of this month's latest television epic claiming to be the 'ultimate'
Frankenstein, I would just like to take this opportunity to remind viewers
that there can only be ONE 'ultimate' Frankenstein, and it is this one - Frankenstein:
The True Story. Made for American television in 1973 and subsequently released
theatrically in Europe in a shorter version with snippets of extra gore not
deemed appropriate for TV, Jack (The Illustrated Man, Damnation Alley) Smight's
lovingly-executed take on Mary Wollstonecraft-Shelley's 1818 classic is unparalleled
in either its grandeur or its moving performances. Christopher Isherwood's
brilliant script also explores what many other versions only gloss over - the
intimate relationship between Frankenstein and his monster. I wouldn't go so
far as to call this "Frankenstein: The Gay Story" (okay, I guess
I just did), but there are certainly noticeable homoerotic undertones at work
here, and it's an undisputed fact that gay men love this version more than
any other (a gross generalization based on the two gay men I asked). With the
FX crew from 2001: A Space Odyssey, production designer Wilfred Shingleton
(The Innocents, Polanski's MacBeth) and a cast to die for -- including Leonard
Whiting (Romeo and Juliet), Michael Sarrazin (They Shoot Horses, Don't They?),
Jane Seymour, James Mason, David McCallum (Watcher in the Woods), Tom Baker
(Dr. Who!) and Sir Ralph Richardson -- producer Hunt Stromberg, Jr. swore he
would "settle for nothing but the absolute best!", and I believe
he succeeded. (Kier-La Janisse)
NOTE: The version you are about to see is unique in the world and had only
ever been screened once before. It is the COMPLETE version of the film, with
everything from both the US and European versions. While many sources FALSELY
list a 240min. running time, that includes 46 minutes of commercials.
PRECEDED BY:
AFTER ATE
D. Jason DeGroote Canada 2004 8min.
Local horror team Cinema Fabulon's long anticipated zombie short starring CineMuerte
regulars Kelly Salerno, Ed Brisson and Chris Bavota. Salerno and Marcia MacDonald
star as two dinner guests trapped in a bathroom after a zombie apocalypse ruins
their soiree. Incredibly suspenseful given its short running time, After Ate
marks all involved as talents to watch.
CLOSING FILM:
DIRECTOR JIM VAN BEBBER
& CINEMATOGRAPHER MIKE KING IN PERSON!
THE MANSON FAMILY
(Formerly CHARLIE'S FAMILY)
D. Jim Van Bebber 2003 93min. 35mm
View Trailer
Buy Tickets
"
As near to a representation of a Heironymous Bosch painting
as you're likely to see in cinema, replete with acid-scarred
tripped-out brain-damaged visuals. THIS is the reason we come
to underground cinema, to see beautiful damaged hardcore fucking
shit the mainstream will not show, and VanBebber does not disappoint." (Film
Threat)
"The most accurate and uncompromising cinematic portrayal
of the exterminating angels of Death Valley '69, a psychotic
assault of sex, drugs and violence that propels the viewer
headlong into the Manson experience." (Creation Books)
"Simply put, Jim Van Bebber is one of the toughest
renegade artists alive. His films are made with blood, sweat,
and psychotic determination, showcasing the lowest of white
trash lowlife. He makes many other underground filmmakers
working today look lazy, spoiled, and uninspired by comparison." (Gene
Gregorits, Sex and Guts Magazine)
After 16 years in the making, Jim Van Bebber's epic Manson
docu-drama is finally ready for public consumption. Bootlegs
have been floating around since 1997, when a workprint was
screened at several festivals in attempt to gain finishing
funds. After a long battle doing it his way, Van Bebber's
undisputed masterpiece is completed, blown up to 35mm, and
poised to destroy arthouses across the nation. Everyone knows
the story, so there's no need to synopsize - although it
should be mentioned that Van Bebber's biopic goes into far
greater detail (especially concerning the race wars) than
any version previous. He also manages to capture the true
chaos of the Family, their ass-backwards idealism, and aptly
shows the progression from flower-children to baby-killers
with a chilling believability. His use of different film
stocks creates an engaging patchwork effect, all framed by
the fictional character Jack Wilson, an exploitive news-caster
who won't let the Manson story die, while simultaneously
lamenting the adverse effect the Manson mythology has on
impressionable youth through its over-saturation in the media.
Using Manson's music and dialogue taken verbatim from interviews
with the Family (as seen in the documentary MANSON), Van
Bebber conveys the horror of a group of kids gone terribly
wrong, with a arsenal of weapons and warped philosophies
that lead them to the inevitable climax on Cielo Drive. All
I can say is, The Manson Family was worth the wait. This
is the final word on the Manson mythos, and Van Bebber hopes
that now the door can be shut.
(Kier-La Janisse)
GUEST BIO: Jim Van Bebber is arguably the most gifted visionary
and fiercely independent filmmaker working in the US today.
With a cast and crew of friends and semi-professionals form
his hometown in Dayton, Ohio, Van Bebber has ritten, directed,
edited and financed a small but impressive slate of films
including the nihilistic Roadkill: The Last Days of John
Martin and the Ricky Kasso-inspired My Sweet Satan (both
of which screened at the first CineMuerte), the balls-to-the-wall
martial arts street gang actioner Deadbeat at Dawn, music
videos for Skinny Puppy and Necrophagia, and in between all
that was meticulously plodding away at his epic masterpiece
Charlie's Family (retitled The Manson Family), which is finally
completed after its inception over 16 years ago. He currently
lives in Los Angeles.
GUEST BIO:
Mike King has participated as actor, producer and cinematographer
on Jim Van Bebber's films since 1988's DEADBEAT AT DAWN,
and has a healthy genre CV that continues to build. His cinematography
on THE MANSON FAMILY brilliantly blends lo-fi verite documentary-style
with the lysergic tricks of 60s psychedelic cinema.
PRECEDED BY:
FOR LOVE OF MOTHER ONLY
D. Dennison Ramalho Brazil 2002 20min.
In a village of fishermen deep in the Brazilian countryside,
macabre events unfold during a night of Satanism, death and
prayers to Our Lady of the Head. Starring an ex-bestiality
porn actress as the creepiest Satanist you will EVER see,
and co-written by Ramalho and convicted Macumba priest Pai
Alex. Ramalho is currently scripting the new Coffin Joe movie.
SPECIAL THANKS TO:
Sam McKinlay, Danielle Zandvliet, Jim Sinclair, Darren Gay,
John Ford, Norm Hill, Carl from Scarecrow, Jordan Clarke,
Richard Brennan, Robin Death, Shimpei Okuda, Matt Cimber,
Harvey Fenton, Don May Jr., Paul Naschy, Igor Massa, Christian
Molina, Shade Rupe, Jay Bloznik, Mitch Davis, Mi-Jeong
Lee, Tim and Karrie League, Rick and Barry and R&B,
Rob Jones, Lora Clarke, Doug McCaffry, Blanchette Press,
Kini Seong-Eun Kim, Lee Soo-yeon, Lars Nilssen, Phil Spurrell,
Jim Van Bebber, Bruno & Helene, Josh Pasnak, Angie
Kwong, Dennison Ramahlo, Victor Garcia, Gary Huggins, Sue
Cormier, Jack Vermee, Chela Johnson, Bill Plympton, John
Holderreid, Adele Hartley, Anthony Timpson, Kelly Salerno,
Tony Timpone, Mike Gingold, Matt Kiernan, Mark Walkow,
Edwin Neal, Frank Mazzola, Alex Dafoe, Ashley Fester, all
the CineMuerte and Cinematheque volunteers, Greg Sonier
for continued support, and Tadashi for being the festival's
most retarded fan.
|