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Funny Girl

Starring: Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif, Kay Medford

Release Date: September 19, 1968

FUNNY GIRL follows the early career of stage comedienne Fanny Brice, a role that earned Barbra Streisand the 1968 Oscar for Best Actress.

As the film opens, only her mother believes Fanny can make it in show business. When she gets her first break at Keeney’s Music Hall, her hilarious debut as a roller-skating chorus girl gets her hired as a comedienne. A year later Fanny is working for Florenz Ziegfeld in his famous Follies and brings the house down with an outrageous and unplanned number. Fanny becomes a star, falls in love and marries Nick Arnstein (Omar Sharif), a handsome gambler whose luck doesn’t hold up. The film’s many memorable songs include “Don’t Rain On My Parade” and the Streisand classic “People.”

Stolen Kisses

Starring: Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Delphine Seyrig

Release Date: September 4, 1968

Jean-Pierre Léaud returns in the delightful Stolen Kisses, the third installment in the Antoine Doinel series. It is now 1968, and the mischievous and perpetually love-struck Doinel has been dishonorably discharged from the army and released onto the streets of Paris, where he stumbles into the unlikely profession of private detective and embarks on a series of misadventures. Whimsical, nostalgic, and irrepressibly romantic, STOLEN KISSES is Truffaut’s timeless ode to the passion and impetuosity of youth.

The Devil Rides Out (aka The Devil’s Bride)

Starring: Christopher Lee, Charles Gray, Nike Arrighi, Leone Greene

Release Date: July 20, 1968

The debonair Duc de Richleau has been trusted with the care of his deceased friend’s son, Simon Aron. The Duc discovers that the young man has been seduced into joining a Satanic cult headed by the diabolic Mocata, who is intent on making Simon one of the Devil’s disciples. Having rescued Simon from a bloodied ritual, de Richleau is pursued by Mocata, who will stop at nothing to destroy the Duc and his friends, even summoning the Angel of Death itself.

Starring horror legend Christopher Lee in one of his personal favorite roles and based on the celebrated novel by Dennis Wheatley, THE DEVIL RIDES OUT is one of Hammer’s most accomplished and thrilling mystery horrors.

Nico, 1988

Starring: Trine Dyrholm, John Gordon Sinclair, Anamaria Marinca, Sandor Funtek, Thomas Trabacchi, Karina Fernandez, Calvin Demba, Francesco Colella

The new film NICO, 1988 follows the singer-songwriter, approaching 50, leading a solitary existence in Manchester, far from her 60s glam days as a Warhol superstar and celebrated vocalist for cult band The Velvet Underground. Her life and career on the fringes, Nico’s new manager Richard convinces her to hit the road again and tour Europe to promote her latest album. Struggling with her demons and the consequences of a muddled life, she longs to rebuild a relationship with her son, whose custody she lost long ago. A brave and uncompromising musician, Nico’s story is the story of a rebirth: of an artist, a mother, and the woman behind the icon.

Skate Kitchen

Starring: Rachelle Vinberg, Jaden Smith, Dede Lovelace, Nina Moran, Ajani Russell, Kabrina Adams

In the first narrative feature from THE WOLFPACK director Crystal Moselle, Camille, an introverted teenage skateboarder from Long Island, meets and befriends an all-girl, New York City-based skateboarding crew called Skate Kitchen. She falls in with the in-crowd, has a falling-out with her mother, and falls for a mysterious skateboarder guy, but a relationship with him proves to be trickier to navigate than a kickflip.

Writer/director Crystal Moselle immersed herself in the lives of the skater girls and worked closely with them, resulting in the film’s authenticity, which combines poetic, atmospheric filmmaking and hypnotic skating sequences. SKATE KITCHEN precisely captures the experience of women in male-dominated spaces and tells a story of a girl who learns the importance of camaraderie and self-discovery.

Elvira: Mistress of the Dark

Starring: Cassandra Peterson, Edie McGlurg, W. Morgan Sheppard

30th ANNIVERSARY!

Join the dodos of THE DEUCE for a kind of “birthday-bash” – when Deuce-Jockey Jeff revisits that September night of his 1988 youth spent in awestruck ecstasy at the Times Square Theatre with ELVIRA: MISTRESS OF THE DARK! (aka: ELVIRA®: MISTRESS OF THE DARK™!)… B-picture: MARRIED TO THE MOB!

 

Cassandra Peterson’s infectiously engaging horror-hostess from Heaven hits the big screen in a scream of a frightfully funny flick that revels in ribaldry and ridiculousness… Double-Ds and double entendres!

 

When local TV-looney and her punk-rock pooch inherit a hoary house in fundamentalist Fallwell, Massachusetts – things get incendiary! Eager-beaver Edie McGlurg gets the town on a witch-hunt against our hilarious hero, while mean-uncle W. Morgan Sheppard will stop at nothing to get her “magical cookbook”!

 

Packed as full as Peterson’s seemingly painted-on dress with purposely corny punch-lines, sight-gags, and slapstick, ELVIRA®: MISTRESS OF THE DARK™ is pointedly light-hearted, goofy, and gonzo… with a go-for-broke Las Vegas musical number that will leave you spinning in giddy delight!!!

 

Former SNL and EASY MONEY director, James Signorelli lets Elvira loose to do her own thing in this bodacious, bawdy, B-movie tribute to bimbo-dom!

 

Queen Boxer (aka The Avenger)

Starring: Judy Lee Chia-ling, Peter Yang Kwan, Lee Ying

This August, THE DEUCE-Jockeys team up with our pal Grady Hendrix of Subway Cinema, for a trip to the Empire Theatre and Florence Yu’s QUEEN BOXER!!

“Shanghai,” the narrator intones. “Are the streets paved in gold, or do they run with blood?” In QUEEN BOXER, it’s mostly blood. One of the few Hong Kong action movies directed by a woman – it’s also the debut feature for Judy Lee, the only Bruce Lee impersonator who was actually female. Sold as Bruce Lee’s sister (a stunt thought up by the production company for which Lee eventually had to publicly apologize), Judy Lee dazzles as the deadly dame dealing with dastardly dickheads until she’s finally had it up to here with their asshole behavior and spends the entire last reel beating them to death with her bare hands…

Unleashed for the first time on film (after spending 11 years training in Peking Opera), Lee is an insanely physical actor, and the final punch-a-geddon is so epically brutal, it’s become legendary. Adding angel dust to this old school kung fu crack cocktail is the fact that this 18-day-quickie production is packed with off-kilter editing, insane camera angles, stolen music cues, plentiful gore, and pissed-off women tearing out eyeballs to the sweet, sweet sound of Isaac Hayes’ “Theme from Shaft” – making it the ultimate grindhouse experience!!

Teen Lust

Starring: Kirsten Baker, Perry Lang, Leslie Cederquist

On July 12, THE DEUCE-Jockeys – along with their pal Chris Poggiali from TEMPLE OF SCHLOCK – spend a night at sleazy porn palace Victory Theatre for 1978’s TEEN LUST!

Written, produced and directed by busy and beloved character actor James Hong, this episodic, idiosyncratic bad-taste comedy about a group of high school newly-grads consistently surprises by giving equal time to their creepy parents, neighbors, clergymen, and local law enforcement…

Filmed in 1977 under the title SO LONG, COLUMBUS HIGH, but completed as THE GIRL NEXT DOOR, it failed to find an audience upon its release in 1978 under that title… and spent the next five years haunting drive-ins under yet another two titles… finally hitting The Deuce as TEEN LUST on September 9th, 1983: top-lining a triple bill at The Victory with GETTING IT ON and THE CREEPER…

“…authentically trashy….amounts to a John Waters movie made by a retarded midwesterner.” – Sleazoid Express

Wet Hot American Summer

Starring: David Hyde Pierece, Janeane Garofalo, Marguerite Moreau, Michael Showalter, Paul Rudd, Christopher Meloni, Molly Shannon

The setting is Camp Firewood, the year 1981. It’s the last day before everyone goes back to the real world, but there’s still a summer’s worth of unfinished business to resolve. At the center of the action is camp director Beth, who struggles to keep order while she falls in love with the local astrophysics professor. He is busy trying to save the camp from a deadly piece of NASA’s Skylab which is hurtling toward earth. All that, plus: a dangerous waterfall rescue, love triangles, misfits, cool kids, and talking vegetable cans. The questions will all be resolved, of course, at the big talent show at the end of the day.

LOVE, CECIL

Starring: David Bailey, Manolo Blahnik, Hamish Bowles, Susanna Brown, Leslie Caron, Peter Eyre. Narrated by Rupert Everett.

Oscar-winning set and costume designer, photographer, writer and painter Cecil Beaton was not only a dazzling chronicler, but an arbiter of his time. From the Bright Young Things to the front lines of war to the international belle monde and the pages of Vogue and then onto the Queen’s official photographer – Beaton embodied the cultural and political changes of the twentieth century.

In this tender portrait, director Lisa Immordino Vreeland (Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has To Travel, Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict) blends archival footage and photographs with voice over of Beaton’s famed diaries to capture his legacy as a complex and unique creative force. Dynamic and lyrical, LOVE, CECIL is an examination of Beaton’s singular sense of the visual, which dictated a style that set standards of creativity that continue to resonate and inspire today.