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The Past Is a Grotesque Animal

Northside Film screens the New York premiere of THE PAST IS A GROTESQUE ANIMAL, presented by Oscilloscope.

Introduction by Oscilloscope

THE PAST IS A GROTESQUE ANIMAL is a personal, accessible look at an artist ­Kevin Barnes, frontman of the endlessly versatile indie pop band of Montreal – whose pursuit to make transcendent music at all costs drives him to value art over human relationships. As he struggles with all of those around him, family and bandmates alike, he’s forced to reconsider the future of the band, begging the question – is this really worth it?

Daisies

Northside Film screens DAISIES, presented by Reverse Shot and Janus Films.

Introduction by Reverse Shot.

One of the most anarchic films of all time, Vera Chytilová’s absurdist farce follows the misadventures of two brash young women. Believing the world to be “spoiled,” they embark on a series of pranks in which nothing—food, clothes, men, war—is taken seriously. An aesthetically and politically adventurous film that’s widely considered one of the great works of feminist cinema, Janus Films is proud to present Daisies in a new 35mm print.

Summer of Blood

Northside Film screens the Brooklyn Premiere of SUMMER OF BLOOD, presented by Factory 25.

Introduction by Factory 25 and Q&A with director Onur Tukel

Graying, paunchy, cynical, underemployed—the aging Brooklyn hipster Eric Sparrow (Onur Tukel) is lucky in love with Jodi (Anna Margaret Hollyman), a sensible and sensitive young lawyer. But after rejecting her marriage proposal, Eric is out on his ear; in his downward spiral of sexual frustration and bewildered vanity, he meets a vampire—an encounter that changes everything. ­ – Richard Brody, The New Yorker

If You Take This

Northside Film screens the New York premiere of IF YOU TAKE THIS, presented by BAMcinemaFest.

Introduction by by BAM and Q&A with director, Craig Butta

A psychedelic, hybrid ethnography that takes us into Morocco to discover its music and culture. An American film crew is hired by a Moroccan­born Wall Street financier to document his family, but they soon go off on their own path, chasing the legendary Joujouka musicians. Recalling the myths and legends about the place that first excited them, the crew soon finds history repeating itself in bizarre ways. Part road movie, part head trip, IF YOU TAKE THIS is about sound, image and the distortions within the idea of “authenticity.” It might also be about the end of the world.

HEAVENLY CREATURES With DYKETACTICS

Northside Film screens HEAVENLY CREATURES with the short DYKETACTICS, presented by Queer/Art/Film and curated by JD Samson.

HEAVENLY CREATURES
Q&A with JD Samson
Two girls have an intense fantasy life; their parents, concerned the fantasy is too intense, separate them, and the girls take revenge.

NS14_FilmPOSTER_dyketacticsDYKETACTICS
Introduction by Adam Baran for Dyketactics (4 mins)
Directed by and starring: Barbara Hammer 

Born in Los Angeles but a New Yorker by choice, Barbara Hammer is a whole genre unto herself. Her pioneering 1974 short film Dyketactics, a four­minute, hippie wonder consisting of frolicking naked women in the countryside, broke new ground for its exploration of lesbian identity, desire and aesthetic. Abdellatif Kechiche, director of last year’s sexually sensationalist Blue Is the Warmest Colour, might have done better if he had taken a leaf out of Hammer’s book. Hammer calls the film her ‘lesbian commercial’. 

HOMEMAKERS With AWESOME ASIAN BAD GUYS

Northside Film screens the New York premieres of the feature film HOMEMAKERS and the short AWESOME ASIAN BAD GUYS. (Presented by IFP Film)

HOMEMAKERS
Q&A with Colin Healey, director of Homemakers

A rootless young singer with a knack for destruction attempts to restore her late grandfather’s abandoned Pittsburgh home.

NS14_FilmPOSTER_awesomeasianAWESOME ASIAN BAD GUYS
Intro by IFP’s Dan Schoenbrun for Awesome Asian Bad Guys (8:30)
Directed by Stephen Dypiangco and Patrick Epino
Starring: Dante Basco, George Cheung, Jasmin Currey, Stephen Dypiangco, Patrick Epino, Al Leong, Yuji Okumoto, Randall Park, Aaron Takahashi, Tamlyn Tomita

A motley crew of washed up 80s and 90s Asian bad guy actors joins forces to take down Los Angeles’ most nefarious mob boss.

Holy Mountain

Part of Nitehawk’s SUMMER OF SURREALISM program, LIVE SOUND CINEMA presents Alejandro Jodorowsky’s HOLY MOUNTAIN with a live score by REEL ORCHESTRETTE.

Embodying the sex, drugs, spiritual awakenings and societal unrest of the late 1960s/early 1970S, Jodorowsky’s Mexican-American film Holy Mountain (La Montaña Sagrada) is a suitably bizarre and exquisitely designed trip. The quasi narrative tells of a Christ-like vagrant and six of the world’s most powerful individuals (each representing a planet in the Solar system) for a spiritual pilgrimage through a perverse and unfriendly land. The mission is to find the Holy Mountain and immortality. The film’s symbolic figures and gestures – ranging from birds flying out of bullet holes to reptiles re-enacting the Mexican conquest – make this surreal film one that existed completely outside of traditional filmmaking of the time.

Reel Orchestrette (Bradford Reed & Geoff Gersh) is dedicated to the art of live musical accompaniment to silent films. Reed & Gersh have been collaborating together for almost 20 years, they formed Reel Orchestrette in 2012. 

Part of Nitehawk’s upcoming SUMMER OF SURREALISM program. Featuring Absolut Vodka Cocktails.

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Godzilla (1954)

Starring: Takashi Shimura, Akihiko Hirata, Akira Takarada

There is no better allegory for the grim implications of the atom bomb in post-WWII Japan (nor the modern day nuclear disasters) than Godzilla. Godzilla (aka Gojira) is the beginning of the longest running film series in history, the grandfather Godzilla if you will, and we’re darn happy to be showing the new restoration. It all begins with nuclear testing in the Pacific spawning a 150 foot tall monster that goes on a destructive rampage. Will man be able to destroy its own creation before it destroys us all?

Beaches

Let Nitehawk be the wind beneath your wings with our special Mother’s Day 35mm presentation of BEACHES!

Did you ever know that you’re my hero? Two young girls from very different backgrounds meet one summer and then embark on a lifelong friendship. Classic sobber Beaches shows the ups-and-downs of CC Bloom (Bette Midler) and Hillary Whitney Essex (Barbara Hersey); ranging from show business success, romantic entanglements, children, and illness. Truly the loves of each others lives, the film shows how these two women deal with each other’s differences to become family. We dare you not to cry!

The Slumber Party Massacre

Starring: Michelle Michaels, Robin Stille, Michael Vilella

The only female directed slasher of the 1980s, The Slumber Party Massacre was written by famous feminists Rita Mae Brown, and intended as a sleazy parody of an already sleazy genre. Director Amy Holden Jones thought otherwise, flipping Brown’s cheeky script into straight horror.

The result is a self-aware slasher eager to drill some fresh holes in the genre, all while still delivering on that good ol’ teenage sex and violence. The story is appropriately ridiculous, about a girls’ basketball team hosting a slumber party that’s stalked by an escaped lunatic – and it isn’t long before the long showers, clothes changing and sexy phone calls give way to an ever mounting pile of mangled bodies.