Wednesday, October 26

Dirty Looks Presents Luther Price at PPOW

What’s Showing Today? Wednesday, October 26
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Featured Screening: Dirty Looks presents Luther Price: Fancy Days, Fancy Times at PPOW Gallery, Chelsea. 

Guest post by Dirty Looks programmer Bradford Nordeen, whose essay will be distributed at the screening as part of a complimentary publication also featuring writings by Luther Price, Lia Gangitano and more.

Luther Price grew up in Revere, Massachusetts with his sister Sally. Together the siblings would obsessively watch daytime broadcasts of woman’s melodramas on their black and white TV—films like Imitation of Life or Mildred Pierce—re-enacting the histrionics on a reel-to-reel recorder. This obsessive kind of self-dramatization and hysterical re-enactment continued throughout Price’s career, first through the various, self-invented monikers that he adopted while earning his undergraduate degree in Fine Arts at MassArt (personas included LA, Laija Brie Aethy, Brigk Aethy, Brick, Fag and Tom Rhoads), and then in his later performative revisitations of traumatic incidents like a gunshot wound, deaths in the family and childhood nightmares.

Larry Paradiso, Laija Brie Aethy, LA, Brick and Fag were all predominantly sculpture and performance artists with different logic structures built into each. These characters were not performances per se. Rather, the artist would form personalities in order to execute his fine art projects, often assuming these characters’ mannerisms or affectations full time. Laija Brie went to Nicaragua on a cultural exchange program in 1985 and adapted to his surroundings, becoming Brigk Aethy. There Brigk was accidentally shot at close range by his 15-year-old bodyguard, a devastating wound forcing his return to Boston by emergency means and leaving him teetering between life and death. Eat Fuck Live Shit Want Need was a sculptural installation that the artist created in immediate response once he regained some semblance of health. Permanently scarred, Brigk was fundamentally changed by the event for years to come. The artist turned to filmmaking as an extension of his sculptural practice, inventing the persona Tom Rhoads to plumb his childhood traumas, particularly the circumstances surrounding the suicide of his aunt Sally at age of 23 on the day of Price’s birth.

“Tom Rhoads was a nice guy who would buy you an ice cream cone,” Price explained, an adult manifestation of his haunted childhood. Rhoads made frightening Super 8mm visions of a fecund homecoming, dressing as his mother in Warm Broth, 1987-88, and using those original reel-to-reel performances with his sister for Green, 1988. These early performance films were so startling in their raw vitality they were championed by filmmakers, curators and critics alike, who responded to their urgency of vision and alarming psychological complexity, frequently citing the use of Super 8mm as a medium to reconstruct memory or a traumatic past. As Rhoads evolved, it became clear the work was becoming too harsh, too brutal for such a childlike filmmaker. Tom Rhoads started Sodom in 1988, but the artist soon realized, “[Tom] couldn’t have made Sodom.” So cleft was that film between such opposing forces, he was forced to invent his longest-running persona, Luther Price, out of his apotheosis of good—Martin Luther King Jr.—and that of evil—Vincent Price.

The resulting film and filmmaker would make an immense impact on the avant-garde film community of Boston and the world over. Sodom is extreme, as horrifying as it is whimsical. Made of found gay pornography and biblical disaster footage, the voracious boys of the porn footage are sutured into sequences of cataclysm via a rudimentary hole-punch technique. Halos circle these victims of dogma, victims of plague, victims of hedonism as they dance in a sea of religious calamity, celebrating and damning, all in the same frame. Sodom sparked a zealous coup among film programmers and audiences, who were fiercely divided by an artist who some regarded an heir to Kenneth Anger and Jean Genet, others, a homophobic zealot. Sodom provides no easy answers for viewer. With its gorgeous organic aesthetics, hypnotic soundtrack, gruesome and graphic depictions, the piece performs a harsh rebuttal to the ideals of contemporary gay lifestyle.

Price continued, prolifically producing two strains of film work: his performative films carried on from previous efforts, with the filmmaker embodying physically and emotionally grueling characters, as seen in the feature-length A, 1995, and the Clown and Meat series, 1992-94 and 1990-1999. The latter series revisits his traumatic shooting and later the loss of his entire family to cancer in the span of one year—a body of work which includes Ritual 629, 1999. Price’s other strain assembled found footage, imposing an emotional sense upon this chaotic world for future, foreign scrutiny. Early works in this vain included Bottle Can, 1993, In Black and White and Jelly Fish Sandwich, both 1994, pieces in which Price builds new associative structures of logic, “an attempt to put history into time capsules and send them into space, in the hope that someone will get the right message,” Lia Gangitano writes, “However, as the films’ scrambled forms suggest, the message has degenerated, history has become a series of misdirections.”

Price finished Me Gut No Dog Dog in 1995. A found footage film that culls army recruitment propaganda, gay pornography, family home movies and some amateur Karate narrative, Price uses the barrage of leisure-time footage and outmoded training films to build a personal past. Price fascinatingly coagulates these random scenes into a work recreating his childhood dread of the Vietnam draft. The impending horror of this institutionalized violence is layered against his dormant homosexuality and the army’s homosocial climate, a conflicted fear and thrill of being caught or forced into brute sexual encounters. The film recounts a loss of innocence, with (as in many of Price’s films) the voice of Karen Carpenter ringing its close, as she coos a pathetic rendition of The Beatles’ “Ticket To Ride.” Children file down communion isles as a pretty teen slams his head on a pillow, bracing against some aggressive, off-screen penetration and the tune’s chorus lyric, “He’s got a ticket to ride, and he don’t care,” suddenly acquires an ominous, thanatotic drive.

Due to duplication issues brought about by the explicit content of Me Gut No Dog Dog, Price has since only produced unique films, hand splicing, painting or warping existent footage in one-of-a-kind cycles of work. These hands-on processes are obsessive and laborious for Price, who still considers himself more a sculptor than filmmaker. Never one to linger on any one process, each new body of work almost becomes a skillful disavowal from its predecessor. The Inklbot series (1998-2008) is the result of the laborious hand-painting techniques, often working from nothing but clear leader, while the Biscuits series re-edits 13 identical 16mm copies of footage shot in an African American retirement home in Boston to arrive at a more emotionally accurate documentation of these living situations. Silk and Ribbon Candy (the latter, part of the Ribbons series) belong to this decade of abundant production. These works show the filmmaker re-creating contexts and revising the past, remolding existent images and narratives in lieu of adding to the din. Price has worked in this manner for the past decade, Ritual 629 being one of the last original footage pieces he has created. Not that this slows him. The filmmaker, who still lives in Revere, produces 10 or so films a year. —Bradford Nordeen

Also Recommended

This is a packed day, probably the most exciting lineup of events I’ve seen since Screen Slate’s February launch.

Writer, producer, director, actor and SVA professor Roy Frumkes will be at Spectacle Theater for a very special evening of screenings. Frumkes might be best known to horror fans as the writer and producer of tonight’s Street Trash, a grand guignol slice of sticky social commentary about a malt beverage that melts homeless people into piles of toxic mush. It was shot on location in Greenpoint, Brooklyn—mere blocks from Spectacle!—and offers a fascinating historical perspective on the neighborhood at its worst (though homelessness remains a problem to this day). Frumkes has also documented the efforts of many of his contemporaries such as George Romero in Document of the Dead, an in-depth chronicle of the making of Dawn of the Dead. Frumkes has amassed a great personal archive of unseen footage that he’s carefully sorted through to unspool for the first time at Spectacle tonight, including what he describes as a rare short film by a noted filmmaker that has never been screened before. We don’t even know what it is! As always, admission is $5. And thanks everyone who came out to Strange Rivals’ superb live score last night.

Screen Slate favorite Brian Frye heads to 92YTribeca this evening for Super 8 Snapshots, the latest entry of Flaherty NYC‘s weekly series running through November 16. Frye will present a series of found footage from his personal collection and discuss its influence on his own work. The program proceeds with Super 8mm selections from Kevin T. Allen and Jen Heuson filmed in such varied locales as Peru, Bolivia, Vietnam and South Dakota.

The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus is one of the greatest entries in the band’s storied cinematic legacy. For decades it was suppressed by the group—along with many other unseen films (sort of)—allegedly because the band was dissatisfied with its own performance, rumored specifically to result from The Who‘s dynamite renedition of “A Quick One While He’s Away”. Viewing seems to corroborate this: The Who’s performance is simply one of the greatest, most explosive marriages of rock and cinema, transcending the genre to be perhaps one of the most rousing scenes in all film—and this is coming from a guy who previously knew them old dudes who sold their back catalogue as jingles for car commercials. Other highlights include supergroup Dirty Mac, consisting of John Lennon, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards and Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, playing a heavy, heartwrought version of “Yer Blues”; and there’s Taj Mahal‘s blistering rendition of “Ain’t That A Lot of Love”. Director Michael Lindsay-Hogg will be in attendance at Museum of the Moving Image tonight.

This evening’s DCTV responds to the Fukushima catastrophe with two documentaries, one examining post-Fukushima activism in Japan and another focusing on the laborers chosen to clean up the mess at considerable risk to their own health as well as the unsettling commingling between government and nuclear power officials.

Liu Jiayin‘s acclaimed 2005 debut feature Oxhide plays Exitart this evening. This family drama in which a young filmmaker working with a digital camera casts her family as fictionalized versions of themselves is sort of like a pre-Tiny Furniture Tiny Furniture without rich and famous artists and set in a tiny Beijing apartment. It’s followed by a Skype discussion with Jiayin and filmmaker Caveh Zahedi. Oxhide II plays tomorrow.

Great feature options today include Orson Welles’ The Magnificent Ambersons at Film Forum and Arne Skouen‘s Nine Lives at Scandinavia House, but with so many unique events going on today, why not catch them later this week? Ambersons repeats tomorrow, and Nine Lives returns Friday.

Today

The Films of Adolfas Mekas at Anthology Film Archives

  • Going Home with Hallelujah the Villa. 16mm/video. 1972. 90 min. 7 pm.
  • The Double-Barreled Detective Story with Skyscraper. 35mm/16mm. 1965. 95 min. 9 pm.

Bernard Hermann (2-for-1 Admission) at Film Forum

  • The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles). 1942. 88 min. 1, 4:10, 7:20, 10:30 pm.
  • Hangover Square (John Brahm). 1946. 77 min. 2:40, 5:50, 9 pm.

To Save and Project: The Ninth MoMA International Festival of Film Preservation at MoMA

  • Jean Rouch: Early Films from West Africa, 1946-1951. 4 pm.
  • Études sur Paris (André Sauvage) with Les Halles centrales (Boris Kaufman). Live piano by Ben Model. 1928/1927. 105 min. 7 pm.

Flaherty NYC: Super 8 Snapshots at 92YTribeca. Featuring Brian Frye and Kevin Allen & Jen Heuson. 7:30 pm.
Newfilmmakers Presents Its Annual Halloween Program Presented by Newlatino Group and Latin Horror 
at Anthology Film Archives
. 6 pm.
The Cobweb (Vincente Minnelli) at BAMcinématek. Featuring a Cinemachat with Elliott Stein and photo ardchivist Howard Mandelbaum. 35mm. 1955. 134 min. 7:30 pm.
Protest in Japan Since Fukushima with Nuclear Ginza: Hidden Labor Under Radiation (Nicholas Röhl) at DCTV. Post screening discussion with Yoshihiko Ikegami, Ayumi Goto and Chigaya Kinoshita. 7:30 pm.
Oxhide (Liu Jiayin) at Exitart. Followed by a Skype discussion with Jiayin and filmmaker Caveh Zahedi. 2005. 110 min. 7:30 pm.
Latinbeat Presents: An Evening with Julia Solomonoff at The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Featuring The Last Summer of the Boyita and Siesta, followed by a discussion with Richard Peña, then Sisters and Scratch. 219 min. 1998-2009. 6:30 pm.
Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl (Yoshihiro Nishimura & Naoyuki Tomomatsu) with 964 Pinocchio (Shozin Fukui) at LaunchPad. 2009/1991. Appx. 180 min. 8 pm. FREE
Head-On (Faith Akin) at Goethe-Institut. 2004. 121 min. 6:30 pm. FREE
Black Narcissus (Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger) at MoMA. 1947. 99 min. 1:30 pm.
The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus (Michael Lindsay-Hogg) at Museum of the Moving Image. Followed by discussion and book signing with Michael Lindsay-Hogg. 1968. 63 min. 7 pm.
Luther Price: Fancy Days, Fancy Times
 at PPOW Gallery, Chelsea. Program includes “Ritual 629,” “Silk,” “Ribbon Candy,” “Me Gut No Dog Dog” and “Sodom.” Filmmaker in person. Includes complimentary publication with writings by Luther Price, Lia Gangitano, curator Bradford Nordeen and more. Presented by Dirty Looks. Super 8/16mm. 1989-2006. 8 pm.
Nine Lives (Arne Skouen) at Scandinavia House. 1957. 96 min. 6 pm.
An Evening with Roy Frumkes at Spectacle Theater. Featuring secret special surprises from Frunkes’ personal collection along with a screening of Street Trash (J. Michael Muro, 1987, 91 min). 8 pm.

Ongoing

Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life (Joann Sfar) at Film Forum. 2010. 122 min. 5:30, 9:45 pm.
The Mill and the Cross (Lech Majewski) at Film Forum. 2011. 92 min. 1, 3, 8 pm.
Paul Goodman Changed My Life (Jonathan Lee) at Film Forum. 2011. 89 min. 1, 2:50, 4:40, 6:30, 8:20 and 10:10 pm.

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