What was that Italian one where that woman was at a modelling school or 
something, except the place was home to a coven of witches?
The one where the girl falls into that wire pit and loses her grasp on how 
physics works.

From: Justin Lacko 
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2013 1:38 AM
To: Discuss, SkullSpace 
Subject: [SkullSpace-Discuss] Last "movie night" night, July 19

I forgot that I was going to post a little notice to discuss@ mentioning the 
last movie night I'll be doing before taking off :( 

It will be this Friday, July 19th, and will feature The Holy Mountain, that 
crazy film that some of you may have only heard about in hushed whispers in 
dark alleys behind SkullSpace, or from the lips of crazed hipster vagabonds, 
skin weathered from the harsh elements of the desolate Sahara and beyond. Or 
something.

Despite the film's odd scenes, it's achieved status as a cult film, with a 81% 
fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a 7.6 IMDb score. The stunning collection 
of scenes creates a sumptuous array of bright colour and bizarre ritual that 
will keep your interest. If you haven't seen this film I'd encourage you to see 
it, just for the chance to see something a little different.

Also if you manage to catch Colin Stanners at the event, ask him to describe a 
scene from the film. His descriptions are golden. :D

I think I'll also show another film as well; something a bit more fun and 
lighter to contrast the "art house" of Holy Mountain. Title TBA.

Who will continue the Friday night movie tradition? I hope someone picks up the 
torch. People joked about me "choosing a successor" at the last meeting, but to 
be honest I've never felt that the movie tradition was exclusively mine - 
anyone is invited to show interesting films, and I just happened to be the one 
who did it the most often. From my own perspective, it was really a lot of fun 
to introduce a wide variety of films and see who came out to watch them. Often 
the films would spark interesting discussion amongst the core group of 
attendees and sometimes they turned out to be total garbage. But nevertheless, 
they always provided for an interesting evening. I was happy to provide an 
"alternative" stream of world cinema to SkullSpace when life seems to be 
increasingly dominated by the big Western Hollywood flicks - just my thoughts.

Looking back, here's a somewhat-complete list of all the films I showed at 
SkullSpace (in no particular order) and with a short comment, where appropriate:

...E tu vivrai nel terrore! L'aldilà/The Beyond (1981, Fulci)

Al tropico del cancro/Tropic of Cancer (1972, Lomi)

Cannibal Holocaust (1980, Deodato) - Almost unwatchable for reasons you can 
Google on your own. The soundtrack was awesome though.

Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010, Herzog) - Great film, in which Sean sat through 
for 40 mins before exclaiming, "Why am I sitting through a documentary on 
CAVES?" and promptly left!

Det sjunde inseglet/The Seventh Seal (1957, Bergman)

El Topo (1970, Jodoworsky) - By the same director as The Holy Mountain. Equally 
bizarre.

Hukkunud Alpinisti hotell/Dead Hiker's Hotel (1979, Kromanov) - Watched with 
fine cheese and other snacks with Jurek and co. - AWESOME soundtrack and the 
hotel was an architectural 1970s avant-garde masterpiece!

Il fantasma di Sodoma/Sodoma's Ghost (1988, Fulci) - Watched at the old space, 
I can't remember everyone who saw this but we all had a pretty good laugh at 
how cheesy it was.

La Chute de la maison Usher/The Fall of the House of Usher (1928, Epstein)

L'âge d'or/Age of Gold (1930, Buñuel)

Le charme discret de la bourgeoisie/The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie 
(1972, Buñuel) - Debuted twice; the best scene was where a man who resembles a 
child pedophile gives some children some "dirty" photos at a playground; they 
take them home and the parents are absolutely shocked at the photos; the photos 
come into the camera's view and they are shots of FRENCH ARCHITECTURE

Mon Oncle/My Uncle (1958, Tati) - It was so playful, and everyone thought it 
was so boring because it lacked dialogue! It was about the scenes and the 
visual comedy, guys, c'mon!

Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975, Gilliam)

Playtime (1967, Tati) - I don't think we finished it because it was by the same 
director as Mon Oncle and people also thought this was boring.

Rękopis znaleziony w Saragossie/The Saragossa Manuscript (1965, Has)

Solaris (1972, Tarkovsky) - Watched twice! Awesome awesome film with a 70s 
sci-fi feel to it that explored human consciousness and interactions with 
extraterrestrials!

Stalker (1979, Tarkovsky)

The Holy Mountain (1973, Jodoworsky) - Infamous film of the Friday night movie 
nights. This film is just so... different and... different that it sparked much 
jeering and comparisons to "the weirdest film you can think of." Which is why 
it must be shown again! :D

Un chien andalou/An Andalusian Dog (1929, Buñuel)

Valerie a týden divů/Valerie and Her Week of Wonders (1970, Jireš)

Army of Darkness (1992, Raimi)

Colossus - The Forbin Project (1970, Sargent) - This was one of the only movie 
nights that Mak came to, and enjoyed. :)

Fantastic Mr Fox (2009, Anderson)

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975, Sharman)

The Shining (1980, Kubrick) - Set to be re-shown on the day of the giant "move 
to 2.0 space" meeting. It however was only shown once!

The General (1926, Bruckman) - Also played by the WSO last season, with a few 
SkSp members in attendance!

The Great Train Robbery (1903)

Idaho Transfer (1973, Fonda)

Two Thousand Maniacs! (1964, Lewis)

Weird Science (1985, Hughes)

Zoolander (2001, Stiller)

Tetsuo the Iron Man (1989, Tsukamoto) - This film sparked the Japanese 
cyberpunk horror genre. It was a little too intense for regular screening IMO.

Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes/Aguirre, The Wrath of God (1972, Herzog) - A slower 
Herzog film, but with great scenes from the jungles of Brazil. Watched at the 
old space.

Bordel SS (1978, Bénazéraf) - Almost unwatchable, once we discovered it was 
mostly porn. :P
Casa d'appuntamento/The French Sex Murders (1972, Merighi) - Strangely, with a 
title like this, there was very little nudity.
Damnation Alley (1977, Smight) - One of the first films watched at the new 
space! I remember Adrian liked this one.
Death for Five Voices (1995, Herzog)
Edward Penishands (heavily censored) - Uh yeah. We kinda only watched 15 
minutes of this "film."
Eraserhead (1977, Lynch) - I remember Colin Childs found this film very odd. 
For good reason! It's one of the oddest films I know. It's what made David 
Lynch famous though, and is worth watching, and then reading a discussion on 
the themes.
Hexen bis aufs Blut gequält/Mark of the Devil (1970, Armstrong)

La coda dello scorpione/The Case of the Scorpion's Tail (1971, Martino) - 
Giallo genre film that Mark and Lynn liked.

La plus longue nuit du diable/The Devil's Nightmare (1971, Brismée)

Les raisins de la mort/The Grapes of Death (1978, Rollin) - RIDICULOUS French 
film about some people who fumigate some grapes in France except the pesticide 
turns people into zombie-like crazies. Watched with Colin Stanners, in French. 
Much fun was made of this film, with a really lame ending. :]

Lisa e il diavolo/Lisa and the Devil (1974, Bava)

Moonrise Kingdom (2012, Anderson) - At one point there's a huge sound of 
rushing water, and it was so loud that our cranky upstairs neighbour banged on 
the floor. As if we cared!
Office Space (1999, Judge) - Also played by other people!
Reazione a catena/A Bay of Blood (1971, Bava) - I watched this with Michael and 
we kept laughing at the outlandish ways that people were murdered. Nobody could 
just be stabbed or shot. People died in the most creative ways.
Suspiria (1977, Argento) - I loved the huge turnout for this film! It's my 
favourite of all time. Absolute favourite. Thanks to everyone who watched :)
The Andromeda Strain (1971, Wise) - Nate liked this film and for good reason! 
Great soundtrack, awesome interpretation of early 1970s sci-fi, with lots of 
shots of old computer equipment which Adrian appreciated.
The Boogens (1981, Conway)
El buque maldito/The Ghost Galleon (1974, de Ossorio)
The Man with Two Brains (1983, Reiner)
Pink Flamingos (1972, Waters) - Yeah, not gonna show this again unless it's at 
home in private. Or at 4AM at SkSp with only one other person present.
Barbarella (1968, Vadim) - Fun fun fun psychedlic film!
Danger: Diabolik (1968, Bava) - Sooooo awesome! People will remember this by 
"DEEP DEEP DOOOOWWWNNNN" ;)


Thanks so much to everyone who has sat through a film and enjoyed it, or sat 
through a film and thought I was nuts. :)

~Justin


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