Against the Grain (2023) Movie Script
1
- When I first, you know,
became aware of lost films,
it was more of so the realization,
like, artwork in general can
just degrade and become lost.
- You know, a lost film, by definition,
would basically, or at
least my definition would
basically be a film that
has otherwise not survived.
You know, it's a film that
for whatever reason, we don't have.
But when you start
looking at the lost films
in the '60s and '70s, and especially
the genre films the Vinegar
Syndrome is interested in,
you start unpacking this
treasure trove of film.
- Don't call me, baby, I'll call you.
- It seems like genre
films are more vulnerable
to being lost because there
were fewer prints made of them.
A lot of times, these are
independently produced films,
as opposed to studio films.
- One of the problems with genre films,
they were done at these smaller labs,
DuArt in New York, WRS in Pittsburgh,
and when those labs closed,
a lot of negatives disappeared.
- Check me out.
- My God.
- I think that these independent
producers weren't thinking
about the life of these films
after their initial
exploitation, which is where
they're gonna make the
majority of their money.
- If you want a good
smoke, try one of these.
- I mean, they just had a
low opinion of the movies.
They just saw them as a commercial product
and they didn't really
see them as something
that was deserving of being preserved.
The level of restoration work
that has to be done on
these movies is so extreme
that it takes a lot of
work and a lot of passion
to keep these old movies alive.
- Our mentor, Dave Friedman,
would often say that a film
is like a sack of flour.
Every time you shook it, a
little bit more would come out.
- Before Vinegar Syndrome
and my professional career, I was working
at a place called Film
Workers Club out of Chicago,
and there I specialized in film transfers,
digital color work, but
mostly on advertisements,
not necessarily feature
films, but occasionally.
My first job was actually working
as a projectionist in a movie
theater during high school,
and second job was at a
video and records store.
So it very much plays
into what I do today.
- Prior to meeting
Ryan, and certainly long
before Vinegar Syndrome was
even a concept for either of us,
I was helping to manage
a video store in Chicago,
where I was born and raised,
called Odd Obsession Movies,
which became kind of a
meeting ground social club
for a lot of the more interesting
cinephiles in the city.
And I was also working
on a volunteer basis,
cause it was a volunteer cinema,
at Doc Films at the University of Chicago,
where I was helping as a programmer
and finding materials and so on.
And this is one of the ways
that I initially became
more aware of film rights
and actually began speaking
to filmmakers and film distributors.
It didn't ready faze me
in that I wanted to find
or rescue lost films.
My interest was always themed around films
that look bad in the available versions,
or seemingly don't have
good materials available.
- The term "lost film," to me,
is a film that we know
existed at some point,
but we cannot find any
existing elements to it.
- You know, this is one of those questions
where I've been thinking
about this for so long,
where I feel like now I've lost
what a lost film actually is.
- I would not consider a film to be lost
if it was still on a digital format.
I think that a lost
film, in order to qualify
as a lost film, is there is
literally nothing left of it,
save for maybe, you know, a couple of,
I don't know, a couple of
frames or something like that.
It's something that we
literally cannot get back.
- When I began being
interested in film history,
a lost film was something
which I couldn't view,
and that was my perspective of it.
That being said, nowadays, I'm much more
of the opinion that there
are different classifications
of a lost film.
There's a lost film which is accident,
which means it survives
somewhere, it's just not viewable.
There's a lost film which is
lost to its original medium,
something which may only exist on tape.
- Cut, let's try
and get it right this time.
- But all in all, a lost film is a work
that doesn't exist in
the accessible format
that it's meant to be seen in, I think.
- You know, a film that
was never completed,
in my minds, that's not a lost film.
Like, "New York Ninja" is not a lost film.
It's just an incomplete film.
- If it's not finished,
how can it be a lost film?
Like, it needs to be finished
in order to be a lost film.
I agree with that to an extent.
However, when it comes to
something like "New York Ninja,"
which is what I worked
on and helped finish,
it was a film that had
been shot but not finished.
So the question is, is
it an unfinished film
or is it a lost film?
In the case of "New York Ninja,"
I would probably say it's
a little bit of both.
There was actually some knowledge
of the film existing prior.
One of the great things
about "New York Ninja" is it
actually shows our love of preservation.
I'm not sure a lot
of other companies would
have taken the time
to take an unfinished film
and put the money and
resources into finishing it.
- An orphan film is a film that
we have elements for, however,
the copyright owner has either passed away
or cannot be identified.
I guess the best example
for that would be a lot
of stag films are considered
to be orphan films
because these people who created
them, they used fake names.
So we don't really know
who these people were
or created them.
These are different from lost films,
though, because we know
that they actually existed
and we have the elements
to kind of prove it.
- You've already proven how good you are.
Now let's see if you can act.
- Now, I would always read
"American Cinematographer,"
and they had some just great articles
with Scorsese and directors, you know,
concerned about their films, you know,
especially the film stocks
just weren't gonna last over time.
And that was probably, like, in the '90s
when I started to really realize
that, you know, film itself was,
like, more fragile than
some of the other art forms.
- Phew, this one's bad.
- Probably everyone that's
watching this hopefully knows
what the definition of
vinegar syndrome is by now.
And I think that's something that,
you know, both of us are proud of.
You were asking me what vinegar
syndrome smells like,
It smells like vinegar,
yeah.
- So how I originally got started here,
I was being asked to do some QC work,
and then they started training me.
I was also learning to restore, really,
the first releases.
- So I think it's really important
to call attention to the fact
that the people who work here,
even if they had interest in film
or some kind of, like,
formal technical training
in digital editing or post production,
they, for the most part,
had never touched a piece
of film before coming into this building
and beginning to work here,
and certainly had never worked
in terms of restoration
and archival materials.
Yeah, I think that that's really important
because it shows both
their level of interest
and dedication to what they're doing
and what we're doing collectively,
but also, you know, this is work
that can be done by anyone
if they are really motivated
and have the discipline to study it
and focus on it and learn
the technical side of it.
- You got it.
- Excellent, thank you.
- So the lost films of
Herschell Gordon Lewis,
these were three films,
"The Ecstasies of Women,"
"Linda and Abilene,"
and then "Black Love."
- A young man begins in earnest
to try to arouse a girl sexually.
He caresses her leg and
talks to her gently.
She resists, but he continues.
- It was cool to find these
because there was kind of,
like, rumors about them.
You saw posters, but
otherwise these were lost.
- It's hard to ignore the
name Herschell Gordon Lewis,
and as somebody who had been, you know,
really interested in the
history of erotic cinema,
seeing Herschell Gordon Lewis, you know,
with lost films and having all those films
also be erotic was really interesting.
- Oh, hi, my name is Harry,
glad you could drop in, this is?
- Sandy.
- Oh, yeah, Sandy, that's it, Sandy.
Excuse me a minute, will you, folks.
- Genre filmmakers who worked in sex films
in, like, any capacity, it's almost always
that their genre film
work is gonna overshine
their sex film work.
- You took care of me last year in 1868.
Now I'm gonna take care of you in '69.
- They came out of the
Guffanti Film Lab,
and we're still, you know,
going through this collection to this day.
Also from that collection was
another film called
"Massage Parlor Murders."
Finding all of those and
starting off with those,
it was an added intensity
to get those films right,
showing what we're trying to do
in terms of preservation,
in terms of restoration,
and what we want to do going forward.
- One of the questions that
comes up a lot is the difference
between restoration and preservation.
I would say first and foremost,
Vinegar Syndrome is a
preservation company.
We are one of the few
film companies out there
that actually has an
in-house film archive.
This means that we store the physical film
in the building, temperature controlled,
humidity controlled, that way we're trying
to preserve the actual physical film
for as long as possible, keeping it
from degrading and
deteriorating over time.
Restoration for us is
taking that physical film,
scanning it in digitally,
and then going in and cleaning up,
removing the dirt, the scratches,
physically removing that stuff
in order to make a newer
restored version of the film.
So Vinegar Syndrome is not
the only company out there
that is releasing genre films like this.
There are a number of companies,
Arrow, Blue Underground, Severin.
We all have the same goal
at the end of the day,
is to preserve, restore,
and release these films.
- Our goal was to always do
the most exhaustive releases possible,
the kind of things that we wanted to see,
I wanted to see, studio level transfers
for these only crappy exploitation movies
that people, you know, gave
really bad transfers to,
and go back to the original
elements whatever possible,
you know, restore everything
to the A plus level as much as possible,
given the elements we were working with,
and have it as exhaustive
of extras as possible.
And I guess really at that time,
the only other guys who
were doing it were Don May
and Vinny Bancalari at Elite,
and, you know, I give them a lot of credit
for kind of starting in this arena.
- The law of the
jungle, eat or be eaten.
In these film-
- And then that's why
we started Grindhouse,
because we were frustrated
that movies we loved were only available
as fifth generation bootlegs
from some Japanese LaserDisc
that was, you know,
optically censored anyway
in the case of "Cannibal Holocaust,"
so we ready wanted to give
these movies some respect.
For "The Beyond," we went
to Technicolor in Rome.
Everybody was saying,
"Why do you even care about these movies?"
We went to the lab to
inspect the negative,
and, you know, we were winding through it
and discovering that the negative was,
like, in really poor condition,
even though it had
ended up at Technicolor,
which is one of the
preeminent labs in the world.
You know, it was just, they
just thought of it as junk
and filler, and, you know,
I was winding through the negative
and there was a tear
through one of the frames,
and I called the lab
technician over and he went,
"Oh, no, don't worry about
it, don't worry about it,"
and took a tape splicer
and just slathered a piece
of tape over it and pushed out
the bubbles with his finger,
and it was like, "Bueno,
bueno," it was, like, good,
it's like, for him, that
was good enough, you know,
for a movie that they
thought was just junk.
So, I mean, when people have an opinion
that something is garbage, I mean,
they're not apt to try to preserve it.
- This was actually the
second tape I ever owned,
and the first horror movie I ever owned.
It was a French release, I
got it on holiday, because-
My career in the world
of boutique labels started before Severin.
We had a VHS label in the '90s
in England called Exploited,
and it basically emerged out
of collecting horror movies
in the UK on tape, and
there was a lot more talk
about the fact that not
only were these films
in their commercially released form cut,
but they were also, you know,
not in the correct aspect ratio.
They were old masters,
they were not really the
way the filmmaker intended.
So that became much more
part of the discussion,
that, you know, widescreen was a thing
that we should be aspiring
to to see these films.
Fortunately, I met Bill
Lustig around this time,
and Bill splintered off
to form Blue Underground
and I went with him
for the first, I think,
five years of Blue Underground,
and then we formed Severin after that.
Three of the more satisfying
undertakings we've done
over the last few years
are the director sets
that we've put together for Al Adamson,
Andy Milligan, and Ray Dennis Steckler.
Adamson was first, and
it certainly didn't start
as us doing, you know,
as comprehensive a set
as we possibly could, but because most
of the films came from one source,
the actual licensing part of
it wasn't too complicated.
The complicated part was
finding the films themselves,
and the fact that a lot
of them had been released
in multiple versions was
re-titlings and recut.
So sometimes there would be three reels
of one movie at Iron Mountain,
and then another couple of
reels were at The Academy.
Another reel we might have
to get off a collector
because that one seemed
to have disappeared,
or that version seemed
to have disappeared.
- Filmed on location
where they actually work and play,
see the sensuous ladies
of the Mustang Ranch.
- So the archeology wasn't so
much in finding the elements.
There was some of that, but it was more
about putting all the pieces together
once we got all the elements here.
- In the archive here at AGFA,
we have the, I believe
the only known print
of "Carnival Magic,"
an Al Adamson children's movie classic,
and it unfortunately is
in a very advanced stage
of vinegar syndrome.
Well, I think genre films are likely
to become lost for a couple of reasons.
I mean, one, the kind of
obvious reason is just
because of what they are.
- From every
act of pleasure comes
an equal act of perversion.
- To the general public,
these movies are still trashy,
especially if you're going more
into the exploitation,
sexploitation end of the spectrum.
Like, that kind of stuff just terrifies,
you know, the average person.
But also, just how they were made,
you know, a lot of these
films were financed
by, like, doctors or
dentists who were just like,
"I got a bunch of money, I
want to be a film producer.
And because of that, there was very little
if any thought given to the life
of the film beyond its
initial theatrical run.
- What about these attributes?
- There's so many lost films
that I'm just kind of dying to see.
It's funny, I think a lot of people
when they think of the idea of lost films,
I think lost films are, you know,
silent era Hollywood
productions or early soundies,
talking about things like
"London After Midnight"
and things like that.
- Shut the fuck up!
I don't have to tell
you if I don't want to.
- Those are the fighting
words used to the almighty
when he cast you out of heaven-
- I think my favorite film
that I've helped find is a
little movie called "Sex Demon,"
which is the gay porno
version of "The Exorcist."
- Did you see what your lover did?
He's gonna rot in Hell, and so are youl!
- Made by a 20-year-old male
stripper turned filmmaker
named JC Crickett, or Jimminy Crickett.
It's a film that actually
had a fairly high profile
at the time of its release in 1975.
It was featured in national gay magazines
and heavily advertised in,
like, issues of "The Advocate"
and a lot of other gay publications
and got mixed reviews.
But for decades, it's
been unavailable to see.
If you've ever, like, inspected
or handled a 35 or 16 millimeter print
of a low budget genre film,
you will probably just
be disgusted.
They're dirty, they're full of splices.
They're in just really awful condition,
especially adult titles,
which would literally be played on loop
for their entirety of their runs over
and over and over and over again.
I think the reason why
genre films are overlooked
by, you know, more reputable archives
or institutions are because
they don't have the prestige
that Hollywood films have,
but that stuff is important,
and these films are our
history, our heritage.
They should exist and people
should be proud to have them.
- I disagree with this just a little bit
because I feel that the
institutions that do the most
in the way of film preservation
are pretty indiscriminate
in the kinds of films they preserve.
- I think there's a growing awareness
around the significance
of independent film,
and independent film
often means genre film.
- We warn you that this-
- There's a more of a willingness
to look at these materials
as being significant,
as being uniquely endangered in a way
that a lot of studio films aren't,
and even if we aren't able
to give those films necessarily
the love and the attention,
if we're not, like, doing
extensive restoration work
on most of them, we're still intervening
on their behalf, getting
them out of peril,
and putting them in the vaults.
- Of course, it's easier to
get funding for certain films,
and those films tend to be the classics,
things for which there
is commercial potential,
things for which there might
be some critical acclaim
to the archive for
performing the restoration.
UCLA Film Archive has done
a restoration of "Ouanga,"
a Black cast film for
which I am trying to see
if they will allow me to access,
things like the gay films of Pat Rocco,
not just a film or two here and there,
but documentaries, narratives,
shorts, everything.
And, you know, it's important
to preserve everything
because we don't know now
what's gonna be of value
in 20 years, 50 years.
- Yeah, the first time that I became aware
of the film "The Rare Blue
Apes," whereas I tend to refer
to it as "Quack Quack
and the Rare Blue Apes,"
or just simply "Quack Quack," it was part
of this huge collection,
like, several pallets full
that had arrived at the archive.
It was this female film collector who
had stored these materials,
as the legend goes,
like, in her backyard underneath a tarp.
- Fire!
- Polarizing would probably
be the best description.
- Partnerships with home
video companies such
as Vinegar Syndrome and Severin
can be hugely important.
That sort of work puts the
films back out into the public,
and that's important in itself,
but I think even beyond that,
by sort of, like, promoting film culture
by having information in your releases
about the elements that the
transfers were made from,
you're doing a lot of
work to educate cinephiles
about the materiality of film.
People don't always realize that.
They sometimes just think stuff
exists, like, in cyberspace,
that it doesn't have some sort of, like,
real existence here in,
like, a physical place,
in a film vault.
And the fact that these scans
that home video companies are making
from elements can be traced back
to a particular negative, to
a particular interpositive,
and, you know, now they're out there.
- All this sterilization stuff,
the papers keep talking about.
- Some people say it's a
good thing, but what is it?
That's what I want to know.
- See that-
- I first became interested
in exploitation films
I think in college.
Well, I wanted to be a filmmaker,
I wanted to work in film, but really,
there was no pathway for me, no avenue,
and I wanted to write about film history,
but I wanted to write about something
that hadn't yet been covered
in books and essays and journals,
and really, no one was talking
about the exploitation film.
You know, there were a couple
of mail order video companies
that would have exploitation categories,
like Something Weird and Scarecrow Video,
and I realize, well, this is a genre
that's not really been charted.
And so I would order
as many of these tapes
as I could get, and
try to find other films
in video rental places to, first,
amass the films and to begin to understand
what defined them as a genre.
- I think every high school
girl and boy's entitled
to know the facts of life.
Many a girl has spoiled her whole life
by making just one mistake.
- And years later, I'm still doing that
because the films continue to emerge.
We continue to discover materials
that we didn't know existed before,
and the more films that we release,
the more films that we restore,
the better we continue
to understand this genre.
- The Natives cover themselves
with the skin of the beast,
and so imbibe as they think
the courage of the lions.
- The last film which
was almost a lost film
that I did in this regard is "Ingagi,"
which is a morally
reprehensible exploitation film,
pseudo documentary that pretended
to journey into darkest Africa
and expose a cult of monkey worshipers,
their terminology, not mine,
but it gets into some
really messy racial issues,
but for that reason, it
needed to be preserved
and made available for study
because like "Birth of a Nation,"
you know, none of us
agrees with the philosophy
because "Birth of a Nation,"
but we regard it as
one of the cornerstones
of America narrative cinema.
"Ingagi" is not a cornerstone
of American narrative cinema,
but it is a cornerstone
in the exploitation genre,
and it was a film that was
incredibly controversial.
It was actually banned.
Not many films in America are
banned, this film was banned.
But "Ingagi" just never
made it out on video,
and to my knowledge,
never showed in archives.
And it's funny, if a film
does not come out on video,
it sort of gets erased from
the public consciousness.
It's no longer something that
people were even looking for.
So it's important that
we continue to unearth
and release the films that
were influential at one time
but have become basically forgotten
in the intervening years.
Working with the Library of Congress,
we were able to access two
different prints of the film
which were slightly varying.
So I was able to cut
together a definitive,
god help me, version of "Ingagi,"
so that that film is now on the record,
and for better or worse, we can see it
and understand it and learn a little bit
about what was considered
acceptable popular
entertainment circa 1930.
- Did we ever talk about
Jimmy Maslon and Eric Caiden,
who loved Herschell Gordon Lewis
and found the Herschell
Gordon Lewis movies.
They tracked down the
negatives for "Blood Feast,"
"2,000 Maniacs," "Color
Me Blood Red," because
when those guys saved the
Herschell Gordon Lewis movies,
that was kind of the start
of anybody saving exploitation films.
- When I was about, I guess
about 15, I saw "Blood Feast."
The "Blood" trilogy was playing
citywide in Los Angeles,
all over the Valley.
It was probably in 25, 30 theaters,
and of course there was no
video or cable back then,
so I went to see it, and
with a couple of my friends
in junior high, and it just blew me away.
And the next night, I came
back with my cassette recorder
and just recorded all the
dialogue from "Blood Feast,"
and went to school the next day
and played it for all my friends.
- Well, Frank, this looks like
one of those long, hard ones.
- A couple of years later, I
used to go see films at UCLA,
and I saw people kind of
laughing that something
that was inept, and I'm thinking,
it kind of clicked in my mind, I go,
"They think that's crazy, over the top?
They haven't seen Blood Feast."
So I went to the projectionist and I go,
"What do you guys pay for a rental?"
And he goes, "We pay 150 bucks."
And so I started thinking,
wow, where's "Blood Feast"?
I mean, what if I could get that movie
and get it in 10 campuses
every Saturday night?
That could be 1,500 bucks.
But I had no idea who had the rights.
So I just started to trying to figure out
where was "Blood Feast."
And somebody gave me a lead
once, Stan Kohlberg has it.
So I called up Kohlberg,
he came back and said it was
10 grand, "You want to rights?"
And this was late, this
Is probably, by now,
this is, like, 1979,
maybe 1979 or 1980.
There's still no video cable.
There's only still only
four channels on TV,
so Kohlberg probably was thinking,
"Nobody's gonna play this on TV."
And I told Eric about, and
he, and Eric knew who it was.
Eric goes, "Yeah, that's
Herschell Gordon Lewis.
I'll kick in some money
if you want to get that."
So Eric, he just, he
knew what was going on
cause he had the poster store,
and I met Mike Vraney through Eric.
- When Mike started
Something Weird in 1990,
he came across some 35 millimeter prints
of "A Smell of Honey, a Swallow of Brine,"
"The Sin Syndicate," and a
few tex-exploitation films.
Back in those days, he worked
at a porno theater called the
Apple, and it was in Seattle,
and he didn't know anything
about film restoration.
He didn't know anything
about how films were scanned
or anything, so he would just
bring his 35 millimeter prints
to the theater and project them,
and then sit in the audience
with a camcorder and film it,
and then sell them to
collector markets and stuff.
So those were some of the first films
that he had found, and it made him think
that there has to be hundreds
and hundreds more out there.
He got so excited about these films,
and especially when he, you know,
did his first catalog, and he was like,
"All right, how can I find more?"
There was a magazine called "Big Reel,"
and that was one of the places
where if people were either
buying or selling film,
like, you could find something there.
So he put in an ad saying, you know,
"I'm looking for 60s sexploitation films,"
but he also put in an ad saying,
"I'm selling 60s sexploitation
films on home video."
I can only speak from my own experience,
but, like, in the early 1990s,
there really wasn't as much interest
in exploitation films and genre film.
There was always been an interest in,
like, underground movies, or things
that were just a little fringe-y.
But I think it was a
matter of educating people
that these kind of films even exist.
- Many films that people thought were lost
or hadn't been accessible
since the 1960s were
actually recirculated by
Something Weird Video.
- "Scare Their Pants Off"
is a new kind of story.
- Something Weird was
kind of the gateway drug,
and it definitely got me
going down the rabbit hole,
just looking for weirder and weirder
and more interesting low-budget films.
There's always a ton of really
interesting stories attached
to these movies, whether it
be the actors and actresses,
or the people involved in making the film
or its distribution.
It seems like every movie
is its own little microcosm.
- I saw the Chesty Morgan
movies in the drive-in
when they came out, and Doris
wrote Stan a letter saying,
"I'll sell my movies.
I don't know why anybody
would even want these movies."
So I'm going, "Yeah, I want them, Doris.
What do you want for them?"
And she gave me a price,
I didn't do anything,
I just said, "Okay, fine."
I think, I don't know what it was.
There were, like, 18 movies.
I think it was, like, 40K
or something like that.
And, anyway, I bought the
rights to Doris's films.
- Do you know
that "Bad Girls go to Hell"?
- Then her films
started getting more popular.
- Hey, let me ask you.
How did you come to meet Chesty Morgan?
- Well, somebody told me
about her, and I thought-
- And then she got mad
that she sold them to me.
John Waters also helped a lot,
and in 1981, he wrote "Shock Value,"
and that's around the time
that I bought the rights to the films.
John Waters really propelled
these films into pop culture.
- Barry, did you meet Doris Wishman?
She's so great, you have to
see her movies, they're great.
- Really?
- I saw-
- Probably the most important exploiter
that Something Weird got involved
with was David F. Friedman,
known as the mighty monarch
of exploitation film.
The way that Mike met him was not ideal.
He got a phone call one day saying,
"Hey, I hear you're selling my
'Ribald Tales of Robin Hood"
on video, and, you know, stop it."
And Mike gets on the phone,
"Yeah, and people love it.
What can we do, like, to maybe
make a deal or something?"
Dave Friedman had his films stored
in Los Angeles on Cordova Street.
He wasn't living in Los
Angeles at the time.
He was already back in Anniston,
Alabama, where he's from.
So Mike sets up a meeting
with him down there
and goes in this, like, you
know, stuffy old film vault
and starts looking around, and he's like,
"Oh, what is this?"
And he sees a movie called
"Space Thing," and Dave's like,
"That's the worst science
fiction movie ever made.
You don't want it," and
that made Mike want it more.
And, you know, Dave made
some recommendations,
like, you know, he had
his very first film,
"The Defilers," he was very,
very proud of that movie,
as well as the fact that he knew
that it would probably do well,
and Mike was all about it.
So he took about, I don't
know, half a dozen films,
and he said, "Well,
let's just transfer these
and see what happens," and
things sold like gangbusters.
Dave gets his first
royalty check and he says,
"You can have them all,
and I'm gonna introduce
you to my friends."
- All you kids make me sick.
- The cool thing about Something Weird is
that they were finally
putting out a lot of movies
that I'd read about for years.
So, yeah, Something Weird, you know,
they were sort of doing it first,
and the funny thing about
Mike Vraney, though,
is he was more into just
releasing the movies.
I don't think he was really
that into preservation.
- Mike was not worried about
the longevity of these films.
It was more important for
him to just get it scanned
and put it on home video and
then just put it someplace,
and his someplace was not always the best.
And the way that Mike would store films,
it was willy nilly, like,
they weren't by genre
or, like, put all the Dave
Friedman movies together,
all the Joe Sarno movies
together, all this.
It was just random.
- Mike has many different genres here.
I got something in mind-
- I think releasing films to
home media was always something
about finding rights first
and then finding elements afterwards,
but I think Something Weird
really started this idea
of having elements and saying, "Fuck it,
I just have to put this out."
- Bat Pussy, please,
it's a misunderstanding.
- What's a misunderstanding?
- Probably our proudest accomplishment
Is a movie called "Bat Pussy."
- Meanwhile, at Bat Pussy's
secret warehouse hideout, Dora Dildo,
alias the mighty Bat Pussy,
is patiently waiting for her super senses
to tell her that a crime
is about to be committed.
- Mike ended up getting a large collection
of 16 millimeter adult films
from a defunct theater in Memphis, Texas
from his friend Mike McCarthy,
and people just loved it,
and it became, like, its own cult classic,
and we had no idea, I mean,
that wasn't on any lists,
you know, that we would come up with,
cause over the years, I mean,
Mike would have me go through
our press book materials
or our stills and be like,
"Okay, what other films haven't
we found that look interesting and stuff?"
Well, "Bat Pussy" was
not amongst any of them,
and, you know, in retrospect now,
it was probably our greatest find.
- I've got so much to offer,
Bat Pussy, this is
tougher for me, turn over.
- Around 1991, '92 was
when Mike first heard
about the Movielab.
- Movielab was a very large
independent film processing facility,
and it was the lab of choice
for a large amount of
independent filmmakers.
At some point, Movielab, in
the late '80s, early "90s,
they had to close their doors.
- So Mike goes out to the East
Coast and organizes, like,
three cargo containers full of films
to be sent to a warehouse in Los Angeles
where he would go to a
couple of times a month
and just process film.
And we started finding some
of the most amazing films,
like the Michael and Roberta
Findlay "Flesh" trilogy,
"Touch of Her Flesh,"
"Curse of Her Flesh,"
and "Kiss of Her Flesh."
- Get down there, you slut.
That's the only job women are good for.
- But then, there was an announcement
that there was gonna be
an auction of the films.
Arthur Morowitz, who was
the owner of Distribpix,
he contacted Mike and said, you know,
"If I buy these films,
would you be the custodian,
and we can go in as partners?"
- My father, he had gotten
in touch with a gentleman,
he, I believe, bought the
building that Movielab was in,
and he was, I believe he
was the owner of Panavision,
which they then
moved into that location,
and my father ended up having
a nice conversation with him,
and my father was pretty
well known in the city
at that point, so they had a nice rapport,
and I think the main thing
that ties us to Movielab,
or that sort of brings
this all together is
that this guy was not looking
to throw this film away.
This guy, there was
something nice about that,
when you hear the story told,
but he couldn't do anything with it,
and it was an enormous amount of film.
- It was a Herculean
effort on Mike's part,
you know, processing the film,
and he never actually
got through everything.
He would have, like, you know,
piles of different film elements,
like, you know, part of
the negative to something,
but, like, it was still missing
some of the audio track,
and then, "Okay, well,
we know that's over here.
Label it with the title."
And it would be, like, a happy day
when we'd find all of the reels.
In 2012, Mike was diagnosed
with stage four lung cancer,
so he knew that his days were numbered,
and he really needed to figure out, like,
what was gonna happen with everything
in the Something Weird archive,
including the Movielab collection,
because that was pretty much,
like, the biggest part of it.
After his death, you know,
we actually passed it back on
to Distribpix under the custodianship
of Steven Morowitz now.
So it's just funny to think,
all those films came
out from the East Coast
and they lived here for a while,
and then they all went
back to the East Coast,
and I believe they live in
Bridgeport, Connecticut now.
- I think the big thing for me is
when we started merging with Distribpix,
and now it's just making
I think the film archive
much more complete.
- Distribpix Incorporated is pretty much
a second generation home video company
founded on the production
of black and white sexual
melodrama type films,
started in 1965 by my father
and his partner, Howard Farber,
and they grew it into their
own small little empire.
They invested in theaters,
they bought properties,
and then blossomed that into home video.
I think many people,
they're probably familiar
with Video Shack, which was
the first real large chain
of video stores in the tri-state area,
and the flagship store being
at 49th Street and Broadway.
So I sort of grew up around all this stuff
and just had the greatest memories.
Hundreds of those films
were from Movielab,
and my dad was very happy.
He really loved Mike because every month,
they would get revenue checks.
My dad was just happy,
he was happy with that,
and Something Weird Video became,
you know, the video label,
you know what I'm saying?
A lot of people came up
with Something Weird Video.
- I think in terms of
just taking a collection
as wide and varied
as what film material
Something Weird came across,
the actual branding was also one
of those really important facets of it,
where at a certain point,
if you were able to enter
into the back halls of a video store,
you were automatically able to recognize
that at the very least, what you see,
if it has Something Weird
on it, is gonna be cool.
It's gonna be something weird
that you haven't seen before,
literally, something weird.
But I think that's what makes
the actual current landscape
of the boutique label or
the releasing companies,
independent releasing companies
of today really fascinating
as, like, an actual, really
diverse programming world
where literally anybody can do anything
if you love the material and
are able to brand it correctly.
- I think that the work that Mike did
from, like, 1990 to 2013,
it's an indelible mark
on film preservation.
To me, keeping his legacy alive is,
like, the most important part
cause, I mean, seriously,
if it wasn't for him,
I wouldn't be doing what
I'm doing right now,
and I think a lot of other
people wouldn't be, either.
I mean, he was a real inspiration to,
you know, many film fans and people
who, like, wanted to do this for a career.
And then to be able to,
like, take those films
and just put them, like, you know,
insert them all these other places
where they're gonna just
continue to be discovered
by other people, Severin Films,
Vinegar Syndrome, Arrow
Video, Kino Lorber.
There really wasn't any one company when,
after his death that could just be like,
"Okay, I'll do all that."
So they picked and choose,
and I help them along the way,
and, you know, it's been
really wonderful being able
to work with other people who get it
and, you know, they're
bringing their own voice
to this material now.
- Huh, maybe I missed it.
- It's right on the cart.
- What is it?
- I don't know.
- There's this definite misconception
on the parts of people
who like these films
and buy the physical copies that,
it's come out on disc,
therefore it's preserved,
or therefore the original
materials are preserved.
Not every film that we release
and that we restore lives in our archive.
Sometimes we acquire materials temporarily
and then have to return
them to whoever owns them.
- Oops.
My father was Larry Joachim,
who was a movie producer
and distributor of independent films.
One of my father's friends
had a big collection
in storage and in Movielab.
It was up for auction
or something like that.
I guess my father went there
and there was nobody at the auction
and he got all these
things for very little,
and he just picked it up,
and I said, "What'd you do?"
He says, "Oh, I just got another,
like, 50 films and negatives."
So many of the films that are
in these storage and things
we found out were missing,
they were lost films for many years,
things like "Red Roses of Passion"
and "Beware the Black Widow."
- The one that I have the closest affinity
for is "Beware the Black Widow."
This particular one
seemed really interesting
in that it had, like, it
actually had a killing narrative
and wasn't just straight up nudity.
We had, I believe it was
seven out of eight reels
of the actual sound,
and one part of the actual picture.
So I reach out to the collector
and see whether or not
he had anything else
for this title, and luckily, he did.
- We do know that there was some fires
where the original warehouse
is and other places like that,
and many things were ruined
to the point where
there's very little left.
Luckily, we have found a lot of it.
- "Deep Inside" is an example
of a frustrating project,
in that the only element
that we were able to locate
for the film is a comp dupe negative,
and that means that it's
a picture negative element
that also has a soundtrack on it,
and because it came from another country
and it was the element that had been sent
to that country for their
own theatrical distribution,
the distributor there
decided to reedit the film.
So in order to put the film back together,
we had the main feature,
and then we had three reels
of chunks that had been cut
out, sometimes mid-shots,
from the version that was
released internationally.
So all of these different
elements were scanned,
and then I had to kind
of haphazardly put them all back together
and figure out where all of
these random chunks belonged.
- Do you have to eat that peach like that?
- I love peaches.
- By and large, the most
complicated restorations
in terms of elements are either
where the element was edited
or completed in a way that
requires multiple sets
of elements to be used or pulled from
to create a single version of the film,
or the film was reedited so much
that there isn't a single element,
a complete element that
represents the film
as it was originally intended to be seen,
so other elements have to be used
to either supplement, because
maybe the negative was recut
and things were taken
out of it or reordered
and those pre-print elements
don't exist anymore.
So the only element that
does exist is a print,
or even worse, only a video master.
And we've unfortunately had to do that
on a number of occasions
where the only film materials
we've been able to locate
for a title are either a recut version
or a censored version
that's missing material
that the filmmakers
certainly wanted in there,
and we've had to pull from
a far inferior source.
- The most extreme situation that
I've encountered was "House
on Straw Hill ."
- Perhaps this is the first
time in a long while
that I really feel content.
I actually feel happy this evening.
- It had all kinds of damage
that I hadn't really experienced before.
When you look at the image,
it looked like watermarks all
over it and different colors,
and the colors were fading
in different spots in every frame.
So it wasn't something where unless
you actually went into
every frame and repainted it
that you would actually be able
to restore it unilaterally.
But we found a release print
from a collector here in the US,
and that was actually what we used
for a majority of the master
because it was actually better
condition than the negative.
So I actually went to
where the James Kenelm
Clarke films were stored,
which was at his farmhouse
in Norfolk, in England,
and it was a barn, but
when I went in there,
there was a hole in the roof of the barn,
and all the film cans were just encrusted
into the wall, basically, like,
the brick work was kind of falling apart,
and it was almost as if the
cans themselves were kind
of part of that old ruin.
But it was covered in pigeon
shit, years and years of dirt,
and the elements in Norfolk could get in,
like, hot in the summer,
freezing in the winter,
snow, whatever must have
been on those things,
and all the film cans
were completely rusty,
and this is how the negative
of "House on Straw Hill"
and all his other films had
been stored for decades.
I did manage to pull enough
reels of each of the films,
which I then loaded into my rental car.
When they arrived here, you
know, you could smell them,
you could smell that film, and we had
to then have them all sonically cleaned,
take them down to what we
call the bath house here in LA
and have them sonically
cleaned, and they complained
about the condition of these things,
like, "What the hell are you bringing us?"
But at least then they come back
in the best possible condition
to put on the scanner,
and then we have to figure out how well
they can be restored, which
Is never gonna be perfect,
but at least we've then
scanned them until, you know,
until 8K scanning comes
along, we've got them
and we've got them, you
know, in better conditions
than they were being kept
for the last few decades.
- One of the very earliest collections
that I became involved
with was the material
from a guy named Elvin Feliner,
who for decades was just
buying film libraries.
- I knew Elvin Feltner
for many, many years.
He figured out early on that
he could buy a film library
for X and then have it valued at,
like, 10 or 20, even 100 X.
What he did is he amassed a film library
and he got an appraisal
of the film library
for $400 million,
and so he basically lost
interest in the library
and he was really only interested
in borrowing money against
the value of the library.
- He didn't really care what it was.
Like, he would buy, like, TV shows,
he would buy films, he
would just buy anything,
and one of the libraries
that he bought were all
of the independently produced
films by Albert Zugsmith,
who is best remembered for his flirtation
with Hollywood respectability,
but like many people
who got their starts in
Hollywood, he ended up working
in exploitation films
in the '60s and "70s.
- The film you're about
to see is a new art form,
"The Incredible Sex Revolution,"
written and directed by Albert Zugsmith,
who's brought you such
great motion pictures
as "Written on the Wind," "Touch
of Evil," and "Panty Hill."
- The materials were stored
well for several decades
until the early 2000s when
they were reportedly moved
to a carpeted former Bally Total Fitness.
- He was dying of leukemia.
I was in the hospital visiting him,
and I happened to notice on the table next
to the bed a pile of mail,
and there was a piece of mail
that was registered mail from Florida.
So I kind of quietly grabbed
that piece of mail and
I went into the hallway,
opened it up, and of course
it was from the landlord
of where his film library was stored.
I copied down the name
and the phone number.
Later that day, I reached out to him,
and the guy said basically
that he's foreclosed on it,
he has a dumpster, and in two
weeks, the entire contents
of the storage space
IS going in a dumpster,
and I went down to Florida
to rescue the library.
There was no air conditioning
and there had been a roof leak.
Like, the worst possible conditions
you could ever imagine for storing a film.
- A number of the films
that were salvageable,
although decaying, were "The
Incredible Sex Revolution,"
which was a lost film, and "Violated,"
which sadly still only survives
in terms of a couple of faded prints.
We have the rotting Zugsmith films
in this building for a while,
and we'd basically purge
every couple of years
because it was in such a bad state
that even in two years' time,
film that was semi-salvageable
would have decayed
so much more that it
became un-salvageable.
- We're sitting on raw
scans, raw film scans,
digital film scans
of titles that have, since
the film was scanned,
have decayed because film decays.
I mean, you can only slow it down.
You can't stop it, you can't reverse it.
Film is like people, we
just continue to get older
and, you know, there's more problems
and more aches and pains.
But I wish there was a way
to just hit the pause button,
but you can't.
- There was a certain
amount of crosspollination
between exploitation films
and other low budget
filmmaking of the time.
I first learned about the
driver's education films
of the '50s and '60s,
the explicit "Death on the Highway" films,
and to me, those films were mythic,
and I didn't necessarily
believe that they existed,
at least as described to me.
- They have been called the most
effective traffic safety
motion pictures ever produced.
Without a doubt, you have witnessed
the most shocking scenes ever
put on motion picture film.
The object of the whole thing,
our traffic safety film program,
is simply to make you a better driver.
During these years of filmmaking,
we have shown you the results
of almost every driving
mistake in the book.
- And the intention of the filmmakers
with these films is to show them
to high school drivers in
driver education classes
to scare them into habits of safe driving.
And eventually, I tracked down the makers
of some of these films and
some of the more elusive films
that weren't available
from mail order companies.
I was able to find films on eBay
because no one saw the
value in certain films.
- This car
loaded with teenagers slid
into the end of a guardrail.
The rail knifed through the car,
pinning all of the young men
in the rear portion of the car.
Believe it or not, no one
was seriously injured.
- With industrial and educational films,
typically the pre-print material,
that is the negatives, don't survive,
and I have an especially
tragic story to share.
When I was working on my documentary
on driver education films,
I was seeking out the negatives
for those really landmark films,
like "Signal 30" and "Mechanized Death,"
and the producer who owned the rights,
Earle Deems, had donated the negatives
to the Ohio State Highway Patrol.
He put me in touch, I got
through to the correct person,
and eventually found that they said,
"Oh, yeah, we had that,
but we got rid of it."
And it was like, "Why
did you get rid of it?"
"Well, he also provided
us with video tapes,
and the video tapes were
really all anyone needed
or wanted, so there was no
reason to hold onto the,
no one was ever gonna do
anything with the films."
Of course, I would have done
something with the films,
but I got there too late.
Those negatives had been junked,
and he had an inventory of, like,
A, B-roll, 16 millimeter
camera negatives, it was,
you know, it was sad, to say the least.
And a lot of people during the rise
of the video era felt like,
"We don't need 16 millimeter anymore,
it's all video and once we
have a VHS copy, we're good,"
not looking ahead to realize
that beyond VHS was
gonna be DVD and Blu-ray
and 4K UHD and who knows what else.
So it's crucial that filmmakers,
producers, distributors
always preserve the earliest
surviving materials,
and preferably in more than one form
because there's all sorts of ways
in which films can fade and decompose
and no longer be usable
for the creation of
high definition masters.
- So Chicago Film Society
grew pretty organically
from when we started in 2011.
We initially were just
doing repertory programming,
So we were showing a
movie or two every week,
and we weren't doing any other activities.
We were purely a programming organization.
That's how we conceived of it.
But very quickly, we discovered
that that wasn't really sufficient, right,
because after a certain
point, you run into a wall,
and you're dealing with a lot of archives
and private collectors
and realize the advantages
of having your own collection.
- Film preservation
was not necessarily one
of our goals starting up, but we started
with one film preservation project,
and we also started with
a small film collection,
and just over the course of operating,
those projects kept coming.
We kept seeking them out and finding them,
and the collection continued to grow.
- We had a lot of prints
that were not rare or unique,
but we did have things that were.
So we certainly also
felt there was a level
of responsibility there, that
when we have the only copy
of something, we can either
show it until it crumbles,
or we can, you know, show it once or twice
and then realize, "My God, this film
that we have is the only copy,
and the really responsible thing is
to make a new negative, make new prints
so that we can share it."
- You know, of course we had daydreamed
and joked about doing
preservation projects,
and I think at a certain
point, it became more serious.
I think that was really how we arrived
at doing the "Corn's-A-Poppin project.
- "Corn's-A-Poppin is
really a great example
of how showing something,
even if it's, you know,
maybe a little risky to show
the only surviving print,
how essential that can be
to the restoration and
preservation process.
- There's a film from 1955
called "Corn's-A-Poppin'."
It happens to be written by Robert Altman.
Altman himself didn't talk about it.
He basically disowned the film.
It wasn't ever available
commercially on video.
It didn't screen in revival houses,
it was just basically a
title on a filmography.
- What a show, wow.
- Wow is right.
- And you learn that it's not
just an Altman adjacent curio,
but a regional film, it's a document
of a musical scene that's vanished,
the country and western
swing scene in Kansas City
in the mid '50s.
It is, in its way, a sponsored film
because it was unofficially
funded by the Popcorn Institute,
which was a trade group promoting popcorn.
- Remember, Pinwhistle
is the pop-ular corn.
- You peel back the layers of the onion,
and unlike a real onion,
every layer smells
better and better, right?
And with this specific film,
the more we researched
it, the more we found
that there was this very
compelling story behind it,
and it wasn't just a
silly little musical film
about popcorn, but an
actual artifact of culture.
- I think when most people
think of what a lost film is,
they mean like a lost Hollywood feature,
or maybe a lost independent feature,
but probably a movie
that has some connection
to someone that you've heard of,
but we haven't gotten to see, you know,
this lost corner of their work.
So in that, by that definition,
"Corn's-A-Poppin is really juicy
because of the Robert Altman connection,
but actually, I would say a lot
of the smaller cases are just as exciting.
Any home movie footage that
accidentally captures something
is really interesting to me.
- If you're focused
purely on narrative cinema
or, you know, mainstream film,
there's a kind of very simple
cut and dried narrative
of what a movie is, right?
You make a movie, it opens in theaters.
It's made to entertain people
and make money back for its investors.
But when you get beyond that
and look at avant-garde
films or industrial films
or home movies or artist films or cartoons
or all these other things,
the tools of a film critic looking
at mass media and saying,
"This movie's good,
this movie is bad," those don't
apply I think quite as much.
Instead, you're really looking at it more
as an anthropologist at that point.
You're saying, "What is
this object, who made it?
What was its use, what community
was it part of?" right,
because there can be occasional films
in the same way that there
are occasional poems.
There are films made for
a specific event, right?
And outside of the context of that,
it might look very modest.
It might just look like
a tiny film in a can.
So our job as preservationists
is to research the film
and to figure out the backstory of it,
to figure out the meaning it
had to its original community,
even if that's obscure now,
to be able to draw in a narrative
that can attract anybody.
- I think the most interesting part
about living in the era
that we're currently in is
that we're not really beholden
to five studios anymore.
I think there are a
bunch of different voices
who can actually release
films, curate their own extras,
and actually bring histories forward
that were never really a recognized part
of the canon before.
Genre film is something
fiercely counter cultural,
very against the grain,
if we're using film terms,
and I think Milestone Films is a
really good example of that.
- Yeah, I mean, the canon
IS an interesting question,
and how it works, and how it works,
and inside each of us, not
just as a cultural artifact.
I think we were all influenced
by the films we saw growing
up, by our education,
by a lot of assumptions we have,
and by things that we were taught
when we first started
working in the film industry,
and I started working in 1985.
Some of the things that
were kind of, you know,
you know, just accepted
facts were that certain kinds
of films were sellable
and others were not.
So, for us, that seemed to
be films by mostly white men,
and that other films, unless
they were made by Africans,
I mean, I worked for New Yorker Films,
so films made by African
filmmakers might be sellable,
but films made by African
American filmmakers, not so much.
And I think coming to
terms with how that works
in our own psyches also takes time.
I mean, we say that our goal
is to fuck with the canon.
We want to push it, expand it,
and challenge it whenever we can.
- For the last 14 years,
we have been working
on Project Shirley, a expansive research
into Shirley Clarke's life, her careers,
and distribution of everything from four
of her feature films, her documentaries,
her unfinished work, her short films.
But our touchstone, really,
is Charles Burnett's "Killer of Sheep."
We signed the rights in 2001.
It took us six years to
clear the music rights,
which the degree of
difficulty alone makes it one
of my favorites because I love
going after the impossible.
- Working with Charles
Burnett really help us kind
of reset our expectations of what film can
and doesn't want to do, that
a film can be low budget,
and that can be a great virtue.
I now look at many Hollywood films
and think, "This is crap,"
because it's so trite or so
manufactured or so glossy.
- As to why Milestone has focused
on these films is a complicated question
because at some point, we
did do "The Bat Whispers,"
and one day, I got a phone call
from this man named Curtis Harrington,
and we spent two years
working with Curtis,
trying to free up the
rights to all of his films.
So at that point, we were willing
to try and do genre films,
but it didn't come about, and once you hit
on a successful release schedule,
other filmmakers of that
kind come to you, too.
So if you do horror films,
horror directors come to you.
If you do Jewish films,
Jewish directors come to you.
So we never really had that momentum
to do anything after Curtis,
after "Night Tide," really.
So that's part of it.
Another part, I have to say,
is a lot of these genre films
are directed by white men,
and that is something that we have decided
to let other people focus on.
Genre films are the undercurrent
of American society,
even though they can seem
to be about one subject,
zombie films, for example.
"Night of the Living Dead" was one
of the great political films.
So by investigating these
and seeing another side of society,
it brings out more
depth, more understanding
of what this world is about.
- What counts as film treasures
changes over time, and that,
in fact, until the French new wave
really celebrated American
westerns, the films of John Ford
and Anthony Mann were just genre films.
And so I'm thinking that
although perhaps the
big studio films would have
been preserved no matter what,
I'm guessing that a lot of, you know,
Poverty Row westerns owe their survival
to Jean-Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut
and "Cahiers du Cinma."
- Going through film,
which has sort of become
the very regular part
of my life over the last couple of years,
discovering lost elements,
it's invigorating.
But I did find-
You know, there's not
a lot of people around.
Sometimes it's odd hours.
It's late at night, you know,
sometimes early in the morning,
and you're going through elements.
You know, we see a lot of labels on boxes,
and a lot of times, what's on the outside
of the box isn't necessarily
what's inside the box.
But a few weeks ago, we found
a film called "Red Midnight,"
and we of course looked at the leader,
and I believe the element
is a blow up internegative,
So the film was shot in 16 millimeter.
One of the clues we had was on the leader,
there was a name.
- So "Red Midnight" was
from the Distribpix Movielab collection.
An optometrist, Dr. James A. Newslow,
he made this one film, "Red Midnight."
Apparently he made it
cause he was worried
about urban environments
just being too close together
and fires spreading.
Somehow the film ends up with
a nuke going off in Cape Cod.
That's a whole other story, too.
Samm Deighan said it best to me,
"The best way to describe it is
if Herschell Gordon
Lewis made a spy film."
- Where's the hidden room
to assemble the explosives?
- Look about you and
see if you can find it.
- It was found
at the last minute,
but again, you never know
what else is gonna come.
- Something that's actually
been very eye opening
with this Movielab
collection in general was it
really gave me an idea
of what Movielab did.
It's an impressive collection,
and that's sort of where we are,
and as you can see behind me,
we're still about I estimate
another six months to a year
of going through this stuff,
taking the films out of the cans,
letting them breathe, putting
them into archival cans,
and that's what we're doing.
- You know, back when we started,
we were one of the first
if not the first smaller,
you know, at that time really
small home video company
that was attempting to do
what only the major studios
had done up to that point.
- The first time that I
heard about film restoration,
it was probably in the
context of "Citizen Cane"
or "Vertigo" or something like that,
where the studios have spent
an inordinate amount of money
in doing a restoration of
these films that's been kept
in immaculate conditions,
you know, it's not
exactly a major undertaking
of restoration.
- Film scanners have come down in cost.
Digital restoration tools
are more readily available
to ordinary folks.
There's a higher interest, I think,
in preserving these films
and finding these films
before it's too late.
But I really think in terms of, like,
the home video side of
things, the smaller studios,
like, we were at the forefront,
and I'm pretty proud of that.
- This is the-
- And then you get the rest.
- So as of today, this is
not gonna be an exact count,
we have around 4,000 unique
titles in the database.
That equals around 7,000
elements in general,
which goes onto equal
about 23,000 cans of film,
which is a lot.
- It's a real goldmine for what it is.
There's nothing else like it in the world.
It's an archive just full of films
that would otherwise be lost to time.
- Yeah, when I first
visited Vinegar Syndrome,
I was actually just shocked
by how many people work
here under one roof.
Normally, an archive will
outsource all of that work,
and it can end up being really expensive,
if not entirely cost prohibitive.
And then on top of that,
there's the entire distribution
side of the company.
You see where some of this stuff is going,
it's going to Finland,
it's going to Germany,
it's going to Thailand, it's
going all over the world,
and it all happens one roof, it's insane.
And at the end of the day,
we're making these movies accessible
to people that wouldn't have the means
to necessarily see them at all.
- We do not have an unlimited budget.
You know, we're not getting
money from the government.
We're not getting money from taxpayers.
The money that we're getting
to maintain our archive comes
from selling Blu-rays, selling 4Ks,
selling shirts, selling hoodies.
You know, that's where
the money comes from.
- I really don't
feel that we have a right
to say what people should
see, what people should do.
- I'm waiting for the day
where somebody asks me,
like, "Why do you do this?"
The history is never
gonna be fully written.
There are always new stories to explore
and new stories to tell,
and the only way that
we're gonna do that is
if people come to the archive
and get their hands dirty
and figure out that history.
- One thing that I really
enjoy, in general, is logistics,
and one of the most interesting
things, as far as film goes,
is to be a part of an
excavation, if you will.
One of the most exciting
and most overwhelming
was this past February,
I was asked to help out
with the remnants of WRS,
which was a lab in Pittsburgh.
- WRS is an enormously
famous Pennsylvania lab,
which at different times,
it'd passed through different hands,
but it was very famous
for being the favorite
lab of George Romero.
- We showed up and it was like nothing
I've ever seen before.
There were holes in the roof,
all the insulation was down
on top of these piles of film.
We were staring at pallets
that had literal piles of feces.
- It's had 30 years of mold caked
into the actual outside of each reel
unless it was in a plastic container,
and if it was in a plastic container,
it's gonna be suffering
from higher rates of decay.
- You know, one thing that I'll say
about myself is I don't fall
when it comes to logistical
stuff, we always make it happen,
but this was the first
time I think I said,
"I don't think this is possible."
- It was just me, Joe
Rubin, Steven Morowitz,
who's manning a forklift,
the Ralph Stevens,
who is running around winding
and unwinding pallet wrap
because he didn't want
to spend too much money
on the pallet wrap, but at the same time,
it was all of us together
and some hired folks.
I was doing my archivist
thing where I was like,
"Yeah, this is a cool film.
This is what this is,
this is what that is,"
and kind of trying to get
them excited about it,
cause it was such an enormous ordeal,
and we ended up saving
five truckloads of film.
- There's no doubt in my mind
that there'll be some
amazing things discovered.
- Original materials, IPs, CRIs.
The issue with that is that it's
just gonna take a really long
time to go through it all.
- The heyday of exploitation
movie making will
probably never come again.
The circumstances that led
to those kinds of movies
can never be repeated.
It was a crucible of circumstances
in the '60s and '70s and '80s
that led to a certain kind of very free,
very extravagant, very eccentric,
very idiosyncratic filmmaking,
sometimes utterly off the wall and crazy,
but fascinating, and, you know,
the more of that material is
preserved, the better, really.
- I wonder where the
new member's calling up.
- He's probably calling his tailor
to cancel his orders for a
couple of suits.
- I don't really know that much
about how the general public
and even cinephiles necessarily look
upon a lot of the
restoration work that I do.
I know most people would be happy
to just buy a new edition of "Metropolis"
and "Nosferatu" every five years,
and don't worry, we will continue
to provide them with that.
But it's essential to me to
continue discovering new films.
I think we're over corporate
culture at this point.
There's still a lot of
fascinating history to be told,
and really, do my bit to
sort of let the world know
that we are a long way from having,
you know, fully written the
history of American cinema.
In fact, the material we're just digging
into is often some of the most exciting
and interesting material
because it's not about the studio system.
- I don't know, I think, you know,
Joe will probably have a
completely different answer
and maybe just plead
the fifth on this one,
I don't know, but we have, I
mean, anyone that knows us,
they know that we're very different people
and we come from different backgrounds
and we're bringing different
things to the table.
And not to be, like, cliche,
but I think that it
kind of helps, you know?
We have different
perspectives and, you know,
Vinegar Syndrome is,
like, right in the middle.
- No, these are all mysteries.
That's why I'm calling you,
cause I don't know what the-
- We argue constantly.
To an extent, that is a good thing
because it doesn't mean
that either of us are going
to always have the final say.
We have, whether either of us want to,
we have a tremendous burden
that we are the responsible custodians
for hundreds, well, thousands, actually,
of best surviving or only
surviving film materials
for movies that if they were
lost, would truly be lost.
We have tons of lost films.
Are they really lost
if they're sitting 20 feet away from us?
Maybe not, but they're lost in the sense
of no one else can see them
because we haven't restored them yet,
we haven't released them yet.
So we have such a responsibility
to make sure that what
we're doing is always geared
towards ensuring that the
materials that we have here,
the work that we're doing
here, doesn't become lost,
that we're not part of the problem.
- When I first, you know,
became aware of lost films,
it was more of so the realization,
like, artwork in general can
just degrade and become lost.
- You know, a lost film, by definition,
would basically, or at
least my definition would
basically be a film that
has otherwise not survived.
You know, it's a film that
for whatever reason, we don't have.
But when you start
looking at the lost films
in the '60s and '70s, and especially
the genre films the Vinegar
Syndrome is interested in,
you start unpacking this
treasure trove of film.
- Don't call me, baby, I'll call you.
- It seems like genre
films are more vulnerable
to being lost because there
were fewer prints made of them.
A lot of times, these are
independently produced films,
as opposed to studio films.
- One of the problems with genre films,
they were done at these smaller labs,
DuArt in New York, WRS in Pittsburgh,
and when those labs closed,
a lot of negatives disappeared.
- Check me out.
- My God.
- I think that these independent
producers weren't thinking
about the life of these films
after their initial
exploitation, which is where
they're gonna make the
majority of their money.
- If you want a good
smoke, try one of these.
- I mean, they just had a
low opinion of the movies.
They just saw them as a commercial product
and they didn't really
see them as something
that was deserving of being preserved.
The level of restoration work
that has to be done on
these movies is so extreme
that it takes a lot of
work and a lot of passion
to keep these old movies alive.
- Our mentor, Dave Friedman,
would often say that a film
is like a sack of flour.
Every time you shook it, a
little bit more would come out.
- Before Vinegar Syndrome
and my professional career, I was working
at a place called Film
Workers Club out of Chicago,
and there I specialized in film transfers,
digital color work, but
mostly on advertisements,
not necessarily feature
films, but occasionally.
My first job was actually working
as a projectionist in a movie
theater during high school,
and second job was at a
video and records store.
So it very much plays
into what I do today.
- Prior to meeting
Ryan, and certainly long
before Vinegar Syndrome was
even a concept for either of us,
I was helping to manage
a video store in Chicago,
where I was born and raised,
called Odd Obsession Movies,
which became kind of a
meeting ground social club
for a lot of the more interesting
cinephiles in the city.
And I was also working
on a volunteer basis,
cause it was a volunteer cinema,
at Doc Films at the University of Chicago,
where I was helping as a programmer
and finding materials and so on.
And this is one of the ways
that I initially became
more aware of film rights
and actually began speaking
to filmmakers and film distributors.
It didn't ready faze me
in that I wanted to find
or rescue lost films.
My interest was always themed around films
that look bad in the available versions,
or seemingly don't have
good materials available.
- The term "lost film," to me,
is a film that we know
existed at some point,
but we cannot find any
existing elements to it.
- You know, this is one of those questions
where I've been thinking
about this for so long,
where I feel like now I've lost
what a lost film actually is.
- I would not consider a film to be lost
if it was still on a digital format.
I think that a lost
film, in order to qualify
as a lost film, is there is
literally nothing left of it,
save for maybe, you know, a couple of,
I don't know, a couple of
frames or something like that.
It's something that we
literally cannot get back.
- When I began being
interested in film history,
a lost film was something
which I couldn't view,
and that was my perspective of it.
That being said, nowadays, I'm much more
of the opinion that there
are different classifications
of a lost film.
There's a lost film which is accident,
which means it survives
somewhere, it's just not viewable.
There's a lost film which is
lost to its original medium,
something which may only exist on tape.
- Cut, let's try
and get it right this time.
- But all in all, a lost film is a work
that doesn't exist in
the accessible format
that it's meant to be seen in, I think.
- You know, a film that
was never completed,
in my minds, that's not a lost film.
Like, "New York Ninja" is not a lost film.
It's just an incomplete film.
- If it's not finished,
how can it be a lost film?
Like, it needs to be finished
in order to be a lost film.
I agree with that to an extent.
However, when it comes to
something like "New York Ninja,"
which is what I worked
on and helped finish,
it was a film that had
been shot but not finished.
So the question is, is
it an unfinished film
or is it a lost film?
In the case of "New York Ninja,"
I would probably say it's
a little bit of both.
There was actually some knowledge
of the film existing prior.
One of the great things
about "New York Ninja" is it
actually shows our love of preservation.
I'm not sure a lot
of other companies would
have taken the time
to take an unfinished film
and put the money and
resources into finishing it.
- An orphan film is a film that
we have elements for, however,
the copyright owner has either passed away
or cannot be identified.
I guess the best example
for that would be a lot
of stag films are considered
to be orphan films
because these people who created
them, they used fake names.
So we don't really know
who these people were
or created them.
These are different from lost films,
though, because we know
that they actually existed
and we have the elements
to kind of prove it.
- You've already proven how good you are.
Now let's see if you can act.
- Now, I would always read
"American Cinematographer,"
and they had some just great articles
with Scorsese and directors, you know,
concerned about their films, you know,
especially the film stocks
just weren't gonna last over time.
And that was probably, like, in the '90s
when I started to really realize
that, you know, film itself was,
like, more fragile than
some of the other art forms.
- Phew, this one's bad.
- Probably everyone that's
watching this hopefully knows
what the definition of
vinegar syndrome is by now.
And I think that's something that,
you know, both of us are proud of.
You were asking me what vinegar
syndrome smells like,
It smells like vinegar,
yeah.
- So how I originally got started here,
I was being asked to do some QC work,
and then they started training me.
I was also learning to restore, really,
the first releases.
- So I think it's really important
to call attention to the fact
that the people who work here,
even if they had interest in film
or some kind of, like,
formal technical training
in digital editing or post production,
they, for the most part,
had never touched a piece
of film before coming into this building
and beginning to work here,
and certainly had never worked
in terms of restoration
and archival materials.
Yeah, I think that that's really important
because it shows both
their level of interest
and dedication to what they're doing
and what we're doing collectively,
but also, you know, this is work
that can be done by anyone
if they are really motivated
and have the discipline to study it
and focus on it and learn
the technical side of it.
- You got it.
- Excellent, thank you.
- So the lost films of
Herschell Gordon Lewis,
these were three films,
"The Ecstasies of Women,"
"Linda and Abilene,"
and then "Black Love."
- A young man begins in earnest
to try to arouse a girl sexually.
He caresses her leg and
talks to her gently.
She resists, but he continues.
- It was cool to find these
because there was kind of,
like, rumors about them.
You saw posters, but
otherwise these were lost.
- It's hard to ignore the
name Herschell Gordon Lewis,
and as somebody who had been, you know,
really interested in the
history of erotic cinema,
seeing Herschell Gordon Lewis, you know,
with lost films and having all those films
also be erotic was really interesting.
- Oh, hi, my name is Harry,
glad you could drop in, this is?
- Sandy.
- Oh, yeah, Sandy, that's it, Sandy.
Excuse me a minute, will you, folks.
- Genre filmmakers who worked in sex films
in, like, any capacity, it's almost always
that their genre film
work is gonna overshine
their sex film work.
- You took care of me last year in 1868.
Now I'm gonna take care of you in '69.
- They came out of the
Guffanti Film Lab,
and we're still, you know,
going through this collection to this day.
Also from that collection was
another film called
"Massage Parlor Murders."
Finding all of those and
starting off with those,
it was an added intensity
to get those films right,
showing what we're trying to do
in terms of preservation,
in terms of restoration,
and what we want to do going forward.
- One of the questions that
comes up a lot is the difference
between restoration and preservation.
I would say first and foremost,
Vinegar Syndrome is a
preservation company.
We are one of the few
film companies out there
that actually has an
in-house film archive.
This means that we store the physical film
in the building, temperature controlled,
humidity controlled, that way we're trying
to preserve the actual physical film
for as long as possible, keeping it
from degrading and
deteriorating over time.
Restoration for us is
taking that physical film,
scanning it in digitally,
and then going in and cleaning up,
removing the dirt, the scratches,
physically removing that stuff
in order to make a newer
restored version of the film.
So Vinegar Syndrome is not
the only company out there
that is releasing genre films like this.
There are a number of companies,
Arrow, Blue Underground, Severin.
We all have the same goal
at the end of the day,
is to preserve, restore,
and release these films.
- Our goal was to always do
the most exhaustive releases possible,
the kind of things that we wanted to see,
I wanted to see, studio level transfers
for these only crappy exploitation movies
that people, you know, gave
really bad transfers to,
and go back to the original
elements whatever possible,
you know, restore everything
to the A plus level as much as possible,
given the elements we were working with,
and have it as exhaustive
of extras as possible.
And I guess really at that time,
the only other guys who
were doing it were Don May
and Vinny Bancalari at Elite,
and, you know, I give them a lot of credit
for kind of starting in this arena.
- The law of the
jungle, eat or be eaten.
In these film-
- And then that's why
we started Grindhouse,
because we were frustrated
that movies we loved were only available
as fifth generation bootlegs
from some Japanese LaserDisc
that was, you know,
optically censored anyway
in the case of "Cannibal Holocaust,"
so we ready wanted to give
these movies some respect.
For "The Beyond," we went
to Technicolor in Rome.
Everybody was saying,
"Why do you even care about these movies?"
We went to the lab to
inspect the negative,
and, you know, we were winding through it
and discovering that the negative was,
like, in really poor condition,
even though it had
ended up at Technicolor,
which is one of the
preeminent labs in the world.
You know, it was just, they
just thought of it as junk
and filler, and, you know,
I was winding through the negative
and there was a tear
through one of the frames,
and I called the lab
technician over and he went,
"Oh, no, don't worry about
it, don't worry about it,"
and took a tape splicer
and just slathered a piece
of tape over it and pushed out
the bubbles with his finger,
and it was like, "Bueno,
bueno," it was, like, good,
it's like, for him, that
was good enough, you know,
for a movie that they
thought was just junk.
So, I mean, when people have an opinion
that something is garbage, I mean,
they're not apt to try to preserve it.
- This was actually the
second tape I ever owned,
and the first horror movie I ever owned.
It was a French release, I
got it on holiday, because-
My career in the world
of boutique labels started before Severin.
We had a VHS label in the '90s
in England called Exploited,
and it basically emerged out
of collecting horror movies
in the UK on tape, and
there was a lot more talk
about the fact that not
only were these films
in their commercially released form cut,
but they were also, you know,
not in the correct aspect ratio.
They were old masters,
they were not really the
way the filmmaker intended.
So that became much more
part of the discussion,
that, you know, widescreen was a thing
that we should be aspiring
to to see these films.
Fortunately, I met Bill
Lustig around this time,
and Bill splintered off
to form Blue Underground
and I went with him
for the first, I think,
five years of Blue Underground,
and then we formed Severin after that.
Three of the more satisfying
undertakings we've done
over the last few years
are the director sets
that we've put together for Al Adamson,
Andy Milligan, and Ray Dennis Steckler.
Adamson was first, and
it certainly didn't start
as us doing, you know,
as comprehensive a set
as we possibly could, but because most
of the films came from one source,
the actual licensing part of
it wasn't too complicated.
The complicated part was
finding the films themselves,
and the fact that a lot
of them had been released
in multiple versions was
re-titlings and recut.
So sometimes there would be three reels
of one movie at Iron Mountain,
and then another couple of
reels were at The Academy.
Another reel we might have
to get off a collector
because that one seemed
to have disappeared,
or that version seemed
to have disappeared.
- Filmed on location
where they actually work and play,
see the sensuous ladies
of the Mustang Ranch.
- So the archeology wasn't so
much in finding the elements.
There was some of that, but it was more
about putting all the pieces together
once we got all the elements here.
- In the archive here at AGFA,
we have the, I believe
the only known print
of "Carnival Magic,"
an Al Adamson children's movie classic,
and it unfortunately is
in a very advanced stage
of vinegar syndrome.
Well, I think genre films are likely
to become lost for a couple of reasons.
I mean, one, the kind of
obvious reason is just
because of what they are.
- From every
act of pleasure comes
an equal act of perversion.
- To the general public,
these movies are still trashy,
especially if you're going more
into the exploitation,
sexploitation end of the spectrum.
Like, that kind of stuff just terrifies,
you know, the average person.
But also, just how they were made,
you know, a lot of these
films were financed
by, like, doctors or
dentists who were just like,
"I got a bunch of money, I
want to be a film producer.
And because of that, there was very little
if any thought given to the life
of the film beyond its
initial theatrical run.
- What about these attributes?
- There's so many lost films
that I'm just kind of dying to see.
It's funny, I think a lot of people
when they think of the idea of lost films,
I think lost films are, you know,
silent era Hollywood
productions or early soundies,
talking about things like
"London After Midnight"
and things like that.
- Shut the fuck up!
I don't have to tell
you if I don't want to.
- Those are the fighting
words used to the almighty
when he cast you out of heaven-
- I think my favorite film
that I've helped find is a
little movie called "Sex Demon,"
which is the gay porno
version of "The Exorcist."
- Did you see what your lover did?
He's gonna rot in Hell, and so are youl!
- Made by a 20-year-old male
stripper turned filmmaker
named JC Crickett, or Jimminy Crickett.
It's a film that actually
had a fairly high profile
at the time of its release in 1975.
It was featured in national gay magazines
and heavily advertised in,
like, issues of "The Advocate"
and a lot of other gay publications
and got mixed reviews.
But for decades, it's
been unavailable to see.
If you've ever, like, inspected
or handled a 35 or 16 millimeter print
of a low budget genre film,
you will probably just
be disgusted.
They're dirty, they're full of splices.
They're in just really awful condition,
especially adult titles,
which would literally be played on loop
for their entirety of their runs over
and over and over and over again.
I think the reason why
genre films are overlooked
by, you know, more reputable archives
or institutions are because
they don't have the prestige
that Hollywood films have,
but that stuff is important,
and these films are our
history, our heritage.
They should exist and people
should be proud to have them.
- I disagree with this just a little bit
because I feel that the
institutions that do the most
in the way of film preservation
are pretty indiscriminate
in the kinds of films they preserve.
- I think there's a growing awareness
around the significance
of independent film,
and independent film
often means genre film.
- We warn you that this-
- There's a more of a willingness
to look at these materials
as being significant,
as being uniquely endangered in a way
that a lot of studio films aren't,
and even if we aren't able
to give those films necessarily
the love and the attention,
if we're not, like, doing
extensive restoration work
on most of them, we're still intervening
on their behalf, getting
them out of peril,
and putting them in the vaults.
- Of course, it's easier to
get funding for certain films,
and those films tend to be the classics,
things for which there
is commercial potential,
things for which there might
be some critical acclaim
to the archive for
performing the restoration.
UCLA Film Archive has done
a restoration of "Ouanga,"
a Black cast film for
which I am trying to see
if they will allow me to access,
things like the gay films of Pat Rocco,
not just a film or two here and there,
but documentaries, narratives,
shorts, everything.
And, you know, it's important
to preserve everything
because we don't know now
what's gonna be of value
in 20 years, 50 years.
- Yeah, the first time that I became aware
of the film "The Rare Blue
Apes," whereas I tend to refer
to it as "Quack Quack
and the Rare Blue Apes,"
or just simply "Quack Quack," it was part
of this huge collection,
like, several pallets full
that had arrived at the archive.
It was this female film collector who
had stored these materials,
as the legend goes,
like, in her backyard underneath a tarp.
- Fire!
- Polarizing would probably
be the best description.
- Partnerships with home
video companies such
as Vinegar Syndrome and Severin
can be hugely important.
That sort of work puts the
films back out into the public,
and that's important in itself,
but I think even beyond that,
by sort of, like, promoting film culture
by having information in your releases
about the elements that the
transfers were made from,
you're doing a lot of
work to educate cinephiles
about the materiality of film.
People don't always realize that.
They sometimes just think stuff
exists, like, in cyberspace,
that it doesn't have some sort of, like,
real existence here in,
like, a physical place,
in a film vault.
And the fact that these scans
that home video companies are making
from elements can be traced back
to a particular negative, to
a particular interpositive,
and, you know, now they're out there.
- All this sterilization stuff,
the papers keep talking about.
- Some people say it's a
good thing, but what is it?
That's what I want to know.
- See that-
- I first became interested
in exploitation films
I think in college.
Well, I wanted to be a filmmaker,
I wanted to work in film, but really,
there was no pathway for me, no avenue,
and I wanted to write about film history,
but I wanted to write about something
that hadn't yet been covered
in books and essays and journals,
and really, no one was talking
about the exploitation film.
You know, there were a couple
of mail order video companies
that would have exploitation categories,
like Something Weird and Scarecrow Video,
and I realize, well, this is a genre
that's not really been charted.
And so I would order
as many of these tapes
as I could get, and
try to find other films
in video rental places to, first,
amass the films and to begin to understand
what defined them as a genre.
- I think every high school
girl and boy's entitled
to know the facts of life.
Many a girl has spoiled her whole life
by making just one mistake.
- And years later, I'm still doing that
because the films continue to emerge.
We continue to discover materials
that we didn't know existed before,
and the more films that we release,
the more films that we restore,
the better we continue
to understand this genre.
- The Natives cover themselves
with the skin of the beast,
and so imbibe as they think
the courage of the lions.
- The last film which
was almost a lost film
that I did in this regard is "Ingagi,"
which is a morally
reprehensible exploitation film,
pseudo documentary that pretended
to journey into darkest Africa
and expose a cult of monkey worshipers,
their terminology, not mine,
but it gets into some
really messy racial issues,
but for that reason, it
needed to be preserved
and made available for study
because like "Birth of a Nation,"
you know, none of us
agrees with the philosophy
because "Birth of a Nation,"
but we regard it as
one of the cornerstones
of America narrative cinema.
"Ingagi" is not a cornerstone
of American narrative cinema,
but it is a cornerstone
in the exploitation genre,
and it was a film that was
incredibly controversial.
It was actually banned.
Not many films in America are
banned, this film was banned.
But "Ingagi" just never
made it out on video,
and to my knowledge,
never showed in archives.
And it's funny, if a film
does not come out on video,
it sort of gets erased from
the public consciousness.
It's no longer something that
people were even looking for.
So it's important that
we continue to unearth
and release the films that
were influential at one time
but have become basically forgotten
in the intervening years.
Working with the Library of Congress,
we were able to access two
different prints of the film
which were slightly varying.
So I was able to cut
together a definitive,
god help me, version of "Ingagi,"
so that that film is now on the record,
and for better or worse, we can see it
and understand it and learn a little bit
about what was considered
acceptable popular
entertainment circa 1930.
- Did we ever talk about
Jimmy Maslon and Eric Caiden,
who loved Herschell Gordon Lewis
and found the Herschell
Gordon Lewis movies.
They tracked down the
negatives for "Blood Feast,"
"2,000 Maniacs," "Color
Me Blood Red," because
when those guys saved the
Herschell Gordon Lewis movies,
that was kind of the start
of anybody saving exploitation films.
- When I was about, I guess
about 15, I saw "Blood Feast."
The "Blood" trilogy was playing
citywide in Los Angeles,
all over the Valley.
It was probably in 25, 30 theaters,
and of course there was no
video or cable back then,
so I went to see it, and
with a couple of my friends
in junior high, and it just blew me away.
And the next night, I came
back with my cassette recorder
and just recorded all the
dialogue from "Blood Feast,"
and went to school the next day
and played it for all my friends.
- Well, Frank, this looks like
one of those long, hard ones.
- A couple of years later, I
used to go see films at UCLA,
and I saw people kind of
laughing that something
that was inept, and I'm thinking,
it kind of clicked in my mind, I go,
"They think that's crazy, over the top?
They haven't seen Blood Feast."
So I went to the projectionist and I go,
"What do you guys pay for a rental?"
And he goes, "We pay 150 bucks."
And so I started thinking,
wow, where's "Blood Feast"?
I mean, what if I could get that movie
and get it in 10 campuses
every Saturday night?
That could be 1,500 bucks.
But I had no idea who had the rights.
So I just started to trying to figure out
where was "Blood Feast."
And somebody gave me a lead
once, Stan Kohlberg has it.
So I called up Kohlberg,
he came back and said it was
10 grand, "You want to rights?"
And this was late, this
Is probably, by now,
this is, like, 1979,
maybe 1979 or 1980.
There's still no video cable.
There's only still only
four channels on TV,
so Kohlberg probably was thinking,
"Nobody's gonna play this on TV."
And I told Eric about, and
he, and Eric knew who it was.
Eric goes, "Yeah, that's
Herschell Gordon Lewis.
I'll kick in some money
if you want to get that."
So Eric, he just, he
knew what was going on
cause he had the poster store,
and I met Mike Vraney through Eric.
- When Mike started
Something Weird in 1990,
he came across some 35 millimeter prints
of "A Smell of Honey, a Swallow of Brine,"
"The Sin Syndicate," and a
few tex-exploitation films.
Back in those days, he worked
at a porno theater called the
Apple, and it was in Seattle,
and he didn't know anything
about film restoration.
He didn't know anything
about how films were scanned
or anything, so he would just
bring his 35 millimeter prints
to the theater and project them,
and then sit in the audience
with a camcorder and film it,
and then sell them to
collector markets and stuff.
So those were some of the first films
that he had found, and it made him think
that there has to be hundreds
and hundreds more out there.
He got so excited about these films,
and especially when he, you know,
did his first catalog, and he was like,
"All right, how can I find more?"
There was a magazine called "Big Reel,"
and that was one of the places
where if people were either
buying or selling film,
like, you could find something there.
So he put in an ad saying, you know,
"I'm looking for 60s sexploitation films,"
but he also put in an ad saying,
"I'm selling 60s sexploitation
films on home video."
I can only speak from my own experience,
but, like, in the early 1990s,
there really wasn't as much interest
in exploitation films and genre film.
There was always been an interest in,
like, underground movies, or things
that were just a little fringe-y.
But I think it was a
matter of educating people
that these kind of films even exist.
- Many films that people thought were lost
or hadn't been accessible
since the 1960s were
actually recirculated by
Something Weird Video.
- "Scare Their Pants Off"
is a new kind of story.
- Something Weird was
kind of the gateway drug,
and it definitely got me
going down the rabbit hole,
just looking for weirder and weirder
and more interesting low-budget films.
There's always a ton of really
interesting stories attached
to these movies, whether it
be the actors and actresses,
or the people involved in making the film
or its distribution.
It seems like every movie
is its own little microcosm.
- I saw the Chesty Morgan
movies in the drive-in
when they came out, and Doris
wrote Stan a letter saying,
"I'll sell my movies.
I don't know why anybody
would even want these movies."
So I'm going, "Yeah, I want them, Doris.
What do you want for them?"
And she gave me a price,
I didn't do anything,
I just said, "Okay, fine."
I think, I don't know what it was.
There were, like, 18 movies.
I think it was, like, 40K
or something like that.
And, anyway, I bought the
rights to Doris's films.
- Do you know
that "Bad Girls go to Hell"?
- Then her films
started getting more popular.
- Hey, let me ask you.
How did you come to meet Chesty Morgan?
- Well, somebody told me
about her, and I thought-
- And then she got mad
that she sold them to me.
John Waters also helped a lot,
and in 1981, he wrote "Shock Value,"
and that's around the time
that I bought the rights to the films.
John Waters really propelled
these films into pop culture.
- Barry, did you meet Doris Wishman?
She's so great, you have to
see her movies, they're great.
- Really?
- I saw-
- Probably the most important exploiter
that Something Weird got involved
with was David F. Friedman,
known as the mighty monarch
of exploitation film.
The way that Mike met him was not ideal.
He got a phone call one day saying,
"Hey, I hear you're selling my
'Ribald Tales of Robin Hood"
on video, and, you know, stop it."
And Mike gets on the phone,
"Yeah, and people love it.
What can we do, like, to maybe
make a deal or something?"
Dave Friedman had his films stored
in Los Angeles on Cordova Street.
He wasn't living in Los
Angeles at the time.
He was already back in Anniston,
Alabama, where he's from.
So Mike sets up a meeting
with him down there
and goes in this, like, you
know, stuffy old film vault
and starts looking around, and he's like,
"Oh, what is this?"
And he sees a movie called
"Space Thing," and Dave's like,
"That's the worst science
fiction movie ever made.
You don't want it," and
that made Mike want it more.
And, you know, Dave made
some recommendations,
like, you know, he had
his very first film,
"The Defilers," he was very,
very proud of that movie,
as well as the fact that he knew
that it would probably do well,
and Mike was all about it.
So he took about, I don't
know, half a dozen films,
and he said, "Well,
let's just transfer these
and see what happens," and
things sold like gangbusters.
Dave gets his first
royalty check and he says,
"You can have them all,
and I'm gonna introduce
you to my friends."
- All you kids make me sick.
- The cool thing about Something Weird is
that they were finally
putting out a lot of movies
that I'd read about for years.
So, yeah, Something Weird, you know,
they were sort of doing it first,
and the funny thing about
Mike Vraney, though,
is he was more into just
releasing the movies.
I don't think he was really
that into preservation.
- Mike was not worried about
the longevity of these films.
It was more important for
him to just get it scanned
and put it on home video and
then just put it someplace,
and his someplace was not always the best.
And the way that Mike would store films,
it was willy nilly, like,
they weren't by genre
or, like, put all the Dave
Friedman movies together,
all the Joe Sarno movies
together, all this.
It was just random.
- Mike has many different genres here.
I got something in mind-
- I think releasing films to
home media was always something
about finding rights first
and then finding elements afterwards,
but I think Something Weird
really started this idea
of having elements and saying, "Fuck it,
I just have to put this out."
- Bat Pussy, please,
it's a misunderstanding.
- What's a misunderstanding?
- Probably our proudest accomplishment
Is a movie called "Bat Pussy."
- Meanwhile, at Bat Pussy's
secret warehouse hideout, Dora Dildo,
alias the mighty Bat Pussy,
is patiently waiting for her super senses
to tell her that a crime
is about to be committed.
- Mike ended up getting a large collection
of 16 millimeter adult films
from a defunct theater in Memphis, Texas
from his friend Mike McCarthy,
and people just loved it,
and it became, like, its own cult classic,
and we had no idea, I mean,
that wasn't on any lists,
you know, that we would come up with,
cause over the years, I mean,
Mike would have me go through
our press book materials
or our stills and be like,
"Okay, what other films haven't
we found that look interesting and stuff?"
Well, "Bat Pussy" was
not amongst any of them,
and, you know, in retrospect now,
it was probably our greatest find.
- I've got so much to offer,
Bat Pussy, this is
tougher for me, turn over.
- Around 1991, '92 was
when Mike first heard
about the Movielab.
- Movielab was a very large
independent film processing facility,
and it was the lab of choice
for a large amount of
independent filmmakers.
At some point, Movielab, in
the late '80s, early "90s,
they had to close their doors.
- So Mike goes out to the East
Coast and organizes, like,
three cargo containers full of films
to be sent to a warehouse in Los Angeles
where he would go to a
couple of times a month
and just process film.
And we started finding some
of the most amazing films,
like the Michael and Roberta
Findlay "Flesh" trilogy,
"Touch of Her Flesh,"
"Curse of Her Flesh,"
and "Kiss of Her Flesh."
- Get down there, you slut.
That's the only job women are good for.
- But then, there was an announcement
that there was gonna be
an auction of the films.
Arthur Morowitz, who was
the owner of Distribpix,
he contacted Mike and said, you know,
"If I buy these films,
would you be the custodian,
and we can go in as partners?"
- My father, he had gotten
in touch with a gentleman,
he, I believe, bought the
building that Movielab was in,
and he was, I believe he
was the owner of Panavision,
which they then
moved into that location,
and my father ended up having
a nice conversation with him,
and my father was pretty
well known in the city
at that point, so they had a nice rapport,
and I think the main thing
that ties us to Movielab,
or that sort of brings
this all together is
that this guy was not looking
to throw this film away.
This guy, there was
something nice about that,
when you hear the story told,
but he couldn't do anything with it,
and it was an enormous amount of film.
- It was a Herculean
effort on Mike's part,
you know, processing the film,
and he never actually
got through everything.
He would have, like, you know,
piles of different film elements,
like, you know, part of
the negative to something,
but, like, it was still missing
some of the audio track,
and then, "Okay, well,
we know that's over here.
Label it with the title."
And it would be, like, a happy day
when we'd find all of the reels.
In 2012, Mike was diagnosed
with stage four lung cancer,
so he knew that his days were numbered,
and he really needed to figure out, like,
what was gonna happen with everything
in the Something Weird archive,
including the Movielab collection,
because that was pretty much,
like, the biggest part of it.
After his death, you know,
we actually passed it back on
to Distribpix under the custodianship
of Steven Morowitz now.
So it's just funny to think,
all those films came
out from the East Coast
and they lived here for a while,
and then they all went
back to the East Coast,
and I believe they live in
Bridgeport, Connecticut now.
- I think the big thing for me is
when we started merging with Distribpix,
and now it's just making
I think the film archive
much more complete.
- Distribpix Incorporated is pretty much
a second generation home video company
founded on the production
of black and white sexual
melodrama type films,
started in 1965 by my father
and his partner, Howard Farber,
and they grew it into their
own small little empire.
They invested in theaters,
they bought properties,
and then blossomed that into home video.
I think many people,
they're probably familiar
with Video Shack, which was
the first real large chain
of video stores in the tri-state area,
and the flagship store being
at 49th Street and Broadway.
So I sort of grew up around all this stuff
and just had the greatest memories.
Hundreds of those films
were from Movielab,
and my dad was very happy.
He really loved Mike because every month,
they would get revenue checks.
My dad was just happy,
he was happy with that,
and Something Weird Video became,
you know, the video label,
you know what I'm saying?
A lot of people came up
with Something Weird Video.
- I think in terms of
just taking a collection
as wide and varied
as what film material
Something Weird came across,
the actual branding was also one
of those really important facets of it,
where at a certain point,
if you were able to enter
into the back halls of a video store,
you were automatically able to recognize
that at the very least, what you see,
if it has Something Weird
on it, is gonna be cool.
It's gonna be something weird
that you haven't seen before,
literally, something weird.
But I think that's what makes
the actual current landscape
of the boutique label or
the releasing companies,
independent releasing companies
of today really fascinating
as, like, an actual, really
diverse programming world
where literally anybody can do anything
if you love the material and
are able to brand it correctly.
- I think that the work that Mike did
from, like, 1990 to 2013,
it's an indelible mark
on film preservation.
To me, keeping his legacy alive is,
like, the most important part
cause, I mean, seriously,
if it wasn't for him,
I wouldn't be doing what
I'm doing right now,
and I think a lot of other
people wouldn't be, either.
I mean, he was a real inspiration to,
you know, many film fans and people
who, like, wanted to do this for a career.
And then to be able to,
like, take those films
and just put them, like, you know,
insert them all these other places
where they're gonna just
continue to be discovered
by other people, Severin Films,
Vinegar Syndrome, Arrow
Video, Kino Lorber.
There really wasn't any one company when,
after his death that could just be like,
"Okay, I'll do all that."
So they picked and choose,
and I help them along the way,
and, you know, it's been
really wonderful being able
to work with other people who get it
and, you know, they're
bringing their own voice
to this material now.
- Huh, maybe I missed it.
- It's right on the cart.
- What is it?
- I don't know.
- There's this definite misconception
on the parts of people
who like these films
and buy the physical copies that,
it's come out on disc,
therefore it's preserved,
or therefore the original
materials are preserved.
Not every film that we release
and that we restore lives in our archive.
Sometimes we acquire materials temporarily
and then have to return
them to whoever owns them.
- Oops.
My father was Larry Joachim,
who was a movie producer
and distributor of independent films.
One of my father's friends
had a big collection
in storage and in Movielab.
It was up for auction
or something like that.
I guess my father went there
and there was nobody at the auction
and he got all these
things for very little,
and he just picked it up,
and I said, "What'd you do?"
He says, "Oh, I just got another,
like, 50 films and negatives."
So many of the films that are
in these storage and things
we found out were missing,
they were lost films for many years,
things like "Red Roses of Passion"
and "Beware the Black Widow."
- The one that I have the closest affinity
for is "Beware the Black Widow."
This particular one
seemed really interesting
in that it had, like, it
actually had a killing narrative
and wasn't just straight up nudity.
We had, I believe it was
seven out of eight reels
of the actual sound,
and one part of the actual picture.
So I reach out to the collector
and see whether or not
he had anything else
for this title, and luckily, he did.
- We do know that there was some fires
where the original warehouse
is and other places like that,
and many things were ruined
to the point where
there's very little left.
Luckily, we have found a lot of it.
- "Deep Inside" is an example
of a frustrating project,
in that the only element
that we were able to locate
for the film is a comp dupe negative,
and that means that it's
a picture negative element
that also has a soundtrack on it,
and because it came from another country
and it was the element that had been sent
to that country for their
own theatrical distribution,
the distributor there
decided to reedit the film.
So in order to put the film back together,
we had the main feature,
and then we had three reels
of chunks that had been cut
out, sometimes mid-shots,
from the version that was
released internationally.
So all of these different
elements were scanned,
and then I had to kind
of haphazardly put them all back together
and figure out where all of
these random chunks belonged.
- Do you have to eat that peach like that?
- I love peaches.
- By and large, the most
complicated restorations
in terms of elements are either
where the element was edited
or completed in a way that
requires multiple sets
of elements to be used or pulled from
to create a single version of the film,
or the film was reedited so much
that there isn't a single element,
a complete element that
represents the film
as it was originally intended to be seen,
so other elements have to be used
to either supplement, because
maybe the negative was recut
and things were taken
out of it or reordered
and those pre-print elements
don't exist anymore.
So the only element that
does exist is a print,
or even worse, only a video master.
And we've unfortunately had to do that
on a number of occasions
where the only film materials
we've been able to locate
for a title are either a recut version
or a censored version
that's missing material
that the filmmakers
certainly wanted in there,
and we've had to pull from
a far inferior source.
- The most extreme situation that
I've encountered was "House
on Straw Hill ."
- Perhaps this is the first
time in a long while
that I really feel content.
I actually feel happy this evening.
- It had all kinds of damage
that I hadn't really experienced before.
When you look at the image,
it looked like watermarks all
over it and different colors,
and the colors were fading
in different spots in every frame.
So it wasn't something where unless
you actually went into
every frame and repainted it
that you would actually be able
to restore it unilaterally.
But we found a release print
from a collector here in the US,
and that was actually what we used
for a majority of the master
because it was actually better
condition than the negative.
So I actually went to
where the James Kenelm
Clarke films were stored,
which was at his farmhouse
in Norfolk, in England,
and it was a barn, but
when I went in there,
there was a hole in the roof of the barn,
and all the film cans were just encrusted
into the wall, basically, like,
the brick work was kind of falling apart,
and it was almost as if the
cans themselves were kind
of part of that old ruin.
But it was covered in pigeon
shit, years and years of dirt,
and the elements in Norfolk could get in,
like, hot in the summer,
freezing in the winter,
snow, whatever must have
been on those things,
and all the film cans
were completely rusty,
and this is how the negative
of "House on Straw Hill"
and all his other films had
been stored for decades.
I did manage to pull enough
reels of each of the films,
which I then loaded into my rental car.
When they arrived here, you
know, you could smell them,
you could smell that film, and we had
to then have them all sonically cleaned,
take them down to what we
call the bath house here in LA
and have them sonically
cleaned, and they complained
about the condition of these things,
like, "What the hell are you bringing us?"
But at least then they come back
in the best possible condition
to put on the scanner,
and then we have to figure out how well
they can be restored, which
Is never gonna be perfect,
but at least we've then
scanned them until, you know,
until 8K scanning comes
along, we've got them
and we've got them, you
know, in better conditions
than they were being kept
for the last few decades.
- One of the very earliest collections
that I became involved
with was the material
from a guy named Elvin Feliner,
who for decades was just
buying film libraries.
- I knew Elvin Feltner
for many, many years.
He figured out early on that
he could buy a film library
for X and then have it valued at,
like, 10 or 20, even 100 X.
What he did is he amassed a film library
and he got an appraisal
of the film library
for $400 million,
and so he basically lost
interest in the library
and he was really only interested
in borrowing money against
the value of the library.
- He didn't really care what it was.
Like, he would buy, like, TV shows,
he would buy films, he
would just buy anything,
and one of the libraries
that he bought were all
of the independently produced
films by Albert Zugsmith,
who is best remembered for his flirtation
with Hollywood respectability,
but like many people
who got their starts in
Hollywood, he ended up working
in exploitation films
in the '60s and "70s.
- The film you're about
to see is a new art form,
"The Incredible Sex Revolution,"
written and directed by Albert Zugsmith,
who's brought you such
great motion pictures
as "Written on the Wind," "Touch
of Evil," and "Panty Hill."
- The materials were stored
well for several decades
until the early 2000s when
they were reportedly moved
to a carpeted former Bally Total Fitness.
- He was dying of leukemia.
I was in the hospital visiting him,
and I happened to notice on the table next
to the bed a pile of mail,
and there was a piece of mail
that was registered mail from Florida.
So I kind of quietly grabbed
that piece of mail and
I went into the hallway,
opened it up, and of course
it was from the landlord
of where his film library was stored.
I copied down the name
and the phone number.
Later that day, I reached out to him,
and the guy said basically
that he's foreclosed on it,
he has a dumpster, and in two
weeks, the entire contents
of the storage space
IS going in a dumpster,
and I went down to Florida
to rescue the library.
There was no air conditioning
and there had been a roof leak.
Like, the worst possible conditions
you could ever imagine for storing a film.
- A number of the films
that were salvageable,
although decaying, were "The
Incredible Sex Revolution,"
which was a lost film, and "Violated,"
which sadly still only survives
in terms of a couple of faded prints.
We have the rotting Zugsmith films
in this building for a while,
and we'd basically purge
every couple of years
because it was in such a bad state
that even in two years' time,
film that was semi-salvageable
would have decayed
so much more that it
became un-salvageable.
- We're sitting on raw
scans, raw film scans,
digital film scans
of titles that have, since
the film was scanned,
have decayed because film decays.
I mean, you can only slow it down.
You can't stop it, you can't reverse it.
Film is like people, we
just continue to get older
and, you know, there's more problems
and more aches and pains.
But I wish there was a way
to just hit the pause button,
but you can't.
- There was a certain
amount of crosspollination
between exploitation films
and other low budget
filmmaking of the time.
I first learned about the
driver's education films
of the '50s and '60s,
the explicit "Death on the Highway" films,
and to me, those films were mythic,
and I didn't necessarily
believe that they existed,
at least as described to me.
- They have been called the most
effective traffic safety
motion pictures ever produced.
Without a doubt, you have witnessed
the most shocking scenes ever
put on motion picture film.
The object of the whole thing,
our traffic safety film program,
is simply to make you a better driver.
During these years of filmmaking,
we have shown you the results
of almost every driving
mistake in the book.
- And the intention of the filmmakers
with these films is to show them
to high school drivers in
driver education classes
to scare them into habits of safe driving.
And eventually, I tracked down the makers
of some of these films and
some of the more elusive films
that weren't available
from mail order companies.
I was able to find films on eBay
because no one saw the
value in certain films.
- This car
loaded with teenagers slid
into the end of a guardrail.
The rail knifed through the car,
pinning all of the young men
in the rear portion of the car.
Believe it or not, no one
was seriously injured.
- With industrial and educational films,
typically the pre-print material,
that is the negatives, don't survive,
and I have an especially
tragic story to share.
When I was working on my documentary
on driver education films,
I was seeking out the negatives
for those really landmark films,
like "Signal 30" and "Mechanized Death,"
and the producer who owned the rights,
Earle Deems, had donated the negatives
to the Ohio State Highway Patrol.
He put me in touch, I got
through to the correct person,
and eventually found that they said,
"Oh, yeah, we had that,
but we got rid of it."
And it was like, "Why
did you get rid of it?"
"Well, he also provided
us with video tapes,
and the video tapes were
really all anyone needed
or wanted, so there was no
reason to hold onto the,
no one was ever gonna do
anything with the films."
Of course, I would have done
something with the films,
but I got there too late.
Those negatives had been junked,
and he had an inventory of, like,
A, B-roll, 16 millimeter
camera negatives, it was,
you know, it was sad, to say the least.
And a lot of people during the rise
of the video era felt like,
"We don't need 16 millimeter anymore,
it's all video and once we
have a VHS copy, we're good,"
not looking ahead to realize
that beyond VHS was
gonna be DVD and Blu-ray
and 4K UHD and who knows what else.
So it's crucial that filmmakers,
producers, distributors
always preserve the earliest
surviving materials,
and preferably in more than one form
because there's all sorts of ways
in which films can fade and decompose
and no longer be usable
for the creation of
high definition masters.
- So Chicago Film Society
grew pretty organically
from when we started in 2011.
We initially were just
doing repertory programming,
So we were showing a
movie or two every week,
and we weren't doing any other activities.
We were purely a programming organization.
That's how we conceived of it.
But very quickly, we discovered
that that wasn't really sufficient, right,
because after a certain
point, you run into a wall,
and you're dealing with a lot of archives
and private collectors
and realize the advantages
of having your own collection.
- Film preservation
was not necessarily one
of our goals starting up, but we started
with one film preservation project,
and we also started with
a small film collection,
and just over the course of operating,
those projects kept coming.
We kept seeking them out and finding them,
and the collection continued to grow.
- We had a lot of prints
that were not rare or unique,
but we did have things that were.
So we certainly also
felt there was a level
of responsibility there, that
when we have the only copy
of something, we can either
show it until it crumbles,
or we can, you know, show it once or twice
and then realize, "My God, this film
that we have is the only copy,
and the really responsible thing is
to make a new negative, make new prints
so that we can share it."
- You know, of course we had daydreamed
and joked about doing
preservation projects,
and I think at a certain
point, it became more serious.
I think that was really how we arrived
at doing the "Corn's-A-Poppin project.
- "Corn's-A-Poppin is
really a great example
of how showing something,
even if it's, you know,
maybe a little risky to show
the only surviving print,
how essential that can be
to the restoration and
preservation process.
- There's a film from 1955
called "Corn's-A-Poppin'."
It happens to be written by Robert Altman.
Altman himself didn't talk about it.
He basically disowned the film.
It wasn't ever available
commercially on video.
It didn't screen in revival houses,
it was just basically a
title on a filmography.
- What a show, wow.
- Wow is right.
- And you learn that it's not
just an Altman adjacent curio,
but a regional film, it's a document
of a musical scene that's vanished,
the country and western
swing scene in Kansas City
in the mid '50s.
It is, in its way, a sponsored film
because it was unofficially
funded by the Popcorn Institute,
which was a trade group promoting popcorn.
- Remember, Pinwhistle
is the pop-ular corn.
- You peel back the layers of the onion,
and unlike a real onion,
every layer smells
better and better, right?
And with this specific film,
the more we researched
it, the more we found
that there was this very
compelling story behind it,
and it wasn't just a
silly little musical film
about popcorn, but an
actual artifact of culture.
- I think when most people
think of what a lost film is,
they mean like a lost Hollywood feature,
or maybe a lost independent feature,
but probably a movie
that has some connection
to someone that you've heard of,
but we haven't gotten to see, you know,
this lost corner of their work.
So in that, by that definition,
"Corn's-A-Poppin is really juicy
because of the Robert Altman connection,
but actually, I would say a lot
of the smaller cases are just as exciting.
Any home movie footage that
accidentally captures something
is really interesting to me.
- If you're focused
purely on narrative cinema
or, you know, mainstream film,
there's a kind of very simple
cut and dried narrative
of what a movie is, right?
You make a movie, it opens in theaters.
It's made to entertain people
and make money back for its investors.
But when you get beyond that
and look at avant-garde
films or industrial films
or home movies or artist films or cartoons
or all these other things,
the tools of a film critic looking
at mass media and saying,
"This movie's good,
this movie is bad," those don't
apply I think quite as much.
Instead, you're really looking at it more
as an anthropologist at that point.
You're saying, "What is
this object, who made it?
What was its use, what community
was it part of?" right,
because there can be occasional films
in the same way that there
are occasional poems.
There are films made for
a specific event, right?
And outside of the context of that,
it might look very modest.
It might just look like
a tiny film in a can.
So our job as preservationists
is to research the film
and to figure out the backstory of it,
to figure out the meaning it
had to its original community,
even if that's obscure now,
to be able to draw in a narrative
that can attract anybody.
- I think the most interesting part
about living in the era
that we're currently in is
that we're not really beholden
to five studios anymore.
I think there are a
bunch of different voices
who can actually release
films, curate their own extras,
and actually bring histories forward
that were never really a recognized part
of the canon before.
Genre film is something
fiercely counter cultural,
very against the grain,
if we're using film terms,
and I think Milestone Films is a
really good example of that.
- Yeah, I mean, the canon
IS an interesting question,
and how it works, and how it works,
and inside each of us, not
just as a cultural artifact.
I think we were all influenced
by the films we saw growing
up, by our education,
by a lot of assumptions we have,
and by things that we were taught
when we first started
working in the film industry,
and I started working in 1985.
Some of the things that
were kind of, you know,
you know, just accepted
facts were that certain kinds
of films were sellable
and others were not.
So, for us, that seemed to
be films by mostly white men,
and that other films, unless
they were made by Africans,
I mean, I worked for New Yorker Films,
so films made by African
filmmakers might be sellable,
but films made by African
American filmmakers, not so much.
And I think coming to
terms with how that works
in our own psyches also takes time.
I mean, we say that our goal
is to fuck with the canon.
We want to push it, expand it,
and challenge it whenever we can.
- For the last 14 years,
we have been working
on Project Shirley, a expansive research
into Shirley Clarke's life, her careers,
and distribution of everything from four
of her feature films, her documentaries,
her unfinished work, her short films.
But our touchstone, really,
is Charles Burnett's "Killer of Sheep."
We signed the rights in 2001.
It took us six years to
clear the music rights,
which the degree of
difficulty alone makes it one
of my favorites because I love
going after the impossible.
- Working with Charles
Burnett really help us kind
of reset our expectations of what film can
and doesn't want to do, that
a film can be low budget,
and that can be a great virtue.
I now look at many Hollywood films
and think, "This is crap,"
because it's so trite or so
manufactured or so glossy.
- As to why Milestone has focused
on these films is a complicated question
because at some point, we
did do "The Bat Whispers,"
and one day, I got a phone call
from this man named Curtis Harrington,
and we spent two years
working with Curtis,
trying to free up the
rights to all of his films.
So at that point, we were willing
to try and do genre films,
but it didn't come about, and once you hit
on a successful release schedule,
other filmmakers of that
kind come to you, too.
So if you do horror films,
horror directors come to you.
If you do Jewish films,
Jewish directors come to you.
So we never really had that momentum
to do anything after Curtis,
after "Night Tide," really.
So that's part of it.
Another part, I have to say,
is a lot of these genre films
are directed by white men,
and that is something that we have decided
to let other people focus on.
Genre films are the undercurrent
of American society,
even though they can seem
to be about one subject,
zombie films, for example.
"Night of the Living Dead" was one
of the great political films.
So by investigating these
and seeing another side of society,
it brings out more
depth, more understanding
of what this world is about.
- What counts as film treasures
changes over time, and that,
in fact, until the French new wave
really celebrated American
westerns, the films of John Ford
and Anthony Mann were just genre films.
And so I'm thinking that
although perhaps the
big studio films would have
been preserved no matter what,
I'm guessing that a lot of, you know,
Poverty Row westerns owe their survival
to Jean-Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut
and "Cahiers du Cinma."
- Going through film,
which has sort of become
the very regular part
of my life over the last couple of years,
discovering lost elements,
it's invigorating.
But I did find-
You know, there's not
a lot of people around.
Sometimes it's odd hours.
It's late at night, you know,
sometimes early in the morning,
and you're going through elements.
You know, we see a lot of labels on boxes,
and a lot of times, what's on the outside
of the box isn't necessarily
what's inside the box.
But a few weeks ago, we found
a film called "Red Midnight,"
and we of course looked at the leader,
and I believe the element
is a blow up internegative,
So the film was shot in 16 millimeter.
One of the clues we had was on the leader,
there was a name.
- So "Red Midnight" was
from the Distribpix Movielab collection.
An optometrist, Dr. James A. Newslow,
he made this one film, "Red Midnight."
Apparently he made it
cause he was worried
about urban environments
just being too close together
and fires spreading.
Somehow the film ends up with
a nuke going off in Cape Cod.
That's a whole other story, too.
Samm Deighan said it best to me,
"The best way to describe it is
if Herschell Gordon
Lewis made a spy film."
- Where's the hidden room
to assemble the explosives?
- Look about you and
see if you can find it.
- It was found
at the last minute,
but again, you never know
what else is gonna come.
- Something that's actually
been very eye opening
with this Movielab
collection in general was it
really gave me an idea
of what Movielab did.
It's an impressive collection,
and that's sort of where we are,
and as you can see behind me,
we're still about I estimate
another six months to a year
of going through this stuff,
taking the films out of the cans,
letting them breathe, putting
them into archival cans,
and that's what we're doing.
- You know, back when we started,
we were one of the first
if not the first smaller,
you know, at that time really
small home video company
that was attempting to do
what only the major studios
had done up to that point.
- The first time that I
heard about film restoration,
it was probably in the
context of "Citizen Cane"
or "Vertigo" or something like that,
where the studios have spent
an inordinate amount of money
in doing a restoration of
these films that's been kept
in immaculate conditions,
you know, it's not
exactly a major undertaking
of restoration.
- Film scanners have come down in cost.
Digital restoration tools
are more readily available
to ordinary folks.
There's a higher interest, I think,
in preserving these films
and finding these films
before it's too late.
But I really think in terms of, like,
the home video side of
things, the smaller studios,
like, we were at the forefront,
and I'm pretty proud of that.
- This is the-
- And then you get the rest.
- So as of today, this is
not gonna be an exact count,
we have around 4,000 unique
titles in the database.
That equals around 7,000
elements in general,
which goes onto equal
about 23,000 cans of film,
which is a lot.
- It's a real goldmine for what it is.
There's nothing else like it in the world.
It's an archive just full of films
that would otherwise be lost to time.
- Yeah, when I first
visited Vinegar Syndrome,
I was actually just shocked
by how many people work
here under one roof.
Normally, an archive will
outsource all of that work,
and it can end up being really expensive,
if not entirely cost prohibitive.
And then on top of that,
there's the entire distribution
side of the company.
You see where some of this stuff is going,
it's going to Finland,
it's going to Germany,
it's going to Thailand, it's
going all over the world,
and it all happens one roof, it's insane.
And at the end of the day,
we're making these movies accessible
to people that wouldn't have the means
to necessarily see them at all.
- We do not have an unlimited budget.
You know, we're not getting
money from the government.
We're not getting money from taxpayers.
The money that we're getting
to maintain our archive comes
from selling Blu-rays, selling 4Ks,
selling shirts, selling hoodies.
You know, that's where
the money comes from.
- I really don't
feel that we have a right
to say what people should
see, what people should do.
- I'm waiting for the day
where somebody asks me,
like, "Why do you do this?"
The history is never
gonna be fully written.
There are always new stories to explore
and new stories to tell,
and the only way that
we're gonna do that is
if people come to the archive
and get their hands dirty
and figure out that history.
- One thing that I really
enjoy, in general, is logistics,
and one of the most interesting
things, as far as film goes,
is to be a part of an
excavation, if you will.
One of the most exciting
and most overwhelming
was this past February,
I was asked to help out
with the remnants of WRS,
which was a lab in Pittsburgh.
- WRS is an enormously
famous Pennsylvania lab,
which at different times,
it'd passed through different hands,
but it was very famous
for being the favorite
lab of George Romero.
- We showed up and it was like nothing
I've ever seen before.
There were holes in the roof,
all the insulation was down
on top of these piles of film.
We were staring at pallets
that had literal piles of feces.
- It's had 30 years of mold caked
into the actual outside of each reel
unless it was in a plastic container,
and if it was in a plastic container,
it's gonna be suffering
from higher rates of decay.
- You know, one thing that I'll say
about myself is I don't fall
when it comes to logistical
stuff, we always make it happen,
but this was the first
time I think I said,
"I don't think this is possible."
- It was just me, Joe
Rubin, Steven Morowitz,
who's manning a forklift,
the Ralph Stevens,
who is running around winding
and unwinding pallet wrap
because he didn't want
to spend too much money
on the pallet wrap, but at the same time,
it was all of us together
and some hired folks.
I was doing my archivist
thing where I was like,
"Yeah, this is a cool film.
This is what this is,
this is what that is,"
and kind of trying to get
them excited about it,
cause it was such an enormous ordeal,
and we ended up saving
five truckloads of film.
- There's no doubt in my mind
that there'll be some
amazing things discovered.
- Original materials, IPs, CRIs.
The issue with that is that it's
just gonna take a really long
time to go through it all.
- The heyday of exploitation
movie making will
probably never come again.
The circumstances that led
to those kinds of movies
can never be repeated.
It was a crucible of circumstances
in the '60s and '70s and '80s
that led to a certain kind of very free,
very extravagant, very eccentric,
very idiosyncratic filmmaking,
sometimes utterly off the wall and crazy,
but fascinating, and, you know,
the more of that material is
preserved, the better, really.
- I wonder where the
new member's calling up.
- He's probably calling his tailor
to cancel his orders for a
couple of suits.
- I don't really know that much
about how the general public
and even cinephiles necessarily look
upon a lot of the
restoration work that I do.
I know most people would be happy
to just buy a new edition of "Metropolis"
and "Nosferatu" every five years,
and don't worry, we will continue
to provide them with that.
But it's essential to me to
continue discovering new films.
I think we're over corporate
culture at this point.
There's still a lot of
fascinating history to be told,
and really, do my bit to
sort of let the world know
that we are a long way from having,
you know, fully written the
history of American cinema.
In fact, the material we're just digging
into is often some of the most exciting
and interesting material
because it's not about the studio system.
- I don't know, I think, you know,
Joe will probably have a
completely different answer
and maybe just plead
the fifth on this one,
I don't know, but we have, I
mean, anyone that knows us,
they know that we're very different people
and we come from different backgrounds
and we're bringing different
things to the table.
And not to be, like, cliche,
but I think that it
kind of helps, you know?
We have different
perspectives and, you know,
Vinegar Syndrome is,
like, right in the middle.
- No, these are all mysteries.
That's why I'm calling you,
cause I don't know what the-
- We argue constantly.
To an extent, that is a good thing
because it doesn't mean
that either of us are going
to always have the final say.
We have, whether either of us want to,
we have a tremendous burden
that we are the responsible custodians
for hundreds, well, thousands, actually,
of best surviving or only
surviving film materials
for movies that if they were
lost, would truly be lost.
We have tons of lost films.
Are they really lost
if they're sitting 20 feet away from us?
Maybe not, but they're lost in the sense
of no one else can see them
because we haven't restored them yet,
we haven't released them yet.
So we have such a responsibility
to make sure that what
we're doing is always geared
towards ensuring that the
materials that we have here,
the work that we're doing
here, doesn't become lost,
that we're not part of the problem.