Thursday 7 June 2007
2007 HOLEHEAD—The SF360 Interview With Dennis Nyback
SF360 has picked up my interview with Dennis Nyback whose Bad Bugs Bunny program will be screening twice at the 4th Annual Another Hole in the Head Film Festival. Oddball Film+Video is co-presenting those screenings, as well as offering Bay Area cinephiles two further opportunities to experience Nyback's curatorial prowess.
On Saturday, June 9th at 8:00PM, Oddball presents F@ck Mickey Mouse, Dennis Nyback's film program exploring how the Hollywood studios reacted to the Disney animation juggernaut in the 1930's and 1940's. Watch rare cartoon precursors beat him to the punch, imitators rip him off and parodies make vicious fun of some of Disney's greatest animated shorts. Plus! "Der Fuehrer's Face", Disney's own Academy Award winner suppressed for over 50 years!
As Nyback writes: "In 1994 I became intrigued with various cartoons I owned that had strong connections with cartoons made by the Disney company, yet were made by other animators. These cartoons could be divided into three groups: Blatant imitations of Mickey Mouse; non-Disney precursors to later Disney versions of the same story; and exuberantly vicious parodies. I thought there was a great program on this theme. I called it Compare To Disney (with the "TM" trademark symbol after Disney). This program was reviewed positively by the press, but attracted very small crowds. In 1996 I decided to try it again, but this time I called the show F@ck Mickey Mouse. It premiered under that title at the Cinema Village in New York in January of 1997, and attracted good crowds. I then took it to the West Coast that year and showed it in San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. In 1998, I took it to Europe. During that tour I did one double feature of F@ck Mickey and Bad Bugs Bunny in Gothenburg Sweden which attracted 800 customers, the single largest crowd on the tour."
Following F@ck Mickey Oddball Films presents a second Nyback program at 10:00PM, Ooh La La: A History of Lingerie, a film program exploring the history of lingerie in cinema, from 1915 through the 1960s. Watch vintage 16mm films including Why Girls Walk Home, How to Undress in Front of your Husband and What The Blushing Bride Wore. In these films men are men, and women can look for fashion tips.
This soft core cinema soiree showcases rarities from Nyback's huge collection of rare animation, music, erotic and offbeat films. The program starts off with several early "men's films" that would typically be shown at men's clubs and fraternal lodges like the Elks or Eagles—no women allowed. Though these films are teasingly tame by today's standards, they were illegal to possess at the time.
Other shorts include "Soundies," early skit-driven "music videos" that played in bars utilizing a nickel-fed machine film jukebox called a Mills Pan-o-ram. In What the Blushing Bride Wore, a singing, peeping-tom quartet grows progressively more befuddled as the dancing bride strips off layer after layer of her trousseau. Another campy Soundie The Man Who Comes Around is sung by a lollipop-licking boy whose mommy gets some awfully familiar visitors after daddy goes to work. There's the over-the-top 1930s dance number Dames, which peaks in an actual kaleidoscope of dancing girls and a anti-instructional bit How to Undress in Front of Your Husband, starring Mrs. John Barrymore(!) wife of the famed Hollywood legend. At the other end of the spectrum is Dixie Evans' knock-out 1950s era strip tease How to Get to Hollywood, surely one of the most energetic strip shorts of all time.
There are many, many more surprises as curator Dennis Nyback intros the program, answers questions and gives us choice bits of scintillating cinema history. Plus! A Surprise gem from the Oddball Films Erotic Archive!
F@ck Mickey Mouse, Saturday, June 9th at 8:00PM
Ooh La La: A History of Lingerie, Saturday, June 9th at 10:00PM
Venue: Oddball Film+Video, 275 Capp Street, San Francisco.
Admission: $10.00 (per program). Limited Seating. Shows sell-out. RSVPs preferred. Reservations: info@oddballfilm.com or phone the archive 415.558.8117.
Cross-published at Twitch.
06/08/07 UPDATE: Filmbud Pam Grady enjoyed her own phoner with Nyback for The SF Chronicle.
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