Your Halloween moviegoing guide, plus the weekâs best movies in L.A.
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Hello! Iâm Mark Olsen. (And Iâm Joshua Rothkopf, adding a few more entries in Markâs absence while he enjoys a well-earned vacation.) Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.
Today marks the Los Angeles release of âAnora,â director Sean Bakerâs neo-screwball comedy, one with a secret, sad loneliness about it. Maybe youâve seen the mysterious billboards on Sunset over Seventh Veil. (The movieâs about a stripper.) Or heard that the film won the Palme dâOr at Cannes. The only way to get the full experience is to go see the thing. You wonât feel like you wasted your time.
Reviewing for the paper, Glenn Whipp singles out actor Mikey Madison and her complex portrayal of the title character. Itâs âa star-making performance, leaning into Aniâs audacity while revealing the fragile façade, the vulnerabilities and self-deception lurking underneath⊠You wonât root harder for another character this year.â
And Tim Grierson spoke to Baker at the historic Gardena Cinema, a location the filmmaker chose himself. âIâm interested in any single-screen or just independently owned mom-and-pop theaters,â Baker told us, happy to prowl around the aisles, the projection booth, even a small âcrying roomâ built for unruly children whose parents canât tear their eyes off the screen.
More offices and restaurants should have crying rooms, we say. Until then, weâll just have to suffer the screams and shrieks of Halloween horror as one communal audience. Isnât that the fun of it?
The best movies in L.A. for Halloween
The vibrant moviegoing scene in Los Angeles really comes alive (undead?) for Halloween. From the super-spooky and the ultra-rare to kid-friendly or mega-scary, whatever vibe you are looking for can be found at one of the cityâs movie theaters throughout October.
Vidiots has been leaning especially hard into the season, with a broad array of Halloween-themed movies. On Oct. 19 will be Paul Maslanskyâs 1974 Blaxploitation-horror mash-up âSugar Hillâ on 35mm. Other titles between now and Oct. 31 include Kenny Ortegaâs âHocus Pocus,â Werner Herzogâs âNosferatu,â William Castleâs âHouse on Haunted Hill,â Tobe Hooperâs âPoltergeist,â Takashi Miikeâs âAuditionâ on 35mm and Rusty Cundieffâs âTales from the Hood.â
On Halloween itself, Vidiots will show John Carpenterâs original 1978 âHalloween,â their theater in Eagle Rock being just a few miles away from where the film was shot in South Pasadena.
âIt is so fun to program for Los Angeles audiences during this time of year,â said Amanda Salazar, director of programming at Vidiots, in an email. âIt is a city that is built around creativity and a deep love for world-building and make-believe. Much of the inspiration comes from the city and our communityâs love for the holiday.â
The American Cinematheque will be spotlighting three films by the Brazilian director JosĂ© Mojica Marins, creator of the character known as Coffin Joe who went on to be known as a national boogeyman akin to Jason or Freddy in the U.S. The character first appeared in 1964âs âAt Midnight Iâll Take Your Soulâ and among his other appearances are in 1967âs âThis Night Iâll Possess Your Corpseâ and 1970âs âAwakening of the Beast.â These films have become real faves of international horror aficionados and this chance to see Marinsâ work in a theater shouldnât be missed.
The Cinematheque is also screening George Romeroâs groundbreaking âNight of the Living Deadâ at the Egyptian on Oct. 27, which should provide plenty of classic suspense for anyone looking to get into the Halloween spirit.
Cinematic Void at American Cinematheque will have a 35mm screening of Stephanie Rothmanâs stylish and sexy 1971 âThe Velvet Vampireâ on Oct 21.
At Videotheque in Highland Park, there will be a showing on Oct. 30 of Willard Huyck and Gloria Katzâs âMessiah of Evil,â which has recently emerged from cult status to a wider recognition as a vital piece of â70s independent horror. The story concerns a small town overrun by a cult.
On Oct. 26, 28 and 30, the Academy Museum will have 4K screenings of George Melfordâs Spanish-language 1931 âDrĂĄculaâ starring Carlos VillarĂas and Lupita Tovar â notoriously shot during the evenings on the same sets the Tod Browningâs version starring Bela Lugosi were using during the day. On Oct. 26, there will also be a 70th anniversary screening of Jack Arnoldâs âCreature from the Black Lagoonâ in 3D.
The LA Opera has commissioned a new score for Melfordâs âDrĂĄculaâ from two-time Oscar winner Gustavo Santaolalla (âBrokeback Mountainâ) that will be performed along with the movie at the gothic-themed United Theater downtown on the 25th, 26th and 27th.
The LA Philharmonic will also put on a screening on Halloween of F.W. Murnauâs classic 1922 âNosferatuâ at the Walt Disney Concert Hall with a performance by Clark Wilson on the venueâs massive pipe organ. Itâs a good time to refresh: Robert Eggersâ remake is due at Christmas.
Perhaps itâs no surprise that the Vista Theaterâs Video Archives Cinema Club is showing some of the biggest rarities of the season, including âFrom Beyond the Grave,â âThe Skullâ and âTwisted Nerve.â
The New Beverly will have a fantastic double bill on the 22nd, 23rd and 24th of two of the biggest horror hits of the year, with Osgood Perkinsâ âLonglegsâ and Arkasha Stevensonâs âThe First Omen.â The retro vibes of both films should be enhanced by their presentation in 35mm.
The New Beverly will also screen âThe Texas Chain Saw Massacreâ on the 25th, 26th and 27th from a 35mm print that is part of the Texas Chain Saw Massacre Collection at the Academy Film Archive (just reflect on that for a moment). On the 30th and 31st, the New Beverly will screen a double bill of the underrated âHalloween III: Season of the Witchâ and âTrick âr Treat.â
Even the most dark-hearted of horror fans should find themselves beaming at all there is to go see this spooky season. As Vidiotsâ Salazar put it, âMovies, especially ones that elicit such visceral reactions as scary movies, are meant to be shared together or [forgive my corniness] scared together.â
We like the way you think, Amanda.
Points of interest
The Micheaux Film Festival
Running from Oct. 21-27 is the Micheaux Film Festival, named after the pioneering Black independent filmmaker Oscar Micheaux, known for such films as 1920âs âWithin Our Gatesâ and 1931âs âThe Exile.â
The festival was started by filmmakers Noel Braham and Courtney L. Branch in 2018 and it has grown steadily year by year. This is the first time the event is anchored at the Culver Theater in Culver City. After last yearâs attendance of 4,000 people, Braham and Branch are projecting to see 4,300-4,500 people attend this year.
In a recent interview, Braham explained the festivalâs mission by saying, âWe see ourselves as a cultural hub where we want to take on stories from around the world with the goal and hope of bringing together opposite and polarizing viewpoints which hopefully will lead to not only conversation and understanding but most importantly connection, which we feel is greatly lacking not just in Los Angeles but in our society as a whole.â
The festival will open with Sandrine Orabonaâs documentary âA Radical Act: Renee Montgomery,â about the first WNBA player to be both a co-owner and executive of a WNBA team. Other notable titles include Lovell Holderâs âLavender Men,â based on a short film that previously screened at the festival, in which the stage manager of a small theater daydreams about a gay love affair involving Abraham Lincoln.
Nida Chowdhryâs âAnxiousâ is a dark comedy about a woman grappling with her anxiety attacks. Pamela Bright-Moonâs documentary âRespect My Crown: The Rise of African American Women in California Politicsâ surveys the contributions over 170 years that Black women have made to the growth and leadership of the state.
The festival will close with Byron Manuelâs psychological thriller âSwoon.â Among the festivalâs panel discussions and talks will be a career spotlight with writer-producer-director Penny Prentice, the showrunner of âInsecure.â Other events include an acting workshop, panels on socially impactful storytelling, entertainment law, film festival strategy, music supervision, film financing and a talkback session with Braham and Branch.
âSince our founding, we essentially started to create this space and platform specifically focusing on independent filmmakers,â said Braham. âFor us, our mission and vision is very simple: Lead with help, elevate with value and close the knowledge gap between indie and industry. So we also really pride ourselves on providing tangible knowledge and educational courses to make sure that our audience and community, theyâre getting insight into information and sources that otherwise they may not get access to.â
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