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See New Ballet’s Nut Remix at Malco Summer Drive-In

If your holiday thing is the Nutcracker and you are not real nuts about seeing an adaptation, all I have to say is that sometimes a remake gets it right. Really right. That is definitely the case with Nut Remix, a modern reinvention of Tchaikovsky’s classic Nutcracker, by the savvy and talented team from New Ballet Ensemble & School.

The performance is set on Beale Street. The mash-up of dance and music styles really works. From ballet to breakdancing and flamenco to Memphis jookin, this uniquely Memphis production will mesmerize you from start to finish. This year, the production will be screened at the drive-in for your safety. If you’ve seen the production on stage and have made it your annual holiday tradition or if you’re seeing it for the first time, I can’t think of a better place to experience the magic of Memphis. Just remember to register for your tickets in advance. As part of the school’s mission to make the arts accessible to everyone, this screening is pay-what-you-can with a suggested donation of $40 per car.

Andrea Zucker/Courtesy New Ballet Ensemble & School

Nut Remix

Be sure to do it soon. After last week’s screening, word got around. According to New Ballet, “We sold out our original goal of 150 cars for next week’s screening, and we are now increasing our capacity to accommodate more viewers.”

Experience this uniquely Memphis reimagining of the Nutcracker with the whole family from the comfort and safety of your car.

New Ballet’s “Nut Remix,” Malco Summer Drive-In, 5310 Summer, Thursday, Dec. 17, 6:30 p.m., pay-what-you-can with a suggested donation of $40 per car.

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Time Warp: Zombies Take the Drive-In this Saturday

This dusk-till-dawn Halloween horrorthon movie event features four beloved flicks of undead insanity, including Zombieland, Re-Animator, Night of the Living Dead, and Return of the Living Dead.

Most of us are zombied-out after what seems like a decade of TWD. Oh, wait. It has been 10 years. Those jerks are no better off, and the series should have been canceled when (spoilers) Negan lost Lucille and became a wuss. But let’s stay on topic.

The films that will be showing at this edition of the Time Warp Drive-In are classics. You might have piled your friends in the trunk of your 1968 Dodge Charger to see cult classic gore at the drive-in for an original showing of Night of the Living Dead in the late ’60s. A quick internet search reveals that the Dodge Charger still has the roomiest trunk. Pile them in again for a night at the drive-in starting with Zombieland, the 2009 zom-com starring Woody Harrelson. These films are pure undead brain gold.

Facebook/Time Warp Drive-In

Braaaaaaaains!

Shout-out to former Contemporary Media co-worker Celeste Dixon who is part of the art and film collective Piano Man Pictures, which is offering “vintage intermission insanity between all films.” It’s nonstop horror, y’all.

We’re all pretty happy that the Time Warp is back after a COVID intermission. Just a reminder to wear your mask when outside your car or going to the snack bar so we can continue to enjoy future warped events.

Night of the Living Time Warp: Zombies Take the Drive-In, Malco Summer 4 Drive-In, 5310 Summer, Saturday, Oct. 17, 7:15 p.m., $10.

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Time Warp Drive-In: Shocktober

October is prime time for the Time Warp Drive-In. The four films curators Mike McCarthy and Matt Martin have chosen represent the best of the self-aware, gonzo horror films of the past 30 years.

Sam Raimi’s classic Army of Darkness, the third installment in the Evil Dead trilogy, is something of a career high even for the guy who made Spider-Man. Bruce Campbell’s buffoonish hero Ash picks up where he was left at the end of Evil Dead 2: transported back in time to the Dark Ages. After fast talking his way out of execution by the locals (whom he calls “primitive screwheads”), the everyman is enlisted to retrieve the fabled Necronomicon and end the demon scourge. Naturally, he screws up and unleashes the titular army of undead warriors, which he must then defeat with cheeky one liners and a chainsaw hand.

Bruce Campbell in Army of Darkness

Speaking of chainsaws, Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 will also be featured in the Shocktober lineup. Tobe Hopper returned to the film that made him famous in 1986 with the Golan/Globus-produced Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Leatherface and his mutant redneck family return, but this time instead of viscreal hick horror, there are dashes of slapstick and gallons of blood. Hopper pioneered not only the verite horror movie, but also the kind of self-aware comic horror that has become an integral part of the genre.

The third Shocktober film is House of 1,000 Corpses, rock-star-turned-horror-director Rob Zombie’s directoral debut. The now legendary 2003 gore fest is not the greatest movie ever made, but it’s proof that stylish violence will always keep the seats filled.

Finally, From Dusk Til Dawn rolls at midnight. For my money, this is Robert Rodriguez’s masterpiece. Written by Quentin Tarantino, the characters (one of whom is played by Tarantino, in his best acting role) are unusually well developed for a vampire blood fest. The acting firepower rivals the onscreen gunplay, with George Clooney, Harvey Keitel, Juliette Lewis, Salma Hayek, Tom Savini, and Cheech Marin mixing it up in a Mexican vampire nest. Stay late for this minor classic of the 1990s.

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Time-Warp Drive Returns with the Films of Stanley Kubrick

The July edition of the Time Warp Drive-In is devoted to a director whose work is more often associated with the art house than the drive-in. On the occasion of what would have been Stanley Kubrick’s 86th birthday, Malco’s Summer Drive-In will host an all-night marathon of the director’s work. Memphis filmmaker Mike McCarthy, who, along with Black Lodge Video’s Matthew Martin, programs the monthly events, says that Kubrick’s influence stretched far beyond film.

“Kubrick created worlds,” McCarthy says. “A hippie, like David Bowie, could enter the theater, inhabit the world of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and exit as something else.” The character of David Bowman, the astronaut who ends 2001: A Space Odyssey “lost in space,” inspired Bowie’s first hit, “Space Oddity.” Kubrick’s next film, 1971’s A Clockwork Orange, would similarly inspire the look of Glam rock and the attitude of punk rock.

The evening of films will begin with what is probably Kubrick’s most popular work, 1980’s The Shining, a masterful adaptation of Stephen King’s novel. With Kubrick, who started out as a photographer for Look magazine in 1946, the richness of his images conveys the richness of his ideas. A common criticism of Kubrick’s style is that the performances are flat or cold. But that is a misreading of what the director was trying to do, for it is not the actors who are emoting, but the man behind the camera. The Shining, while filled with luscious images, is an exception. In Jack Nicholson, Kubrick met his artistic match, much as he had 20 years earlier when he did Paths Of Glory and Spartacus with Kirk Douglas.

A Clockwork Orange

The evening continues with another literary adaptation, A Clockwork Orange. Anthony Burgess spoke more favorably of the film than King does of The Shining, but Kubrick made both texts jumping off points for his meticulous, arresting imagery. The near-future dystopia is dominated by Malcolm McDowell as Alex, a middle-class street thug obsessed with classical music whose path to redemption is almost as ethically queasy as his ritualistic ultraviolence.

Even though A Clockwork Orange was initially rated X for violence, its body count pales next to Kubrick’s masterpiece Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. In 1961, Kubrick set out to make a serious movie about the dangers of nuclear war. But the more he read about the Cold War doctrine of “Mutually Assured Destruction,” the more absurd it seemed. So Kubrick made the radical decision to turn his film into a comedy by bringing onboard writer Terry Southern and comedic super-genius Peter Sellers. Even taken apart from its Cold War context, Dr. Strangelove is a clear triumph and still one of the most important comedies ever made. That the civilization-ending mass killing is, in retrospect, somehow more acceptable than Alex’s mundane street thuggery is just part of the joke.

The last film on the drive-in program is Kubrick’s biggest and most intimidating masterpiece. 2001: A Space Odyssey is not only the greatest science fiction movie ever made, it placed second behind only Ozu’s Tokyo Story in the 2012 Sight & Sound Directors’ poll of the greatest films ever. Every shot is a meticulous work of art in its own right, and taken together, they offer too much to comprehend in one sitting. But the pleasure of returning to unravel works of genius is part of what gives Kubrick’s films their enduring power.

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The Release of Cigarette Girl

This weekend sees the climax of May’s Mike McCarthy love-in. Friday night, May 23rd, Black Lodge Video hosts the DVD release party for Cigarette Girl, McCarthy’s latest feature, first released in 2009 and remastered and handsomely packaged by Music+Arts Studio. The DVD includes a director’s commentary from McCarthy, loads of special features, and a CD of Jonathan Kirkscey’s brilliant score. The party starts at 9:30 p.m., and it will include live music from Mouserocket and Hanna Star (McCarthy’s daughter).

Saturday night is the main event, with a marathon of McCarthy’s films showcased just where they ought to be: at a drive-in. Time Warp Drive-In celebrates 20 years of Guerrilla Monster films with a screening of Cigarette Girl, Teenage Tupelo, The Sore Losers, Superstarlet A.D., Elvis Meets the Beatles, Midnight Movie, and more. Among the “more”: live music from the Subtractions and popcorn baptisms (!).

Time Warp Drive-In is the work of McCarthy, Malco’s Jimmy Tashie, and Black Lodge’s Matthew Martin. They launched Time Warp Drive-In last Halloween season with a “Shocktober” screening of horror classics such as A Nightmare on Elm Street and Evil Dead 2.

“Let’s have fun,” McCarthy says of the concept. “I talk about the past a lot, but I’m actively living in the present and looking forward to the future. But I want the past to travel with me.”

In April, Time Warp Drive-In settled into a regular format, screening the last Saturday of each month. April was tagged Soulful Cinema, with Hustle & Flow, Purple Rain, Superfly, and Coffy; June has road classics like Two Lane Blacktop and Bullitt; July celebrates Stanley Kubrick’s birthday; August memorializes death week with a selection of Elvis films; August also revs up for bike films such as The Wild One and Girl on a Motorcycle; September honors Tim Burton; and October brings Shocktober back with more horror.

“I can’t say enough nice things about Jimmy Tashie at Malco,” McCarthy says. “He is this presence who understands the 20th century and what the drive-in was originally there for.”

McCarthy’s films will look great projected in the Memphis night air. 

Cigarette Girl DVD Release Party

Friday, May 23rd, 9:30 p.m.

Black Lodge Video

Time Warp Drive-In Presents the Underground Cinema of Mike McCarthy

Saturday, May 24th, dusk

$10 per person

Malco’s Summer Drive-In

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Show Time

Area moviegoers who’ve done The King’s Speech and The Adjustment Bureau and have no interest in Mars Needs Moms or Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (3D or no) have plenty of options this week.

On Thursday, ArtsMemphis and Indie Memphis are teaming up for a screening of The American Astronaut. This comedy, which was shown at the Indie Memphis film festival in 2009, is set in the future and in space and is populated with out-of-this-world oddballs. The free screening is at 7:15 p.m. at the Malco Summer Drive-in. Attendees are also invited to a pre-screening get-together at Taqueria la Guadalupana on Summer at 6 p.m.

Also on Thursday, it’s the debut of Memphis Heat: The True Story of Memphis Wrasslin’. This documentary, an offshoot of the book Sputnik, Masked Men, & Midgets, covers the history of Memphis wrestling from Sputnik Monroe to Jerry Lawler and beyond. Screenings are at 7 and 9 p.m. at the Paradiso. For more on the film, go to page 44.

On Tuesday, the University of Memphis’ Marcus W. Orr Center for the Humanities and the Department of Foreign Language and Literature kicks off The Italian Film Festival. The first film is Basilicata coast to coast, a road movie of sorts (on foot!) following four musicians on their way to a music festival. Other festival screenings include Happy Family on March 31st and 18 anni dopo on April 5th. All screenings are at 7 p.m. at the University Center Theater. Admission is free. For more information, go to memphis.edu/moch.

On Wednesday, St. Peter Catholic Church continues its Lenten film series with a screening of One Came Home by local filmmaker Willy Bearden. The film, set just after World War II in Mississippi, revolves around the Hodges family, who are heartbroken over the loss of a loved one in the war, and the sudden appearance of a man who claims to have served with the fallen soldier. The evening begins with a 6 p.m. prayer service, followed by a light supper and a screening of the film.