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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

EAT at Black Lodge

Eat at “EAT.” 

EAT is the new restaurant now open at Black Lodge, the iconic movie rental facility, theater, and performing arts venue at 405 North Cleveland.

“It’s something we’ve been wanting to do for the last two years,” says Matt Martin, a Black Lodge owner. “We were set up and ready to build the kitchen right when Covid hit.”

But they had to use that money “to survive,” he says.

Matt Martin, a Black Lodge owner. (Credit: Zack Parks)

 The name “EAT,” which Lodge owner James Blair created, is “one part kind of a throwback name” to those “little diners that say ‘Eats’ or ‘Joe’s Eats’” on Times Square “mostly in older movies,” Martin says.

The other part was inspired by John Carpenter’s 1988 movie, They Live.  “In that movie, subliminal messages are hidden behind everything.”

The main character, played by Roddy Piper, uses special glasses to see through everything, Martin says. When he looks at a menu he sees the word “food.” When he looks at money, he sees “This is your God.” “Everybody is getting hit with these subliminal messages all the time. We thought that would be funny.”

EAT was the perfect choice. “We didn’t want to call it ‘The Gilded Orchid’ or anything like that. It’s more of of a fun-based diner within the Lodge. A great place when you’re at the show to come over and grab a bite to eat.”

And if somebody asks,  “Do you want to eat at the Lodge,” you just said the name.”

Blair also is EAT’s chef. “We were just lucky one of our owners happened to be a well-trained chef.  So, he designed the menu. And he’s got all kinds of other additions, specials, and things he plans on unveiling soon.”

They wanted to begin with “a very simple menu. We’ve got a long history of throwing parties, showing movies. Black Lodge has never been associated with food before. This is a new thing for us, but it’s something we’ve always wanted to do. But we needed to learn to do it properly.”

A “high-end breakfast” was a priority, Martin says. “We thought Midtown should have access to breakfast all day and into the night.”

A “Waffle Grilled Cheese Sandwich” made with brie is one item. Another is Blair’s “phenomenal BLTA sandwich everyone is in love with. ‘A’ is for ‘avocado.’”

Blair’s entrees include “Sweet Spicy Thai Pork” and “Thai Yellow Curry.” 

 “And then we’ve got a lot of different fun lunches. Nachos made with tater tots called ‘Tot-Chos.’”

They also have fresh soft pretzels and gourmet popcorn.

Martin’s life partner Ashlee Tierney is making fresh bread and desserts, including cherry pie  (a nod to Twin Peaks) and a “fresh baked brownie raspberry ganache pie.”

Ashlee Tierney at EAT (Credit: Mars McKay)

A big focus was to add “plenty of vegetarian and vegan options,” Martin says. A lot of restaurants just offer “hummus and bread and that’s it. We were like, ‘We gotta have at least five options for people who are vegan and vegetarian.’ We wanted to make sure our menu is aware of and reflects the diverse tastes of our community.”

EAT is open noon to 9 p.m. on Thursdays,  noon to 11 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, and noon until 9 p.m. on Sundays. The Lodge plans to expand hours, menu choices, and add food delivery.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Saving Black Lodge: “City Full of Good People” Rescuing Memphis’ Film and Music Mecca

Black Lodge, the video store reborn at 405 N. Cleveland.

Black Lodge Video started out as an independent video store in Cooper-Young in the late 1990s. Founders Matt Martin and Bryan Hogue were mostly looking for a way to feed their passion for collecting movies on VHS and DVD, but when they outlived their corporate competition to become the last video store standing in Memphis, it was clear that the Lodge had become something more. It was a hangout store, an artist’s salon, a no-budget film school, a venue for outré music, and a haven for the weird kids.

But even the Black Lodge couldn’t stand against the power of Netflix, finally closing in 2014. Bryan Hogue bowed out, but Matt Martin and a group of would-be entrepreneurs kept searching for ways to bring back the Lodge magic. Finally, in late 2019, the re-envisioned Black Lodge opened at 405 N. Cleveland in the Crosstown neighborhood. It was a much bigger space, meant to combine the video store with an arcade and a flexible theater space for film screenings, bands, DJs, or theatrical performances.

But thanks to the pandemic, the Lodge is on shaky financial ground. They’re asking for help with a crowdfunding campaign and an upcoming live-streaming telethon.

I spoke with Martin about the campaign to save the Black Lodge. Our conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Photo by Ashlee Tierney

Black Lodge owner Matt Martin.

Chris McCoy: The new Black Lodge opened just six months before the pandemic lockdown started, right?

Matt Martin: Literally six months. Obviously, there were years of planning, and once we implemented it in September, 2019, we knew we were going to be having to run thin. Everybody’s going to have to work a lot and get paid very little for that first six months. But we could make it work if we fought and cut every corner. We had gone through Halloween and New Year’s, which for us like any other venue is the big time. They were hugely successful nights. It told us what we needed to know, which was the space was working. The people liked it. Cut to February of 2020. We can actually get the last of the loans together that will help us build out a kitchen. And then of course, what no one could have expected showed up. The entire new business model was designed around live shows, movie screenings, club nights, parties, so 80 percent of our revenue disappeared overnight. Not just us, every bar, every venue all over the country, same exact thing. We’ve lost a bunch that may never get to come back. We knew when it came here to Memphis and when it was time to shut everything down, that the only hope of survival was to lean on the video store and see if we could just pay the basics and make it to the other side.

Right off the bat, we were absolutely touched. Huge numbers of people at the beginning of COVID didn’t want to go out anywhere, and rightfully so. Many could have canceled their memberships with us. We sent an email about that and said, look, for the first month of this, we’ve got to completely shut the doors just to be safe. And we’re going to hope to crawl it back open in May, which is when we wound up reopening. It was one of those early signs that Memphians are wonderful people who love art and fight for the things we have that are unique in this city. Almost no one canceled. People would call me and say, ‘I am not going to be able to come during COVID, but I don’t want you to stop charging me. I want you all to survive.’ That was a beautiful and touching. And it really has been our saving grace from when COVID broke till now, just the goodness of people agreeing to let their memberships keep going. As COVID stretched on, we actually started to gain people, because there were so few things for anyone to do. And of course, we had to implement all kinds of safety precautions, like temperature checks at the door, mass required hand sanitization, no more than five or six people in the store at a time. We’ve tried to be as safe as humanly possible.

This all went on so much longer than any of us thought. We knew there’s only so long we can survive at this level. A lot of the reason we were able to make it was because the landlords were good enough to slash the rent down to the very basic, just to give us some time.

CM: They’ve got to realize that, if you guys aren’t here, what’s going to be here? There’s not gonna be like an Urban Outfitters coming in here to replace you in the middle of a pandemic.

MM: Exactly. Like, you might eventually, but for now, you’re just going to be stuck with an empty building you’re paying insurance and utilities on. That’s worked very well, even though we’ve even had to limit the hours we’re open, just because we can’t afford to pay enough people to be here. When we got past New Year’s, it became clear that if, if this is going to drag on as long as we’re fairly sure it will, safe shows of the nature of which we give are not feasible probably till the fall. And even that is speculating that vaccinations go well over the next six months. We realized we’re cutting so close to the bone we may not make it. For every bar right now, it’s a waiting game. How long can you go with a minimal amount coming in and still get the bills paid, keep the heat on and make it to the other side? Because we all know, especially those of us in the business of throwing nightlife, that when it’s safe to do so again, it will be huge, bigger than it was before, because so many people have gone so long without being able be around other people and see a band, or sit in a movie theater and watch a movie together.

We’ve hesitated a long time in asking for help, mainly because everyone needs help right now. It almost felt bad to say something when other places were suffering, when other people were suffering more. When we set it up, we were like, let’s do an Indiegogo so that we can offer rewards for every level and give something back, make it something more exciting for people to get involved.

And right off the bat, we were flabbergasted at the generosity of everyone. We went over the analytics of the donations. It wasn’t, you know, 19 rich people out in East Memphis gave us $500 to $1000. It was nickels and dimes, five bucks, 10 bucks — the norms were low and clearly large numbers of people just gave what they had at a time when no one has anything. That blows me away. Obviously, I’m touched personally, and thankful for the business, but there’s another level of it that I think speaks loudly about how good people can be, and how giving they can be, even when they have nothing left. Memphis is an arts town. We make music here. We make great food. We make movies. It’s wonderful to see the populace show once again, as they have time and time before, that they’re ready to fight for unique things and don’t want them to go away. They don’t want those things that make Memphis Memphis to disappear. And I’m proud to have gotten to that point where people think that way about Black Lodge, We started as just two guys in a video store, in the middle of a beat-down house. I never thought that many people would ever come around. It turned into something very big in the cultural zeitgeist of the city.

CM: If the pandemic wasn’t enough, you lost Bryan Hogue last year, too.

MM: That was the most painful thing of all. He’d had some health problems, and it was something we feared. I was heartbroken as a friend and heartbroken as a business partner to lose Brian from the world. But after it happened, not dozens, but hundreds of people came in, sometimes just to say, ‘He was a gruff, crazy guy, but when he would talk to me about movies, he inspired me to want to see new things and to find new art.’ It helped them and changed their lives a little. I wish he had been here to see how many people he touched. I wish he’d been here to see how well this fundraiser has gone! When we put it together, even I’m like, you know, nobody’s got anything right now. It’s not that people don’t want to give, it’s that they don’t have anything to give. And yet they did.

Louise Page onstage at Black Lodge on New Year’s Eve 2019.

CM: Tell me about the streaming telethon.

MM: It’s the third weekend in March, the 19th and 20th. We are going to be doing a two-day streaming telethon that’s going to incorporate a good dozen bands — local, of course— local films, local music videos, and local performance art of various types. It’s going great so far. I would love to say I thought of this telethon, but I want people to know this is, again, about the goodness of other people who walk in the door. Sara Moseley, Frank McLallen of the Sheiks, they came to me. We never asked them for any of this. We can all do prerecorded sets, but none of us want a dime for this. We just want to help because all of us have played a show at Lodge had a great time. But they’re also saying, we’ve got to work together. We’re musicians. We need places to play when this is over.

CM: What is Memphis without juke joints and punk clubs?

MM: Exactly. There’s a whole universe of phenomenally talented musicians that need places to play, places to do their sound. They’re not easy to sell in a simplified bar venue on Beale, where there’s a certain sound, and that’s what we do here. So when they came to me, they said let us arrange this. We’ll do all the work. They went and looked for sponsors. They reached out to sound engineers. They reached out to people who just said, yes, I will give of my time, expect nothing back. And that alone brought me to tears. It really hit home right then. We’re lucky enough to be in a city that cares about art and artists. We’re lucky this city is full of good people.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

John Hughes Big 80s Films At The Time Warp Drive-In

The gang’s all here for The Breakfast Club at the Time Warp Drive-In

Time Warp Drive-In organizer Matt Martin says the most requested theme in the six-year history of the monthly retro movie night has always been the teen ’80s movies of John Hughes. Saturday night, April 20th at the Malco Summer Drive-In, Time Warpers will get their wish.

Hughes grew up in suburban Grosse Point, Michigan. After getting his start with National Lampoon, he became one of the most prolific and successful writers of his generation. For better or worse, his insightful depictions of high school hierarchy became the default view of teenage life in the ’80s and ’90s. When they were released, they were often controversial due to their frank depictions of teenage sex, drugs, and rock and roll, while teenagers of the time praised the emotional honesty. Today’s audiences in the teenage target demographic might find the film’s almost exclusively white cast and creaky gender role assumptions problematic. It’s the rare artist who can remain controversial over the decades, only for changing reasons.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is probably Hughes’ tightest screenplay, comedy wise. Putting the majority of those words in the mouth of a fourth-wall breaking Matthew Broderick made it an instant classic. Would Bueller have gotten away with his low-key crime spree if he’d been a black teenager who couldn’t leverage his white privilege? Probably not. Does he show signs of borderline sociopathy? Arguably. But when this film is really clicking, you can’t help but root for Broderick’s portrayal of the consummate teenage con man with a heart of gold.

John Hughes Big 80s Films At The Time Warp Drive-In

The Breakfast Club is Hughes at his most empathetic. He created the perfect portrayals of the teenage stereotypes of the jock, the beauty queen, the introvert, the waste-oid criminal, and the geek, and then proceeded to rip them to pieces by revealing the scared and hopeful people underneath.

John Hughes Big 80s Films At The Time Warp Drive-In (2)

Weird Science was Hughes’ second film as director in 1984, and, as the title says, it’s probably his weirdest. In what must be the most egregious example of the Manic Pixie Dream Girl in film history, two nerds, Gary (Anthony Michael Hall) and Wyatt (Ilan Mitchell Smith) use…well, weird science…to semi-accidentally create a super-powered supermodel, played by real life supermodel Kelly LeBrock. But like most stories of summoning a genie from a lamp, the wishers end up getting more of what they need than what they think they want.

John Hughes Big 80s Films At The Time Warp Drive-In (3)

The Time Warp Drive-in rolls at 7:30 PM on Saturday, April 20th at the Malco Summer Drive-In. 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Cinematic Panic Film Festival Brings The Weird

When you think of “film festival fare,” what usually comes to mind are sincere indie dramas, light language comedies, and earnest documentaries about social issues. But that’s not what’s on the marquee for Memphis’ newest festival, Cinematic Panic.

Black Lodge Video was a Cooper-Young institution for 15 years. As anyone who frequented the place can recall, there was always a few film freaks hanging around in the store watching selections from its vast video catalogue. You never knew what you were going to see on the vintage big-screen projection TV.

Since the Lodge shut down its original location four years ago, co-owner Matt Martin has been on a frustrating and seemingly quixotic quest to bring it back to life. Last year, it was announced that they had finally found a new home. The bigger and better Black Lodge would relocate in a storefront at 405 N. Cleveland. The completely new space will include not only the legendarily huge video collection for rent, but also an arcade with new and vintage video games, and a combination movie theater and music venue in the back.

Evil Dead

Once the new Black Lodge was in operation, Martin says he envisioned a weekly event called Cinematic Panic that would be in the spirit of the old days of cinephiles daring each other to watch the unwatchable. “The idea was to show the most weird, off-putting, bizarre, uncategorizable movies I could find.”

But while he was helping Memphis filmmaker Chad Allen Barton with the Piano Man Pictures Roadshow, a touring retrospective of films created by the collective, Martin says Barton suggested changing the concept. “He said something that struck me: If you do it every week, the shock loses its power.”

Barton and Martin set out to try something new: a film festival dedicated to outré cinema. They scheduled the first Cinematic Panic festival for October, when the new Black Lodge was scheduled to be completed, and called for submissions. “We wanted to see what we can find here locally, and as far as our reach can muster,” says Martin. “That turned out to be global.”

From Beyond

Barton says they were unprepared for the more than 300 submissions they got from all over the world. It was an avalanche of the kind of movies that rarely get screenings in conventional festivals outside of midnight slots. “Everybody wants to be Sundance,” says Lodge co-owner Danny Grubbs.

“We’re underneath Sundance,” says James Blair, Lodge partner and chef who is designing the menu for the new kitchen. “We’re in the sewers of Sundance. That’s where you’ll find us.”

Last House On The Left

Martin says movies intended to unsettle have been around the beginning of cinema. “What does Edison first shoot for? A version of Frankenstein. Shock and horror has been a staple of fiction since drawings on the cave. We look back at the Edison stuff, or look at Nosferatu, or “Un Chien Andalou” by Dali and Buñuel. These are all films that were trying to explore the newly created concept of cinema, and asking, how far can this go? Can we shock and terrify with just images and sound? The answer, of course, was a resounding yes.”

But the Black Lodge team was dealt setback after setback as they tried to create the new space. “We’ve been panicking for a year and a half at this point,” says Blair.

‘Return of the Flesh Eating Film Reels’

Grubbs says the construction is “80% done.” The 6,000-square-foot space lacks internal walls, but the floors, plumbing, bathrooms, and other critical systems are already complete. When it became apparent that the store would not be complete in time for the scheduled film festival, the team did some soul searching and decided to stage it as a pop up event in the cavernous space as a thank you to the Black Lodge faithful. “People have waited a long time, patiently, for the new Lodge to be built,” says Martin. “We don’t get to be public about its development very often. We knew everybody was anxious, so we decided to give them a glimpse. Come inside the space and watch movies on this massive screen. Get a feel for what the Lodge is going to do.”

Running five days starting Wednesday, October 24th, Cinematic Panic is jam-packed with classic weirdness and new strangeness. To set the tone, the first night will feature Videodrome, David Cronenberg’s landmark mashup of body horror and mass media theory, as well as David Lynch’s little seen 2002 “sitcom” Rabbits which stars Naomi Watts as a humanoid rabbit.

Cinematic Panic Film Festival Brings The Weird

Other werid classics screening include Todd Solondz’s 1998 black comedy Happiness, Peter Jackson’s perverse puppet show Meet The Feebles, the 1986 H.P. Lovecraft adaptation From Beyond, Sam Rami’s groundbreaking comedy horror Evil Dead, and a pairing of Last House On The Left and Audition. “[Last House On The Left] is a brutal film by anyone’s standards,” says Martin. “It’s a difficult watch. But it’s 40 years old, and as relevant as ever with its comments on assault and sexual trauma. It’s one of the films that changed horror from the old school world of monsters and castles to the monsters next door to you. Then we chose Audition because of the role reversal of female as tormentor.”

Memphis made movies include two features: Barton’s satire Lights, Camera, Bullshit and Jim Weter’s 2012 At Stake: Vampire Solutions. Among the 101 short films are John Pickle’s “Return of the Flesh Eating Film Reels,” and works by several Memphis filmmakers, including Ben Siler and Laura Jean Hocking.

Joe Finds Grace

Eight features will screen in competition, including Joe Finds Grace, a film Barton describes as “The Hunchback of Notre Dame goes on a road trip of self-discovery.”
There’s no jury, so winners of the short and feature competition will be determined purely by audience reaction.

The snacks Blair has prepared fit with the festival’s “I dare you” theme, such as chocolate covered grasshoppers and fermented Japanese string beans. There will be musical performances scattered in with the films, and Saturday night after Evil Dead, the festival will transform into the popular Black Lodge Halloween show, headlined by Negro Terror.

Grubbs says after the festival is over, they plan to finish construction and hope the new Black Lodge will be fully operational by the end of the year. This will be the first of many Cinematic Panic festivals. “We’ve got eight projectors, so we could do multiple screens in the future if we wanted to,” says Grubbs.

“No. No.” says Barton. “Please. No.”

Cinematic Panic runs from Wednesday, October 24 to Sunday, October 28 at 405 N. Cleveland. Schedule available here.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Inside Videodrome

So, you ask, what’s all this internetting doing to me, anyway? You’re not alone in questioning the effects of advanced communications tech on the human brain that evolved basically to find food and a mate and create strategies to the get the food and have sex. But you may be surprised to learn that one of the most potent explorations of the question of our relationship to technology was made in 1983. 

James Woods gets personal with his new device in Videodrome.

When he created VIdeodrome, director David Cronenberg was coming off his first big hit in Scanners, a horror film about killer telepaths that was sold with the image of a man’s head exploding. 

The money shot from Scanners.

Videodrome combined the body and sexual horror themes of Cronenberg’s earlier, low-budget indies with his musings about the evolving media landscape that was increasingly saturated with an expanding cable TV landscape and the home video revolution brought on by the spread of the videocassette players. Cronenberg’s nightmare was a population desensitized to horror and violence and imbued with a desire to merge with the machines delivering the images. 

Debbie Harry in VIdeodrome

Starring TV actor James Woods and punk goddess Debbie Harry, the film lost money on release, but became a cult classic when teenage horror addicts seeking cheap thrills found it on video store shelves in the late 80s. Cronenberg moved on to big budget horror pictures in Hollywood, such as his classic remake of The Fly, and later outré literary adaptation such as Naked Lunch and Crash.  But for many fans, Videodrome remains his masterpiece. 

Tonight at 7 PM, Indie Memphis is screening Videodrome as part of the Memphis in May salute to Canadian cinema. Afterwards, yours truly will participate in a panel discussion with Commercial Appeal  film critic John Beifuss, Black Lodge Video proprietor Matt Martin, and University of Memphis Communications professor Marina Levina. 

Inside Videodrome

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Film Features Film/TV

Time Warp Drive-In 2016

“Staying at home and watching a movie is great, but there’s another way to do it,” Matt Martin says. The Black Lodge Video owner, together with Memphis underground movie guru Mike McCarthy, is gearing up for the third season of the Time Warp Drive-in. Once a month, the Malco Summer Drive-in will play host to an all-night extravaganza of classic (if you define “classic” loosely) movies.

“There’s been a resurgence in interest in retro-cinema, especially among millennials,” Martin says. “The drive-in allows people to go back in time and see some great movies they might never have heard of. At the same time there’s this cinema-drenched environment. Mike likes to call it ‘free-range cinema.’ We invite the audience to be part of a night that’s not just about the movies. You can get out under the stars, interact with people, have a picnic with cinema all around you.”

Robert De Niro and Ray Liota in Goodfellas

This year’s series begins Saturday with Dark Urban Worlds: The Films of Martin Scorsese. For one ticket, audiences will get four films: Scorsese’s 1990 organized-crime epic Goodfellas; then The Departed, which tackled the story of gangster Whitey Bulger a decade before Johnny Depp’s Black Mass; Taxi Driver, the 1976 masterpiece that made Scorsese and Robert De Niro legends; and After Hours, the 1985 comedy where straight-laced Griffin Dunne tries to escape from bohemian New York.

“The drive-in always was a home for the bizarre,” Martin says. “It’s been synonymous with weirdo genre movies, exploitation, and strange horrors. I wanted to get a couple that represent that theme — for example Goodfellas takes inspiration from exploitation — but then throw some more obscure stuff in there, like After Hours, because so few people have ever seen it. The drive-in audience is tricky. It’s not like a regular movie theater, because attention doesn’t work the same way. The environment is more conducive to hanging out and interactivity and fun. We tried to pick things that have a certain pace, a certain energy to them. The drive-in is more about the entire experience than about the individual storylines.”

Other programs in the 2015 Time Warp series includes Sing Along Cinema!, the April set of musicals including the contrasting 1980 films The Blues Brothers and Xanadu; Comic Book Hardcore! in May, with Sin City and The Crow; Return of the Burn with Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and Half Baked; Martial Arts Mayhem in July, with Enter the Dragon and Kung Fu Hustle; Paranoid Visions, a tribute to John Carpenter with They Live and The Thing; and Bride of Shocktober!, horror comedies including Young Frankenstein and Shaun of the Dead.

On another front, Martin says Black Lodge Video has been without a physical building for more than a year, but that is about to change. “We’ve finally found what we think is the new and best home for Black Lodge, and our enormous collection, and we can hopefully make some announcements at the end of the month about where that will be. We’re going to take it up a notch, and hopefully we’ll be able to branch out into other directions, like theme nights and workshops. My hope is that the Lodge will be, by summer, ready to reclaim its position as Memphis’ leading film archive.”