Stretching the concept of a “short,” but too good to pass up: in 2014, “The Simpsons” allowed Don Hertzfeldt to animate a “couch gag” in the style of “World of Tomorrow.” Beam epasode now into exo-skulls and vigorously touch flippers.
POD 366, EP. 161: SPRING HAS SPRUNG AND WEIRD MOVIES ARE POLLINATING
366 Weird Movies may earn commissions from purchases made through product links.
Discussed in this episode:
Allegro non troppo (1976): Read the Canonically Weird entry! It’s great news that Bruno Bozzetto‘s alternate envisioning of Fantasia has been restored and will be touring theaters again (and likely show up on a decent Blu-ray soon.) Playing at the Metrograph in Manhattan this week, sometimes paired with Mr. Prisney’s movie. Allegro non troppo restoration at Metrograph.
Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn (2021): The film that first brought Radu Jude to the world’s attention is about a teacher whose sex tape is inadvertently leaked, causing a scandal. Not sure how weird it is, but it’s certainly eccentric, at least (and has explicit sex scenes). Buy Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn.
Cat Sick Blues (2015): A cat lover becomes a masked-kitty killer after his beloved pet dies. This one has been languishing for quite a while in the reader-suggested queue. Buy Cat Sick Blues.
Fishers of Men (202?): After eating a fish, a vegetarian becomes obsessed with all things piscine. This absurdist Indian parable is in pre-production, seeking funding, but promises “lush magical surrealism.” Found at Variety.
Rainy Dreams (202?): A hybrid documentary/dream animation, as the director enacts the nightmares of Iranian refugee children. Another in-development project seeking funds. Read more at Variety.
Revelations of Divine Love (2025): A low-budget biopic centering around the medieval Christian mystic Julian of Norwich. Playing at Anthology Archives in NYC this week, with limited stops thereafter (see following link) before a presumed VOD release. Revelations of Divine Love linktree.
“Scott Pilgrim Takes Off: The Limited Series”: Read Shane Wilson’s review. A commentary track from “Scott Pilgrim” creator Bryan Lee O’Malley and the series’ executive producer are the only special features offered in this Blu-ray edition of the limited animated series that’s a metanarrative version of the Canonically Weird original cult film, but at least you no longer need to subscribe to Netflix to enjoy it. Buy “Scott Pilgrim Takes Off: The Limited Series.”
They Will Kill You (2026): This Zazie Beetz-fronted action film about a lone maid fighting off Satanists who want to sacrifice her is notable mainly because it marks the Hollywood debut of Why Don’t You Just Die!‘s Kirill Sokolov. A couple of isolated critics, however, have called it “weird,” giving us just enough leeway to consider it here. They Will Kill You official site.
“u know i luv u” (202?): Bill Plympton is seeking funds for a new animated music video. As of this writing the project is halfway funded with 12 days to go. “u know i luv u” Kickstarter.
WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:
We’re super-excited about next week’s guests: Craig Rodgers and Dennis Bartok from boutique Blu-ray label Deaf Crocodile, on to talk about new releases, old releases, and (to the extent they can) future releases. In written content, Micheal Diamades discovers the surreal sc-fi animation Interface (2021), Shane Wilson makes a deal he may regret as he reviews both Faust (1926) and Faust: Love of the Damned (2020), and—Christ!—Gregory J. Smalley endures the bargain-basement blasphemy of “Your Life Is on the Line! The Joe Christ Anthology, Vol. 1.” Onward and weirdward!
CAPSULE: ALPHA (2025)
366 Weird Movies may earn commissions from purchases made through product links.
DIRECTED BY: Julia Ducournau
FEATURING: Mélissa Boros, Golshifteh Farahani, Tahar Rahim
PLOT: Young teenager Alpha gets a homemade tattoo, and her doctor mother obsesses over the possibility that she may have contacted a disease that will turn her into a statue; meanwhile, her heroin-addicted uncle comes to crash in their small Parisian flat.

COMMENTS: Alpha, the movie, is sick with contagion and addiction. In this diseased alternate-reality Paris, an Arab single-mom doctor tries to protect her improbably-named daughter Alpha from the dangers of the outside world. When the girl experiments with her limited teen freedom, getting a rustic homemade “A” tattoo on her arm at a party while intoxicated, her mother freaks out: where did the needle come from? Was it properly sterilized? Because, you see, there is a blood-borne disease going around which slowly turns those infected into statues. It primarily affects homosexuals and intravenous drug users, but unsanitary tattoo needles are also a disease vector. Fear that she may be deathly ill, and ostracism from her schoolmates once the rumors start circulating, aren’t the only stresses in Alpha’s life; her emaciated, estranged, heroin-addicted uncle, who is a stranger to her, has also moved into the small flat as he tries to get clean after a lifetime of relapses. At school, Alpha also keeps inconveniently (and humiliatingly) bleeding from her slow-to-heal tattoo wound; curious, although also seemingly tangential to the film’s main theme.
Despite the magical-realist plague and some confusing flashbacks, Alpha essentially plays out as a coming-of-age family drama. The three principals all do fine work, with Rahim (whose visible ribs suggest must have laid off baguettes for months in preparing for his junkie role) a particular standout. Cinematography is crisp, and needle drops from Portishead and Nick Cave add an undeniable (if possibly anachronistic) coolness factor.
Despite mostly eschewing the horror elements this time to focus on familial drama and teen anxiety, Ducournau retains her talent for conceiving scenes that are, on the surface, completely innocent, but which hint at deep perversions: in this case, a bit where Alpha’s jittery uncle white-knuckles his way through opiate withdrawal, while the anxious Alpha tries to fall sleep in bed next to him in their shared bedroom. The dreadful atmosphere of rising pandemic feeds into Alpha’s developmental worries. Growing independence, annoyance with lame and overprotective adults, and awkward liaisons with hormonal boys hardly override fears of death and an unstable adult roommate constantly on the verge of fatal overdose.
Alpha is well-written, well-acted, well-shot, well-scored, and has an serious emotional core… and yet, for some reason I can’t find it in my stony heart to unconditionally recommend it. The problem here is that, while Titane succeeded because it was a weird movie that slowly developed a deep emotional appeal, Alpha underwhelms because it starts as a humanist drama and then tacks on unnecessary surreal accoutrements. While Ducournau’s two previous efforts were weird movies that provided accommodations for art-house patrons, this one is an art-house movie offering accommodations for fans expecting something strange. Other than allowing an excuse for some cool makeup, the marbelizing symptom of the central disease adds little to the movie’s emotional or aesthetic effect. Had Ducournau made a standard drama, she might have gained a more appreciative audience… though at the cost of her reputation as one of the few provocateurs willing to ignore the inconvenient blah-ness of reality. Still, even if Alpha is not entirely a success, it’s a good film, and we’re happy to note Ducournau hasn’t sold out to the commercial allure of realist cinema. Let’s hope this is a temporary retreat, and she’ll relocate the bloody pulse of deep, dark weirdness for her next project.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
CAPSULE: HIM (2025)
366 Weird Movies may earn commissions from purchases made through product links.

DIRECTED BY: Justin Tipping
FEATURING: Tyriq Withers, Marlon Wayans
PLOT: After suffering a traumatic injury just before the draft, a star college football player attends a remote retreat to be mentored by his idol, who years ago suffered a similar setback before making an unlikely comeback.

COMMENTS:
Behold, the Lord God will come with strong hand, and his arm shall rule for him: behold, his reward is with him, and his work before him.
Stamina, speed, and sacrifice: three elements you need to become the GOAT. Especially sacrifice. Football must be what drives you. Forget family, forget God. Everything for the game. Isaiah understands this—it’s why he ushered his team, The Saviors, to victory in eight Super Bowl championships. But Isaiah has grown old, and new blood must take the helm. Does this young rising star have what it takes?
And it shall be said in that day, Lo, this is our God; we have waited for him, and he will save us: this is the Lord; we have waited for him, we will be glad and rejoice in his salvation.
The parallel backgrounds of Isaiah (Marlon Wayons) and Cam (Tyriq Withers) are slammed on the screen, sports news-style, showboating the talent and lite psychosis of the fanatical athlete mind. Growing up, Cam watched Isaiah dominate the field, all under the relentless pressure from his own father to become HIM, to become the GOAT. Cycle forward a decade-and-a-half, and Cam is on the cusp of his first professional draft. Then one night, after practice, he ends up brained by a warhammer-wielding team mascot.
And said unto me, Thou art my servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified.
The bulk of the story unfolds within Isaiah’s remote compound, chronicling a week of Cam’s trials as he recovers from his injury while attempting to gain his idol’s favor. During that time things become strange—borderline weird, in fact. Mystical overtones abut sports satire: Isaiah’s wife is a cryptic marvel heading up a cavalcade of followers, enablers, psychos, and fools. HIM (all capitals, mind you) has smash-style to spare, and as it ratchets up the intensity, so it also ratchets a primordial kind of evil. I shall say no more on that point, save my observation that I’m not sure whether the finale went too far, or not far enough. Regardless, the talents behind HIM rise to the difficult challenge of providing me a third sports movie I can wholeheartedly recommend.
For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; he will save us.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
APOCRYPHA CANDIDATE: HOPITAL BRUT (1999)
366 Weird Movies may earn commissions from purchases made through product links.
DIRECTED BY: Le Dernier Cri (Pakito Bolino, Marc Druez, Christophe Istier)
FEATURING: None
PLOT: A revue showcasing the grotesque occupants of the world’s most inhospitable hospital.

WHY IT MIGHT MAKE THE APOCRYPHA: Hopital Brut is an indefatigable assault on the senses, combining a deliberately crude and hyperactive visual style, a clamorous soundtrack that never softens or slows, and a giddy disregard for propriety. The curators aim to offend, and they never let up in their compulsion to shock.
COMMENTS: The digital hive mind at Google Translate interprets “hôpital brut” directly as “raw hospital.” However, “brut” alone lso translates as “gross,” and “Gross Hospital” is a far more appropriate and accurate title for these 45 minutes of cartoon cacophony assembled by the French collective Le Dernier Cri (translation: “The Latest”).
One of the things that makes animation anthologies like Spike and Mike’s Festival of Animation compelling is the broad range of styles and intentions sitting alongside each other. Hopital Brut is based on comic panels created by more than two dozen stars of the alt-comic scene, and their unique artistic approaches seem well-suited to the format, which promises something distinctly strange behind each door. However, the end product suffers from an interminable sameness, with one chaotic onslaught sliding into the next one. The techniques change somewhat, with stop-motion, paper cutouts, and even the occasional burst of sped-up live action footage spotlighted, but they all share a rapid pace, herky-jerky rhythm, and a love of the coarse. With so many sources of artistic inspiration at play here, and considering the assembled film’s intention to be a patchwork quilt of strangeness, maybe it’s not asking too much to expect a little variety. Instead, the same ideas keep popping up to the tune of the relentless hammering of an industrial soundtrack.
Despite its repetitiveness, a few segments have enough novelty to stand out, such as the tale of the lonely artist who turns to a lord of the underworld in order to get girls, but discovers that the over-endowed demon has more to offer. Another patient freaks out when he sees himself drowning in his soup. A set of genitals features anthropomorphized testicles that look like busts of German composers. A giant praying mantis shows up for a quick orgy of rape and evisceration, which makes for a change of pace from all the poking, prodding, and maiming that the doctors usually employ. But even these moments are only marginally more impactful than their brethren, as the same notions are served over and over again. The chef may change, but the dish remains the same.
There’s little doubt that Hopital Brut is weird. It wears its irreverence and its iconoclasm on its sleeve. But after that, there’s very little to recommend it. The film is a Venn diagram where the categories of “weirdness” and “watchability” are moving steadily apart until they are completely separate circles. It ends as it began, no less defiant and no more engaging than it was from the outset. Still, the collective seems to have landed squarely in the center of its intended target, and there’s an amusing piece of evidence to back that up. If you visit the film’s page at MUBI, you’ll be greeted with a piece of text which is both absurdly tangential and highly apropos: “Hopital Brut is not available to watch. Instead, check out Lars von Trier’s Antichrist.” An even trade? It’s probably a perfect double feature, an algorithmic pairing that would make Le Dernier Cri’s collective hearts flutter.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
“Don’t want to fry on acid? Afraid your gonna do a Diane Linklater dive off a skyscraper thinking that you can fly and the only “scraper” you’ll get is when they peel you off the pavement?! Look no further than the semi short ‘Hopital Brut’!!!… keep kids far away from this, unless you want your kids traumatized for their rest of their short, miserable lives.” —noisepuncher_caiaav, Noisepuncher
(This movie was nominated for review by Parker Weston. Suggest a weird movie of your own here.)