A girl conducts a necromantic ritual in 1901 to re-animate the bodies of Diego Portales and Jaime Guzmán, the architects of Chilean authoritarianism.
POD 366, EP. 165: A FINITE BUFFET OF WEIRDNESS
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Discussed in this episode:
A Blind Bargain (2025): A man offers his mother to a mad scientist (Crispin Glover) for a rejuvenating experiment; things turn out differently than he expects. A “remake” of a lost Lon Chaney silent done in the style of a 70s psychological thriller. A Blind Bargain official site.
Buffet Infinity (2025): Read Giles Edwards’ Apocrypha Candidate review. A very limited release for this surreal “channel-clicking” odyssey that will show up on VOD May 8 . Buffet Infinity official site.
Hair High (2004): A couple attend their high school prom after their death. This typically absurd Bill Plympton animation lost money, but it features a relatively star-studded voice cast of Sarah Silverman, Dermot Mulroney, both David and Keith Carradine, Beverly D’Angelo, Ed Begley Jr., and vocal cameos by Matt Groening and Don Hertzfeldt. Buy Hair High.
Point Blank (1967): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s review. John Boorman‘s early existential gangster film is the coolest thing Lee Marvin has ever done; the Criterion collection apparently agrees. Buy Point Blank.
Resurrection (2025): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s Apocrypha Candidate review. Bi Gan ‘s dream-anthology feature is his most surreal film to date, and an instant art-house classic. Now on Blu-ray and DVD from Criterion Premieres. Buy Resurrection.
Song of the Miraculous Hind (2002): Marcell Jankovics explores more Hungarian myths, a la Son of the White Mare. Deaf Crocodile brings this Magyar-forward entry to the masses; its reputation suggests it has less appeal to general audiences than his other features. Buy Song of the Miraculous Hind.
Vampire Time Travelers (1998): The adventures of butt-biting sorority vampire time travelers. A DIY, shot-on-video comedy that leans heavily into its absurdism; the Visual Vengeance Blu-ray includes an entire bonus feature, I Know What You Did in English Class. Buy Vampire Time Travelers.
WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:
No guest scheduled on next week’s Pod 366, but we’ll be back with the weird movie news you can use. In written content, Micheal Diamades indulges in The Movie Orgy (1968); Pete Trbovich kicks off his limited “Pete’s Perverted Pix” series with The Laughing Woman (1969); Shane Wilson digs up Funny Bones (1995); and Gregory J. Smalley wonders if Mother Mary (2026) will speak words of wisdom that will comfort him. Onward and weirdward!
APOCRYPHA CANDIDATE: UP THE CATALOGUE (2024)
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DIRECTED BY: Alastair Siddons
FEATURING: Lyndsey Marshal, John Macmillan, Morgana Robinson, Anastasia Hille
PLOT: Hailey, the lead presenter for a shopping network, is forbidden from suspending her performance on a set where it’s always still morning.

WHY IT MIGHT JOIN THE APOCRYPHA: Hailey’s journey to the end of the film is by turns comical, confusing, and surreal, culminating in a quick-but-profound moment of “hmm.”
COMMENTS: Judging from the Kafka dreams I suffered after watching this, I’ll advertise that angle first. An eager makeup artist preps protagonist Hailey for broadcast, interrupted by odd exchanges with an unseen Dave who runs hot and cold: snippy one moment, flattering in the next. “Forever Bread,” the invention of a gruff fellow in military-style fatigues, is among the never-fully-explained items for sale on 4QTV (quality, quantity, quintity, and never any Q’s), and we learn of Hailey’s aversion to bread mold and of her son, whose name she can’t quite remember. Derek—a regular caller, it seems telephones and goes on to confess his fear of dying (not unreasonably for a nonagenarian). Quick break, and on to the next item.
Alastair Siddons skewers one of television’s more ridiculous and unsettling genres, home shopping programs, through a ridiculous and unsettling little film. Up the Catalogue never goes anywhere; first Hailey’s is unable to leave the production set, then the building, and the finale is an extended pursuit down a repeated cycle of stairwell. Her boss, Dave, is the hellish counterpart of a Chris Morris TV producer, dangling the promise of implied freedom in front of Hailey only if she agrees to the terms of the rent-to-marry companion owl, Maureen, who used to be the network’s star hamster.
Up the Catalogue left me with a feeling of “Whelp, that just happened”, followed thereafter by a none-too-restful bit of sleep. The film cruises along the comedy-cringe line in true British fashion, adding a hearty dose of cramped infinity-space as the story unfolds within an endless backstage labyrinth. By the end, I wanted out as much as Hailey did, and I was relieved that my visit to this world wrapped up in only a little over an hour. That said, I strangely enjoyed the distressing journey—a sentiment which leaves me as confused as the climax did.
Rolling again in Five-Four-Q-Two-Action!
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
366 UNDERGROUND FROM THE READER-SUGGESTED QUEUE: DAYMAKER (2007)
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DIRECTED BY: Joe LiTrenta
FEATURING: Joe LiTrenta, Michael Nathanson, Cristina Marie Proctor, Myla Pitt, Sakura Sugihara, Carrie Terraccino, Sara Weibel
PLOT: On a clear day in New Jersey, twentysomethings meet up, chat, drink and take drugs, dream, and reconvene in new combinations.

COMMENTS: Not too long ago, we talked about the options available to the no-budget filmmaker. They can go for taboo. They can go for shock value. They can try for goofball comedy. They can aim at surrealistic nonsense. They can go for flat-out absurdism. Whatever the approach, the goal is to demonstrate what an aspiring filmmaker can do even without all the bells and whistles and the fancy equipment and the support of a whole industry. And if there’s an important message about the human condition to convey in the process, then that’s just gravy.
Which brings us to Daymaker, a DIY debut from writer/director Joe LiTrenta that is about drugs. It’s not about the drug trade, or drug abuse, or drug profiteering. It’s not a hard-hitting exposé or a harrowing descent into addiction or even a psychedelic celebration. It’s just about drugs. We know this because it’s the only thing anyone in the film talks about. Any other topics—work, relationships, a movie someone saw—are filtered through the ongoing use of drugs, like a benzo-laced Bechdel Test that the film cannot pass. No one wants to leave it to chance that you might miss this reading of the text, so characters come out and say it at every opportunity. “I’m addicted to cocaine.” “Janice has a drinking problem.” “We did a bunch of molly.” “That’s right, no more acid for me.” “I’m supposed to have been sober for a month now and I can’t even stop my hands from shaking.” This feature is most amusing/bananas when a woman tells her daughter, “Mommy has an illness,” and the girl replies, “Because you like beer?” Daymaker is not a coy film.
Having laid its cards on the table, it has precious little to say about the subject. There’s a slot machine-approach to scenes, with characters from previous scenes coming together to start a new one. This hints at a La Ronde-esque format in which each new pairing reflects on the interactions we’ve seen before, or where a single character or object leads us on a picaresque journey, but there’s nothing so orderly. The unpleasantly rude boyfriend we meet at the very beginning of the film hasn’t gone any further emotionally or geographically when he returns halfway through to proposition a girl for her pink motorcycle helmet, nor has his now-ex-girlfriend when she turns up as the subject of a hastily staffed photo shoot with cigarettes and highway flares. People just come together willy-nilly, and there’s a good chance that when they do, they’ll be drinking or snorting or talking about having drank or snorted.
After a while, you start to get the sensation that it’s not the characters that have done drugs, but that the movie itself is high. It has that drifting lope to it, that sense of being in a conversation with someone who can’t hold the plot and who seems to be way too into whatever distraction comes up next. The comparison that kept coming to mind, unfavorably, was A Scanner Darkly, a film legendarily successful at putting the viewer inside the minds of its aimless, drug-addled protagonists while revealing their world for the hollow dead end that it is. Daymaker has some of those same moves, with significantly less plot to interfere. Drugs are certainly not glorified—people are either being told they need to get off that stuff or are admitting themselves that they need to get off that stuff—but there are no consequences. The most devastating impact of their addictions is that they are dreadfully boring. At more than two hours, Daymaker really needs to have something to say to justify itself, and it decidedly does not.
Daymaker is bad, but often in intriguing, surprising ways. The actors—you might assume they were all amateurs doing the director a solid until you see the surprising number of them with more than one credit to their name—deliver their dialogue with the desperate hopefulness of amateurs who have been asked to improvise, but the words they speak are so carefully assembled that they leave no room for an ad-lib. (At least one performer stumbles on her lines and they just leave it in.) Repeatedly, characters tell each other that they’ve just said something funny, and their word is all we have. Locations bounce between the basement of a rec center, a cellar decorated with cinder blocks and unpainted drywall, a series of sparsely decorated bedrooms and living rooms. These spaces are meant to suggest how low these people have fallen, but in fact scream “a friend loaned us their house for a day.” Twice, the film breaks into a dance number. You want it all to mean something, to add up to a message that has been lurking amidst the randomness, but it never does—and it doesn’t seem to want to.
There is at least one moment that I can take to the bank. It’s a dream sequence where a girl walks through a field of perfect green, leaving behind her the faintest trace as she cuts through the tall grass, while a boy stares after her clutching a childish mash note. The image is genuinely captivating. The guy who shot it must have some talent; somebody ought to throw a few bucks at him and see what he can do.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:
No other critics have published reviews of this movie.
(This movie was nominated for review by Desmond, who said it was “damn weird.” Suggest a weird movie of your own here.)
CAPSULE: BAD LUCK BANGING OR LOONY PORN (2021)
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DIRECTED BY: Radu Jude
FEATURING: Katia Pascariu, Claudia Ieremia, Nicodim Ungureanu
PLOT: Scandal erupts as a young teacher’s homemade sex tape leaks online.

COMMENTS: When a movie starts with hardcore imagery of a pornographic nature, you know you’re in for a wild ride. Bad Luck Banging is an emblematic work that put its creator, Radu Jude, on the map as one of the most controversial, subversive and uncompromising visionaries in the current cinematic landscape. It also dramatically changed our perception of contemporary Romanian cinema: by revealing a completely different direction than the social realism associated with the Romanian New Wave, it laid the groundwork for even more ambitious cinematic achievements like Dracula (2025).
After the brief albeit graphic introduction, the movie divides into three distinct parts. For the first, we follow our teacher protagonist, Emi, around Bucharest as she buys groceries and runs errands. The almost documentary-like pacing of this section may not be ideal for casual viewers. The camera takes its time revealing cacophonies and pathogens of the heroine’s urban environment. It’s a subversive “city symphony,” with Bucharest portrayed as it is, not in a celebratory light. It’s a subtle yet caustic commentary on the ethos of a post-industrial consumerist society.
Then, the second section begins. It is an interlude of sorts, disrupting the main narrative while taking the form of an abecedary and a collection of anecdotes and fun facts. Its playfulness and essayistic nature remind the viewer of Godard and the experimentation of the French New Wave in general. At the same time, it expresses a deeply cynical view of humanity, and especially of Romania.
The third part—slightly longer than the two before it—focuses on an official meeting between our teacher and frustrated parents regarding the online leak of the teacher’s homemade erotic videos, which transforms into a trial of sorts, with every parent acting as an archetype of Romanian society, judging our protagonist’s deeds. Each, from a leftist intellectual to oppressive figures representing the Church and the Army, express long-established opinions, mostly of the conservative kind. Taking place in an enclosed space, the whole segment maintains theatricality, with corresponding lighting. In the end, three possible endings are proposed (let’s just say that the last is the weirdest).
Music plays a major role, underlining the ironic moments. Paeans accompany atrocities, while battle hymns go along with pornographic imagery. Upbeat tunes signal the transition between parts. And let’s not forget M. A. Numminen’s catchy yet seemingly random Wittgenstein-based song “In Order to Tell” (1970) in the closing credits.
Bad Luck Banging can be discussed today not only as a satiric view on western society’s pathologies, but also as a relic of the Covid era. Everyone wears masks and social distancing is all around the news.
WHAT THE CRITICS SAY: