POD 366, EP. 162: DEAF CROCODILE SPEAKS

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Discussed in this episode:

Deaf Crocodile home page

The Backrooms (2026): A24 backed ‘ feature debut about mysterious logic-defying trans-dimensional rooms discovered in a retail establishment, and got and Renate Reinsve to sign on. It’s based on a webseries, whose  inaugural episode won the Weirdcademy Award for Weirdest short in 2022. The Backrooms official site.

Dead Mountaineer’s Hotel (1979): Read Shane Wilson’s review. The Estonian sci-fi thriller/mystery is now out in a deluxe limited edition;  cheaper standard edition is pre-order only.

“DEFA Fairy Tales”: This box set collects five bizarre fairy tales (in the vein of fellow 1957 DEFA production The Singing Ringing Tree) seldom seen outside the Iron Curtain. The titles are Snow White, Little Red Riding Hood, Mother Hulda, Snow White and Rose Red, and The Devil’s Three Golden Hairs (which we are promised will blow some minds). Pre-order “DEFA Fairy Tales”.

The Devil’s Rain (1975): Watch Pete Trbovich’s video review. ‘s crazy Satanic horror film arrives on 4K UHD + Blu-ray courtesy of Severin Films. Buy The Devil’s Rain.

The Final Programme (1973): Read Otto Black’s review. Continuing with , Severin also releases this psychedelic, messianic, post-apocalyptic effort (also on 4K UHD + Blu-ray). Buy The Final Programme.

Return from Tomorrow (2026): A surprise sequel to the Canonically Weird Disney satire Escape from Tomorrow  is announced out of nowhere (which is appropriate, since the original came out of nowhere), continuing the story with the same characters but a bigger budget for more elaborate surreal visions. It’s debuting at the Florida Film Festival on April 11. Future dates are unknown, but we’ll keep tracking it. Bloody Disgusting broke the news.

Roy from Space (1983):  A nearly-lost Mexican sci-fi animation with outsider art elements. Deaf Crocodile is raising funds to replace some of the film’s, um, “questionably appropriated” live-action elements with new animation in the same style. Pledgers will get exclusive slipcovers drawn by Gilbert “Love and Rockets” Hernandez that will not be available outside of this campaign. Roy from Space Kickstarter.

Vampyros Lesbos (1971): Read Terri McSorley’s review. ‘s most popular movie, probably because it casts curvy as a lesbian vampire. Buy Vampyros Lesbos.

“The Weird and Wonderful World of Czech Animation”: Perk up New Yorkers! This amazing series at Metrograph starting April 5 will include screenings of stop-motion shorts and features Invention for Destruction, Alice [Neco Z Alenky] (1988), and The Pied PiperThe Weird and Wonderful World of Czech Animation at Metrograph.

WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:

No guest scheduled on next week’s Pod 366. Giles will be off, so Greg and Pete will get you up to date on another slate of weekly weird movies. In written content, Micheal Diamades tracks down the obscure Japanese pop-duo item Pink Lady’s Motion Picture (1978), Shane Wilson stays in Japan for the celebrity satire Helter Skelter (2012), Pete Trbovich gets the Cat Sick Blues (2015), and  Gregory J. Smalley exults in the The Tragedy of Man (2011) (a Deaf Crocodile release, by coincidence.) Onward and weirdward!

366 UNDERGROUND: YOUR LIFE IS ON THE LINE! A JOE CHRIST ANTHOLOGY, VOL. 1

Beware

You have to feel sympathy for the poor microbudget filmmaker. There is almost nothing they can do that the Hollywood filmmaker cannot do better. The easiest option to stand out is to give viewers something that Hollywood can’t. This could be a non-clichéd storyline or avant-garde aesthetics; but those paths require hard work and talent. There is one fairly easy avenue to notoriety open to anyone brave and shameless enough to take it: show the audience something taboo. This path probably won’t get you rich, but it may at least get you noticed.

has repeatedly said, “It’s easy to be shocking. It is much harder to be witty at the same time.” Generations of underground filmmakers have been proving that adage true ever since Pink Flamingos spat in America’s face with its vision of smug, gleefully villainous drag queen coprophagia. Waters’ outcasts and gays weren’t sissies to be kicked around: they were powerful, they would cut you. And they would make you laugh, often against your better judgement. But ever since Waters blazed the path, punks, outsiders, and weirdos everywhere have spat out their own attempts at scandalizing the bourgeois, aping Waters’ shocks despite not possessing his wit or purpose, to diminishing returns. Few returns are as diminished as the 1980s-90s direct-to-VHS atrocities of one Joe Christ, punk musician turned garbage auteur. Now, VHS and early DVD revivalists Saturn’s Core have shoveled the collected refuse of Christ’s movie attempts from 1988-1995—God forbid, there’s a volume 2 coming!— into a trash bin of a Blu-ray. Here are the 5 short films included:

“Communion in Room 410” (1988): Joe literally cuts a woman with a razor on the arm and breasts, then he and another woman drink the blood. They also eat Wonder bread dipped in blood in mockery of communion. Joe’s irritating, badly recorded music plays in the background. This goes on for 20 minutes, with all the artistry of “2 Girls, 1 Cup.” Hard to watch; I suggest not watching it.

“Speed Freaks with Guns” (1991): Joe delivers a paranoid, methed-up monologue, then shows some home videos of him and 2 female cronies murdering random women, then steals a car and leaves New York. This mess does contain one interesting scene: a priest randomly pukes communion wafers on Joe as he passes by. It’s the one of a very few attempts at humor on the entire disc. It’s also, revealingly, the only scene where Christ depicts himself as a victim rather than the bully.

Still from Crippled

“Crippled”: A paralyzed woman is cruelly abused by her caretakers. This is actually a surprisingly trenchant critique of… naw, just kidding, it’s more crap.

Still from acid is groovy kill the pigs

“Acid is Groovy Kill the Pigs”: A meth addict buys acid because his dealer has no meth, eats the entire blotter, then goes on a killing spree and interviews the numerous other acid-chewing serial killers he knows. The “pigs” of the title aren’t cops; they’re everyone who isn’t a serial killer themselves. The only halfway good scene is death by puppy, another rare attempt at comedy. “Acid” shows improvement over the last 3 Christ films, in little details like title cards and music that’s properly recorded, but it’s still the cinematic equivalent of soap scum you find clinging to the grout in your shower.

Continue reading 366 UNDERGROUND: YOUR LIFE IS ON THE LINE! A JOE CHRIST ANTHOLOGY, VOL. 1

AN UNPRODUCED DAVID LYNCH PROJECT??

famously died with many projects abandoned or left incomplete: the comedy “One Saliva Bubble” with Steve Martin and Martin Short; a highly-unlikely Eraserhead sequel that would continue Henry’s adventures (which Mel Brooks farcically claimed would be titled “Eraserhead: The Terrible Twos”); the animated “Snootworld” (canceled by Netflix); “Unrecorded Night” (code named “Wisteria”) (also canceled by Netflix); and, perhaps most infamously, “Ronnie Rocket.”

Lynch was known to extensively storyboard his ideas with sketches and/or doodles before embarking on a script proper. This is where our story starts. This reddit poster claims to have found this a this drawing at the bottom of a box of papers and trinkets labeled “memorabilia” purchased at a recent L.A. estate sale for $50. On the back (the poster did not upload an image) was written “DL-3/6/26.” The poster theorizes that is an authentic Lynch sketch, made in his final days, for an unproduced project, many of which were rumored to still be brewing in Lynch’s always-busy brain. Horizontal streaking near the bottom of the image suggests it might have been transferred from a video source—or deliberately crafted to look as if it had?

A sketch from an unproduced David Lynch project?

To be skeptical, the style is only pseudo-Lynchian. The crosshatching at the bottom is similar to, but less aggressive, than Lynch’s usual pencil style. The rabbit definitely fits the auteur’s preoccupations. But “grey aliens” are not a typical feature of Lynch’s work (Lynch prefers his aliens more like pillars of steam arising from some baroque samovar apparatus), and the floating fish and eyeball in the doorway seem like they were tacked on by someone trying to be “weird.” It actually seems too “regular” for Lynch.

OK, it’s probably not from an unproduced Lynch project: but what could it be? Are the numbers at the bottom some kind of timecode, or a title? What plot or symbolism could it hide? And what does it mean?

THEY CAME FROM THE READER-SUGGESTED QUEUE: FAUST (1926) / FAUST: LOVE OF THE DAMNED (2000)

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We all think we know Faust. The guy who sold his soul to the devil, right? But before there was Christopher Marlowe’s dramatization of the tale of Faust, or Goethe’s two-volume epic Faust, or Rembrandt’s etching of Faust, or Liszt or Berlioz or even Randy Newman’s Faust, there was the actual guy. The historical record finds a Johan Georg Faust born in the last 13th century who went on to become a respected alchemist and astrologer, but who may also have been an outrageous con artist, claiming the ability to reproduce the miracles of Jesus Christ. Rumors suggest that he died in an explosion, a fate which his contemporaries attested to his ties with the devil. Before the century was out, tales of his extraordinary misdeeds had begun to proliferate; one such copy fell into the hands of Marlowe, and the legend of the man who made an unwise bargain with the devil began to spread.

The price of immortality is steep. “Faustian bargain” has become common parlance, and on this very site, two different interpretations of the Faust myth are currently under consideration for eventual induction into the Apocrypha, including a Jan Svankmajer-directed surreal mix and a version of more recent vintage from Russia. Today, let’s dive into a couple more such interpretations, one attempting to faithfully deliver the classic tale with what were then newfangled tools of cinema, while the other takes what it wants from the myth to reach its own, not-especially-lofty ends.

FAUST (1926)

 

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DIRECTED BY: F. W. Murnau

FEATURING: Gösta Ekman, , Camilla Horn,

PLOT: Heaven and hell make a wager over the fate of Faust, a pious man who sells his soul to the devil to save his city from the plague. 

COMMENTS: The short directorial career of F. W. Murnau is so loaded with classics — Nosferatu, The Last Laugh, Sunrise, Tabu — that a remarkable achievement like Faust could easily get lost in the shuffle. The film more than earns its place in this august company, though, with style to burn. Though the tale is familiar and the visual gimmicks are naturally dated, there’s a freshness to this telling that sidesteps a lot of the expected reservations.

Murnau is particularly proud of his in-camera effects, and he deploys these techniques with Zemeckisian fervor. An early scene in which the devil looms over a small medieval town like the most imposing mountain would have justified recalling the film a hundred years hence, but Continue reading THEY CAME FROM THE READER-SUGGESTED QUEUE: FAUST (1926) / FAUST: LOVE OF THE DAMNED (2000)

APOCRYPHA CANDIDATE: INTERFACE (2021)

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DIRECTED BY:  Justin Tomchuk (AKA )

FEATURING: Voices of Justin Tomchuk, Libby Brien, Christa Elliot

PLOT: A lone man and a pink shape-shifting parasite wander and reminisce in the aftermath of the Philadelphia Experiment.

Still from Interface (2021)

WHY IT MIGHT JOIN THE APOCRYPHA: Interface has a dreamy vibe from start to finish, uncanny and uneasy in the vein of ‘s works.

COMMENTS: Interface is not your typical, shallow Adult Swim-style surrealism, even if it may seem like it at first. A melancholy and sense of existential dread infuses every scene. Something uncanny lurks in the movie’s corners, and it isn’t just the monster accompanying our protagonist in his wanderings.

The setting is an alternate version of the aftermath of the Second World War, in which the Philadelphia Experiment had unforeseen consequences. (For those that do not know or remember, the Philadelphia Experiment is an urban legend about a hypothetical U.S. Navy teleportation experiment). Many sci-fi movies— especially B-movies—have been inspired by this story, most notably Stewart Raffill’s The Philadelphia Experiment from 1984.

Interface approaches this narrative more subtly than previous adaptations, recalling a dream and a work of pure surrealism. We follow, for the most part, two survivors of the Philadelphia Experiment, a lonely man unable to grow old and die and the shape-shifting monster that accompanies him everywhere. The lonely man wanders aimlessly, a soul trapped in limbo, while the accompanying parasite uses him as a host for its own survival.

There are clear symbolic undertones. The protagonist represents modern man, trapped in guilt and grief after catastrophic event (WWII). The parasite works as a personification of the negative emotions consuming him. A lyricism underlies the grotesque absurdity of the situation, highlighting the personal and collective trauma.

Memories of the past, as well as scientific attempts to restore that past, are interspersed throughout the movie. The focus, however, remains on our hero and his attempts to move on with his life (or his death). The uncanny, retro digital animation—recalling movies of the 80s and 90s—adds to the uneasiness of his situation. The melancholic soundtrack, composed by the director, does the same.

For the art lovers out there, there are a plethora of visual references to paintings, especially surrealist paintings, like Rene Magritte’ s “The Son of Man” or ‘s entire oeuvre. Even seemingly random abstract shapes in between scenes recall Kandinsky. These Easter eggs showcase Tomchuk’s wide range of influences and rich intellectual background.

“Interface” started as a web series, and it is still available on Youtube in its entirety for free; you can also rent or buy it on VOD for an ad-free experience that puts a little money in the filmmaker’s pocketbook (and even less in ours). Alternatively, you can purchase a Blu-ray or VHS version directly from the director for a more immersive retro experience.

WHAT THE CRITICS SAY:

“…meditative, philosophical, atmospheric, surreal, imaginative, fantasy-sci-fi animation that brings to mind Mamoru Oshii at his most enigmatic and bizarre with a light sprinkling of Miyazaki.”–Zev Toledano, The Worldwide Celluloid Massacre

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