Lost Media Archive

Host of Provo's ISMN "Incredibly Strange Movie Night" since 2001. (Previously known as "Tapioca Night" circa 1993 in Ogden, UT).

We are also founder of the world's first Troll 2 cast reunion (which they didn't want to mention in the documentary for some reason, making it look like it started in New York. I guess karma will catch up with them).

LMA is a Utah-based collection of mondo/ kitsch/ cult/ ephemeral/ experimental/ historical/ obsolete/ forgotten/ unearthed audio-visual and textual documents. LMA is also a resource for those who cling to bygone media formats. The LMA was founded by Blair Sterrett and works together with loaf-i productions, the Free Form Film Festival and Salt Lake City Film Festival to arrange screenings, viewings, and concerts. The LMA also promotes and initiates the creation of new and unusual films, albums, performative projects, and book events. We accept donations of any and all projection, recording, and filming devices. When possible, we maintain these machines for use by recordists and filmmakers. (We now curate over 35,000 films.)

For more info, donations or to join the weekly email list, please contact B.C. Sterrett at bcsterrett@gmail.com. Thank you.

ISMN: Ed Wood’s “I Woke Up Early the Day I Died” (1998) Tuesday Nov. 29th 10 PM @ Brewvies

                                   

(Not Available on Netflix #16)
*TUESDAY Nov. 29th @ Brewvies:
ISMN will resume this coming Tuesday with one of the greatest indie films of the 90’s!
Ed Wood Jr’s lost screenplay: 
I Woke Up Early the Day I Died” (1998)
You would think an Ed Wood story filmed in the 90’s wouldn’t work, but it does!  And completely without dialog! Unlike a silent film however, it’s full of grunts, screams, and even alternative music!
See trailer and Facebook invite info @ https://www.facebook.com/events/163965030368722/
You can also visit the official website for this film! http://www.iwokeupearly.com/
Some favorite reviews:


Ed Wood’s latest masterpiece…
13 April 1999

10/10
Author: anonymous from Toronto, Ontario, Canada

This is a script that Ed Wood worked over 10 years on trying to get made. Aris Iliopulos finally got the chutzpah to film a script that Wood saved from his burning home at the expense of other, more transitory valuables.

This is a dialogue-free movie, that some may foolishly describe as silent. In fact, it is a quite noisy film, without the inane chatter of most flicks. In the hands of these filmmakers, the music and sound effects provide a rich audio experience that works better than almost any grist from the Hollywood script mill, particularly that stupid boat movie Billy Zane last was in (‘Watch out!’, ‘Oh no!’ - J. Cameron…. ick…) I’ll take Zane’s wonderfully communicative monosyllabic grunts in this film over empty dialogue any day.

Billy Zane heads a team of players who obviously really wanted to be in this film. Ricci is radiant as always, and the gods are shining when you can put Sandra Bernhard, Rick(y) Schroeder, Eartha Kitt and Andrew McCarthy’s name on the same poster.

The design is perfect, the pyramid set exquisite, and Ron Perlman’s beastly performance is simply wonderful. Overall, this is a chaotic, visceral masterpiece lovingly crafted by fans of Ed Wood Jr., auteur and cinenephile. A must see for anyone who really loves movies the way that the first rate Iliopulos and his cast obviously do. A film to make you wish you had made it yourself.

Slapstick expressionism & Ed Wood24 August 2002
10/10
Author: Tobin Fields from Louisville

I’ve been disappointed, if not surprised, at the lack of appreciation this film has received. Once again, Billy Zane proves he’s more than just a Hollywood pretty boy in a silent performance that combines spastic slapstick with understated pathos. Calling this a silent film is inaccurate, as there’s a lot of music and sound. It has a manic pace and is full of the goofy inventiveness that Ed Wood is finally beginning to be appreciated for. Look at the cast listing, and realize that everyone shines. No one is there just to show their face. I believe they’re all in the movie to show their appreciation of Wood, and to do a broad, physical kind of acting not seen much these days.

But, today, reviewers try to guess what’s going to become a hit much more than they show any kind of esthetic appreciation for a movie. And IWUETDID has no discernable target audience. It was made mostly out of love for Wood’s script. Even after his death, the trendy social parasites have dealt him another serious blow, and deprived the world of a minor classic. This is a highly entertaining and a genuinely experimental film that really deserves to live, at least on DVD.

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Bonus Short Film:

Betty Boop and Cab Calloway in “Minnie the Moocher” (1932)

DVD/8 Mins/Not Rated

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Time: Nov. 29th @ 10 PM

Place: Brewvies in SLC

Price: FREE

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See you there!

BC