DEAF CROCODILE NOVEMBER MOVIES!

Here’s what Deaf Crocodile has coming…

The Mysterious Castle In the Carpathians (Tajesmstvi Hradu V Karpatech) 1981, Czechoslovakia, 97 min.: A unique and almost indescribable mix of Gothic fiction, steampunk gadgetry (designed by Czech animation wizard Jan Švankmajer), slapstick comedy and romantic opera, director Oldřich Lipský’s wonderfully bonkers delight has elements of The Fearless Vampire Killers, Terry Gilliam, Mel Brooks and “The Benny Hill Show.” Based on an 1892 Jules Verne novel The Carpathian Castle (which partially inspired Bram Stoker to write Dracula), the film follows Count Teleke of Tölökö (Michal Dočolomanský) on the trail of the count’s lost lover, opera singer Salsa Verde (Evelyna Steimarová) – only to discover she’s been abducted by fiendish Baron Gorc of Gorceny (Miloš Kopecký), whose castle home is filled with the bizarre inventions of mad scientist Orfanik (Rudolf Hrušínský). Littered with puns, sight gags and non-sequiturs – “Later, in Werewolfston”, an invented dialect, a detached golden ear for eavesdropping, a staff topped by an enormous TV eyeball – Mysterious Castle was the third fantastical film from the team of director Lipský and writer Jiří Brdečka after their much-loved musical western spoof Lemonade Joe (1966) and their detective/horror satire Adela has Not Had Supper Yet (1977), both major Czech cult hits. (Note that actor Miloš Kopecký and Jiří Brdečka worked on the supernatural anthology Prague Nights, also released by the Národní filmový archív, Deaf Crocodile and Comeback Company.) In Czech with English subtitles.

Benny’s Bathtub (Benny’s Badekar) – 1971, Fiasco Film (Denmark), 41 min. Dirs. Jannik Hastrup and Flemming Quist Møller: How can you not love a psychedelic animated kids’ film in which a young boy, bored with the dreary and gray Adult World, follows an enchanted tadpole through the drain in his bathtub – where he discovers a surreal and musical undersea world?? Populated by singing (and barely dressed) Mermaids, a funky hepcat Octopus and whiskey-drinking Skeleton Pirates, the underwater kingdom is the grooviest scene this side of Yellow Submarine, with helpings of Dr. Seuss, Sid & Marty Krofft and Harry Nilsson’s The Point thrown in. (Kids’ entertainment in the early 1970s was truly outtasite!) In addition to the candy-colored, kaleidoscopic visuals, the film is famed for its incredibly addictive soundtrack featuring Jazz heavyweights of Copenhagen circa 1970, with vocals sung by the cream of Danish 60s Pop and Rock including Peter Belli, Otto Brandenburg, Poul Dissing and Trille on tracks like “Octopus Song/ Blækspruttesangen” and “Seahorse Song/ Søhestesangen”. Considered something of a national treasure in Denmark (where it was selected for the country’s Cultural Canon alongside works by Carl Th. Dreyer, Isak Dinesen and Hans Christian Andersen), Benny’s Bathtub has been beautifully restored in 4K from the original camera negative and sound elements for its first-ever U.S. release. In Danish with English subtitles.

For more information, visit the Deaf Crocodile website.