THE BRAIN + BRAIN DAMAGE Double Feature | Joe Bob Briggs in Attendance | Co-Presented by AGFA
Joe Bob Briggs returns to the Music Box Theatre for “Cerebellum Night,” a double feature of THE BRAIN (1988) and BRAIN DAMAGE (1989). Joe Bob will be hanging out in the Music Box Lounge before and after each movie, selling exclusive merchandise as well as doing a meet-and-greet with autographs for ticket holders.
THE BRAIN - Directed by Ed Hunt | 1988 | 94 minutes
A giant mutant brain terrorizes Canadians at Christmastime! BUT THAT’S ONLY THE BEGINNING!! A group of teens stumble on a mad scientist (David Gale, RE-ANIMATOR) who is attempting to control people’s minds via a public access TV show. And this somehow leads to a goop-filled, multi-tentacled mutant brain that eats a guy, throws a woman out of a window, and forces neighbors to commit chainsaw murders. Combining teen angst from OVER THE EDGE, conspiracy theories that out-strange STRANGER THINGS, and monster effects that feel like outtakes from KILLER KLOWNS FROM OUTER SPACE, THE BRAIN is a one-in-a-zillion trash-horror treasure chest. This movie also features one of the greatest lines of dialogue that you’ll hear this year: “You think you’re in America? Well, you’re not -- you’re in high school!”
Restoration courtesy of Shout! Factory and the American Genre Film Archive.
BRAIN DAMAGE - Directed by Frank Henenlotter | 1989 | 86 minutes
After altering the landscape of trash-horror history with BASKET CASE and FRANKENHOOKER, the brilliant Frank Henenlotter unleashed BRAIN DAMAGE, his ultimate Grimm’s Fairy Tale for perverted adults. This is a slimy, grimy, gore-soaked slice-of-NYC-life that follows a poor schmo who is addicted to a drug called Aylmer. But unlike heroin or cocaine, Aylmer is a mutant penis monster who needs to eat human brains in order survive. Hooray! BRAIN DAMAGE is hilarious, unsettling, and jam-packed with bad taste gags that would probably cause John Waters to reassess his life’s work. Do not miss.
Restoration courtesy of Arrow Films and the American Genre Film Archive.
About AGFA
Formed in 2009, the American Genre Film Archive (AGFA) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit located in Austin, Texas. The AGFA exists to preserve the legacy of genre movies through collection, conservation, and distribution. Our archive counts among its advisors Alamo Drafthouse founders Tim and Karrie League, filmmakers Paul Thomas Anderson and Frank Henenlotter, musician RZA, exploitation film savior Lisa Petrucci, and genre film superheroes Zack Carlson and Lars Nilsen. Housing over six thousand film prints, a 4K film scanner, and theatrical and home video distribution arms, AGFA will never rest until genre movies rule the world.
About Joe Bob Briggs
Joe Bob Briggs is the author of several books and many articles on genre film, including Joe Bob Goes to the Drive-In, Profoundly Disturbing: Shocking Movies That Changed History. His wise-cracking take on B movies has been featured on two long-running late-night television shows, first on The Movie Channel and then on TNT. That tradition continues with his latest series, The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs, currently featured on AMC’s Shudder streaming platform.
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