The Sprocket Society and the Northwest Film Forum proudly present:

The Secret Sunday Matinee

Only 2 Shows Left! See What's Coming This Week!

Every Sunday at Noon
Through November, 2008

$8.50 general / $5 NWFF members / $6 kids under 12 & seniors

Northwest Film Forum

1515 12th Ave.

on Capitol Hill, between Pike & Pine
info: www.nwfilmforum.org

Featuring:

FLASH GORDON CONQUERS
THE UNIVERSE!*

Weekly cliffhanger episodes!
All 12 serial chapters, in order!

And a SECRET MATINEE FEATURE!

Aliens! Monsters! Pirates! Mad Scientists! Strange Critters! Classics and "Classics"!

Plus CARTOONS & SHORTS!

Favorites, rarities, and interesting oddities!

Plus the ‘13th EPISODE’ SHOW!

More Flash Gordon! Extra-special surprises!

Every Sunday at Noon
Aug. 31 - Nov. 23, 2008

All film, no video!
Recommended by The Stranger!

Ticket Information for The Secret Sunday Matinee

Join the Secret Matinee Club now!

The Club Meets at:  Northwest Film Forum, 1515 12th Ave. (206-267-5380) – on Capitol Hill, between Pike & Pine

Meetings are Held:  every Sunday at 12 noon, through Nov. 23, 2008 (13 weeks)
Special time 4:00 PM on Sun. Oct. 26 only.

One-day and Series Memberships Available:

Membership in the Club** grants you admission to movie screenings at the Secret Matinee Theatre! Series memberships are available online at BrownPaperTickets.com, and at the NWFF Box Office.

One-Day Membership:

Buy individual tickets online or at showtime at the NWFF Box Office.
  • $8.50 General Public
  • $6.00 Children under 12 and seniors over 60
  • $5.00 NWFF Members

Series - 13 weeks:

Sorry, series passes are no longer available.

Coming This Week!

Sunday, Nov 16 @ noon

Week 12: The thrilling conclusion of Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe -- "Doom of the Dictator"! Last episode (but one more matinee after this one)!

Poster for Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe

Plus Little Red Riding Hood (1949) -- young Ray Harryhausen's stop-motion animation short, in a rare original 16mm print! And Wabbit Twouble (1941) -- a favowite Mewwy Mewody cwassic diwected by Wobewt Cwampett.

Secret Feature: His name is Joe. He's from Africa. Cut him some slack, it's his first time in the Big Apple. One of the all-time classics! In glorious B&W.

Coming Sunday Nov. 23
Series finale!

The "13th Episode" Show -- with more Flash Gordon, extra-special surprises, and free funny glasses for the 13-D movies.

Past Secret Matinees

Download Secret Sunday Matinee Posters

Official event poster: Secret Sunday Matinees, fall 2008 (Jpeg, 450x707 pixels)

In Our Last Episode...

1: August 31, 2008
Serial episode: "The Purple Death" (1940, 29 min.) Cartoon: One Froggy Evening (1955, Warner Bros.) -- Directed by Chuck Jones. Short: A Trio of Cinema Wonders -- Three short silent films combined: The Black Imp (1904, Georges Melies, FR) -- an imp torments the hapless guest of an inn by making the furniture come to life. The Dancing Pig (Le cochon danseur, 1907, Pathé Frères, FR) -- a turn-of-the-century circus or music hall act featuring the most astonishing (and unnerving) pig suit in history. The Acrobatic Fly (1908, Percy Smith, USA) -- fascinating extreme-closeup footage of a fly being made to manipulate various objects, including tiny dumbbells. One of the very first "macro" films ever made, and the first of dozens by Percy Smith. Secret Feature: Rocket Ship (1936) a 72 min. feature-length version of the first Flash Gordon serial, released at the same time as the serial.
2: September 7, 2008
Serial episode: "Freezing Torture" (1940, 21 min.) Cartoon: Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party (1933, Paramount) -- Directed by Dave Fleischer. With color added in the early '70s, retraced for TV. Short: The Red Spectre (1907, Pathe Freres, FR) -- Early trick film by Ferdinand Zecca, with original stencil- and hand-coloring. A skull-faced demon in a red cape performs amazing magical acts, enhanced with early special effects. Secret Feature: The greatest classic horror film of all time!
3: September 14, 2008
Serial episode: "Walking Bombs" (1940, 21 min.) Cartoon: Koko's Earth Control (1927, Inkwell Films) -- Directed by Dave Fleischer. One of the very best and most inventive, combining drawn animation, cut-out photos, and live action. Silent, shown with music: "Integrales" by Edgard Varese. Short: Charmin Bathroom Tissue TV commercial (1981), with Robbie the Robot as Mr. Whipple's assistant, "Squeezak." Short: Star Trek Bloopers (ca. 1966) -- The first volume of the famous blooper reels, originally produced for the cast & crew's private wrap parties at the end of each season. Secret Feature: Flying saucers attack! Will they save DC?!
4: September 21, 2008
Serial episode: "The Destroying Ray" (1940, 17 min.) Cartoon: Duck Amuck (1951, Warner Bros.) -- Directed by Chuck Jones. An unseen animator torments Daffy Duck with a series of surreal pranks, transforming him and his world into bizarre and even psychedelic mutations. A direct homage to the silent Out of the Inkwell cartoons by Max and Dave Fleischer, it manages to lovingly trump the inspiration. Animated by Ben Washam, Ken Harris and Lloyd Vaughan, with layouts by Maurice Noble and outstanding backgrounds by Philip DeGuard. One of three Jones cartoons preserved by the Library of Congress in the National Film Registry. Secret Feature: Pirates! The swashbuckler that launched a thousand ships, and a couple screen legends!
5: September 25, 2008
Serial episode: "The Palace of Terror" (1940, 20 min.) Cartoon: Modeling (1921, Out of the Inkwell Films) -- Directed by Dave Fleischer. Produced by (and starring) Max Fleischer. Animated by Dave Fleischer and Roland Crandall, who also plays the hook-nosed old man posing for a bust in the film. Koko the clown wreaks havoc in a sculptor's studio before retreating, as usual, back into his inkwell. In addition to the usual "Koko" mix of drawn animation and live action there is some fine stop-motion footage as well. Secret Feature: Cowboys and dinosaurs! A forgotten classic with top-notch stop-motion effects!
6: October 5, 2008
Serial episode: "The Flaming Death" (1940, 21 min.) Short: The Ghost of Slumber Mountain (1919) -- Directed, written, and special effects by Willis O'Brien. Precursor to O'Brien's legendary 1925 stop-motion dinosaur epic, The Lost World. Long feared lost, it survives only in a truncated version. Secret Feature: Giant atomic-powered, fire-breathing dragon levels Tokyo!
7: October 12, 2008
Serial episode: "The Land of the Dead" (1940, 20 min.) Cartoon: Superman aka The Mad Scientist (1941, Paramount) -- Directed by Dave Fleischer. The Oscar-winning first installment of the legendary series of cartoons. Short: The Dream of a Rarebit Fiend (1906, Edison Films) -- Directed by Wallace McCutcheon. An early and amusing live-action trick film only ostensibly based on the legendary newspaper comic strip by Winsor McCay (who went on to make a poineering cartoon of his later strip, Little Nemo). Secret Feature: Sadistic mad scientist creates then torments man-imals! And they kill him! One of the darkest pre-Code films.
8: October 19, 2008
Serial episode: "The Fiery Abyss" (1940, 18 min.) Cartoon: Bobby Bumps' Hypnotic Eye (orig: Bobby Bumps and the Magnetic Eye, 1919) -- Animated by Earl Hurd. Shown with music by the Raymond Scott Quintet. Secret Feature: Ancient, buried, psychic aliens! Run amuck! In color!
9: October 26, 2008
Serial episode: "The Pools of Peril" (1940, 18 min.) Short: Conquest of the Pole (1912) -- One the best Georges Méliès' special effects epics. With French intertitles, and slightly longer than the usual Blackhawk 16mm version (though still not complete). Silent, shown with a scored remix of the album Eskimo by The Residents. Secret Feature: A spectacular and bizarre 1950s Russian fantasy by director Alexander Ptushko. Rescued from the vaults: a new lab print never shown before!
10: November 2, 2008 — Halloween Horror Show - special time: 4 PM
Serial episode: "The Death Mist" (1940, 18 min.) Short: The Pillar of Fire (La Colonne de feu, 1899) -- A very early hand-colored trick film by Georges Méliès, on a beautiful, rare 16mm print. Shown silent. Running time: approx. 1 minute. Cartoons - a spooky Disney early-sound double bill: The Skeleton Dance (Walt Disney Studios/Celebrity Pictures, 1929) -- A very rare blue-toned print of this old favorite. Music: "March of the Trolls" by Edvard Grieg. Animated by Ub Iwerks, Roy O. Disney, Walt Disney, Wilfred Jackson. Hell's Bells (Walt Disney Studios/Celebrity Pictures, 1929) -- An obscure B/W oddity directed by Ub Iwerks, with music by Carl Stalling. Secret Feature: Sixties Italian vampires! In space! In delirious color!
11: November 9, 2008
Serial episode: "Stark Treachery" (1940, 21 min.) Short: [The Astronomer's Dream] (ca. 1906-7) -- An unknown trick film, probably directed for Pathé by Segundo de Chomon. A rare but very high-contrast color print of a tinted version. No titles of any kind. Silent, shown with "Walking on the Moon" by Sun Ra and his Solar Myth Arkestra. Cartoon: Betty Boop's Ups and Downs (1932) -- Who knew economic collapse could be so surreal? A Depression-era masterpiece directed by Dave Fleischer, and animated by Willard G. Bowsky and Ugo D'Orsi. Secret Feature: A forgotten Japanese giant monster classic from the '60s!

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* A note about the serial's title

The opening cards of our 16mm prints read "Flash Gordon and Space Soldiers Conquer the Universe", a retitled version syndicated to television in the 1950s and 1960s. The title was changed slightly so it "would not be confused with" the Flash Gordon TV series airing when it was first distributed. Except for the main title cards, filmed in a completely different style from the rest of the credits, and maybe a couple bad edits here and there, it's the same serial that was shown in theaters in 1940. Cheaply repackaged old movie serials were a staple of early television. During their syndication, these retitled episodes were widely shown as after-school and Saturday morning television. This was how George Lucas and Stephen Spielberg famously came to be influenced by Flash Gordon and similar serials.

** Sorry, membership in the Secret Matinee Club does not make you an ongoing member of The Sprocket Society. At this time, the Society is not open for public enrolment, though we hope to do so in the future.