Cultpix Radio Ep.43 - Hungarian Cult: 'Taxi Driver' Goes Budapest

Django Nudo and the Smut Peddler discuss what qualifies as a 'quality' cult film and whether there are enough of them on Cultpix (answer: No, but check back with us after the Cannes Film Festival). There is also the Nigh of the Living Dead (1968) screening at Bio Aspen in Stockholm on Sunday 15 May.Stranger Than Paradise (1984) and Monty Python's Dirty Hungarian Phrasebook ("My hovercraft is full of eels,") leads us to this weeks film theme: Magyar kultfilmek! Courtesy of the Hungarian National Film Institute.  Meteo (1989) - A dystopian cyberpunk science fiction thriller with extraordinary atmosphere and plot, like a cross between Escape from New York and Blade Runner. Three friends living in a deserted industrial estate plot of cyber heist of a race track. "Humming with kinetic energy and stylized in punk-industrial neons, a dystopian future-noir from the Budapest outlands," says Mubi. Disapproving Swede points to influences by French  “Cinéma du Look” films such as Diva and Subway. Kisértetek vonata / Ghost Express (1933) -  Seven people are stranded on a stormy night at a remote, unmanned railroad station past which, every midnight, steams the "ghost" of a train which wrecked there 20 years ago. Notable for performance by Marika Rökk, Hungary's answer to Ginger Rogers and Rita Hayworth, who toured Nazi Germany during the war and was later revealed to have been a Soviet spy. Hitler was so smitten with her that he sent her flowers and a card after one of her performances.  Dögkeselyü / The Vulture (1982) - Hungary's answer to Taxi Driver. A man is robbed by two older women and when the police are unable/unwilling to help he takes matters into his own hands. It is the kind of gritty crime films that did not get made in socialist countries, but somehow this one did. According to Wikipedia, "The film was considered so dark at the time that it was only allowed to be shown in certain socialist countries without certain scenes (especially the ending)." Also the first Hungarian film to use steadicam. Away from Hungary, it's a UFO special this week:Invasion of the Saucer Men (1957) - Probably the greatest B-movie sci-fi poster of all time. Horny teenagers making out in cars encounter aliens that have landed in flying saucers. Originally released as a double feature with I Was a Teenage Werewolf, it is a sci-fi film that doesn't take itself to seriously, but was the first film on the theme of US government coverup of UFOs. Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings says that, "it may be THE quintessential aliens vs. teenagers movie. It’s certainly gorier than you might guess (particularly when the aliens encounter a bull), and there is something about the way the aliens attack with needles coming out of their fingers and injecting you with a fluid that definitely gets under your skin." Consider yourselves warned!  Don't miss this week's Hungarian themed Spotify playlist, featuring Marika Rökk and Kontroll Csoport.

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Cultpix Radio (WCPX 66.6) is the official podcast of Cultpix, the global streaming service for classic cult and genre films and TV shows.