The Guardian (USA)

Scala!!! review – heartfelt tribute to an icon of independen­t cinema

- Peter Bradshaw

If any British movie theatre deserved three exclamatio­n marks it is the Scala, the subject of this richly enjoyable and informativ­e documentar­y from Jane Giles and Ali Catterall. It was a unique grindhouse slash alt-cinephile repertory house which inspired generation­s of film-makers, artists and musicians, and its notional “club” status allowed it to show all sorts of outrageous and transgress­ive material: horror, sex, satire, drugs, vampires and bikers. The Scala also championed progressiv­e, LGBT and pro-union causes.

The cinema was housed in a wonderfull­y stately building with a cupola dome in London’s scuzzy and pre-gentrified King’s Cross between 1981 and 1993; the building in fact now survives and thrives as a nightclub. The Scala also became legendary for its wonderful monthly poster-style foldout sheets advertisin­g the forthcomin­g attraction­s which were sexier and more exciting than the earnest booklets in other cinemas; it became a movie theatre with the excitement of a 24/7 punk festival, not a college of further education. And this was the preGoogle, pre-YouTube age, when simply finding out about the existence of films, never mind actually seeing them, was very difficult.

As this film recounts, what made it special were the all-nighters (I remember the freaky experience), which in an age of dreary licensing laws and oppressive­ly early last trains were a great latenight resource in the London of the Thatcherit­e 80s. In the end the Scala’s closure was not simply due to issues around rents and attendance figures, but also partly a battle about cinema and free expression. The programmer­s dared to show A Clockwork Orange which Stanley Kubrick had withdrawn from UK distributi­on on the grounds that he was getting blamed for copycat violence, and its distributo­rs Warner Bros hit the Scala with a lawsuit that helped finish it off. A very entertaini­ng madeleine for movie-going of the analogue age.

• Scala!!! is released on 5 January in UK and Irish cinemas, and on 22 January on BFI Player. Scala: Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll Cinema runs at BFI Southbank throughout January.

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 ?? Rebel spirit … director John Waters in Scala!!! Photograph: Publicity image ??
Rebel spirit … director John Waters in Scala!!! Photograph: Publicity image

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