Scala!!! Or, the Incredibly Strange Rise and Fall of the World’s Wildest Cinema and How It Influenced a Mixed-up Generation of Weirdos and Misfits
Mar 5, 2024
Back in 1988, my flatmate Pete and I went to London to see Jean Michel Jarre’s Destination Docklands. We didn’t have tickets but were hyped for a gigantic, open-air light show to the beats of Oxygen. Instead, we caught roughly a quarter of a distant firework in a freezing gale then missed our train home. With nowhere else to go, we headed to an all night show at The Scala cinema, the subject of Jane Giles and Ali Catterall’s documentary Scala!!! Or, the Incredibly Strange Rise and Fall of the World’s Wildest Cinema and How It Influenced a Mixed-up Generation of Weirdos and Misfits. The Scala was a mix of arthouse, grindhouse, and flophouse. They showed every type of film possible and it was inclusive in ways that modern mores now seem hopeless with.
That freezing October evening at the movies bled into the next day, the all-night show ending with Zardoz. Dawn broke to Sean Connery waving a revolver and wearing swimming trunks. The misery of the evening was history. It was a hundred times more tripped out and rock and roll than what we set out to see. You don’t like my Scala story? Yeah, it’s a pretty dull, but there are many more (actually interesting tales) curated within Scala!!!.
Writer/directors Giles and Catterall both worked there, and their touch makes this account authoritative as well as great fun. Together with a bit of help from crowdfunding and the BFI, they have compiled a loving chronicle of a short-lived but deeply influential movie club.
“…John Waters, who talks about Divine taking acid and being traumatized by Eyes Without a Face“
The Scala was open from 1978 to 1993. The place quickly became a witness and incubator to the punk, new romantic, and acid house movements. That’s not to mention the now famous filmmakers who went there. This is illustrated by terrific interviews with patrons such as The Jesus and Mary Chain, The The, Sonic Youth, and S-Express, among others. There is also an amusing tale about Boy George, a regular there, and photos of Sid Vicious and Johnny Rotten in its early days. It surely says something that many of the talking heads are musicians, all enthusiastic fans, and fish happily out of water from their chosen art form, which nicely sums up the one part cool, one part nerdy spirit of the club.
Besides the musicians, we have a number of colorful recollections from actors and directors, such as John Waters, who talks about Divine taking acid and being traumatized by Eyes Without a Face, and Ralph Brown discussing how he sourced amphetamines from the Iranian embassy to sell at the sandwich counter.
However, not all the stories in Scala!!! are great. Ben Wheatley’s tale about a heckler somehow makes the crowd there – and thus humanity – sound grim, and the prolonged reminiscing about gay sex in the toilets felt tediously contemporaneous in its celebratory tone. It comes across as sordid next to sections on the cinema’s work for gay rights (early fundraisers for The Terence Higgins Trust and campaigns against Clause 28 – legislation from Thatcher that placed additional prohibitions on gay media).
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