When Lucha Underground Season 2 wrapped up last month it left a lot of us with more questions than answers. Thankfully we don’t have question to long as Season 3 is just a month away already!

The Trailer for Season 3 proves that the greatest and craziest wrestling show on television hasn’t gotten any less crazy. Sword fights, fire-breathing dragons and Marty the Moth tied up in a basement are just some of the highlights in this trailer.

There’s a ton of questions that are raised out of this but my favorite question is “Why is Paul London dressed like a tripped out Willie Wonka!?”

That’s right! Geekscape’s favorite professional wrestler, The Hero of the Prophecy himself, appears in this trailer!

For those of you unfamiliar with Lucha Underground it is one of the most unique wrestler shows on Television. Unlike the WWE or TNA, Lucha Underground isn’t a wrestling show as much as it’s a TV show about a wrestling show.

It’s equal parts telenovella, Monday night Raw, horror movies, Kaiju and The Muppets. Lucha Underground also has a fair stronger sense of supernaturalistic fantasy. There are characters who are dragons, time-travelling spacemen, werewolves and the living enbodyment of death… and that’s just a handful of the weird characters roaming in the temple.

What’s the most impressive aspect of El Rey’s most popular series is that despite the supernatural elements, despite the craziness of the matches? It’s the most well thought out wrestling show in years. Things that happened two years ago build into a story that ends beautifully. Throw away lines and characters turn into major plot points.

On September 7th, the 3rd season of this outstanding series debuts. And if you’re a wrestling fan, you’re already excited. If you’re not a wrestling fan, you have a little under a month to watch two seasons and get excited.

With Creed on its way to theaters, Robert Rodriguez will sit down with Sylvester Stallone on a new episode of The Director’s Chair. Primed to air this Sunday, November 15 at 8pm ET/PT, the rebel filmmaker and the Italian Stallion will meet once again (Rodriguez directed Stallone in Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over) to talk about his stellar career, from Rocky to Rambo and all the way to The Expendables.

In honor of the episode, El Rey and Geekscape are teaming up once again for an awesome poster giveaway! We’re giving away FIVE (5) of these incredible posters from artist Paul Shipper.

stallone_final_v3

How do you get one? It’s very simple.

Invite three of your friends to like El Rey and Geekscape on Facebook. Then, on the Geekscape Facebook post advertising this contest, comment below with your Expendables codename. Jet Li was Yin Yang. Randy Couture was Toll Road. The awesome Terry Crews? Hale Caesar. Sylvester Stallone, Barney Ross. (Hey, it works.) So tell us yours, and we’ll pick the winners by Saturday, November 14. Good luck!

We’re a bit late because the press release got buried in my email, but El Rey Network just locked down a deal with Warner Bros. and will begin airing reruns of cult TV shows making their basic cable debut for the first time. Among them? ConstantineAlmost HumanMortal Kombat: Conquest, and both iterations of the sci-fi series V.

El Rey just got hella nerdy.

“We are proud to have these extremely popular titles make their off network cable debuts on El Rey Network,” said El Rey Network founder and chairman Robert Rodriguez in the press release. “This is the kind of distinctive, action packed content that viewers have come to expect on our air and these franchises will be the perfect compliment to our existing line-up of iconic and thrilling originals and acquisitions.”

Uh. Yuh-up. Constantine and Almost Human begin airing on Nov. 3 and Nov. 9 respectively, while the rest of the acquired shows will air sometime in 2015 and 2016. Check out the full list of shows with the press release’s description (Almost Human strangely leaves out the fact that it starred Karl Urban) being added to El Rey’s rotation.

Constantine (Begins Nov. 3, airs Tuesdays at 8pm ET)

Almost Human (Begins Nov. 9, airs Mondays at 8pm ET)

Human Target

Mortal Kombat: Conquest

Freddy’s Nightmares

V: Miniseries and V: The Series (2009 remake)

The Twilight Zone (2002 remake)

Night Visions

Yeah, that it’s the remake of The Twilight Zone and not the original is lame, but it’s dope that El Rey got Constantine. It’s the next best thing to happen to the show aside from a total revival. We’ve got his one Arrow appearance to look forward to, and without any foreseeable Netflix availability, a regular spot on El Rey is still a blessing. Almost Human too, which I was totally into until Fox pulled the plug.

So, are you excited as we are for the new shows coming to El Rey? Let us know!

When I walked out of the theater after seeing Mad Max Fury Road earlier this year, I asked my buddy, both of us delirious from the two-hour adrenaline rush we had just experienced.”You know what else he directed?” I asked him, referring to Fury Road director George Miller.

“What?” he wondered. I answered, “Happy Feet.”

He burst out laughing. I chuckled, because yeah, it’s funny. But it also shows how versatile of an artist Miller is.

El Rey will be airing a new installment of my favorite docu-series, The Director’s Chair, this Sunday, Aug. 30 at 8pm ET with the legendary filmmaker George Miller himself sitting down with Robert Rodriguez.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cS-6bFNsMxQ&feature=youtu.be

 

To celebrate, our friends at El Rey are giving us FIVE (5) of these hella sweet George Miller posters from artists Tim Doyle and Joshua Budich. These limited edition posters can be yours, just head on over to the Geekscape Facebook page for details!

george-miller

The Director’s Chair with George Miller airs this Sunday, Aug. 30 at 8pm ET.

Good morning! Do you know what day it is?

In Uruguay, August 25, 1825 was the day Uruguayans declared independence from the Empire of Brazil. In France, August 25, 1944 marks the liberation of Paris from Nazi Germany, held under their iron grip since the signing of the Second Compiègne Armistice in 1940. In Austin, Texas, August 25 is From Dusk Till Dawn Day.

I’m not kidding.

Filmmaker and El Rey Network founder Robert Rodriguez, along with Mayor Steve Adler of Austin, Texas have proclaimed August 25, 2015 “From Dusk Till Dawn” Day, celebrating From Dusk Till Dawn‘s independence from seasonal hiatus.

A ceremony was held yesterday at the Troublemaker Studios where From Dusk Till Dawn is produced. “We are proud to be home to Robert Rodriguez’s Troublemaker Studios, his incredible El Rey Network and of course, his iconic television original, From Dusk Till Dawn which has achieved cult status here in Austin and around the globe,” said Mayor Adler. “It is testament to our belief that Austin is a creative hub for talented filmmakers and visionaries who are inspired by what our city has to offer.”

Dusk_Day_R3

Rodriguez added, “Austin is my home and I’m honored to have collaborated with the Austin creative community all these years making movies and television for the world to see I’m so proud that From Dusk Till Dawn is Austin made and that we can celebrate this day with the community.”

Austin is starting to boom as a creative hub in the heart of the continental United States. It’s the Brooklyn of Texas, basically. So it is cool that someone with as much pull as Robert Rodriguez can give back to his stomping grounds. I’m still reading his book, Rebel Without a Crew, which is essential reading for all aspiring filmmakers. He definitely makes you feel bad for sitting on your butt not making anything. I feel so bad, I just want to sit on my butt not making anything.

And while I’ll do nothing, I’ll watch From Dusk Till Dawn season two. Premieres tonight at 9pm EST.

From Dusk ‘Till Dawn: The Series returns later this summer in an all new season, and making his debut as a new character is From Dusk ‘Till Dawn movie alum Danny Trejo as the goofy-looking-but-I-still-wouldn’t-mess-with-him, The Regulator.

The Regulator is a new character, and the press release describes him as an “agent of evil” in the middle of a “deadly errand.” Most of my errands are boring. I think I’ll take boring over deadly. Better for my conscience.

From the press release:

El Rey Network and Miramax released a first-look image of From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series featuring Danny Trejo (Machete, Machete Kills) in his new role as”The Regulator,” a horrifying agent of evil who is summoned to perform a deadly errand. Trejo appeared in the From Dusk Till Dawn film franchise as “Razor Charlie.”  Currently in production on its sophomore season, From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series is slated to return late Summer 2015.

Excited? Of course you are, and tell us your favorite Danny Trejo role in the comments. (Who are we kidding, it’s Machete.)

This Tuesday is Cinco de Mayo! Commonly known as that one day in May to get shit-faced while wearing a cartoonish sombrero, the holiday is actually a celebration for Mexican-Americans to commemorate the Mexican victory over the French at the Battle of Puebla that took place on May 5th, 1862.

Try to remember that as you drown yourself in tequila. Also take off the sombrero, you look ridiculous.

Our friends at El Rey are celebrating Cinco de Mayo with a day-long marathon of From Dusk Till Dawn on El Rey Network, starting at dusk (6 PM ET) until dawn (4 AM ET).

Adding to the fiesta, El Rey Network founder/chairman and director of the original From Dusk ‘Till Dawn Robert Rodriguez will release the season one rock soundtrack of From Dusk Till Dawn along with a special Spanish version of “After Dark,” the amazing Tito & Tarantula track heard in the iconic snake dance scene from the original 1995 film.

We at Geekscape are holding a contest to giveaway five (5) sets of From Dusk Till Dawn posters, soundtrack, and signed season one DVD sets!

Here’s how to win:

Invite FIVE (5) friends that you “ride with” (like you ride with El Rey) to like the Geekscape and El Rey Facebook fan pages. Then, starting Tuesday (May 5) at 12 PM ET, comment on the Geekscape status with those five friends tagged and tell us why you’ll always ride with them from dusk ’till dawn. We’ll pick the winners at random and we will ONLY pick those who comment.

That’s it! So get your friends to like those pages and you can win a kick-ass, badass From Dusk Till Dawn prize pack all to yourself.

Don’t forget: Tune-in to El Rey for the Cinco de Mayo marathon of From Dusk Till Dawn starting at 6 PM ET and ending at 4 AM ET. You totally need something to watch when you’re drunk on tequila, so ride with El Rey.

Season two of From Dusk Till Dawn is currently in production and will premiere this summer at the ATX Television Festival this June.

El Rey Network never fails to provide pop culture geeks exactly the kind of entertainment they crave. Tomorrow (Saturday, April 25), the house Robert Rodriguez programmed will deliver its “MonstroCity” movie marathon, featuring the monsters of your nightmares that terrorize the urban jungle.

Get ready to sit back tomorrow with Curandero, Lucio Fulci’s City of the Living Dead and Zombie, and C.H.U.D.!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3uUJE8RwEQ&feature=youtu.be

The full schedule is below:

A marathon dedicated to celebrating the monsters that are worthy of your nightmares, MonstroCity will take over your evening with cannibals, zombies, and demons as they overtake cities from above and below ground! You have been warned, this marathon is not for the faint of heart. There will be gore, there will be violence, and most importantly, people will be eaten!

SATURDAY, April 25th

 

CURANDERO (12PM EST & 8:15PM EST)

Director: Eduardo Rodriguez

A journey that takes one man into the bowels of black magic in Mexico City

 

CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD (2:15PM EST & 10:30PM EST)

Director: Lucio Fulci

A reporter and a psychic race to close the Gates of Hell after the suicide of a clergyman caused them to open, allowing the dead to rise from the grave.

 

ZOMBIE (4:15PM EST & 12:30AM EST)

Director: Lucio Fulci

Strangers looking for a woman’s father arrive at a tropical island where a doctor desperately searches for the cause and cure of a recent epidemic of the undead.

 

C.H.U.D. (6:15PM EST & 2:30AM EST)

Director: Douglas Cheek

A bizarre series of murders in New York City seems to point toward the existence of a race of mutant cannibals living under the streets.

For America, cities were and still are a symbol of opportunity and hope. At the turn of the 20th century and well into the roaring twenties, the young and old flocked to make something of themselves… while the monsters dwelled outside the city limits.

The remarkable similarity that the majority of American horror films share is that they physically take place in remote or suburban locations. They almost never happen in cities. To know why, we only look at our own history.

When European settlers began to colonize the Americas in the late 15th century, conflict with indigenous tribes were, well, brutal. And bloody. You kind of expect now that every Thanksgiving your college roommate will bring up how much the pilgrims like, totally screwed over the Native Americans in terrifying fashion, man.

Well, your roommate isn’t wrong. America lost its humanity in the outskirts of society, in the total lawless wilderness. From murdering and grave robbing Native Americans and forcing them onto the Trail of Tears, to the slavery on the cotton fields and farms that built our nation, America’s worst sins happened beyond the roads.

Our folklore contain figures and spirits that lived beyond the cities. Bloody Mary, the Headless Horseman, the Jersey Devil and more. Seriously, peruse these tales yourself. How many of these tragic figures are said to haunt the most remote areas of our land?

Tomorrow, El Rey will prove that some monsters lurk just around the city block. Tune in at 12 PM ET and for an encore at 8:15 PM ET, as the MonstroCity marathon kicks off with Robert Rodriguez-executive produced Curandero!

Once again, our friends at El Rey have hooked us up with another exciting sneak peek at this week’s Lucha Underground, featuring the one and only Sexy Star stepping up against Pentagon Jr.!

We’ve got exclusive stills from the episode at the bottom of this post, along with the clip right below.

Following the awesome Mask vs. Mask match against Super Fly, Sexy Star finds herself pitted against the monstrous Pentagon Jr. — with poor Melissa, the beautiful ring announcer of Lucha Underground still recovering from an attack sitting ringside. You can see the stress in her eyes.

This isn’t the first time it’s ever been done, and definitely not the first time on Lucha Underground, but you’ll notice that this particular match features a woman up against a man — an awful man, Pentagon Jr.

But I wouldn’t worry. Besides the fact that Sexy Star is more than capable of standing on her own, intergender wrestling has had a long and varied history.

Although rare, intergender wrestling became something of a novelty in the 1970s. It wasn’t mainstream because, I mean, obviously, but legendary funny man Andy Kaufman adopted intergender pro wrestling as one of his comedy gimmicks and became the “Intergender Champion,” a title he gave himself. After a string of staged segments where he’d wrestle women, Kaufman would go on to the now-classic feud against the Memphis legend, Jerry “The King” Lawler. You can find these segments on YouTube if you care to look.

For reasons I shouldn’t even have to flat out state, intergender pro wrestling never took off and became a part of the mainstream. They happened, but usually in extreme, absurd or chaotic storylines. It’s really not hard to see why either, the image of an intergender match can be extremely jarring and visually uncomfortable when taken too far — and this is wrestling, where everything is a few steps from too far.

But that’s what makes Lucha Underground so damn incredible. I reiterate, intergender matches have happened to varying degrees of seriousness, but in this week of Lucha Undergound it is entirely refreshing to see an honest-to-goodness battle between two stars no matter their genetics. This isn’t a trashy storyline involving baby mamas or infidelity. This is a blood feud, something that is truly inherit to pro wrestling and lucha libre.

I’ll never advocate violence against women, but in this week’s episode we see Sexy Star combat Pentagon Jr. in a genuine struggle of good versus evil. This is a contest of moral one-upmanship, the heart and soul of all of lucha libre. I can’t wait to see it.

Enjoy the exclusive gallery below and tune in to Lucha Underground tonight at 8:00 PM ET/PT on El Rey Network. Check your local listings.

Oh, and as a bonus, here’s Johnny Mundo getting a talking-to from a certain Alberto El Patron. I saw these guys wrestle at Madison Square Garden in 2011. I’m so excited to see them flourish in Lucha Underground!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OOgCMhY_00&feature=youtu.be

Tonight on Lucha Underground is something special. Tonight, the league will channel true lucha libre tradition and feature its first Mask vs. Mask match in its young history when King Cuerno and Prince Puma go one-on-one.

Also featured: the continuation of the Trios Title Tournament when Angelico, Ivelisse, and Son of Havoc lock up with Drago, Aerostar, and Fenix!

One of the defining characteristics of lucha libre that separates it from American, Japanese and even Canadian professional wrestling is the mask. The mask is so much more than a piece of fabric and spandex, it’s an identity. It’s a name. It’s the very blood that flows through you. It is every part of Mexican culture.

The mask is revered in lucha libre for it is not only the literal face of a luchador, it’s also their history. It is their accomplishments. It’s the places they’ve been, and the hard-working people who paid to see them and want to believe that gods and heroes exist. A single mask could tell a million stories.

Luchadors may never take off their mask without it being any kind of a big deal. Masks may only be removed if a wrestler plans to retire, be it that particular identity or because they’re retiring for good. It’s also illegal (in wrestling, not lawfully) and offensive to remove another wrestler’s mask during a match.

This kind of reverence of the mask in lucha libre has, inevitably, allowed it to become a part of the drama that occurs in that four-sided theatrical stage. Waging your mask against another’s is the ultimate test in lucha libre. Perhaps more than championship titles, losing a mask in lucha libre is the biggest challenge a luchador could endure. It’s like a samurai waging his katana against another swordsman, or a gunslinger betting his revolver in a duel against his rival. It’s Ash betting ownership of Pikachu against Gary.

And tonight on Lucha Underground, Prince Puma and King Cuerno put their histories and identities on the line in the ultimate test of oneupmanship. I can’t wait to see it.

Check out the exclusive gallery we have below, and tune in to Lucha Underground tonight at 8 PM ET/PT on El Rey. Check your local listings if you don’t know if you have El Rey. If they won’t offer it, send them flying with a hurracarana.

Luis Valdez is an important name. Yet I don’t hear it often.

Perhaps it’s the circles I run in, but in both the classroom and in the outside world, I have noticed director’s names have become buzzwords for people to show off their cred, no matter how hollow they actually are. “I love Tarantino,” I hear often. “Oh yeah? I love Fincher.” “Kurosawa.” “Wright.” “Hitchcock.” “Nolan.” We turn artists into Pokemon cards, a symptom of our obsession of the “’90s kids” label.

But thanks to The Director’s Chair with Robert Rodriguez, we not only get to know better the important filmmakers we know and love — del Toro, Coppola, etc. — it’s a chance to really examine the artist, from his/her own perspective. In the newest episode, filmed in the Ricardo Montalban Theatre featuring “the father of Chicano cinema” Luis Valdez, Robert Rodriguez journeys with Valdez over his childhood, his career, and eventually to his biggest hits in films like Zoot SuitLa Bamba, and The Cisco Kid.

“Film is accessible to us,” Valdez says early on in his interview. “We can do film.” Today in 2015, where we all carry cameras in our pockets, that statement has never been more true.

Luis Valdez is relaxed. This episode of The Director’s Chair featuring him is such an easy 40+ minutes that you nearly forget you’re watching two prominent filmmakers talk. It’s startling considering the gravity of the subjects — racial, class inequality in mid-20th century American history, of which Valdez puts extremely well into the context of his career — because Valdez speaks just like a cool uncle or professor that we’ve all known at least once.

Valdez may not have the deep filmography of previous The Director’s Chair subjects, but that doesn’t make his insight any less enlightening or inspiring. Valdez’s real world run-ins with gangs — his cousin was a “pachuco” which served as a starting point for Zoot Suit — and front lines of protest colors him in ways more interesting than any filmmaker who just made a bunch of movies.

But beyond film, Valdez has been active elsewhere, particularly theatre. He admits in the episode that he’s 74-years-old, but that there is so much he still wants to do. In my interview with Valdez, he discusses working on his newest play, Valley of the Heart’s Delight, and he hopes to turn it into a film. I hope he does too.

“If you break in, you have to bring extra sledgehammers,” Rodriguez says to Valdez. He agrees. If there’s one thing that Valdez won me over in this forty-minute interview, it was his perspective on fighting for the next generation. His background as an activist surely inspired his understanding how difficult it is for new, young people to let their voice be heard.

In some ways, I’m kind of glad cinema snobs don’t mention names like Valdez often. It’s easy for me to discriminate against their false sense of superiority. As they continue to diminish art like they’re Magic the Gathering cards, dropping their knowledge to show off at their convenience, I’ll be here celebrating the visionaries who, like his (or her, in other cases) peers, intend to educate and positively influence the next generation. Valdez, above all, would know all about fighting for the future.

The Director’s Chair with Luis Valdez gets 4 out of 5 stars.

The special premieres tonight on El Rey Network at 8 PM EST/8:15 PT. It will be followed by Valdez’s 1987 classic, La Bamba immediately after at 9 PM EST/9:15 PT.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Df5-M8Mk-RI

“Injustices grows like weeds,” Luis Valdez tells me. “If you do nothing they’ll choke your whole garden, man.”

It’s a natural metaphor for Valdez to use. He spent his childhood following the harvests in central California valleys with his migrant farmer parents, and he stood on the picket lines with Cesar Chavez’s United Farm Workers.

“It’s incumbent on every new generation to develop a social conscience and to really defend themselves.”

Hailed as the father of Chicano theatre, Luis Valdez’s voice has been heard on the theatrical stage, the cinema and on the front lines of protests. With a childhood background in theatre, he founded El Teatro Campesino, a theatre troupe composed entirely of farm workers for the United Farm Workers union. Their one-act plays toured migrant camps to entertain and enlighten both farmers and the public alike and were infused with social and political commentary. Valdez’s plays lifted the morale of the strikers during the toughest, most formative years in American history.

Eventually, Valdez would take his talents to the cinema, starting with the bombastic Zoot Suit (1981) starring Edward James Olmos. An adaptation of his smash-hit play, it was based on the Sleepy Lagoon murder trials and the Zoot Suit Riots of 1943.

In 1987, Luis Valdez captivated audiences worldwide with the American movie classic, La Bamba, his critically-acclaimed biopic of Chicano rock-‘n-roll star Ritchie Valens, whose untimely death alongside Buddy Holly and J.P. Richardson became colloquially known as “The Day the Music Died.” Valdez’s film was nominated for Best Picture at the 1988 Golden Globes and currently holds a 96% on Rotten Tomatoes.

The legendary Luis Valdez will be featured in the next episode of The Director’s Chair with Robert Rodriguez, set to air tonight at 8 PM EST/8:15 PT on El Rey Network. I had the chance to speak to Luis on his appearance on the show, his storied career, the Hispanic origins of Batman, and what the 74-year-old has next in store.

the-directors-char

I apologize for getting a little meta as I interview you about your interview, but what went through your mind when you were first approached about being featured on The Director’s Chair?

Luis: I’ve been in this business for quite a while, I started fifty years ago. So to be invited to speak and have a conversation with Robert Rodriguez on a show on the network he started, I think it’s the mark of the tremendous progress that he has individually made but also for all the rest of us. I love his ambition, I love his grand vision, you know?

At the same time, I’m very appreciative of the fact that he has acknowledged my work in the line of succession with different playwrights and filmmakers and also in my relation to his work. All in all, it was a tremendously exhilarating experience.

Was there anything you discovered or rediscovered about yourself as you retraced your career?

Luis: When you do this, you start at the beginning of your career [that] was really focused on your own needs and obstacles, and ultimately you realize you’re not really doing it for yourself. I mean, if you’re lucky you realize it’s not for you. We love in a society, we live in a world that’s communal. We end up serving others and offer opportunities to your own work, and so the conversation [in The Director’s Chair] really underlined that, I think.

But at the same time that we’re talking about the past, we’re also servicing the future. There are all these young filmmakers, male and female that are watching the program, and looking at this interview between two filmmakers and I’m sure they come away thinking, “I can do this. I know what my future is.” In that sense, it’s a tremendous inspiration.

As one of those young filmmakers, that’s absolutely true. I’m itching to pick up a camera again.

Luis: [laughs]

So this is Geekscape and we’re all comic book nerds here. In The Director’s Chair you described El Pachuco as “Batman.” Can you elaborate a little more on that comparison?

Luis: You know, a lot of people don’t realize the roots of Batman are really Latino. They don’t go back to the bat god, the ones the Mayans had — they had one that was “bat man,” they had sculptures of him, literally they had bats down there — but the other, more relatively recent inspiration for Batman was Zorro. But Zorro was based on the California bandits. Joaquin Murrieta and Tiburico Vásquez.

Tiburico Vásquez was a local, he lived in this town where I live now, [and] he used to wear all in black. He used to wear a cape, he was a dashing figure, he was hanged in San Jose in 1875 but he made the news. Even all the way to New York, they published the news about his hanging. But, the thing is, he was a romantic figure. So that was picked up, I think, [and] absorbed into the figure of Zorro which was a more fanciful, more romantic image of early California.

But then Zorro led to Batman, except now transplanted to the city and wearing a cape, but essentially dealing with crime, but still strange because he’s a “bat man.” So El Pachuco, in some ways, is also dressed in black, black and red, which are the colors of an ancient Aztec god, he comes from the school of hard knocks … I didn’t go exactly [into making him] as the bat god, but there are all these links and if you know history, particularly cultural history, you’ll see that there’s a continuity and it was important that we had a Latino superhero, who was above the constrictions of reality.

So, since Pachuco is mythical, even though they strip him he stands up like an Aztec god. Even though he can be confronted, no one can beat him. He says it’s gonna take more than the US Navy to wipe me out, because no army on Earth can defeat a mythological figure. And every people, in order to be free and to have sovereign power over their own destiny, has to have its own mythology. And so, I was just recapturing these roots for the Latino, but ultimately for all Americans.

Images: Huffington Post, Reality is Scary, Batman Wiki
Images: Huffington Post, Reality is Scary, Batman Wiki

You built your career on the picket lines, so to speak. Young Americans today have been very active, from Occupy Wall Street to Ferguson, Missouri. How do you feel about people speaking up in the way they’re doing it today?

Luis: It’s absolutely essential for every generation to capture that social responsibility. Injustice grows like weeds, okay? The injustices of the world are like weeds, and if you do nothing they’ll choke your whole garden, man.

It comes out of human beings, it comes from the dark side of the human being, when people don’t give a hoot about other people and they’ll steal and rob and rob the food out of baby’s mouths, so it’s incumbent on every new generation to develop a social conscience and to really defend themselves. And that takes demonstrations sometimes.

I wish they didn’t always have to go to the streets, but if we’re lucky we get representatives in Congress that can represent our interests. We have heavy obstacles in terms of the moneyed interests in Congress, there’s a lot of greed and corruption, let’s face it.

Of course.

Luis: So it is all important that young people stay aware and protect themselves.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y53v3NudAAs

In La Bamba you casted Lou Diamond Philips as Ritchie and faced a lot of criticism. I personally thought it was kind of cool because I’m Filipino.

Luis: Good for you! [laughs]

But in The Director’s Chair you said “the play’s the thing.” Even today, films are being criticized for racial miscasting. Do you believe audience anger towards those casting decisions are justified?

Luis: It depends on where it’s coming from. A lot of the public responses are based on the prejudices and ignorance, they’ve been inherited from previous generations. If you know anything about history, particularly California agriculture for instance, I grew up with Filipinos, Chinese and Japanese. California has always been a multicultural state, but the thing is, you’ve got to open your eyes and people in general need to get over their own prejudices.

One of the great things about the Delano grape strike is that it combined Filipinos and Mexicans together for the first time in that kind of intense and successful way. There had been strikes dating all the way back to the ’20s with Filipino workers, they were part of the … workforce, in the fields, they had a right to complain about the working conditions, they faced tremendous discrimination and yet, they’re related. They’re like cousins to Mexicans. Mexicans don’t realize that, the Filipinos are like the Asian Hispanics.

My last name is Francisco!

Luis: Yeah! So all that is really something that people can change their minds about if they’re educated. Part of our journey too is to educate people, [which] I like to do through the arts. That’s how you sweeten the lesson, you entertain people but you teach them about their own history.

You said in The Director’s Chair that you still have a lot ahead of you, that you’re in “Act Three” so to speak. Does that mean we might see you direct another film? If so, what kind of movie do you want to tackle?

Luis: I have a new play called Valley of the Heart’s Delight which is still making its way up the ranks towards LA. I would like to film that. I would love to make it a film. It’s a love story between a Mexican farm worker and the daughter of his Japanese employer in Silicon Valley.

It’s [set in] 1941 just on the eve of World War II. It’s intense, it’s based on one of my childhood friends on the love story of his parents because he was half-Mexican, half-Japanese, and so it has been a very successful play, we put it in workshops, and now it’s just starting to climb the ladder. It’ll get to LA, and I hope people will see the possibilities for a movie. I’d love to film that.

Thank you so much for speaking to me today, Mr. Valdez. It’s been a pleasure.

Luis: Thank you, man. Good luck on your career.

The Director’s Chair with Luis Valdez airs tonight on the El Rey Network at 8 PM EST/8:15 PT. It will be followed by La Bamba at 9 PM EST/ 9:15 PT. Check your local listings for El Rey.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Df5-M8Mk-RI&feature=youtu.be

“I didn’t go to film school,” says La Bamba director Luis Valdez. His education came from doing. “I looked through the lens and I said, there are some possibilities here. We can do stuff.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Df5-M8Mk-RI&feature=youtu.be

This Sunday on El Rey Network, influential Chicano movement filmmaker Luis Valdez will sit with Robert Rodriguez to discuss his career, his background, and everything else on the next episode of The Director’s Chair.

It’s impossible to ignore Valdez’s contribution to filmmaking, but it’s also shocking how little he’s mentioned amongst film enthusiast circles. Perhaps it’s just the crowds I run in, but Valdez isn’t a name people drop for film geek cred like they would Tarantino or Kubrick. I hope his participation in The Director’s Chair changes that.

What I especially hope to see in his interview is his founding of the Teatro Campesino, which I’m only learning about now, is a theatrical troupe performed entirely by the United Farm Workers. An intriguing Wikipedia paragraph sells me on why I’m eager to watch Valdez’s episode:

Although the troupe began by entertaining the farmworkers, within a year of their founding they began to tour to raise funds for the striking farm workers. By 1967, their subject matter had expanded to include aspects of Chicano culture that went beyond the fields: education, the Vietnam War, indigenous roots, and racism.

The Director’s Chair with Luis Valdez premieres this Sunday, March 29 at 8 PM EST/8:15 PT. It will be immediately followed by an airing of Valdez’s 1987 classic, La Bamba at 9 PM EST/9:15 PT. Check your local listings for El Rey Network.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y53v3NudAAs

Tonight is the premiere of Lucha Underground‘s milestone twentieth episode, and we at Geekscape have an exclusive look at tonight’s match pitting Son of Havoc against Angelico. Check out Angelico’s tenacity and Son of Havoc’s passion. This is why we watch pro wrestling, guys.

Besides the focus on lucha libre, I think one particular aspect that Lucha Underground has an edge over the competition are its frantic, kinetic camera angles. In just this minute-long clip, this is very apparent. I believe a cinematic eye is vastly underrated in modern professional wrestling, and yet pro wrestling affords that opportunity more than other, “actual” sports.

Lucha libre has a rich history in Mexican cinema. Decades before a certain guy from Miami layed the smack down in Hollywood, the lucha stars of yesteryear like El Santo, Mil Máscaras and Blue Demon were crossover sensations that ruled the ring and the screen. They were living comic book heroes, and they thrived and gave birth to a whole wonderful, bizarre subgenre of cinema. Among the many films produced in this era, Ladrón de cadáveres was a big success. Directed by Fernando Méndez, he would later revolutionize Mexican horror with the landmark El vampiro in 1957.

From Blue Demon’s Wikipedia page:

In three of his films, Blue Demon starred as the leader of a squadron of masked superheroes known as Los Campeones Justicieros (The Champions of Justice). Membership in the Champions included such legendary Mexican wrestling figures as Blue Demon, Mil Máscaras, Tinieblas, Rayo de Jalisco, El Medico Asesino, El Fantasma Blanco, El Avispon Escarlata and Superzan.

Before The Avengers, there was a time when masked wrestlers starred in movies that had them beat up demons and devils and lifted rocks to smash monsters. It was awesome, and I’m afraid in our cynical, too-serious mindsets we just can’t enjoy these stupid pleasures anymore. Even our superheroes brood too much today.

But about the cinematic eye, even the camera movement in those days didn’t take full advantage. That’s what makes Lucha Underground so exciting, it’s a weird blend of classic Mexican cinema with post-MTV reality style, faux cinema verite. These old formulas have been crafted to create something new, and that’s Lucha Underground.

Enough with the history lesson. Enjoy the clip and tune in to Lucha Underground tonight at 11 pm EST/8 pm PST. Check your local listings for El Rey Network.

Also check out the gallery we have for you below!

Briefly: It looks like Robert Rodriguez and Danny Trejo are set to reunite once more, as Trejo has just joined season two of the El Rey network’s From Dusk Till Dawn series.

The actor, however, won’t be reprising the role of Razor Charlie (from the film series, of course), he’ll instead portray “The Regulator,” a horrifying agent of evil who has been summoned to perform a deadly errand. Ominous.

Step Up 2’s Briana Evigan has also joined the upcoming 10-episode season. She’ll play Sonja, an American expatriate working as a tattoo artist in a Mexican Mercado – who also has a sideline forging papers and passports out of her back room.

According to El Rey, the new season “begins with our characters in their separate worlds – Santanico (Gonzalez) and Richie (Holtz) are outside Houston, living like Bonnie and Clyde; Seth and Kate (Madison Davenport) are scraping by South of the Border; and Freddie Gonzalez (Jessie Garcia) is protecting his wife and young daughter in a Houston suburb.  And Carlos Madrigal (Valderrama) and Scott Fuller (Brandon Soo-Hoo) emerge from the Titty Twister, changed men.  They will all come together once again – this time facing off against an even bigger threat.”

What did you think of the first season of From Dusk Till Dawn? Are you looking forward to season two? Sound out below!

Rodriguez

“The things they fire you for when you are young are the same things that they give you lifetime achievement awards for when you are old.” That’s one of the best lessons to take away from at the end of the next hour of The Director’s Chair on the El Rey Network, featuring Robert Rodriguez interviewing the godfather of modern cinema, Francis Ford Coppola.

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A popular hypothetical question I hear asked occasionally is who, living or dead, would you invite for dinner? It’s a fun question I have legitimately thought hard about, which is ridiculous because one of my go-to answers is Bruce Lee which renders the effort of thinking this hard makes me question my priorities.

But the rest are almost always artists or filmmakers. A few leaders, sure — if I could sit with Bruce Lee and Martin Luther King Jr. I wouldn’t even chew my food — but, almost always, my choices are the visionaries behind the most intricate art that humans have created.

The Director’s Chair is not the most unique thing to ever happen. There are such a thing called podcasts, after all, and Inside the Actor’s Studio. But that doesn’t discount the series or its merits in the slightest. It’s not just filmmakers talking, it’s Robert Rodriguez — the guy who inspires all film students to pick up a camera, like yours truly — talking to giants of the cinema in an intimate setting with a conventional four-camera set-up.

The attraction in every episode is clearly watching Rodriguez speak to filmmakers as a pseudo-journalist, resulting in very different episodes individually, but all aesthetically unified. (What a distortion of the auteur theory.)

This Monday’s episode of The Director’s Chair on the El Rey Network sees Robert (“Roberto?” Coppola asks at one point) speaking to Francis Ford Coppola, and it’s a can’t-miss. There are no scandals or juicy inside information to learn from here, because fuck all of that noise. This is purely Coppola speaking as an artist who had his struggles both before and after his name became household. It’s sentimental and sweet, and shortly afterward it just made me want to watch Apocalypse Now, of which they go into rather heavily.

The arc of the episode is not unfamiliar with similar docu-talk programs. There are the early years, when Coppola was a theatre director in college, and before you know it (because they have commercial breaks to consider) they’re talking about Coppola and Lucas on the set of Warner Bros.

The Godfather is the first film they really speak of, and they go rather in-depth. Once again, it’s nothing new if you’ve binged on the special features of your umpteenth Godfather home release, but with Rodriguez steering the conversation it’s still refreshing to watch and listen.

Of most depth they go into is Apocalypse Now. I don’t know if I can really “spoil” anything here, but you need to listen to Coppola being “scared stiff” during production. To say it was a risky production is a terribly obvious statement, but hearing Coppola himself talk about the stress he felt during production reduces this giant into a human. Our current celebrity culture puts people on a pedestal, whether they deserve it or not. Coppola is a commanding name, among the few that even those who aren’t film buffs immediately recognize as a near immortal auteur. To see Coppola be just human is a remarkable moment.

I read The Outsiders like every middle schooler in 21st-century America, and I honestly enjoyed that film of his. I know it isn’t a stand-out work in his ouvre, but I have a personal connection to it. Coppola also confesses it as “saccharine,” which might disappoint a lot of people.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the one Coppola movie I express the most fascination with due to its stark contrast against the rest of his filmography, is discussed but not nearly enough as I hoped. He and Rodriguez, an SFX guy himself, dwell mostly on the very interesting and thematically-rich special effects work and complications and is worth listening to. But I wanted to hear more about the film overall.

As a dumb millennial of the YouTube age, I’m trying to make of what Coppola thinks of indie filmmaking today. Towards the end of the program, he’s asked what he thinks about the evolving technology in cinema. That has become a standard question to ask all filmmakers today, and you often hear the same answers over and over. There are those who lament the labor of old school techniques, others are optimistic about shooting and editing and distributing an entire film with the device in your pocket. I won’t repurpose what he said because this is a special you need to see, but Coppola speaks of his excitement for “live cinema.” Live shots, montage, but “being performed for you.”

“Someone’s gonna do it,” he says. I’ll fool myself into thinking I’ll be that guy.

The sprinkles on this filmmaker’s dessert are the personal touch Rodriguez has towards Coppola. Rodriguez clearly would not feature a filmmaker he doesn’t care or know about, but he has known Coppola for years. There’s home footage of the two of them speaking with their kids running around or falling asleep on their shoulders. It really underscores the conversation as intimate, but it never feels like you’re intruding.

The last remarks of Coppola subverts what we know artists to be. Rodriguez reinforces that filmmakers need to be thick-skinned,  but Coppola almost opposes that. “The good ones are insecure,” he says. “You naturally beat yourself up, but that’s part of the personality.” As someone who has been VERY insecure about his work, it’s something I’ve taken to heart that is slowly shedding my shyness towards my own art.

Thanks Coppola. Because of you, the world will get to see my next music video I’m directing for my friend’s band. It’s gonna have skeletons and demons and Satanic sacrifice. I’m not kidding by the way. I can’t wait!

Robert Rodriguez speaking to Francis Ford Coppola was going to be a must-see even if it were just an hour of them talking about doing laundry. These are two remarkable artists of our generation with critically divisive work whose contributions to the cinema are boundless. You can’t miss this hour of television.

The Director’s Chair with Francis Ford Coppola airs Monday, March 2 at 8 PM EST/8:30 PST on the El Rey Network. It is immediately followed by Francis Ford Coppola’s Academy Award-nominated film, The Conversation, which lost to The Godfather Part II, which was also directed by Coppola. How many people in our industry can say that happened?

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“The things they fire you for when you are young
are the same things that they give you lifetime
achievement awards for when you are old.”
– Francis Ford Coppola in “El Rey Network Presents:
The Director’s Chair

For true cinema lovers, there’s nothing quite like two artists just sitting down to talk about art. But whether’s a podcast recorded on someone’s Macbook or a professionally-produced television series, you come for who’s talking.

On March 2 at 8 PM ET/8:30 PT, filmmaker and mastermind of the El Rey Network, Robert Rodriguez, will sit down with the godfather of modern cinema Francis Ford Coppola on a new installment of The Director’s Chair, the series of hour-long specials where Rodriguez interviews some of the most prolific names in cinema. Right after will be the network premiere of Coppola’s The Conversation starring Gene Hackman at 9 PM ET/9:30 PT.

To commemorate the once-in-a-lifetime meeting, a stunning, breathtaking poster was commissioned from rock star indie artist Joshua Budich. It’s an absolutely beautiful piece of work.

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The bold use of red. The detail. The significance. Absolutely breathtaking. If you’re not familiar with Joshua Budich’s, work, get acquainted. The guy creates some of the most astonishing tributes to pop culture, television, and cinema. His skill is razor sharp and his vision unlike so many others. I sense an influence from Dru Struzan (although what film artist isn’t?). I want to buy all his prints and frame them everywhere in my house.

But let’s not forget the very reason this poster was created. I am stoked to watch Robert Rodriguez — whose infamous Rebel Without a Crew I’m only just now reading — go one-on-one with Mr. Coppola. As Jim Ross said when Shawn Michaels walked down the ramp to wrestle Shelton Benjamin one night on RAW, “the clash of styles” is “gonna be awesome.”

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I owe a lot to Coppola on some personal levels. While my mother raised and treated her son like any good mother would, there are two significant things that bonded us despite the generational divide: The Beatles, and The Godfather. We bonded not just emotionally or sentimentally, but intellectually. For the first time we appreciated something together. She didn’t have to tolerate it, not like she did with Power Rangers or cartoons. Elsewhere, she has been searching for a chronological cut of The Godfather trilogy where the film begins with Corleone’s life in Italy and ends with The Godfather III. She swears up and down it aired on NBC a few decades ago, and it’s been my mission to find that particular cut ever since.

Of all of Coppola’s filmography though, there’s one movie of note I find peculiar: Bram Stroker’s Dracula. By its very essence it’s unlike his other works, even when you consider Jack. I am not smart or eloquent enough to put into words why that film just plain works for me, and there are so many things to hate; Keanu Reeves, as much as I love the dude, was way out of his depth. He was nearly destroyed when he shared scenes with Gary Oldman, like he was Jigglypuff at 200% and Oldman was a Falcon Punch. Yet, there’s something about its atmosphere, or perhaps even its time and place as a gothic film that captures me. I watch a movie like Dracula and other ’90s gothic films like The Crow and they make me feel like I was born a decade too late. I try to watch them every Halloween.

The Director’s Chair with Francis Ford Coppola will air on the El Rey Network on March 2 at 8:00 PM ET/8:30 PT followed by the network premiere of Coppola’s Oscar-nominated classic, The Conversation, at 9:00 PM ET/9:30 PT. Check your local listings for the El Rey Network.

I’ve said before that the El Rey Network is THE network to watch. What other channel can you watch The X-Files AND Mexican lucha libre? What other channel would put on a marathon of Godzilla movies? El Rey seriously won my heart a few weeks ago when they were promoting their Godzilla marathon and casually used the word “tokusatsu” like it was no big deal.

This year, they’re bound to get even better. Details are sparse, but El Rey will be airing well over 200 Shaw Brothers kung-fu movies starting this year, announced on their Facebook page.

Shaw Brothers Studio was founded by brothers Runje, Runme, and Runde Shaw and at one point were the largest film production company of Hong Kong. They produced over a thousand movies of varying genres, but they are commonly remembered for their vast library of kung-fu movies. The studio has an incredibly rich history, from originating in Chinese operas to producing the first Chinese sound-on-film talkie Spring on Stage (1931) to suffering setbacks during the Japanese occupation of World War II. From  the late ’60s and throughout the ’70s, the studio produced some of their most well-known kung-fu movies, including One-Armed SwordsmanFive Fingers of Death, and The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, which yes, is what the Wu-Tang Clan named their first album from. My cousins grew up watching the 1982 classic Five Element Ninjas, which was released in the states as Chinese Super Ninjas.

In 1985 the studio ceased film production facing numerous problems, be it piracy or competition from Golden Harvest (who found success producing the 1973 international hit Enter the Dragon starring Bruce Lee). The studio attempted television in 1987 and returned to film in 2009, but their output was considerably smaller and movie releases farther in between; in 1979 they produced 37 feature films. In 2009, they only made one.

The studio’s last two films were the 2011 romantic comedies I Love Hong Kong and The Fortune Buddies before ceasing operations that year. Currently, the Shaw Brothers legacy lives on in the fans and in their deep library of genre movies, which are now owned by Hong Kong-based Celestial Pictures. I suspect it was through Celestial Pictures that El Rey got this kick-ass broadcasting deal.

Robert Rodriguez’s El Rey network has been proving itself to be ground zero for cool things cool nerds want to watch. Whether it’s reruns of The X-Files or Bruce Lee movies, El Rey is just that awesome channel to have on when you show off your man cave. Lucha Underground is one of their original programs, and just four weeks in we’ve seen some of the craziest wrestling anywhere on television.

Tonight is the premiere of the fourth episode, and we have an exclusive clip featuring Fenix and Pentagon Jr. tearing the house down.

The episode premieres tonight at 8 PM EST/PT on the El Rey network. Check your local listings.

From the press release:

El Rey Network will air the fourth episode of their action packed original wrestling series “Lucha Underground,” from Emmy Award®-winning producer Mark Burnett on Wednesday, November 19th at 8:00PM ET/PT. In the brand new episode entitled “Thrill of the Hunt,” Konnan cautions Puma to not get involved in the main event between Mundo and Big Ryck and Sexy Star makes a theatrical return as she vows vengeance on Chavo and takes on Ivelisse in the ring. Let us know if you would like photos/clips from this week!
The new 39-episode series combines ancient lucha libre tradition, extraordinary athleticism and a flare for theatrics in each hour-long episode. Every Wednesday, viewers will have a backstage and ringside seat as masked villains and heroes tell their stories while facing off to battle for wrestling supremacy resulting in programming that is unlike anything else on the screen.

Are you watching Lucha Underground? Tell us what you think in the comments below!

Briefly: It’s Wednesday, which means that TONIGHT we’ll be treated to the second episode of the El Rey Network’s fantastic (at least judging from the premiere) new series Lucha Underground.

If you haven’t heard of it, and haven’t  even the slightest interest in wrestling (or sweet television), take a look at the series’ trailer for a fantastic idea of what it’s all about:

The 39-episode series combines ancient lucha libre tradition, extraordinary athleticism and a flare for theatrics in each hour-long episode. Every Wednesday, viewers will have a backstage and ringside seat as masked villains and heroes tell their stories while facing off to battle for wrestling supremacy resulting in programming that is unlike anything else on the screen.

In tonight’s episode, “Los Demonios,” Johnny Mundo and Prince Puma are out for revenge on Big Ryck and his crew. Chavo teams with Sexy Star and takes on Son of Havoc & Ivelisse. Blue Demon Jr. is confronted by Catrina who warns him of 1000 Deaths… Mil Muertes. Chavo Guerro seeks revenge.

And guess what? We’ve got some exclusive stills for tonight’s event! Here’s what you all came here for:

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And if you just can’t wait for tonight, here’s a clip:

Excited? Johnny Mundo will also take to reddit at 4PM PT (7 Eastern) for an AMA, so you may want to get in on that too. Be sure to let us know what you think of the stills, and if you’ll be checking out Lucha Underground tonight at 8!

Just in from our friends over at IndieWire. Today at a press event Robert Rodriguez and Univision Communications announced that they will be teaming up to produce a brand new Television Network.

The English language El-Rey will be geared toward young adults with programming focused on pretty much everything, from unscripted and sports all the way to dramas and animations. Rodriguez was quoted as saying:

I’m thrilled to be partnering with Univision on this groundbreaking initiative to deliver high-quality original programming to our community and the wider, mainstream audiences, El Rey Network will serve as a launching pad to satisfy the tastes of young adults looking for exciting, cinematic, action-packed content. As a broadcast leader in media, Univision is the best partner to support us in achieving this vision.

But that is all boring news compared to what kind of scripted series are planned. Rodriguez announced that he will be adapting the 1996 film ” From Dusk Til Dawn” as a series. He will be writing and directing and plans on expanding the lore of the film. He has also brought on board Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci (Star Trek) to produce an action adventure series for the network. Both shows will be filmed in Austin at Rodriguez’s headquarters.

So keep an eye out on the TV Program Guides this December for El-Rey