Our annual summer series of films that you won’t find on DVD or videotape has spawned a winter edition with four films from a great and fertile period in international cinema: 1969 to 1974. The Gravy Train (aka The Dion Brothers, screening February 5) was meant to be Terrence Malick’s follow-up to Badlands, but Malick was replaced by director Jack Starrett and took his name off the screenplay. Nonetheless, the story of two criminal brothers (Stacy Keach and Fredric Forrest) who dream of opening a seafood restaurant remains a vital, decidedly quirky American gem that is ripe for rediscovery. Kurt Vonnegut Jr. wrote the screenplay adaptation of his own play, Happy Birthday, Wanda June (February 12), with Rod Steiger starring as one of the most comically sexist characters ever to hit the big screen. The rarest of this lineup is Dillinger is Dead (February 19), Marco Ferreri’s wonderfully absurd study of a bored industrialist whose life changes when he discovers a hidden gun in his home. The series concludes with a new 35mm print of Polish director Jerzy Skolimowski’s cult classic Deep End (February 26). This sometimes-shocking coming-of-age story follows the virginal new employee of a decaying British bathhouse who develops a dangerous crush on an older staff member (Jane Asher).