Synopsis
In 1971, a small revolution shook up New York's independent cinema: released anonymously, Pink Narcissus straightforwardly depicts the gay fantasies of a young, sensual Narcissus, filmed in technicolor in a perfect kitsch setting. Quickly become a cult and long shrouded in an aura of mystery - it was sometimes attributed to Andy Warhol, sometimes to Kenneth Anger - this masterpiece, shot on Super 8 film over a seven-year period in a small New York apartment, was reclaimed thirty years later by James Bidgood. A pioneer of the LGBTQ cause, the American photographer and filmmaker born in 1933 influenced a whole generation of photographers with his dreamlike, flamboyant stagings, including Pierre et Gilles and David Lachapelle. This documentary by Wolfgang Hastert takes us into the world of this little-known genius of queer visual culture, who died in poverty in 2022 at the age of 88.
What you will find in this film
A pioneer of queer cinema • the art of portraiture and staging • the visual language that influenced Pierre et Gilles and David Lachapelle • an orgy of color • kitsch and romantic homoerotic reveries • the end of hyper-masculinized nudes • a nod to censorship - some politically incorrect - the genesis of the film Pink Narcissus
Further exploration
This content is for members only.
• BIDGOOD, JAMES BIDGOOD ; Bruce Benderson ; Taschen ; 1999
https://archive.org/details/PinkNarcissus
https://www.artsy.net/artist/james-bidgood