As its title suggests, “Pink Narcissus” is one thing of a hothouse flower. A feature-length film, shot over a interval of seven years on eight-millimeter movie and elaborate units constructed within the filmmaker’s tiny Manhattan condo, it’s additionally a labor of affection — focusing largely on a single actor.
Initially launched anonymously, this homoerotic fantasia created by the photographer James Bidgood, newly restored by the movie and tv archive on the College of California, Los Angeles, will get its first theatrical run in 54 years at Metrograph, beginning April 11.
The breathtaking opening sequence wherein a full moon is glimpsed by means of a tangled forest is as fastidious as a late Thirties Disney animation, an affiliation supported by a musical monitor heavy on program music like Mussorgsky’s “Night time on Bald Mountain.” Quickly, amid busy butterflies and fluttering flowers, Bidgood’s younger star, often known as Bobby Kendall, makes his first look.
The film has no dialogue and, as far as I can inform, no girls. Dressed variously in tight white denims and brief kimonos, however most frequently posed as a nude odalisque, Kendall performs a stored rent-boy whose fantasies present a succession of set items, as when he imagines himself as a matador whose bull is a hard-charging biker. Kendall additionally participates in a toga get together and is entertained by a provocative stomach dancer in a male seraglio.
Intercourse acts are implied and full nudity coyly veiled. Express but decorous, “Pink Narcissus” is based on a dialectic between the erotic and the abject. The rococo condo and an idealized pure world of rosy sunsets vie with a dank public urinal and an invented, garbage-strewn Occasions Sq. the place pushcarts promote vibrators and different intercourse toys. Charles Ludlam will be glimpsed among the many denizens of this sordid area, however greater than Ludlam’s “ridiculous” theater, Bidgood’s precursors are taboo-breaking films like Jack Smith’s “Flaming Creatures” and Kenneth Anger’s “Fireworks.”
Like Anger and Smith, Bidgood seems to have been deeply impressed by Josef von Sternberg’s gauzy unique mise-en-scène. Bidgood’s imaginative and prescient is neither as exhilaratingly threadbare as Smith’s nor as perversely opulent as Anger’s — nonetheless, blown as much as 35-millimeter, the eight-millimeter inventory is gorgeously grainy. Anger and Smith are daring, “Pink Narcissus” shouldn’t be. But when Bidgood’s movie feels claustrophobic, it’s price noting that through the interval it was made, gay relations have been unlawful in New York.
“Pink Narcissus” opened in New York in Could 1971 and performed on the Cinema Village for six weeks, a run coinciding with the second anniversary of the Stonewall riot. Arty porn or porny artwork? Though awash with advertisements for homosexual and straight intercourse movies, and that includes frequent articles on homosexual liberation, The Village Voice didn’t deign to provide “Pink Narcissus” a assessment — though the New York Occasions critic Vincent Canby did. Contemplating the film an train in humorless camp, he in contrast it unfavorably to Mike Kuchar’s underground hit “Sins of the Fleshapoids.”
A long time handed: Bidgood, whose baroque images for Muscle Boy and different male physique magazines have been rehabilitated as gallery artwork, lastly took credit score for the movie. “Pink Narcissus” was belatedly acclaimed in The Voice, in addition to The Occasions, as a “queer basic.” John Waters likened it to “The Wizard of Oz.” If not precisely “Depraved,” the film is a singular achievement.
Pink Narcissus
Runs by means of April 20 at Metrograph, Manhattan; metrograph.com.