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[Commlist] CFP: ReFocus: The Films of Paul Morrissey
Sat Sep 10 18:04:06 GMT 2022
Paul Morrissey is a key figure of American underground filmmaking. Early
in his career he joined Andy Warhol’s Factory and worked on numerous
projects, notably the ambitious Chelsea Girls (1966), a 210 minute-long
split-screen experiment which became an unexpected crossover hit and
raised the profile of New York underground filmmaking.
After Warhol was shot in 1968, Morrissey took a more central role in the
Factory’s filmmaking activities: he produced, directed and shot the
loose trilogy Flesh (1968) Trash (1970) and Heat (1972). These further
develop the hands-off filmmaking style that made him famous; straddling
the porno chic era and underground filmmaking, and anticipating later
movements such as Dogme95 and slow cinema.
His subsequent films, including parodic reimaginings of Dracula,
Frankenstein, and Sherlock Holmes, plus several films in the 1980s that
took an often grim look at street life in New York, reveal a complex
filmography that defies easy categorization. Lurching from experimental
to horror to music hall comedy, his filmography proves thorny for
auteurists. His vehement distancing of himself from Warhol’s influence
is a point of controversy for film and art historians, while his
staunchly conservative views contrast with the seemingly inclusive
representations in his films, particularly his recurring use of the
transgender performers Holly Woodlawn, Candy Darling, and Jackie Curtis.
This proposed collection of critical essays, to be published in the
ReFocus series on American directors, aims to revitalize interest in
Morrissey’s work and to showcase the variety and significance of his
controversial and unique films. Essays may focus on:
- The contested authorship of Morrissey’s filmography
- Morrissey’s portrayal of New York - Morrissey’s place within the New
York Underground
- Parody, genre, and intertextuality - LGBT+ representation
- Morrissey’s stars, such as Joe Dallesandro, Holly Woodlawn, Sylvia
Miles, Udo Kier etc
- Performance and performativity
- Morrissey and technology: 16mm, split-screen, 3D etc
- Particular theoretical readings of Morrissey’s films; psychoanalytic,
Foucauldian etc - Morrissey’s influences, especially studio-era
Hollywood - Morrissey’s legacy and influence on contemporary film
- Your suggested topic
Please send an abstract of 200-250 words, along with a short bio, to
John A. Riley at (techsavoury /at/ gmail.com) by 9 December 2022.
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