Matthew Barney Movies

Preferring to categorize himself as a sculptor rather than a video or performance artist, Matthew Barney became an art world darling before age 35 with his ambitious avant-garde film fantasia The Cremaster Cycle (1994-2002).

Born in San Francisco, Barney moved to Boise, ID, with his family at age six. When his parents split six years later, Barney stayed with his father and sister in Boise, visiting his artist mother regularly in New York. Rather than dreaming of an art career in his teens, though, Barney distinguished himself as the quarterback for his high school's championship-winning football team. Too short to play college ball, overachieving class president Barney opted to go to Yale and paid his way through college by modeling. After a couple of semesters in premed, Barney shifted to Yale's art department, where his abstract sculptures caught the eye of students in the more distinguished graduate program. Barney drew on his jock background (and revealed his enduring interest in Vaseline as a creative medium) in his 1989 senior thesis, Field Dressing, a two-part video project featuring Barney raising and lowering his nude body over a vat of petroleum jelly that he periodically smeared over his eyes, nose, mouth, and genitals, and then a wedding gown-clad Barney battling football training equipment. Moving to New York after graduation, Barney showed Field Dressing in a group show in 1990. Drawing attention with his objects sculpted out of Vaseline and tapioca as well as his videos, Barney scored his first solo show in 1991 in a Los Angeles gallery. Barney immediately became a new art star when the show opened in New York, despite criticism from some quarters deeming his art shameless, empty exhibitionism. Nevertheless, Barney's work was included in such internationally renowned shows as the Whitney and Venice Biennials in 1993, garnering comparisons to artists Joseph Beuys, Vito Acconci, and Chris Burden. By the mid-'90s, Barney was dubbed the "most important artist of his generation" by the New York Times.

The primary reason for such superlatives was Barney's eight-year, multimedia Cremaster Cycle. Exploring, as he called it, "the life cycle of an idea," Barney merged his interest in a concept's development through an unresolved artwork with his fascination with the human embryo's moment of physiological limbo before the gonads either ascend or descend to create a female or male child (the "cremaster" being the muscle that controls the rising and lowering of the testicles). Starring himself in various guises and packed with extreme, visceral, and silly references to pagan mythology, architecture, pop culture, art, biology, and his autobiography, Barney's Cremaster films were akin to avant-garde filmmaker Maya Deren's tangled, narcissistic dream worlds and Kenneth Anger's hypnotic excursions into masculine imagery and mythopoeic allegory. Though he had devised how the cycle would progress geographically and thematically before he started shooting in 1993, Barney immediately revealed his disinterest in anything resembling conventional narrative when he released Cremaster 4 first in 1994. Set on Britain's Isle of Man, Cremaster 4 featured a flame-haired satyr Barney tap-dancing amid androgynous body-builders and struggling up a Freudian tunnel clogged with Vaseline, and a motorcycle race between two teams heading in opposite directions. As with the subsequent Cremasters, Cremaster 4 was accompanied by gallery shows of sculptures, photos, and drawings from the film, with the sales of the art pieces funding the increasingly expensive cycle. Appearing in 1995, Cremaster 1 evoked Busby Berkeley musicals with its chorus girls dancing on the blue AstroTurf field of Boise's Bronco Stadium, while performer Marti Domination ran the show from a Goodyear blimp hovering above. Barney coaxed retired Bond girl Ursula Andress into playing the Queen of Chain in 1997's Cremaster 5, the cycle's Budapest opera finale featuring Barney as a giant with his genitals tethered to pigeons that may not allow his scrotum to make the fateful descent into the troubled waters of sexual differentiation. 1999's Cremaster 2 was part twisted Western and part crime film, with Norman Mailer appearing as Harry Houdini and Barney playing Mailer's The Executioner's Song subject, doomed Utah murderer Gary Gilmore. Emphasizing its place as the cycle's turning point as well as its "climax," the three-hour Cremaster 3 (2002) was the most elaborate film of the five. Cheekily referencing Barney's position in the art world as well as the difficulties of being male, Cremaster 3's set pieces involved an Oedipal battle on the spire of the Chrysler Building between artist Richard Serra's malevolent Architect and Barney's Entered Apprentice, and Barney's struggle to scale the interior of New York's Guggenheim Museum, vanquishing model and amputee Aimee Mullins' cheetah woman in the process. Hailed as the brilliant end to a Wagnerian project, the debut of Cremaster 3 in 2002 was followed by the New York Guggenheim's solo show of artworks from the entire cycle and the cycle's theatrical release (in order) in 2003.

Featuring 12 lines of dialogue over the six-and-a-half-hour running time, The Cremaster Cycle played to packed houses in specialty theaters, earning as much praise for its range and imagination as derision for its solipsism, banal masculine trials, and sleep-inducing longueurs. Though Barney's relationship with eccentric pop star Björk made the artist even more of an avant-media darling for the new millennium, "the Michelangelo of genital art" limited his self-revelations to his onscreen Cremaster exploits, and spoke in interviews only about his work. While the films' consecutive order illuminated the geographical journey from West to East, and the running concern with sexuality and its discontents, The Cremaster Cycle remained deliberately ambiguous, a stance echoed by Barney's enigmatic explanations of the films and undefined plans for an encore. ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi
2007  
 
De Lama Lamina documents a collaboration between artist Matthew Barney (best known for the Cremaster cycle) and musician Arto Lindsay. The work was originally presented at the Carnival celebration in Salvador. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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2006  
 
The acclaimed experimental filmmaker behind the Cremaster series, Matthew Barney contributed this short to the hardcore-sex anthology Destricted. Barney himself stars as a man adorned with a peculiar phallus who successfully mates with a large deforestation machine. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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2006  
 
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As helmed by a series of avant-garde performance artists and provocateurs, the seven-episode omnibus picture Destricted both pays homage to classic porn and deconstructs the concepts of obscenity and voyeurism, with a series of extreme tonal variations on the sexual act. The premier episode, artist Matthew Barney's "Hoist" (which is laced with transsexual metaphors) depicts a bizarre mating ritual between a man with a giant cucumber for a penis and a 50-ton deforesting Caterpillar truck. For the second go-round, House Call, notorious still photographer Richard Prince (best known for "re-photographing" the Garry Gross nudes of Brooke Shields) re-shoots to the point of graininess (and re-dubs) images from a "classic" hardcore sequence involving an encounter between a stud (John Saint John) and a chesty woman (Kora Reed), and their kinky games with a thermometer. Commercial veteran Marco Brambilla authored the third episode, "Sync" - a kind of "teaser" - by splicing together thousands of split-second sequences from sex scenes in both hardcore and mainsteam features, and "matching up" the action (creating a sequence with it of the various film segments), from foreplay to climax. Controversial director Larry Clark (Kids, Ken Park) authored the fourth (and longest, at 38 minutes) segment, entitled "Impaled"; it begins with a series of spontaneous, one-on-one interviews with adolescent boys, where Clark asks them intimate questions about their sexual fantasies and sexual desires, and indicates that he plans to select one to undergo an unsimulated, hardcore sex scene with an actual porno actress. The film then cuts to the "act" itself, which proves ironically mechanical and untitillating for its male participant. Sam Taylor-Wood' "Death Valley" constitutes the fifth segment and offers an extended (voyeuristic) glimpse of a man in the desert who masturbates to ejaculation. The sixth segment, Marina Abramovic's much-acclaimed "Balkan Erotic Epic," provides a riotous parody of ethnic sexual rituals, in which women expose their breasts and "mate" with the ground, and men fertilize gardens with their semen. And Gaspar Noe's closer, "We Fuck Alone," combines the influence of Tamaño Natural and Flicker by depicting copulation between a man and an inflatable sex doll - as filmed beneath an alienating strobe light. As a measure of U.S. society's love-it-or-hate-it conservatism, this picture ran at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival but skipped U.S. arthouse distribution (to say nothing of a mainstream American release). It did, however, receive a European theatrical run. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Ana VukovicNatasa Vukovic, (more)
 
2005  
 
Filmmaker and artist Matthew Barney collaborated with his wife, noted musician Björk, for this ambitious experimental feature. Aboard a Japanese fishing vessel named the Nisshin Maru, a crew of laborers constructs "the Field," a sculptural mold in the shape of an oval that is filled with melted petroleum jelly. As the crew slaves over the project, a man and woman (played by Barney and Björk) are brought on board, and while the ship sets sail the couple prepare to be married in a traditional Japanese ceremony. As the pair are about to be wed, the captain of the Nisshin Maru (Susil Osoma) relates the history of his ship to them. That night, a massive storm at sea disturbs "the Field," and the petroleum jelly floods the room where the newlyweds are staying, forcing them to tear away their outer shells and reveal the animals which lurk within in order to survive. Drawing Restraint 9 was one of Matthew Barney's first major works after completing his widely acclaimed five-film series The Cremaster Cycle. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Matthew BarneyBjörk, (more)
 
2005  
R  
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The lost subculture of America's rebellious, Reagan-era hardcore set is explored in filmmaker Paul Rachman's cinematic adaptation of Steven Blush's book. Disillusioned by politics, angered by greedy record labels, and bound together by a powerful antiestablishment sentiment, bands such as Minor Threat, Black Flag, Dead Kennedys, and Bad Brains paved the way for such later bands as Nirvana and Pearl Jam by fearlessly questioning -- and frequently mocking -- the status quo, and proving that you don't need radio play to reach an audience. Whether working for a real change or simply attempting to shake things up in the music scene, these bands gave a voice to the legions of youthful fans who felt their opinions had been neglected in mainstream society. In this documentary, concert footage combines with interviews to offer a comprehensive look at the musical revolution that defined an era. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Bad BrainsBlack Flag, (more)
 
2005  
 
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With his acclaimed Cremaster Cycle and 2005 feature Drawing Restraint 9, avant-garde artist Matthew Barney established himself as a bold experimentalist who wasn't afraid to take a few risks for the sake of his art. Set into motion in the late '80s, Barney's Drawing Restraint series consists of works in which the artist attempts to create works while hindered by physical weights and barriers. The result, claims Barney are creations that are much more rewarding due to the difficulty it takes to render them. With Drawing Restraint 9, the artist teamed with his wife, Björk, to tell the tale of a couple who boards a Japanese whaling ship to partake in a series of obscure rituals -- including a ceremony that took place in a tank filled with 45,000 pounds of petroleum jelly. For fans longing to see how the innovative artist achieves his unique vision, this documentary by filmmaker Alison Chernick mixes clips from Drawing Restraint 9 with interviews and footage of Barney playing high-school football to create a comprehensive look at her subject's entire career. Additional conversations with Guggenheim curator Nancy Spector, New York Times art critic Michael Kimmelman, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art chief curator Yuko Hasegawa, and more, this portrait of Barney transcends the trappings of your typical making-of documentary. Björk and Mayumi Miyata collaborate to create the musical score. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Matthew BarneyBjörk, (more)
 
2002  
 
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Cremaster 3 is the final installment of the five-part epic film cycle from director and sculpture artist Matthew Barney. Encompassing a dizzying number of themes, this elaborately stylized experimental film showcases Barney's affinity for architecture and sex. Much of the highly symbolic imagery involves Celtic mythology and phallic references, with Barney himself appearing as the Entered Apprentice and sculptor Richard Serra playing architect Hiram Abiff. Some of the settings include the Chrysler Building in New York City, the Saratoga race track, and the Guggenheim museum ( where much of Barney's work is actually shown). Spatially driven rather than narratively, the film is a display of visual effects and impulses with little to no dialogue. All five parts of the film cycle (titled out of sequence) can be seen at art galleries, though Barney has been known to give out video copies with the purchase of his sculptures. Cremaster 3 was shown in the Frontier program at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi

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Starring:
Richard SerraMatthew Barney, (more)
 
1999  
 
Renowned experimental artist Matthew Barney directs this lyrical, challenging work about America, mythology, and death. Believing that his grandmother had an affair with Harry Houdini (Norman Mailer), noted murderer Gary Gilmore (Barney) wanders through the afterlife -- depicted here as a gold-colored honeycomb maze filled with two-stepping cowboys and rodeos -- hoping to find the magician. In the process, Barney constructs a personal narrative from elements and symbols of the American west. Cremaster 2 was shot on high-definition digital video and transferred to 35mm. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Norman MailerMatthew Barney, (more)
 
1998  
 
The five in-progress avant-garde Cremaster films have been made out of sequence for a Guggenheim Museum showing of all five in the year 2000; Cremaster 5 is actually the third to be filmed (released in 1998 when number two and number three had not yet been made). In number five, the Queen of Chains (Ursula Andress, with the singing voice of Adrienne Csengery), wearing a glass dumbbell on her head, moves into the restored Budapest Opera House where she sings passionately of her lost love (writer-director Matthew Barney), later seen as a half-man/half-fish surrounded by pink mermaids. Her aria is in Hungarian, minus subtitles. The 51-minute musical fantasy, with a vid-to-film transfer, was made on a $200,000 budget. Also of note: The title refers to the set of minor muscles in the male anatomy that raise and lower the testes, in order to accomodate for temperature. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi

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Starring:
Ursula AndressMatthew Barney, (more)
 
1995  
 
Artist Matthew Barney continues his elaborate, symbolic mediation on sex, death, and creation with this 40-minute audiovisual installment of his much-acclaimed Cremaster cycle. Labeled the first in the series although it was originally exhibited second (in 1995, following the inaugural Cremaster 4), Cremaster 1 is set in the sculptor/filmmaker's hometown of Boise, ID, on the football field of Bronco Stadium. There, a flock of stewardesses and showgirls converge, forming intricate dance/movement patterns both on the field and in the sky, their actions dictated by Goodyear (Marti Domination), a goddess hovering overhead, simultaneously occupying two Goodyear blimps. While surveying her subjects, each version of Goodyear arranges grapes in a formation on the floor, which are then carried out by the dancers below. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi

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