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Frisk (1995)

Frisk (1995)
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A man pursues his sexual obsessions to their darkest and most dangerous extremes in this gay-themed drama based on a novel by Dennis Cooper. Dennis (Michael Gunther) is a gay man, who as a teenager developed a perverse attraction to violent pornography and simulated snuff photographs, which he describes in great detail in a series of letters to his former lover Julian (Jaie Laplante). As Dennis grows older, his fascination with the darker side of the sexual underground grows more intense, and in time he meets Henry (Craig Chester), a masochist who posed for some of the pictures that sparked his interest in S&M. When Dennis learns that Henry was murdered, he weaves the incident into an elaborate fantasy, in which Dennis suffers a painful death in a dungeon of erotic torture. In time, Dennis graduates from violent fantasies to sadistic interludes with a male prostitute (Michael Stock) and eventually plans a series of sexually-oriented murders, concluding with an episode in which Dennis and two collaborators (Parker Posey and James Lyons) drug a young punk (Alexis Arquette) into unconsciousness. After having group sex, Dennis and his cohorts murder the punk. As one might expect, Frisk proved to be highly controversial and received a sharply divided reaction in its screening as the closing night attraction at the 1996 San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival; some hailed it as a disturbing and iconoclastic masterpiece, while roughly half the audience angrily stormed out of the theater before the film's conclusion. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Michael GuntherParker Posey, (more)
Director(s):
Todd Verow
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Frisk

A man pursues his sexual obsessions to their darkest and most dangerous extremes in this gay-themed drama based on a novel by Dennis Cooper. Dennis (Michael Gunther) is a gay man, who as a teenager developed a perverse attraction to violent pornography and simulated snuff photographs, which he describes in great detail in a series of letters to his former lover Julian (Jaie Laplante). As Dennis grows older, his fascination with the darker side of the sexual underground grows more intense, and in time he meets Henry (Craig Chester), a masochist who posed for some of the pictures that sparked his interest in S&M. When Dennis learns that Henry was murdered, he weaves the incident into an elaborate fantasy, in which Dennis suffers a painful death in a dungeon of erotic torture. In time, Dennis graduates from violent fantasies to sadistic interludes with a male prostitute (Michael Stock) and eventually plans a series of sexually-oriented murders, concluding with an episode in which Dennis and two collaborators (Parker Posey and James Lyons) drug a young punk (Alexis Arquette) into unconsciousness. After having group sex, Dennis and his cohorts murder the punk. As one might expect, Frisk proved to be highly controversial and received a sharply divided reaction in its screening as the closing night attraction at the 1996 San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival; some hailed it as a disturbing and iconoclastic masterpiece, while roughly half the audience angrily stormed out of the theater before the film's conclusion. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
84 mins

Complete Cast of Frisk


Director(s):
Todd Verow
Writer(s):
Todd Verow
Producer(s):
Marcus HuJon Gerrans
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Member Reviews
 
Enoch J.

Okay, it isn't the 1934 classic movie nor the novel by William Somerset Maugham but the tip-off should be "dark film" and an iconic gay magazine cover -- gagging yet? The controversy of course is that sexual games of S&M and bondage are not linked to murder and violence--psychopathic behavior. Again, "dark film"--Parker Posey is a cast member? One might add, "dark comedy" since it takes hyperbolic reference to development of obsessive desires and plucks every image of psychological disturbance into the character's grim descent into asocial behavior. This film was not the needed thing when pushing for gay rights against Robertson and Dobson information-fed fanatics. And, as a non XXX film dealing with S&M, this is a tame film--compared to what some San Francisco studios were churning out in 1996.

Yes   |   No

 
Jason R.

Disturbing

Yes   |   No

 
Adrian W.

Raunchy, low-grade, and unpleasant, this film is more about the pointless murder of youthful victims for the wacko joy of it. Yuk.

Yes   |   No

 
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