Andy Warhol Movies
American pop artist Andy Warhol became a pop icon himself, symbolizing the wild decadence of the "beautiful people" of the 1970s. Born Andrew Warhola in Pennsylvania, he studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology before designing advertisements for women's shoes. After gaining notoriety for his pop-art renditions of things such as Campbell's Soup cans and silk screens of Marilyn Monroe, Warhol began making experimental films during the early '60s. Most of his early works were little more than passive chronicles of the ordinary. For example, in the film Sleep, he simple recorded a man sleeping for several hours. Such endeavors were heralded as groundbreaking by other experimental filmmakers, but the public and most critics generally regarded them as wastes of film, and their time. Still, Warhol continued making these plotless films until he eventually began adding crude soundtracks and sketchy scripts. Many of these films are filled with his "players": the beautiful people, "freaks," and wealthy dilettantes that constantly surrounded the artist and his "Factory," an art studio he founded in 1962. His films became a form of cinéma vérité, a voyeur's delight of strange people doing equally strange things. Some of the players Warhol turned into underground celebrities included Candy Darling, Viva, Holly Woodlawn, and Ingrid Superstar. Simply playing versions of themselves, they left the viewer to decide if they were, in fact, real people or simply fantastical figures. Many of Warhol's films were centered on sex and death, and the sex in his films was often explicit and transcended traditional gender boundaries. In 1968, Warhol was wounded by a disgruntled Factory reject, an incident which inspired the 1996 movie I Shot Andy Warhol. While healing, he began to withdraw from filmmaking, closed the Factory, and turned the reins of his operation over to filmmakers such as Paul Morrissey, who helped make subsequent movies more commercially accessible. Morrissey was behind Warhol's best known films Flesh for Frankenstein and Blood for Dracula, both of which were shot while in Rome in 1973. Although Warhol never fully recovered from the attempt on his life and had stopped making films, he did continue his voyeurism of the strange lives of his illustrious friends via the Polaroid camera he carried with him until he died in 1987 from complications following surgery. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie GuideThis silent, grainy black-and-white film, shot at 24 frames per second and projected at 16 f.p.s., is one of the first of Warhol's early open-form, portraiture movies. In contrast to the scripted movies like Hedy the Shoplifter, or semi-directed films by Chuck Wein (My Hustler, Nude Restaurant, Beauty No. 2, Poor Little Rich Girl), and the almost fully directed and scripted Paul Morrissey pieces (Lonesome Cowboys), Warhol would just mention a simple idea to the actors in Haircut who then spontaneously created their movements and attitudes. Four men are in a rather seedy garret interior lit by a single bare light bulb mounted in a fixture sitting on a dresser with hair products (?) on it. One man (Billy Name) cuts another's (Billy Linich) hair, one stands seductively, and one in a kind of Australian hat takes slow drags off a pipe. They speak casually, behave as if they are stars, mocking, homoerotic, and distant, with an edge that is not lighthearted "camp." At times they fall into abstract posing configurations, while the camera obsesses on the indistinct borders of things. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, All Movie Guide
With the exception of 1963's Tarzan and Jane Regained...Sort of, which used a soundtrack created by Taylor Mead, Harlot was Warhol's first foray into sound film. It stars a transvestite named Mario Montez (in honor of Hollywood star Maria Montez), who sits in full drag on a couch in Warhol's Factory, suggestively eating bananas. A bored woman sits beside him, and two men (one of them in a tuxedo) stand behind them. Off-screen, Ronald Tavel, Billy Name, and Harry Fainlight discuss, among other things, the pros and cons of various female movie stars. With typical Warholian perversity, the characters onscreen remain for the most part silent. This primitive dialectic between sound and image would be developed more successfully in such later films as The Chelsea Girls. ~ Tom Vick, All Movie Guide
The morning after he completed filming his eight-hour study of the Empire State Building, Empire, Andy Warhol used the same rented camera and two leftover 1200-foot film magazines to make this silent feature-length portrait of Henry Geldzahler. Geldzahler was at the time a curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and a friend and supporter of Warhol. This film was one of few instances where Warhol actually did simply turn on the camera and leave the room, returning only to change film magazines midway through the shoot. Sitting on a couch and armed with a cigar and a pair of sunglasses, Geldzahler at first seems to regard the camera as a challenge, but through the course of the film his haughty demeanor crumbles under the weight of his boredom, and he ends up curled in a fetal position, waiting for the film to run out. ~ Tom Vick, All Movie Guide
The action in the first reel takes place at a bungalow on the beach at Fire Island. Ed Hood (the John) plays a bitchy, aging queen has ordered a blonde male hustler, Paul (Paul America) from a service called "Dial-a-Hustler." He is watching the hustler from the back porch of the bungalow, where he is joined by self-described "fag hag" Genevieve (Genevieve Charbon), who wants to steal Paul away from the John just to see him suffer. Another, older hustler (Joe Campbell, also known as "The Sugar Plum Fairy"), shows up, claiming already to have "had" Paul, much to the consternation of the John, who proposes a bet to see who will win Paul's heart and soul in the end. The entire second reel takes place in a bathroom which is filmed from the hallway outside an open door. Sugar Plum and Paul are showering, shaving, and cleaning up as they have a long conversation about the pros and cons of hustling. Sugar Plum is about to make the move on Paul when he is interrupted by Genevieve, who promises Paul a good time if she will go off with him. Genevieve is followed by the John, who offers Paul money, cars, and girls in exchange for companionship. A woman (Dorothy Dean) with lipstick and glasses, not previously seen in the film, stops by to suggest that hustling might not be the best career choice for Paul and that he should probably seek an education instead. The question is left hanging as the film runs out of Andy Warhol's camera. ~ David Lewis, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paul America, Ed Wiener, (more)
By 1965, Jack Smith was exhibiting versions of Normal Love, mixing his soundtracks live and often re-editing the film as it was being shown. After Smith's death, Jerry Tartaglia prepared this restored 105-minute version, which premiered in 1997. Although shot on backdated color-film stock and paced more languidly than Flaming Creatures, Normal Love again features women and cross-dressed men in an idyll of sexual anarchy. Smith filmed almost entirely outdoors, emphasizing pinks and greens in the scenery, costumes, and props, and combining textural passages with allusions to film icons such as the Mummy and the Werewolf, Maria Montez, and Busby Berkeley. The inspired finale is set atop a massive pink cake (where the dancing Cake Cuties include Andy Warhol). The Yellow Sequence, an additional 20 minutes of footage -- in which gold tones predominate and the players include Tiny Tim -- was also restored by Tartaglia as an addendum to Normal Love, and the two films are inevitably shown together under the single title. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mario Montez, Diana Baccus, (more)
A day in the life of Andy Warhol, shot in documentary style and condensed into just 22 minutes (or 18, according to some sources) by filmmaker Marie Menken. ~ David Lewis, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Andy Warhol












