Frisk (film) explained

Frisk
Director:Todd Verow
Producer:Jon Gerrans
Marcus Hu
Music:Coil, Lee Ranaldo
Cinematography:Greg Watkins
Editing:Todd Verow
Distributor:Strand Releasing
Runtime:88 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Frisk is a 1995 American drama film directed by Todd Verow, based on the 1991 novel of the same name by author Dennis Cooper. It is a first-person narrative about a serial killer. Dennis (Michael Gunther) describes a series of ritual murders in letters to his sometime lover and best friend Julian (Jaie Laplante) and Julian's younger brother Kevin (Raoul O'Connell), an object of desire to Dennis.

Verow once explained in an interview "we really need to concentrate on what makes us unique, what makes us interesting and what makes us dangerous".[1]

It is banned in the UK due to its content. It was rejected by the BBFC in 1998, and although still banned in UK, it has been shown without a certificate at London's ICA cinema.[2] It was the closing night attraction at the 1996 San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.[3] When screened in Manhattan, several cinema viewers left during the violent scenes.[4]

Bob Mould mooted scoring the film in 1993. Dennis Cooper's work, he said, "deals with a lot of fetishes and fantasies and free-floating imagery, which I like a lot. I've read the book. It's pretty harsh. It's pretty gay."[5]

Cast

Reviews

In 1996, Stephen Holden of the New York Times called the film "harshly repellent" and "realistic but messy style that might be called cold porn for its utter lack of erotic warmth". It is "meandering and narratively diffuse, but it is also disturbingly well acted".[4]

Notes and References

  1. Carl Stychin and Didi Herman (Editors)
  2. Web site: Banned in the UK . letterboxd.com . 17 June 2016 . 11 November 2018 . en.
  3. Web site: Frisk (1996) . Rotten Tomatoes . 11 November 2018.
  4. News: Holden . Stephen . FILM REVIEW;Where Gory Ends Wait For Drugged-Out Punks . 11 November 2018 . New York Times . 22 March 1996 . en.
  5. David. Cavanagh. Sidewalking. Select. July 1993. 72.