Variety (1983)

Dir. Bette Gordon, English, USA

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Wed 25 September 2013 // 19:30 / Cinema


New York, New York

Remember when New York was filthy? This is the cinematic world of Variety, where the nightly wash of neon round Times Square holds a threatening edge, and desires are rated XXX.  Written by Kathy Acker, this lost gem of downtown post-punk cinema is both a time capsule from an energetic moment in American independent filmmaking and a simmering portrait of a young woman losing her grip on reality.

Christine is adrift, trying to pay the rent, when barmaid best friend Nan suggests a gig working in the box office of the Variety, a porn cinema.  Initially unphased by the job, curiosity soon gets the better of her and Christine is drawn into the world of her patrons, and grows increasing fascinated by a shadowy customer, with a fervour that spills into obsession. 

Before there was Girls, or Frances Ha

Before there was Girls, or Frances Ha, there has been a long line of art, film and literature dealing with young women, lost in the city and seeking something, a job, a relationship, a sense of what the hell they’re doing with their lives.   Hailed as "a feminist Vertigo" on its release by LA Weekly, Bette Gordon's feature film debut may pass the Bechdel Test, but is much more ambiguous than polemical, and the strange flip of voyeurism from a male to female perspective gives this character study some fascinatingly blurred edges.

Post-Punk 

As part of a downtown Manhattan scene/moment that featured Jim Jarmusch, Susan Seidelman, Amos Poe and others, as documented in last year’s Blank City,Variety features an impressive post-punk pedigree.  The film features the soon-to-be-famous photographer Nan Goldin as Christine's smart cookie barmaid pal, a sleazy voice cameo from Spalding Gray, an early turn by Luis Guzman as the porn cinema’s caretaker, and even a cameo from John Waters' muse and underground heroine Cookie Mueller.  John Lurie provides a suitably scuzzy jazz score and shooting duties fall to cinematographers John Foster (Wild StyleKeane) and Tom DiCillo (Stranger Than ParadiseUnderground U.S.A) with the latter going on to direct Johnny Suede and Living in Oblivion.

Little screened in the UK, this is a welcome opportunity to discover a classic of feminist underground transgressive New York cinema.  

Reviews

Written by blood-and-guts flavour of the month Kathy Acker, and directed by New York feminist film-maker Gordon, this boldly goes into feminine response to pornography - and the results are by no means predictable.” – Time Out

"Bette Gordon's film and I share the same tastes. It's into urban cultures and lifestyles, perversity, seedy underworlds, truer visions of the downtrodden, pop art, John Lurie's jazz, lights, and the dark heart of the city." - Innergenre

Tonight Variety is presented on 35mm by She Shark Industries, a new independent enterprise from film programmer Kate Taylor.


TICKETS:

On the door: £5 / £3.50

Advance tickets: £4.50 / £3 http://www.wegottickets.com/event/236489

Event on facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/events/1407323336151918/?fref=ts

This film is being programmed as part of the Scalarama Season