Cult Movies
The phrase “cult movie” is now used
so often and so broadly that the concept it refers to has become rather
difficult to delimit, especially given the sheer diversity of films
that have
been brought together under the term. Cult movies are often referred to
as
though they were a very specific and particular genre, but this is not
the
case, since such films fall into an enormous variety of different
formal and
stylistic categories. Indeed, many cult movies are categorized as such
precisely because of their cross- or multi-genre narratives, or other
offbeat
qualities that take them outside the realm of genre completely.
Films can develop cult followings in
various ways -- on the basis
of their modes of production or exhibition, their internal textual
features, or
through acts of appropriation by specific audiences. The usual
definition of
the cult movie generally relies on a sense of its distinction from
mainstream
cinema. This, of course, raises issues about the role of the cult movie
as an
oppositional form, and its strained relationship with processes of
institutionalization and classification. Fans of cult movies often
describe
them as quite distinct from the commercial film industries and the
mainstream
media, but many such films are actually far more dependent on these
forms than
their fans are often willing to admit.
Most cult
movies are low-budget productions, and most are undeniably flawed in
some way,
even if this means just poor quality acting or cheap special effects.
Many deal
with subject matter that is repulsive or distasteful, but most of the
movies
which have garnered cult followings have done so not because they are
necessarily shocking or taboo, but rather because they are made from
highly
individual viewpoints, and involve strange narratives, eccentric
characters,
garish sets or other quirky elements, which can be as apparently
insignificant
as a single unique image or cameo appearance by a particular bit-part
actor or
actress. Many cult movies lack mass appeal, and many would have
disappeared
from film history completely were it not for their devoted fans, whose
following often takes the form of a fiery passion.
“B”-Movies and “Trash”
Perhaps the first movies to develop
cult followings were “B” --movies -- those quickly-made, cheaply
produced films
that had their heyday in Hollywood’s “Golden Age.” “B” movies began to
proliferate in the mid-1930s, when distributors felt that “double
features”
might stand a chance of luring increasingly frugal Depression audiences
back to
the theaters. And their strategy worked. Contemporary audiences of
devoted
cinema-goers thrilled to cheap “B”-movie fare like The Mummy’s Hand
(1940), The Face Behind the Mask (1941), Cobra Woman (1944), and White Savage (1943). Often
(but not always) horror or science-fiction films, these movies were
inexpensively produced and usually unheralded -- except by their fans,
who
often found more to enjoy in these bottom-rung “guilty pleasures” than
in the
high-profile epics their profits supported.
“B”-movies were cheaply made, but
not necessarily poor in quality. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s,
however, a
number of rather inept films were made
that have subsequently developed substantial cult followings. This
“trash”
movie aesthetic was founded on an appreciation for the low-budget
movies of the
fifties and sixties. Struggling with severe budgetary limitations,
directors
were regularly forced to come up with makeshift costuming and set
design
solutions that produced truly strange and sometimes unintentionally
comic
results. This gave birth to a specific aesthetic, one which was later
borrowed
by underground filmmakers like Andy Warhol, Jack Smith and the Kuchar
Brothers,
who also made their films in the cheapest possible way.
Most of the original “trash” cinema
failed miserably at the box office, and has developed a cult reputation
only in
retrospect, after being re-appropriated
by a later audience with an eye for nostalgic irony. For the most part,
the
films were not products of the big Hollywood studios; most of them were
made
independently, often with an eye to the drive-in theater market, and
sometimes
outside the United States. Such films include the Japanese monster epic
Godzilla
(1956) and its low-budget Danish
imitation Reptilicus (1962), as well as shabby Boris Karloff
vehicles
like Die Monster Die (1965), and bizarre sexploitation films
like The
Wild Women of Wongo (1958). Today, many movie buffs are drawn to
the camp,
kitschy qualities of these movies -- their minimal budgets, low
production
values, and appalling acting. Many such films were made by Roger
Corman, who
originally specialized in quickie productions with low-budget resources
and
little commercial marketing, including Attack of the Crab Monsters
(1957) and Creature from the Haunted Sea (1960). Corman’s place
in cult
film history is also assured by his unrivalled eye for talent; among
many
world-class names who were employed by him at a very early stage in
their
careers are Jack Nicholson, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese,
Jonathan
Demme, James Cameron, and Peter Bogdanovich.
The unrivalled king of ‘trash
cinema’ was undoubtedly Edward D. Wood, Jr., whose output – films like Bride
of the Monster (1955) and Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959) –
are
considered the nadir of naïve charm. These movies have been much
celebrated in
retrospect because of their unique and endearing ineptitud, and for the
implausibility of their premises. Like most other ‘bad’ cult movies,
Wood’s
films lack any kind of finesse or imagination or wit, but are loved by
their fans
for precisely this reason. Significantly, cults have also recently
grown up
around more contemporary ‘bad’ movies. For example, almost immediately
after
the theatrical release of Paul Verhoeven’s Showgirls (1995),
which
recouped only half its forty million dollar cost, the film opened in
Los
Angeles and then in New York as a midnight cult movie. This phenomenon
suggests
that the cult movie aesthetic is not necessarily antithetical to the
big-budget, mass-market, mode of production nourished by the major
Hollywood
studios.
It also raises the question of the
distinction between “cult” and “camp.” Generally speaking, camp began
in the
incestuous New York underground theater and film communities, and is a
quality
of the way movies are received, rather than a deliberate quality of the
films
themselves. Indeed, camp, according to author Susan Sontag, is always
the
product of pure passion, on however grand or pathetic a scale, somehow
gone
strangely awry. To be considered camp, it is not enough for a film to
fail, or
to seem dated, or extreme, or freakish – there must be a genuine
passion and
sincerity about its creation. Camp is all about a faith and emotion in
the film
that is shared by director and audience, often across the passage of
time,
contradicting the popular assumption that camp is concerned only with
surfaces,
and the superficial.
The two concepts—camp and
cult--clearly overlap in a number of ways; many films develop cult
followings
because of their camp qualities. For example, many studio films have
attracted
a retrospective devotion through a process of re-appropriation on the
part of
gay audiences. This is especially true of films that star gay icons
like Joan
Crawford, Judy Garland, Liza Minelli or Barbra Streisand in especially
melodramatic or pathetic roles. Such films include Mildred Pierce
(1945), The Best of Everything (1959), A Star is Born,
(the 1954
and 1976 versions), Whatever
Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), and similar pictures that are
considered by
their fans to be especially mawkish, sentimental, overly serious or too
straight faced. For example, the 1981 Joan Crawford biopic Mommie
Dearest
was almost immediately proclaimed a camp masterpiece by Crawford’s gay
followers, and hit the midnight circuit immediately after its first
run.
Other
films have developed cult followings
because of their unique presentation of new gimmicks or special
effects. For
example, Herschell Gordon Lewis’s drive-in blockbuster Blood Feast
(1963) has attained cult status partly because it was the first film to
feature
human entrails and dismembered bodies “in blood color”. The films of
William
Castle have attracted a cult following mainly thanks to their
pioneering use of
low-budget publicity schemes and special effects like Percepto
(specially
wired-up seats) for The Tingler (1955), Emergo (a cardboard
skeleton on
a wire hanging over the audience) for The House on Haunted Hill
(1958)
and Illusion-O (a 3-D viewer) for 13 Ghosts (1960), although
there are
those who claim that Castle’s most successful gimmick was his use of
the hammy,
smooth-voiced Vincent Price. In a similar way, John Waters’s Polyester
(1981) is a cult film partly because of its use of Odorama (audience
scratch-and-sniff cards), and Roger Vadim’s Barbarella (1968)
has
achieved cult status mainly due to the extravagance of its costumes and
sets,
including Jane Fonda’s thigh-high boots and fur-lined spaceship.
There are also a number of iconic
directors whose every movie has attained cult status, mainly because
their
films tend to replicate the same individual fascinations, or
pathologies. A
good example is Russ Meyer, whose films are especially popular among
those
fans, both male and female, who share his obsessions with supremely
buxom
actresses engaged in theatrical violence. Most typical of the Meyer
oeuvre is
perhaps Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1966), which features
three
leather-clad, voluptuous, thrill-seeking women in go-go boots out to
raise
hell.
A different kind of cult movie is
the film that has attracted curiosity because of the particular
circumstances
surrounding its release. Such films may have been banned in certain
states, for
example; they may have had controversial lawsuits brought against them,
or they
may have been associated with particularly violent crimes, like A
Clockwork
Orange (1971) or Taxi Driver (1976). Or they may be
notoriously
difficult to get hold of, like Todd Haynes’s Superstar – The Karen
Carpenter
Story (1987), a study in celebrity and anorexia in the guise of a
biopic
performed by Barbie dolls. The movie was quickly taken off the market
for
copyright reasons, but has still managed to attract a substantial cult
following.
In other cases, films attain
retrospective cult status because of the circumstances surrounding
their
production. For example, The Terror
(1963) is a cult film partly because of Jack Nicholson’s early
appearance in a starring role, and Donovan’s Brain (1953) gains
cult
status because of the presence of the actress Nancy Davis, later to
become
better-known as First Lady Nancy Reagan. Moreover, scandalous public
disclosures that accumulate around actors or actresses inevitably give
their
films a certain amount of morbid cult interest. For example, in his Hollywood
Babylon books (1975 and 1984), underground filmmaker Kenneth Anger
keeps a
toll of films involving one or more celebrities who eventually took
their own
lives, all of which have since come to attain an odd kind of cult
status of
their own. Anger also discusses “cursed” films that feature stars who
died soon
after production was completed – films like Rebel Without a Cause
(1955), starring James Dean, and The Misfits (1960), starring
Marilyn
Monroe. In cases like these, knowing fans often enjoy subjecting the
film to
microscopic scrutiny in a search for telltale betrayals of bad health,
signals
of some emotional meltdown, portents of future tragedy, or innocently
spoken
words of irony, regardless of what else might be happening on screen.
For
example, parallels are often drawn between the death of James Dean in
an
automobile accident, and the “chicken run” scene in Rebel Without a
Cause,
in which Jim Stark (Dean) and his friend are driving two stolen cars
toward the
edge of a cliff; the first one to jump out is “a chicken.” Jim rolls
out at the
last second, but his friend's coat sleeve is caught in the door handle,
and he
hurtles over the cliff to his death. In the aftermath, we hear Dean's
anguished
cry: “a boy was killed!”
Cult movies cross all boundaries of taste,
form, style and genre.
There are cult westerns like Johnny Guitar (1954), cult
musicals like The
Sound of Music (1965) cult romances like Gone with the Wind
(1939),
cult documentaries like Gates of Heaven (1978), cult drug
movies like Easy
Rider (1969), and cult teen movies, like, American Graffiti (1973), Animal House (1978), and
Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused (1993). There are cult
exploitation films like Reefer Madness (1936), cult
blaxploitation films
like Shaft (1971), and cult porn movies like Deep Throat
and Behind
the Green Door (both 1972). Many cult films are music-based, and
have
developed a lasting following on the basis of their soundtrack alone.
These
include Tommy (1975), Rock and Roll High School (1979),
The
Blues Brothers (1980), and Pink Floyd: The Wall (1982).
And then there are movies that have
developed cult reputations simply because they convey a certain mood,
evoke a
certain atmosphere or time period, are irrefutably strange and creepy,
or are
just an acquired taste. Examples include films as diverse as Harold
and
Maude (1971), D.O.A (1981), Diva (1982), Blade
Runner
(1982), Scarface (1983), Repo Man (1984), Pee-Wee’s
Big
Adventure (1985), The Toxic
Avenger (1985), Hard Boiled (1992) and The Big Lebowski
(1998). And while most of these movies seem to attract male-based
cults, female
followings have grown up around fashion-conscious “chick flicks” like Valley
of the Dolls (1967), the teen movie Clueless (1995), and
anti-teen
movie Heathers (1989).
Midnight Movies
The first
movie to be “officially” shown at a midnight screening was Alexandro
Joderowsky’s
odd drama El Topo, (1970) which was discovered by Ben
Barenholtz, booker
for the Elgin theater in New York, at a Museum of Modern Art screening.
Barenholtz allegedly persuaded the film’s distributor to allow him to
play it
at midnight at the Elgin, because – as the poster announced – the film
was “too
heavy to be shown any other way.” The disturbing film was a runaway
success,
and midnight premieres of offbeat movies eventually became (with
varying
degrees of success) a regular aspect of distribution, initially in New
York,
and later elsewhere. The aim of the concept was to provide a forum for
unusual,
eccentric, distasteful or otherwise bizarre movies. The best kind of
audience
for these films generally tended to be those who were not averse to
going out
to see a film in the middle of the night – usually a younger, hipper
group of
urban movie fans not easily put off by unconventional themes, scenes of
drug
use, nudity or violence. Indeed, many of the midnight movies that
attained cult
success did so because they transgressed various kinds of social
taboos. For
example, when its run had come to an end, El Topo was followed
at the
Elgin by Pink Flamingos (1972), which had late-night audiences
lined up
around the block. In fact, all John Waters’s films eventually became
staples of
the midnight movie circuit, especially Polyester (1981) and Hairspray
(1988), with their grotesque vignettes held together by the loosest of
narratives and a distastefully ugly cast of garish grandmothers and
white-trash
oddballs, generally led by the overweight transvestite, Divine.
One of the most significant
midnight movies was Eraserhead (1978),
the nightmarish first film made by cult director David
Lynch, which contained a series of disturbing images in a
post-apocalyptic setting.
Lynch went on to make other movies which soon developed cult
followings,
including Blue Velvet (1986) and Wild at Heart (1990),
both
filled with dark, odd and ambiguous characters. Other important movies
which
gradually developed a cult following after being shown over the years
on the
midnight circuit include Freaks, (1932), Night of the
Living Dead
(1968), The Evil Dead (1983) and Re-Animator (1985).
Essentially, the real key to the
success of a midnight movie was the film’s relationship with its
audience, and
the slavish devotion of its fans. Perhaps the most successful midnight
movie of
all time was the Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), a
low-budget
film adaptation of Richard O’Brien’s glam stage hit about two square
lovebirds
who enter the realm of an outrageous Gothic transsexual. A failure when
it was
first released, midnight screenings at the Waverly Theater in New York
City
quickly established Rocky Horror as an aberrant smash, starting
a trend
in audiences for interactive entertainment. As the film garnered a
significant
cult following over the late 1970s and early 1980s, audiences began to
arrive
at the theater dressed in costume, carrying various props to wave and
throw in
the aisles as they yelled responses to characters’ lines and joined in
singing
and dancing to the musical numbers on screen.
Cult Classics
A film does not have to be offbeat,
obscure or low-budget to attain a cult following. On the contrary, a
number
of critically-acclaimed movies have
attained cult status precisely because their high quality and skilful
performances, as well as their emotional power, have given them
enduring
appeal. These kinds of films are often described as “cult classics”
because,
while attracting a fiercely devoted band of followers, they are films
that most
mainstream audiences and critics have also praised and admired. Unlike
ordinary
cult movies, cult classics are often products of the big Hollywood
studios, and
most of them are made in the United States. Moreover, unlike many cult
movies,
cult classics are neither weird, offbeat or strange, but often
sentimental and
heart-warming. They include such films as It’s a Wonderful Life
(1946), Miracle
on 34th Street (1947), and The Wizard of Oz (1939). One of
the most
deeply-loved of such films is Casablanca (1942) whose cult –
or so
legend has it – began in the early 1950s,
when the Brattle Theater adjoining Harvard University in
Cambridge,
Massachusetts held a regular “Bogart week,” since the theater’s student
clientele
connected so clearly with Bogart’s sense of style. The series was shown
at
around final exam time, to bring the students some needed late-night
relief
from the stress of their studies, and culminated with a screening of Casablanca.
Bibliography:
Brottman, Mikita, Hollywood Hex. London: Creation
Books, 1999.
Everman, Welch, Cult Horror Films. New York: Carol
Publishing Group, 1993.
Hoberman, J. and Jonathan Rosenbaum, Midnight Movies.
New York: Harper and Row, 1983.
Jancovich, Mark, Antonio Lázarro
Rebolli and Andy Willis, eds., Defining
Cult Movies:
The
Cultural Politics of Oppositional Taste, Manchester and New York:
Manchester
University
Press, 2003.
Mendik, Xavier, and Graeme Harper, eds., Unruly
Pleasures: The Cult Film and its Critics.
Surrey,
U.K.: Fab Press, 2000.
Morton, Jim, Incredibly Strange Films. San Francisco:
RE Search Books, 1986.
Peary, Danny, Cult Movies: the Classics, the Sleepers,
the Weird and the Wonderful. New York:
Grammercy Books, 1998.
Stevenson, Jack, Land of a Thousand Balconies.
Manchester: Critical Vision, 2003.
Telotte, J.P., ed., The Cult Film Experience: Beyond All
Reason. Austin: University of Texas Press,
1991.
Mikita Brottman is professor of language and literature at
the Maryland Institute College of Art. She writes for both mainstream
and alternative
publications on the pathological and apocalyptic tendencies in
contemporary
culture. Recent publications include Offensive Films Nashville,
TN:
Vanderbilt University Press, 2005), and High Theory / Low Culture
(NY:
Palgrave, 2005).
Word count: 3000 approx.
Edward D. Wood, Jr. b.
Poughskeepie, New York, 1924, d.
Hollywood, 1978.
Often described as “the worst
director in history,” Wood’s following has exploded since his death in
1978.
For years, a small group of Ed Wood cultists treasured the two films
that were
commercially available -– Glen or Glenda? (1953) and Plan 9
From
Outer Space (1959) -- without knowing much about the man himself.
This all
changed in 1992, with the publication of Rudolph Grey’s reverent
biography Nightmare
of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of Edward D. Wood, Jr.; this was then
followed
by director Tim Burton’s runaway success Ed Wood (1994), a dark
comedy
based on the life, times and movies of the infamous director.
Wood's cult
status is due in part to his endearingly unorthodox personality and
unusual
openness about his sexual fetishes. A twice-married transvestite,Wood
fought in
World War II , and claimed to have been wearing a bra and panties under
his
uniform during a military landing. His ventures into Hollywood
movie-making
were ill-fated until, in 1953, he landed the chance to direct a film
based on
the Christine Jorgensen sex-change story. The result, Glen or Glenda
gave a fascinating insight into Wood's own obsessive personality, and
shed
light on his fascination with women's clothing (an almost unthinkable
subject
for an early 1950s feature) by
including the director’s own plea for tolerance toward
cross-dressers
like himself. This surreal, cheap (though well over-budget) and
virtually
incomprehensible film is notable for Bela Lugosi’s role as a scientist,
overseeing and “explaining” the action from outside the plot,
delivering
cryptic messages about gender directly to the audience. Neither Glen
or
Glenda nor any of Wood's subsequent movies were commercially
successful,
but he continued to make films until failing health and financial need
sent him
into a physical and emotional decline. Grey’s biography presents Wood
in his
later years as a moody alcoholic; sadly, the last period of his career,
before
his premature death at age 54, was spent
directing undistinguished soft and later hardcore pornography.
Wood’s best-known film is the infamous Plan
9 From Outer Space
(1959), which features aliens arriving on earth and attempting to
conquer the
planet by raising the dead. The film is notorious for its pathetic,
illogical
script, cardboard masonry, ridiculous “special effects,” and the use of
kitchen
utensils as space helmets. It stars the heavily-accented Swedish
wrestler Tor
Jonson, and a drug-addled, terminally ill Bela Lugosi who died during
production, and is sporadically replaced by a stand-in who, even with
his cape
drawn over his face, looks nothing at all like the decrepit Lugosi. The
film
also features the glamorous Finnish actress Maila Nurmi, better known
as
Vampira, generally believed to be the first late-night television
horror
hostess (and followed by many imitators, including the more successful
Elvira).
Plan 9 from Outer Space contains the only surviving footage of
Vampira,
although she has no dialogue in the film.
Wood’s films have been canonized by
cultists as high camp, and continue to be adored for their charming
ineptitude,
startling continuity gaps, bad acting, and irrelevant stock footage. In
Tim
Burton’s biopic, Johnny Depp plays Wood as an engaging kook, a
cross-dresser
obsessed with angora, financially impoverished but full of ideas, who
fought
for his dream so desperately that he finally made it happen. However,
those
familiar with Wood's films (and Grey's biography) usually claim that a
more
accurate portrait of this complicated man can be found in the 1994
documentary Look
Back in Angora, written and directed by Ted Newsom. This is a
thorough and
serious (though still very funny) portrait of Wood, including
interviews with
his wife Kathy, his ex-girlfriend Dolores Fuller, and his right hand
man Conrad
Brooks, among others.
Recommended Viewing:
Glen or Glenda? (1953), Bride of the Monster
(1955), Night of the Ghouls (1958), Plan 9 From Outer Space
(1959), Ed Wood (1994), Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora,
(1994).
Further Reading:
Grey, Rudloph. Nightmare of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of
Edward D. Wood, Jr., Los Angeles: Feral House, 1992.
Word Count: 500 words approx.