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Whore
1991 - USA - 80 min. - Feature, Color
Genre/Type |
Drama |
Keywords |
adoption, bum [hobo],
prostitute/prostitution, ex-husband, pimp |
Themes |
Prostitutes |
Tones |
Lurid, Hallucinatory, Disturbin |
Box office |
$1.008 million |
From play |
Bondage |
PLOT
SINOPSIS
Russell's avowed purpose with Whore was to avoid the glamorous
depiction of prostitution common to such slick Hollywood products as
Pretty Woman. As played by Theresa Russell (no relation to Ken), the
eponymous character lives a hellish existence. Relating her story
directly to the camera, Russell introduces us to her no-good former
husband (Jason Saucier), her brutish pimp (Benjamin Mouton), and the
kinkiest of her "johns." Her one true friend, a bag man named Rasta
(Antonio Fargas), also saves her life -- but not her soul. The film
exists in three versions: an 82-minute R cut, an 82-minute NC-17
cut, and the 92-minute European version, which sometimes carries a
rating, sometimes merely a disclaimer.
REVIEW
Ken Russell invited plenty of ill will upon Whore with its
in-your-face title and so-gritty-it's-downright-bleak approach. The
world's oldest profession has typically been prettied up for the
cinema (the "whore with the heart of gold" being one of its oldest
archetypes), but Russell bucks that trend with such belligerence
that it's nothing more than off-putting. Theresa Russell's
dehumanization is so unyielding that the performance quickly becomes
a caricature. She tussles with pimps, johns, and cops, she spouts
disinterested dirty talk while rolling her eyes during intercourse.
Ken Russell spends so much of the movie cramming home his message,
and his agenda becomes abundantly clear so quickly, it's the viewer
who's likeliest to become disinterested in no time at all. In some
ways it's an update of Russell's equally polarizing Crimes of
Passion (1984), which provided a pretty dingy glimpse into this
world in its own right. Apparently convinced he wasn't hardcore
enough back then, Russell strips even more soul from his characters
for this go-around. The viewer gets backed into a corner in which
all he or she feels is the contempt, none of the sympathy that might
naturally arise from a true documentary, rather than a maverick
attempt at ruthless fiction filmmaking that emulates the documentary
form. By the end, the viewer just wants to cleanse the pallet and
clean the VCR heads, but from feeling sullied, not shaken or moved.
CAST |
Theresa Russell - Liz
Benjamin Mouton - Blake
Antonio Fargas - Rasta
Sanjay - Indian
Elizabeth Morehead - Katie
Michael Crabtree - Man in Car
John Diehl - Derelict
Robert O'Reilly - Young Man in Camero
Jason Kristofer - Shy Kid
Jack Nance - Man Who Helps Liz
Frank Smith - Charlie
Jason Saucier - Bill
Lee Arenberg - Violent Man
Ginger Lynn Allen - Wounded Girl
Jered Barclay - Dead Trick in Car
Bob Prupas - Maitre d'
Joy Baggish - Flo
Daniel Beer - Bill's Drinking Partner
Ken Russell - Waiter |
Daniel Quinn - Brutal Man
Blanche Sindelar - Theater Cashier
Danny Trejo - Tattoo Artist
B.J. Ward - Theatre Manager
Tom Villard - Hippie
Scott David-King - Cop on Bike
Sean Fitzpatrick - Cop on Bike
Linda Francis
Amanda Goodwin - Liz's Girlfriend
Alisa Christensen - Lady in Toilet
John Carlyle - Shoe Fetish Man
Barbara Eaton - 2nd Stripper
Stephanie Blake - 1st Stripper
Barbara Mallory - Rachel
Gail McMullen - Nurse in Convalescent Home
Scott Harte - Chris
Bobby Bruce - Strolling Violinist
Charles Macauley - Older Man in Car
Doug MacHugh - Man in Diner |