Trash (1970 film)

Trash (alternate title: Andy Warhol's Trash) is a 1970 American drama film directed and written by Paul Morrissey and starring Joe Dallesandro, Holly Woodlawn and Jane Forth. Dallesandro had previously starred in several other Andy Warhol/Paul Morrissey films such as The Loves of Ondine, Lonesome Cowboys, San Diego Surf, and Flesh. Dallesandro was Morrissey's preferred leading man.

Trash
Directed byPaul Morrissey
Written byPaul Morrissey
StarringJoe Dallesandro
Holly Woodlawn
Jane Forth
Release date
  • October 5, 1970 (1970-10-05)
Running time
110 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25,000

Woodlawn made her screen debut in this film; director George Cukor famously instigated a write-in campaign to have her nominated for an Academy Award, but this didn't materialize. Jane Forth, a 17-year-old model, also makes her debut in this film. She would shortly afterwards appear on the cover of Look magazine. The film also features other Warhol superstars such as Andrea Feldman and Geri Miller. Sissy Spacek also made a quick uncredited appearance as 'a girl who sits at the bar' but was cut from the final film.

The film features graphic scenes of intravenous drug use, sex, and frontal nudity.

Plot

Joe Smith, a heroin addict, is on a quest to score more drugs. Joe has problematic relationship with his on-off, sexually frustrated girlfriend, Holly Sandiago.

During the course of the day, Joe overdoses in front of an upper-class couple, attempts to fool welfare into approving his methadone treatment by having Holly fake a pregnancy, and frustrates the women in his life with his drug-induced impotence.

Cast

Reception

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and wrote that it was "aware of its own ludicrousness ... The humor grows out of the incongruity of the actors, the situation, the movie, the audience. 'Trash' passes right through pornography and emerges on the other side."[1] Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the film "true-blue movie-making, almost epic, funny and vivid, though a bit rotten at the core," concluding, "'Trash' is alive, but like the people in it, it continually parodies itself, and thus it represents a kind of dead end in filmmaking."[2] Variety wrote that the film was "the most comprehensible, least annoying and possibly most commercial of a long line of quasi-porno features from 'Chelsea Girls' to 'Lonesome Cowboys.'[3] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three stars out of four and wrote, "The Warhol-Morrissey world is a strange one, but in many ways, especially if taken in infrequent doses, a far more real world than the formula Hollywood drama or comedy. The actors are solidly in touch with their madness and can improvise with wit."[4] Kevin Kelly of The Boston Globe slammed the film as "worthless excess of an amateur rank beneath consideration."[5] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "What Morrissey did in his first film 'Flesh' and now in this sometimes uproariously funny, sometimes desperately sad new work is to draw upon the far-out scene of the Warhol superstars and utilize the same basic setups of extended dialogs between two or three people."[6]

See also

References

  1. Ebert, Roger (March 5, 1971). "Trash". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved December 19, 2018.
  2. Canby, Vincent (October 6, 1970). "Film: Andy Warhol's 'Trash' Arrives". The New York Times. 57.
  3. "Film Reviews: Trash". Variety. September 30, 1970. 20.
  4. Siskel, Gene (March 1, 1971). "Trash". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 13.
  5. Kelly, Kevin (October 18, 1970). "Warhol's 'Trash' precisely that". The Boston Globe. A-17.
  6. Thomas, Kevin (December 25, 1970). "'Trash' an Urban Odyssey". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 27.
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