J. Hoberman
The Making and Unmaking of Flaming Creatures
1963, 45 min., 16mm, b/w
Recognized as an unprecedented visionary masterpiece, Flaming Creatures was also reviled, rioted over, banned as porn, and pondered by the Supreme Court. “Jack Smith described Flaming Creatures as ‘a comedy set in a haunted movie studio.’ It is that, as well as the single most important and influential underground movie ever released in America,” according to J. Hoberman, film critic of The Village Voice for more than 30 years and an authority on the Smith performance and film oeuvre. “Smith’s movie was a source of inspiration for artists as disparate as Andy Warhol, Federico Fellini and John Waters but he never completed another.” Find out why. Hoberman’s books include The Dream Life: Movies, Media and the Mythology of the Sixties and Bridge of Light: Yiddish Cinema Between Two Worlds.
In person: J. Hoberman
Curated by Steve Anker.
Funded in part with generous support from Wendy Keys and Donald Pels.
| Date & time | General Admission |
Students with current I.D. |
CalArts Students, Faculty and Staff |
| Mon 11.09.09 8:30 pm | $9 | $7 | $5 |
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