Skip to main content
Blu-ray Releases: Imprint: Whore (1991) - Reviewed
 |
Courtesy of Imprint |
The late idiosyncratic godfather of the French New Wave
cinema movement Jean-Luc Godard once remarked the best form of film criticism
possible is to not respond with words like I’m doing here but rather for people
to break down and make a movie in response.
While that sentence remains debatable in theory, in practice the concept
of answering one film with another is common in the film business. From Howard Hawks’ Rio Bravo answering
Fred Zinnemann’s High Noon to Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris answering
Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, the notion of one filmmaker
criticizing or reinterpreting another’s work by presenting their own new work in
response is as old as the medium itself.
Which brings us to the movie title you ‘can’t say but see’,
Ken Russell’s 1991 NC-17 prostitution drama Whore. A snarky rebuke of Garry Marshall’s hit Julia
Roberts’ starring romantic comedy Pretty Woman which Russell felt trivialized
the hardships endured by sex workers, the arguably last great film of Ken
Russell and second take on prostitution (Crimes of Passion being the
first) is perhaps the usually flamboyant provocateur’s tamest and most grounded
film to date. Where earlier Russell’s
tended towards absurdist detours ala Altered States, Gothic or The Lair of the White Worm, Whore adapted by Russell and Deborah Dalton
from David Hines’ monologue play Bondage is a fourth wall breaking
matter of fact exchange with the film’s titular heroine trying to survive in a
dangerous netherworld.
Starring a bravura Theresa Russell (Nicolas Roeg’s Bad
Timing and Insignificance) as LA street hooker Liz, the film follows
her exploits and degradations for survival in the past through flashback and
the present where she’s trying to escape the clutches of her domineering pimp
Blake (Benjamin Mouton). Throughout this
mostly dialogue driven stage-play-to-film transposition, the jaded battered Liz
looks into the camera and addresses the audience directly, leaning onto our
shoulder giving us the gory details with the earnestness of a confessional. In between clients she encounters a homeless
man named Rasta (Antonio Fargas) more keen on friendship than transaction, Liz
recounts her difficult childhood while trying to evade the pursuits of her
nefarious pimp.
A bit garrulous and episodic with a combination of graphic
dialogue and sometimes explicit sexual content, Russell’s immodest yet honest
look at the life of a sex worker on the run from her pimp shies away from the
director’s usual forays into excesses like The Music Lovers or The Devils, instead getting to know this woman and her imprisonment out in the
open world like a documentarian. Though
consistently snarky with occasional trademark Russellian campy acting, this
might be the late provocateur’s most straightforward picture which for all of
its illicit subject matter and especially its title manages to somehow refrain
from being exploitative itself.
Shot handsomely by Iranian cinematographer Amir Mokri, best known
for his work with Michael Bay, the film captures the rugged city terrain and
alleyways with a near-stagey artifice, reminding viewers of the film’s
theatrical stage play roots. Amazingly
the film garnered the compositional talents of John Woo’s Hard Boiled composer
Michael Gibbs who offers up a serviceable synthesized score augmenting the
dialogue driven proceedings. Theresa
Russell’s energetic, impassioned and somewhat sleazy performance doesn’t quite
climb the walls like she did with Bad Timing but nevertheless makes this
resourceful bad girl someone we invariably empathize with over the course of
the movie. With her expressive face, her
deliberately clunky delivery and foul-mouthed abandon, Russell makes Liz into a
hot mess with a mountain of baggage and dirty laundry to air out.
Though less showy than typical Ken Russell who himself
cameos in the piece alongside former porn star Ginger Lynn Allen, Danny Trejo
and even David Lynch regular Jack Nance, Whore by title and rating
invariably found itself crippled by the curse of the NC-17 rating. While a heavily edited version of the film in
R rated form was released at chains like Blockbuster Video, few viewers
actually got to see the film in its original theatrical release. Despite tanking at the box office and
garnering middling reviews from critics who almost always get their backs up
around Ken Russell, Whore enjoyed enough of a cult following through
viral videos and revival screenings that eventually the good folks at
Australian based blu-ray boutique label Imprint have finally granted this long
sought-after Russell gem a home video release after years of languishing on
tape and laserdisc.
Not necessarily the starting point for uninitiated Ken
Russell viewers who will go in expecting raunch and come away underwhelmed by
the film’s straightforwardness, Whore is perhaps the last time we saw a
major film from the late British master.
Afterwards, Russell moved into making films for television again,
reuniting with the BBC before eventually going on to make films in his own
estate grounds’ backyard. Though Whore
is far beneath what the grandmaster was truly capable of, his 1971 film The
Devils ascending to untold artistic heights, it nevertheless remains the
last time the director’s impish provocative personality was in full widescreen
35mm bloom and Imprint have given this film a truly loving treatment replete
with newly filmed as well as archival extras.
The title isn’t necessarily sayable yet Whore remains a
forthright example of how one film can generate a sharp fanged riposte in the
form of another film full of snark as well as sincerity. A good final theatrical bow from arguably Britain’s
greatest and perhaps most brazen filmmaker.
--Andrew Kotwicki