MVD Rewind Collection: Mondo New York (1988) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of MVD Entertainment Group

In 1962, the documentary film world changed forever for better or worse with the emergence of Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco E. Prosperi’s Mondo Cane.  Derived from the Italian slur translated to “dog world”, the film was an abstract series of shocking images of animals being killed or bizarre forms of sexuality loosely connected by a thread of documenting authentic events set to a stirring Oscar nominated score by Riz Ortolani and Nino Oliviero.  A precursor to such fare as Faces of Death, television shows like Cops or fringe internet website such as liveleak, they’re designed for shock value gawking not dissimilar from slowing the car down to gaze at a road accident or catch a glimpse of a crime scene in between those flashing cars.

 
The gangrenous infected bastard thing that won’t leave, the Mondo films became their own subgenre poised around shock and awe, paving the way for Night Flight variety television show producer Stuart S. Shapiro’s 1988 tribute to the unholy altar of Jacopetti/Prosperi with Mondo New York, restored in 2K from the original camera negative and presented in widescreen for the first time on home video.  In a deluxe package prepared by MVD Rewind Collection replete with a reversible cover, limited slipcover, booklet and double-sided poster, small time director Harvey Keith’s debut film despite two scenes of animal cruelty towards rats and chickens is kind of a weird smorgasbord snapshot of multiracial bisexual New York featuring an unusual array of distinctly New York based performance artists.  If you can get past the animal parts, this is maybe one of the funniest snapshots of late 1980s New York that isn’t from Troma and isn’t fiction.

 
Following a young nameless woman through the subways and alleyways of New York City during the night, through the day and back to night again, we meet a wide variety of Naked City stars with more than a dash of Berlin styled cabaret shows that tread a tightrope walk between avant-garde and geek show.  Featuring performances from Joey Arias, Joe Coleman, Karen Finley, Phoebe Legere, Ann Magnuson, Lydia Lunch, Dean Johnson in drag with his band The Weenies and Rick Aviles, the film takes us through S&M clubs, open standup comedy bits, naked performance art, a man who blows off fireworks tied to his chest, real junkies and prostitutes and an unsimulated cockfight.  All of this should be very illegal but according to Mondo New York that’s just the way things were.

 
Somewhere between Mondo Cane, Jackass and Liquid Sky with all manner of vulgar crassness and uncensored dialogue that’s too pornographic in form to recite here, Mondo New York doesn’t look like its predecessors.  Instead going for a hyperreal neon-lit tapestry akin to Liquid Sky shot surprisingly handsomely by Lenny Wong replete with the numerous wild characters inhabiting it and aided by an electronic soundtrack by Johnny Pacheco and Luis Perico Ortiz that sounds like John Du Prez if he scored a Cannon Film.  The characters who come into play give invigorating performances though as aforementioned I could do without seeing a chicken head being bitten off.  The highlights include Charlie Barnett’s standup followed by Rick Aviles and points to a time when people were more comfortable with racial humor.

 
More of a time capsule of a bygone New York life than anything with a few gross bits that, yes, qualify it as mondo, Mondo New York is difficult to recommend let alone try writing about.  But for what its worth it did offer some insights into the timeline’s bevy of performance artists dominating the underground hidden night and day lives of New Yorkers.  No I can’t recommend this to most people but having seen the unexpurgated Jacopetti/Prosperi shockmeisters, Mondo New York outside of the animal bits is substantially tamer than the films that inspired its creation.  Though like the mondo films before it scenes are clearly staged and blocked with dolly tracks that follow the nameless heroine’s shoes walking the sidewalks, there’s more truth and reality to this mondo snapshot of New York than most other actual mondo pieces.

--Andrew Kotwicki