Experimental theater being what it is, any
document of this offbeat genre is sure to divide audiences. As such, something
like Dionysus in ’69 can’t be
appraised in only one way. Those with adventurous spirits and an eagerness to
see postmodern rethinks of longstanding storytelling conventions will be able
to appreciate Dionysus in ’69 as a
form of artistic exploration. Concurrently, those who enjoy understanding what
the hell they’re watching will lose patience quickly. Even those who seek out Dionysus in ’69 because of Brian De
Palma’s involvement are likely to be confounded. The picture has a couple of
significant connections to the director’s later work, but he didn’t conceive or
singlehandedly helm the piece, at the execution is avant-garde in the extreme.
Shot
in 1968, while De Palma was a film student at NYU, the film captures a
presentation by experimental-theater ensemble the Performance Group. Based on
the ancient Euripides play, Dionysus in ’69
ostensibly tells the story of a conflict between gods, and layered upon the
original text is a postmodern freakout written by William Arrowsmith. Actors
strip down to jockstraps (or less) while creating sexualized tableaux onstage,
up to and including a pair of lengthy and semi-explicit orgy scenes. In some
scgments, actor William Finley (who plays both Dionysus and the role of actor
William Finley) speaks in modern language, while his costar, Will Shepherd (who
plays both Pentheus and the role of actor Will Shepherd), communicates largely
in stilted "classical" vernacular. (FYI, Finley later starred in De
Palma’s 1976 rock musical Phantom of the
Paradise.) The live audience beholding the filmed performance of Dionysus in’69 becomes involved in the
show, as well. Seated on the floor, in chairs, and on scaffolds surrounding the
intimate performance space, audience members participate in dance scenes and
receive dialogue and physical contact from the actors. All of this serves the
familiar experimental-theater concept of transforming a play into an active
experience rather than a passive one.
De Palma, who shares an “a film by”
credit with fellow NYU students Bruce Joel Rubin (later on Oscar winner for
writing the 1990 hit Ghost) and
Robert Fiore, employs one of his favorite cinematic devices, split-screen photography.
Therefore, the entire 85-minute film comprises two angles of grungy-looking
black-and-white images projected side-by-side. As with everything else about Dionysus in ’69, the split-screen effect
is as headache-inducing as it is mind-expanding. Incidentally, Dionysus in ’69 received an X-rating
during its original release, though its edgiest elements are full-frontal
nudity, rough language, and simulated sex.
Dionysus
in ’69: FUNKY
1 comment:
this film is available on youtube! also at a couple of other easily accessed sites. haven't watched more than a couple of minutes of it, but loved the music:) pretty wild looking...
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