Divine Trash
John Waters Actor , Jeanine Basinger Actor , Steve Buscemi Actor , Ken Jacobs Actor
MPAA Rating:
NR
Contains:Brief Nudity,Adult Situations,Not For Children,Adult Language
Choose a format:
-
Overview
-
Format Details
-
Edtitorial Reviews
-
Cast & Production Credits
Divine Trash
UPC: 826663217698
Studio: Shout! Factory
MPAA Rating: NR Contains:[Brief Nudity, Adult Situations, Not For Children, Adult Language]
Summary: A documentary profile of filmmaker John Waters, Divine Trash focuses on the bad-taste pioneer's early years, especially his 1972 breakthrough Pink Flamingos, which turned the director of Mondo Trasho and Multiple Maniacs into the king of midnight movies thanks to word of mouth about the film's gleeful taboo-bashing -- and a distribution deal with the fledgling New Line Cinema. Interviews with filmmakers who both influenced Waters (Paul Morrissey, Herschell Gordon Lewis, Mike Kuchar, George Kuchar) and were influenced by him (Steve Buscemi, Jim Jarmusch, David O. Russell, Hal Hartley) are interspersed with copious behind-the-scenes footage from the making of Pink Flamingos, including the infamous doggy-doo scene. Through it all, the witty Waters provides commentary, recollections, and one-line quips. Pete Garey, owner of the film lab where Waters learned the technical side of moviemaking, recalls his first meetings with the youthful auteur. Mink Stole and other Dreamland Studios superstars reminisce about growing up in suburban Baltimore with Waters, who as a youngster loved car crashes, puppets, and clowns. The director's strait-laced parents reminisce about the financial support they provided for Pink Flamingos, which they have never seen. Neither has Frances Milstead, who looks back on the career of her late son, drag terrorist and Waters muse Divine. Divine and late "egg lady" Edith Massey crop up in various archival interviews and film clips. The man who played the "talking asshole" in Pink Flamingos also appears, albeit anonymously and disguised. Various film theorists and critics debate the merits and meaning of the Waters oeuvre, while Baltimore critic Don Walls and former Maryland film censor Mary Avara express their incredulity about the director's success. Divine Trash won the Filmmakers Trophy for Best Documentary at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. Director Steve Yeager, a longtime friend of Waters, would go on to direct In Bad Taste: The John Waters Story and help Milstead write a book about her son. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
Category: Film, TV & Radio
Awards: Filmmaker's Trophy: Documentary – Sundance Film Festival
Features:
Interactive menus
Scene access
Filmographies
Production credits
Weblinks
Divine Trash
Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)
Release Date: 05/27/2003
Runtime: 90 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Side #1 --
1. Influence [11:14]
2. Inspiration [12:27]
3. Eat, Sleep & Breathe Film [12:50]
4. Pink Flamingo [12:43]
5. Freaks [10:27]
6. Crew [12:24]
7. Underground Film Premiere [11:16]
8. Almost Too Much [13:24]
Brian J. Dillard
John Waters is such an endlessly entertaining interview subject that it would be hard to make a bad documentary about him as long as the filmmaker himself agreed to participate. Luckily, Divine Trash director Steve Yeager had extensive access to not only Waters himself, but also his expansive archives, resulting in a documentary that's as informative as it is amusing. It says a lot about Waters' self-confidence that he shot making-of footage during the shoestring-budget production of Pink Flamingos even though his career until that point had consisted mostly of movie screenings in church basements and bingo halls. Yet history has vindicated the cockiness of the 25-year-old hipster in dark shades whom the viewer sees subtly mocking a square interviewing him for television. Divine Trash does not, however, completely fawn over its subject, nor does it focus exclusively on Waters himself. Plenty of screen time is devoted to the outrageous performers (Divine, Mink Stole, David Lochary) and offbeat collaborators (makeup artist Van Smith) who helped the director realize his vile visions. And several of the interview subjects -- most notably Mary Avara, the hilariously tongue-tied "last film censor in America" -- profess something less than total admiration for the director's work. A wider look at Waters' earliest experiments and more scenes from the obscure features that have never received proper distribution would have transformed Divine Trash from an engaging overview into an indispensable document. As is, the film provides a thorough introduction for casual enthusiasts and hardcore fans who want to learn more than they can from the films themselves. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Steve Yeager
Director
Steve Yeager
Producer
Steve Yeager
Screenwriter
Kevin Heffernan
Screenwriter
Caroline Kaplan
Executive Producer
Jonathan Sehring
Executive Producer
Dan Barto
Composer (Music Score)
Tim Kahoe
Executive Producer
Cindy Miller
Producer
Brooks Moore
Executive Producer
Thomas W. Yeager
Executive Producer
John Waters
Actor
Jeanine Basinger
Actor
Steve Buscemi
Actor
Ken Jacobs
Actor
Jim Jarmusch
Actor
George Kuchar
Actor
Mike Kuchar
Actor
Herschell Gordon Lewis
Actor
Jonas Mekas
Actor
Paul Morrissey
Actor
Mary Vivian Pearce
Actor
Robert Shaye
Actor
Mink Stole
Actor
Patricia Waters
Actor
Country: USA










