The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Ulrike Ottinger Day *

* (restored/expanded)

 

‘Ulrike Ottinger is, to use a somewhat outmoded term, a cinematic artist in the literal sense. Her exceedingly artificial visual worlds contain a cornucopia of allusions to art history and literature, from the ancient statue of Laocoon with his sons and the legend of Joan of Arc to Oscar Wilde’s Dorian Gray and Virginia Woolf’s novel Orlando. She uses these works as raw material for fantastical stories told with a visual opulence that reflects her predilection for costumes, masquerades and transformations of all sorts.

‘Ottinger’s very first film, Laocoon & Sons (Laokoon & Söhne, 1973), set the course she was to pursue in her subsequent work. It’s about the metamorphic quest of Esmeralda del Rio, who as a widow by the name of Olimpia Vincitor goes off in search of her past, shortly thereafter turns into ice-skater Linda MacNamara, and ends up taking on the male identity of a gigolo called Jimmy Junod. The continual metamorphoses catapult the viewer into a whirl of confusion in which nothing is final or permanent, nothing definite.

‘“Things are constantly occurring here that run counter to the strictures of theatre,” summarizes the narrator at a certain point in the film. This observation may also serve to characterize a leitmotif in all of Ottinger’s subsequent work, in which carnivalesque and commedia dell’arte scenes seasoned with a pinch of Baroque morbidity are interwoven with borrowings from science fiction movies to form a unique narrative blend – a blend that defies all conventional pigeonholing of style or genre.

‘From the outset, the filmmaker worked with an almost exclusively female crew. Tabea Blumenschein created the wonderful costumes and masks for many of Ottinger’s pictures, and actresses like Delphine Seyrig, Magdalena Montezuma, or Irm Hermann, who gained fame in Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s films, make multiple appearances in her works. In spite of all that, Ottinger’s art cannot be reduced to a “model for an alternative female art world”, as persistently claimed by feminist critics. On the contrary, taken as a whole her oeuvre is more about exploding socially sanctioned gender categories of male and female. This bent is illustrated, among other things, by all the satyr-like figures, bearded ladies and other hermaphrodites and freaks that populate Ottinger’s visual universe.

‘In addition to her feature films, Ottinger has made a series of films about her travels that rank among the best that the contemporary documentary genre has to offer. They tell of foreign parts from the perspective of the familiar. Here again the dominant theme is transformation: the deliberately subjective perspective makes the foreign appear familiar and instead places our own culture and customs in a strange light. A penchant for oriental and Asian culture is unmistakable in her choice of subjects.’ — Goethe House

 

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Stills






































 

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Further

Ulrike Ottinger Website
‘Undiscovered Countries: The Films of Ulrike Ottinger’
Ulrike Ottinger @ imdB
Ulrike Ottinger @ Women Make Movies
Ulrike Ottinger Filmproduktion @ Facebook
Official ‘Prater’ Website
Book: ‘Ulrike Ottinger: The Autobiography of Art Cinema’
‘Ulrike Ottinger’s Chronicle of Time’
Ulrike Ottinger’s ‘Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press’
Ulrike Ottinger interviewed
Video: ‘Ulrike Ottinger: An Interview’ @ Video Data Base
Ulrike Ottinger @ mubi
‘Decadent Fetishism in Ulrike Ottinger’s Johanna d’Arc of Mongolia
‘Encore! Nonconformist German director Ulrike Ottinger
Jonathan Rosenbaum on Ulrike Ottinger
‘Ulrike Ottinger: What’s Left to be Seen’
‘Notes on the Cinema Stylographer: Ulrike Ottinger’

 

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Extras


ULRIKE OTTINGER: NOMAD FROM THE LAKE


ULRIKE OTTINGER on PLACES


Ulrike Ottinger. The Sociology of Film and Cinema. 2007


Filmgespräch Ulrike Ottinger

 

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Interview
collaged

 

You’re a German filmmaker. What are we to take away from this: “German”.

Ulrike Ottinger: I find myself rather isolated in the German film scene, particularly among my women colleagues, because my films come out of the tradition of fantasy and surrealist filmmaking. Besides that, my experience as an artist, especially in Paris during the sixties, is rather unusual for a filmmaker. My eyes have become extremely sensitized to visual images. My film BILDNIS EINER TRINKERIN, for example, on one level offers a sightseeing tour through Berlin. I construct my films with images. I use a syntax of images, whereas most German women filmmakers seem conventionally tied to dialogue. I seek new images for the new content which is proposed by a woman’s experience. This may be why spectators often complain about my films’ length and dense imagery. They are not accustomed to an associative style, beyond psychological motivation.

One can see parallels in your development at the level of representation: in your early films both elements – on the one hand the artificiality of the figures, of their charcteristics, of the decor, and on the other the semidocumentary, “unstudied” camera work – seem to clash in every image, only to merge at the end. Ticket of no return comes closest to a definite separation: the emphasis throughout is on the playful and the contrived. Now we have the clear juxtaposition of two aesthetic stances: fiction and documentation.

UO: There have always been clear confrontations in my films. In Ticket of no return, fiction and reality carry on a dialogue which is commented upon by the ladies “Social Question”, “Exact Statistics” and “Common Sense”. All the while the urgent appeal for “Reality” sounds from the airport loudspeakers. Freak Orlando is the attempt to present the totality of culture, power and politics as an historical tableau, in which “reality” appears as a bewildering trompe l’æil. In Johanna d’Arc of Mongolia, the carriers of Western culture riding on the Trans-Siberian are confronted first with their own culture, travelling as they are in their own museum, which is then unexpectedly held up by a foreign culture.

In your films you construct worlds out of “everyday myths”, out of “epistemes” and social roles in order to tade your characters (whether they are this way by choice or force of circumstances) to the margins of normality and beyound. The political aspect of your films is the dream or utopia of freedom which can arise in the viewer’s mind – the freedom to be different.

UO: It was not my intention to create exotic images. The film is concerned, rather, with the transport of culture. If exoticisms arise in the process. they are never identified with “the foreign” per se but rather with the unsuccessful encounter with the foreign. I don’t mean that only negatively, because the results are sometimes interesting. My film is devoted not to exoticism bur rather to nomads. These can be Mongols, but also job-seekers, Jewish intellectuals and artists, refugees, those travelling for edification or adventure. I see the route of the Trans-Siberian and also the Silk Road as a sort of guest-book of cultures, in which the most various influences leave their mark. The theme of the film is the infectiousness of nomadic ideas.

You have worked with the same actresses time and time again, in particular Delphine Seyrig, and always seem to be striving for a mixture of “professionals” and “amateurs.” These amateurs, however, are often people who give the impression of having already tried to gain control of their everyday reality by playing themselves. On what principles do you choose your actresses so that they can take your characters beyond their function as representations of abstract types, and make them into living subjects?

UO: “Amateur” and “professional” are two different performance techniques which, once again, carry on the dialogue between documentary and fiction on another level. For me, it is not a matter of living or dead subjects, as long as they fully realize their performance technique.

In talking about your films, one can emphasize the aspect of the (cultural) journey, of movement through particular situations, which also always remain journeys through time – something reminiscent of the great era of the silents, with its episodic films. But one can also focus on your predilection for puzzles, for the playful jumbling of established patterns, and thus for artistic self-reflection. And thirdly, there is the particular tension in all your films between documentation and fiction – a relationship which today’s cinema as a whole is perhaps in a position to carry the furthest. In what context would you place your work?

UO: I play with many contexts and various narrative forms. The classic introduction of the four western protagonists, who, as it were, sing their arias on the stage, observes the unities of place, time and action. The well-organized interior makes of nature an artificial exterior. But whilst the tundra rolls past the windows in painted tableaux, the people inside hear its siren call. Unaccustomed stories penetrate the familiar surroundings, which in the end are invaded by an exterior oblivious to all this domestication. In the grasslands, under the open sky, epic singers introduce Mongolian time.

Godard once said, “Technique is the sister of Art.” Would you agree with his attribution of gender?

UO: Art has many Siamese twins.

 

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11 of Ulrike Ottinger’s 18 films & installations

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Madame X: An Absolute Ruler (1977)
‘Madame X, the cruelest and most successful pirate of the Far Eastern seas, puts out a call to all women seeking a world full of gold, love, and adventure to join her crew and become marauders on the high seas. But even after their first pitiless attack on a yacht carrying hilarious caricatures of bourgeois male hegemony leaves them awash in plunder, the increasing assertion of the new pirates’ identities and desires leads an already chaotic journey into absolute bedlam. On the women’s ship Orlando the flags of attack, leather, weapons, lesbian love and death are raised with a beauty which dispenses with a total domination of the viewer’s gaze. The aesthetic is strictly stylized, exhibiting itself without overwhelming us.’ — ulrikeottinger.com


Trailer


Excerpt

 

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Ticket of No Return (1979)
‘A portrait of two unusual but also extremely different women. One rich, eccentric, hiding her feelings behind a rigid mask, consciously drinks herself to death. The other is a known drinker in town. In the course of the story they try to get to know each other, but they cannot come together. The background is Berlin, thrown open to a grotesque kind of sightseeing (drinkers’ geography) and complemented by authentic contributions from people who live here or are visiting, rock singers, writers, artist, taxi drivers. With Tabea Blumenschein, Magdalena Montezuma, Nina Hagen and Eddie Constantine.’ — Women Make Movies


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Freak Orlando (1981)
‘This, apparently her most monumental film project, is nothing if not ambitious—inspired by Virginia Wolfe’s time-tripping feminist tract ORLANDO, the film (according to a synopsis published on Ottinger’s website) means to present “a history of the world from its beginnings to our day, including the errors, the incompetence, the thirst for power, the fear, the madness, the cruelty and the commonplace, in a story of five episodes.” What that quote doesn’t reveal is that this politically incorrect film’s world is populated entirely by freaks. In other words, Ottinger’s aims are similar to those of Todd Browning’s FREAKS and Werner Herzog’s EVEN DWARFS STARTED SMALL: a vision of our world as a giant freak show, a concept FREAK ORLANDO takes farther than Browning or Herzog ever did.’ — fright.com


Excerpt


Excerpt

 

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Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press (1984)
Dorian Gray in the Mirror of the Yellow Press is Ulrike Ottinger’s epic media studies fever dream. Plotting to boost circulation of her multinational media empire, Frau Dr. Mabuse (art film icon Delphine Seyrig) molds dapper aristocrat, Dorian Gray (60s supermodel Veruschka von Lehndorff), into a tabloid celebrity of her own designs. Introducing Dorian to a world of power and intrigue, Mabuse pairs him off with opera star Andamana (Tabea Blumenschein). But as readers tire of the new couple’s amorous exploits, Mabuse dispatches her maniacal henchmen (Fassbinder regular, Irm Hermann, Magdalena Montezuma, Barbara Valentin and writer, Gary Indiana) to kill off Dorian’s paramour. And so begins his plummet into the seedy, criminal underbelly of 1980s Berlin. Dorian would be Ottinger’s last entirely fictional feature of the 1980s as well as the final film in Ottinger’s Berlin trilogy, in which a “stylized composition provides a sightseeing trip through Berlin,” that is, at once, fictional and phantasmagorical, yet also wholly documentary in its depiction of the city’s architecture and underground milieu.’ — Dirty Looks NYC


the entire film

 

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Seven Women, Seven Sins (1986)
Seven Women Seven Sins represents a quintessential moment in film history. Seven women filmmakers invited to direct for the seven sins were amongst the world’s most renown: Helke Sander (Gluttony), Bette Gordan (Greed), Maxi Cohen (Anger), Chantal Akerman (Sloth), Valie Export (Lust), Laurence Gavron (Envy), and Ulrike Ottinger (Pride). Each filmmaker had the liberty of choosing a sin to interpret as they wished. The final film reflected this diversity, including traditional narrative fiction, experimental video, a musical, a radical documentary, and was delivered in multiple formats from 16, super 16, video and 35mm. After the initial television airing Maxi Cohen went on to prepare it for a theatrical release, unifying the formats into 16mm. The theater release of Seven Women Seven Sins caused quite a stir. People lined up around the block to see this compelling anthology of the seven deadly sins.’ — NYWIFT


Trailer

 

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Joan of Arc of Mongolia (1989)
‘In this tri-lingual epic, seven western women travel in the Trans-Siberian Railroad and are kidnaped by a tribe of Mongolian female warriors. As fantastic as it sounds, this tale is as grounded in historical and ethnographical research as it is in Ottinger’s fictions of transformation, metamorphosis and the problem of dealing with otherness. The whole film is a twin structure, cut through by doubles, repetitions, similarities and endless reflections. The images have a crease, established by the stories … In this way the Mongolian world casts a reflecting light on western customs and habits and cinema recommends itself as the instrument of investigation and the agent of old and new myths.’ — Frieda Grafe


Excerpt

 

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Prater (2007)
‘The fabled Viennese amusement park, Prater, is the centerpiece for Ottinger’s meditation on vanished pre-war Europe and its fascination with machines and entertainment. Ottinger skillfully pieces together the park’s history, interweaving remarkable archival footage, interviews with members of the carnival worker families who are the park’s lifeblood and new fictional footage starring Veruschka as a latter-day Alice gliding through the Prater’s Wonderland. An intellectual thrill ride, Ottinger’s film makes delightfully unexpected turns with its harnessing of diverse writings by the likes Josef von Sternberg, Elias Canetti and Elfriede Jellinek.’ — collaged


Trailer

 

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Under Snow (2011)
‘In the Echigo region of northwestern Japan, where heavy snow blankets entire landscapes and villages for more than half the year, a distinctive way of life has evolved. Time follows a different, slower rhythm, and everyday routines, along with religious rituals, wedding traditions, festivals, foods, songs, and games, are adapted to Echigo’s austere living conditions and natural beauty. Ulrike Ottinger’s latest film leads us into this mythical country, turning her lens on daily and communal life under the snowy mountains. Narrated in English by American literary and media theorist Lawrence A. Rickels, this stunning documentary sequences merge with the tale of students Takeo and Marko, played by Kabuki performers. Their journey through the past and repeated encounters with the present find them wondrously transformed with help from a beautiful vixen fox. Under Snow is clear evidence that Ottinger, whose career spans more than four decades, remains one of world cinema’s most original artists.’ — Women Make Movies


Trailer

 

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Floating Food (2011)
‘Ulrike Ottinger’s Floating Food is an installation exploring eating as a cultural and religious ritual, and the cultural connotations of water. The installation is composed of film montages, photographs, ethnographic objects and sculptures that include a Samurai robe made of dollar bills and a shaman’s costume. The renowned filmmaker, photographer, and collector of images and texts from around the world displays various aspects of her creation in a huge collage. Water, the central motif of the exhibition, is considered by Ottinger as more than simply a representation of a theme. Rather, water embodies a principle of thought, of life and of work.’ — collaged


the entirety

 

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Chamisso’s Shadow (2016)
‘Adelbert von Chamisso accompanied the Romanzow research expedition on the Rurik from 1815 to 1818 as a botanist. Inspired by his descriptions as well as those of the other great explorers such as Forster and Anderson with Captain Cook, Steller with Bering and Humboldt I came up with the idea to create a cinematic evocation of these travel experiences, both past and present. I believe the past and the present of these journeys belong together and can’t be separated just like poor Schlemihl and his shadow in Chamisso’s ‚Wondrous Story’, where Schlemihl seeks to recover and reinstate his lost shadow as he travels through the world.’ — U.O.


Trailer

 

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Paris Calligrammes (2020)
‘In Paris Calligrammes, the artist Ulrike Ottinger casts a highly personal and subjective gaze back to the twentieth century. At the heart of her film is Paris: its protagonist is the city itself, its streets, neighborhoods, bookstores, cinemas, but also its artists, authors, and intellectuals. It is a place of magical appeal, an artistic biotope, but also a place where the demons of the twentieth century still confront us.’ — Bernd Scherer


Trailer

 

 

*

p.s. Hey. ** A, Hi. Okay, thanks a lot, Alex. ** Jack Skelley, Hey, J. Hatred Object thought he knew the way to a guy’s dick, and maybe he did. Awesome seeing on you on Saturday. I hope you’re feeling tons better and that the gig tomorrow (?) is a massive booty shaker. Love, me. ** alex, Hi, alex. Good to see you, pal. Super itching to start editing the film, yes. I’m drinking green tea too as we speak because my usual dose of coffee didn’t provide its usual blast off. Congrats on the convivial new job. What is it? And excellent that you did the workshop with Blake. He’s great and knows of what he speaks (and writes) big time. Happy it stoked you and made you write excitingly. I’m obviously super high on the restorative properties of form experimentation. I look forward to reading what you’ve wrought when the time comes. Right, it’s spring. While I was away this homely plant someone gave me massively self-improved by extruding these sort of pink and white flowers. My jet lag might be dying, maybe, it feels like it, hopefully. I hope your writing and gardening are prioritising your pleasure. ** Sypha, Hey. Well, I’m glad your second C is a moderate one. I don’t think anyone’s getting it over here anymore. People talk about it nostalgically and stuff. Improve lickety-split. ** Bill, I know, it’s weird I’ve never been to Vienna. We’ll see how much free time I’ll have since I’ll be kind of in and out, but I do hope to see some art or something. Jimmy Duval is actually referenced in one of my novels, I can’t remember which. Maybe ‘Frisk’? I think someone is described as having a Duval-like stomach or something. He was in a video with me way back, for the ‘United States of Poetry’ PBS series where poets read poems and they were enacted with these kind of narratives. They had me read a not so great poem about a street hustler and Jimmy played the hustler. This is it. How was the screening and talk? ** Dominik, Hi!!! Oh, my god, Julian is great! Thank you for the photos. I’m all crushed out. He should be an escort. That would be fun to stay with you guys. I’m assuming Vienna will intrigue me enough on the quick trip that I’ll want to go back and luxuriate in it. My jet lag is maybe much better this morning, I think. I’d hate to jinx it, but I haven’t nodded off today yet. Love making a temporary fix to my meat-phobic digestive system so I can eat heythereyo (if I want to), G. ** Darbs, You did change your name. Darby Crash’s close friends used to call him Darbs. Oh, shit, hospital. Okay, mum’s the word, but I’m awfully glad you’re out of there. Your mom sounds … difficult to say the least. Luckily you seem to manage to be pretty interesting even under her power mongering. I don’t know how something like that gets sorted and frees you, but I obviously hope something does. I have friends with scarred arms and legs, and they have plenty of friends and admirers, so I think anyone who doesn’t want to know you for that reason is just a generalising bullshit idiot, and your doctor is too. Oops, sorry. You will escape that place, even if I don’t know how/when. I thought I’d be a bullied weirdo outcast forever when I was your age, but I found the right people and the real world opened. I don’t think I know Peng Yu and Sun Yuan off the top of my head, but I’ll go find their stuff and find out. The ‘silent twins’ book is really good. I read that quite a while ago, but I remember being kind of obsessed with it. Awesome that it’s coming back. I do like 90s German techno. I used to listen to it a lot. Especially the gloomy stuff like uh, early Sven Vath and stuff. Let me know the name of that artist when you think of it. I hope to see you again soon. Hugs and strength to you, friend. ** _Black_Acrylic, Oh, yeah, sounding, no thank you very much, ha ha. I liked ‘EO’ too, as you may know. I need to catch up on films. The only things I’ve seen in forever were plane entertainment. ‘Dune’ was so tedious. ** Cody Goodnight, Hi, Cody, I’m good enough. How are you? Whoa, enjoy the graduation. Is there a ceremony or something? Congrats! And N.O. too, duh. I’m liking all of the artistic input you’re intaking. Some great stuff there, and excitingly all over the place. I hope to start getting new stuff into my head ultra-soon too. The film shoot was massively consuming. Great to see you! I hope your week is dawning in an avalanche-y style. ** maGic G, Well, yes, I loved the extract, and, as soon as the book itself gets here, which it is supposedly doing, I’ll fill in the blank. Miraculously well, very cool and, may I say, long deserved. Great news about your brother! And, seriously (?), you have a twink slave now? Or, wait, he wants to be your slave? And I assume you’ll grant his wish? Holy moly. I don’t know if I believe in magic. Maybe. Some say being optimistic is believing in magic. Have a total blast today! Love, me. ** politekid, Hi, O! Ah, families, what can you do? Well, I guess you can do what I did and move halfway across the world from them. So glad you like Simon. He’s so unread. And he won the fucking Nobel Prize, which has to be the weirdest Nobel Prize choice ever. My fave is ‘Triptych’. It’s just three detailed ‘pans’ (in language) through the same room. Calder was a godsend, but, yeah, could there even be uglier books? Well, I’m happy to hear you’re writing a script, if that helps. And a most curious one. Well, I did kind of a different but same thing with ‘The Sluts’ where I just mimicked online writing, and it’s my worst written novel, but it’s the one everyone loves so much, so go figure. This weekend … John Waters was here to do an event because his novel is just being published here now, and I went to see his event and hung out with him a bit, which was great because I haven’t seen him in the flesh in about a decade. And I did my biweekly Zoom ‘book club’ with US friends. And I hung out with this interesting Australian writer. And I tried to stay awake (mega-jetlag). And other stuff. It was okay, I guess. What’s your week? ** Right. I decided to restore and expand an old, defunct blog post about Ulrike Otttinger for you guys, and I hope you’ll try to make the best of it. See you tomorrow.

16 Comments

  1. Misanthrope

    Dennis, Who dis? New number.

    I’m glad you’re back and I’m glad the filming went well. Now, get that thing out into the world pronto. We’re waiting!

    Otherwise, I hope you’re well.

    Same old shit with me. I’m going into the office today for my one day a month appearance. Just gonna fake it till I make it and then onward and upward.

  2. A

    No Problem. Thank you DC! I hope you can email me back sometime before the swamp of editing with Zac takes over May. The FedEx driver couldn’t find your place in Paris to deliver the ARC, I hear this is common with Paris packages – so there is one waiting for you at the postal office but the driver needs delivery instructions to your place for re -delivery but when you email back – let me me know if Zac gave you The Shards copy I gifted you and the ARC from LA place, he told me he was gonna bring it back to Paris to you on May 2nd but if you didn’t get it, keep me posted. I’ll find a solution!

  3. Dominik

    Hi!!

    Ah, I’m glad you like Julian! He must find me really fucking annoying because I can’t stop staring at him. He’s just so damn beautiful!

    It’s a deal then! If/when you’re in Vienna again, you’re most welcome! By that time, I’ll probably have a pretty good idea of the places worth visiting too.

    And great news about your jet lag! I hope the last of it evaporates today in a completely unremarkable manner.

    Be prepared to fight for heythereyo, though! EmotionalDistress seems to want him quite a lot too, and he makes it very clear that he’s a HOMICIDAL NECRO CANNIBAL – even if he’s not proud of it.

    Have you seen the movie “Bullet Train”?

    Love trying to create an actual honeymoon, but it keeps dripping down to Earth, Od.

  4. Nick.

    Hi! Long time no speak I think?? It’s me Nick. ! Honestly after being so crazy for so long I kind of evened out the last we spoke and you were amping up filming which I hope went well! ill have to read back on what’ve you’ve posted but I Just wanted to say hi and im doing so well its kind of crazy. How was shooting what’s something odd that happened not good or bad just weird maybe? I’ll keep it short on my end but please tell me anything you’d like! Talk soon!

  5. Thomas Moronic

    Hey Dennis.
    Welcome back! Loved seeing the behind the scene peaks of the film. So excited for the finished thing – cool times ahead! I hope the jet lag disappears asap and you feel refreshed and back with it. My new book just came out in the US (the US version is paperback and the UK version out at the end of May is hardback) – would you be cool if I put together a post for here?
    We should talk soon.
    Lots of love,

    Thomas xoxo

  6. Jack Skelley

    Dennis — “Cock Cheeze of Hate Object When He’s Older.” Thanx for your well-wishes and great to see you! I vow to once again defeat my migraine! The gig with the ex-Captain Beefheart bassist (& others) is next week. I’ll report back. Yesterday had a rad chat with Taylor Lewandowski for Full Stop magazine, and currently editing a QA for Hobart with writer Andie Blaine. These are good peeps!!! Do you know Hobarts? https://www.hobartpulp.com/

  7. David Ehrenstein

    A great lesbfilmmaker and a mighty purveyor of Lesbian hic. She not only write and dirctbut creates the spectacular cosrumes worrn by the gorgeous likes of Delphine Seyrig, Verushka and Tabea Bluminschne (who was the love of Pstricia Highsmith’s life

  8. Bill

    Good to see the return/enhancement of this Ottinger day, Dennis. I loved Freak Orlando, and enjoyed Ticket of No Return. Should check out some of her other films.

    The screening and Q&A went very well. The restoration is beautiful, such a treat to see it on a big screen (my first time). Duval does seem like a sweetie, and Araki was very appreciative. The makeup/hair guy was there, so there was a lot of gossip about hair and on-set goings-on. I had drinks with old friends afterwards (I think you know Johnny Ray Houston?), so it was a fine evening out.

    Bill

  9. _Black_Acrylic

    Seems my body clock is still all out of whack. Today I watched Skinamarink and slept through the first 10 minutes, but got back on board and really enjoyed the rest.

    Yikes, sad to say that Leeds United are currently in a very bad situation indeed. Tonight the board is meeting to sack our new manager Javi Gracia, who has only been in the job a few weeks and has us languishing in 17th place with 4 games left. We should never have got rid of the genius Marcelo Bielsa if you ask me.

  10. Steve Erickson

    Will you and Zac edit the entire film yourselves, or are you also working with an outside editor? How many hours of footage did you need to dig through? Do you already have a full structure for the film in mind?

    I’m currently tapering down on Klonopin, with the intention of eventually quitting entirely. Both my doctor and therapist are really insistent on this, since long-term benzo usage can cause brain damage and early onset Alzheimer’s. The first month did not go terribly, but it had many rough moments, and I have at least a year of tapering to go before I can finally quit it. I’m meeting with my doctor tomorrow, and I honestly don’t know if I should go down to the next level or wait a month to give my brain some time to adjust. I guess he’s the expert.

    Ottinger’s run through JOAN OF ARC OF MONGOLIA is great. I’ve become increasingly interested in the more experimental and queer side of New German Cinema. (I’m watching Werner Schroeter’s FLOCONS D’OR tonight, in preparation for an article on an Udo Kier retrospective.) Have you seen many of her documentaries? I’ve only caught two, and although they’re OK, they don’t seem to play to her film-as-acid trip strengths. Their length has also kept me away.

    For Artsfuse’s May column of short reviews, I wrote about producer Samurai Banana’s album JUST TIRED and David Easteal’s excellent film THE PLAINS: https://artsfuse.org/272249/may-short-fuses-materia-critica-3/. And for InReview Online, I reviewed the National’s new album FIRST TWO PAGES OF FRANKENSTEIN: https://inreviewonline.com/2023/04/28/first-two-pages-of-frankenstein/

  11. Bernard Welt

    Welcome back from filmland. I haven’t been following stuff (I admit) so I don’t know at what moment things shifted from the “Jesus-Christ-is-this-ever-going-to-happen” of last summer to location shooting but I guess the fact that it did should be my positivity reminder that things do work out, except when they don’t. All sounds very, very good and it’s a thrill to see the pictures from the shoot.
    I’m plodding along, will send news if there ever is any. Meanwhile: I actually spent a lot of early spring on the followup to Doug Lang’s death in November–I’m pretty sure you read at least once in the Folio Books series Doug had in DC in the 80s, and he and i were faculty colleagues as well as poetry comrades, and now i recall you very kindly contributed to a GoFundMe when he went into assisted living. Anyway, I did a lot of organizing for a tribute at the Corcoran, where he had a very devoted following of graduates. A really right-minded, selfless teacher. So it was good to work on that, and also going through a lot of his work, as i did, was very motivating.
    So was seeing Eileen Myles last week in DC. She was beyond great.
    Not getting to Paris this season and I think not this year. We have a family trip to the UK, and I have a conference thing in Oregon. But I want to see what Paris is like in maybe autumn or winter; the hot summer days there are not my favorite. I miss the city and the Récollets and coffee with you. I hope you are thriving. And that Thomas Moore does his Day here. And that people take that slut’s note about shigella seriously because it is very bad news and sending lots of people to the hospital here in the US. My doc now considers rimming the most hazardous sexual practice out there. Too bad cause it’s nice, but . . . GI ailments — yuck.

  12. Cody Goodnight

    Hi Dennis!

    How are you? I hope you are doing well. I have only seen Ticket of No Return, which I loved, and I would love to see Ottinger’s Freak Orlando. It looks fantastic. I’m finishing out my semester. Think I’ll watch Josef von Sternberg’s Shanghai Express tomorrow. Maybe rewatch Disney’s Snow White with it. I hope you have a lovely day!

  13. alex

    I went cold turkey on coffee for the first time ever back in January and successfully replaced it with green tea. idk, it jolts me less than coffee and I’m not a morning person so it’s gentler

    thanks! it’s the hospital job I may have mentioned, although I’m not working in the actual hospital itself but for these youth health drop-in centres they help run. I like it so far and it’s fun to work alongside young people

    yeah I found Blake’s ideas really reset some gears for me around my writing practice. I’m trying to write while listening to music more which is totally antithetical to how I’ve written in the past. what kind of noise level do you go for when writing? and with the film, has how you’ve imagined it changed much now that you’ve shot it all? I figure editing is a really transformational stage for a movie

    I love spring cause the plants in my place multiply and I get my grow lights going which make me feel cozy when it’s raining. hope you had an equally warm, plant nursery kinda day. talk soon!

  14. politekid

    ashamed to say this is the first i’ve heard of Ulrike Ottinger. absolute knockout stills. i’ll do some tracking down asap.
    gotcha, Triptych is mega-queued up. “just three detailed pans through the same room” has immediately sold me on it. i had no idea Simon won the nobel prize til i googled him a few days ago — as you say, wild. some more of that would be welcome. what little opinion i have of the nobel prize for lit, aside from an antipathy towards competition and ‘ranking’ of art in general, is that it seems to be awarded to writers about forty years after it would have been useful to any of them.
    haha thanks for the script happiness — and the ‘curious’ tag, i hope it can live up to that. i deffo see what you mean with The Sluts & a piecemeal writing style (practice?), from how i remember reading it. i’m trying to keep my script within the bounds of just two onstage ‘characters’ tho, so i guess it’ll be a kinda united opposite approach? best not to theorise while trying to create. also haha at worst written — my worst written thing is whatever i happened to have read back last.
    that sounds like a pretty great weekend to me. i missed John Waters when he was in England, & i wasn’t even rota’d to help him sign books @ Barbican, which i’m still bitter about. what *is* my week? there’s a big Mike Nelson retrospective i want to get to, so i might check that out. oh and my sister has just published a book based on her PhD — tudor art history — she has a reading/launch on Friday so i’ll be there. how about yours? i hope it’s golden

  15. Guy

    Hi Dennis, I hope you have recovered from your jet lag? Seriously: a twink slave. I honestly can’t believe it myself. It does feel like a gift from either the universe or my mother. Well, I’m happy to feel you’re sort of interested to hear about it, because I’m dying to talk about it, but due to the unconventional nature of the situation, I haven’t told many other than my brother, and even then I can’t really go into details…. So, the twink found me on Instagram of all the places. And he was just constantly messaging me from the beginning of the year, and I was of course flattered cause he’s a beautiful and well-known translator, who’s just moved to this country to continue his studies in performance art. When I finally found the time to meet up with him, he turned out to be as cute and twinky as his photographs: short, skinny, dark curly hair, almond-shaped eyes with long lashes (which I’m slightly envious of cause I have underwhelmingly short lashes.) Anyway, at first he was being extremely romantic like “I want to watch my favourite movies in your arms” etc, but during our second “date”, as we were about to kiss in the basement of my favourite bar, I informed him I have a partner so he knows the situation and won’t complain later. He said he was okay with it as long as my partner is okay and wouldn’t cause issues. I reassured him it’s fine, but implied that I don’t have time for romance and that I love my partner so I’m just mostly interested in sex and a bit of friendship. We ended up having sex that evening, but sadly I was tired and in a rush. Afterwards on whatsapp, but also during sex, he did say that he would love to be my slave and that he is into bdsm, and he’d want me to tie him up and urinate on him. I’m happy to do this; although the last time I did this was a decade ago, when I had a Scottish slave who got dangerously obsessed and ended up stalking me when I broke up with him… I basically had to move and change my address et cetera, so it was kind of traumatic. So, yes, it’s been lovely but intense. I haven’t really enslaved him yet, but we’re meeting up again on Thursday for a little bdsm session… If you’re interested, I will happily keep you posted. I was telling one of my other friends the other day “Currently, my life is like a Dennis Cooper book but a Hollywood version…” Also, I agree with you that optimism is a sort of magic… I think I am optimistic by nature, but due to a few traumatic incidents in my life, I have grown to become anxiously pessimistic. I am working on this now. Optimism is magic and manifestation. I want to change my life for better and live without fear and nightmares. If you have any tips/ anecdotes about any of this, please grace me with your diamonds.

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