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Synopsis

Meryl Streep recently said that if a Martian were to visit Earth and were only to view recent Hollywood movies, it would assume the primary profession of women is prostitution. And given the glamorized portrayals in such films as Pretty Woman, a Martian might even consider such an occupation in a simple, positive light. Ken Russell brooks no such illusions. His latest feature is based on a play by a London taxi driver who often drove prostitutes to and from their clients, and who combined several of their life histories to construct the story of Liz. As played by Theresa Russell, whose most recent films include Bad Timing, Black Widow, and Insignificance, a prostitute’s life is neither glamorous nor remarkable, but just a job. Russell is a tough, gum-cracking, working-class realist who discusses her professional life with a matter-of-fact sensibility that has grown weary in the face of the various abuses she must suffer. Her direct address (to the camera) adds a certain theatricality to her role which is at times disarming, but is also distancing and thought provoking, in that it reminds us constantly of the “constructed nature” of the filmic world. Ken Russell has rarely created a naturalistic reality in his work, and his technique can be difficult for those seeking only escapist fantasy to accept. However, its potency as a forum to present Russell’s notions of sexuality, to mock male mythologies, and to undercut our own expectations and desires makes it specifically appropriate.

All of the characters both begin with and then depart from certain accepted stereotypes, and the performances of Theresa Russell and newcomer Benjamin Mouton are particularly well developed and emotionally powerful. Whore is a film whose impact and intent are to push us away from complacent sexist verities. This is certainly not new territory for Ken Russell, whose Crimes of Passion pondered the contradictions and schizophrenia of modem-day sensuality. But “China Blue” was a metaphor; Liz is walking the streets and looking for customers. –Sundance Film Festival

Director

Original

Ken Russell

British director Ken Russell started out training for a naval career, but after wartime RAF and merchant navy service he switched goals and went into ballet. Supplementing his dancing income as an actor and still photographer, Russell put together a handful of amateur films in the 50s before being hired as a staff director by the BBC. Russell made a name for himself (albeit a name not always spoken in reverence) during the first half of the ‘60s by directing a series of iconoclastic TV dramatizations of the lives of famous composers and dancers. And if he felt that the facts were getting in the way of his story, he’d make up his own — frequently bordering on the libelous. If he had any respect for the famous persons whose lives he probed, it was secondary to his fascination with revealing all warts and open wounds.

A film director since 1963, Russell burst into the international consciousness with 1969’s Women in Love, a hothouse version of the D.H. Lawrence novel. No director… read more

Wall

Displaying 3 wall posts.
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chanandre

26May13

the woman on the still looks a lot like kim gordon from Sonic Youth

Neo-Gloom likes this

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Trolley Freak

1Jan12

Ken Russell's low budget adaptation of a low key play can be viewed as a companion piece to his earlier Crimes Of Passion. The film shows a less glamorous and more realistic side to the oldest profession than the contemporaneous and lightweight Pretty Woman. In what is virtually a filmed monologue, the fearless and brilliant Theresa Russell matter-of-factly describes her life as a streetwise Los Angeles prostitute..

Graeme Higginson likes this

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richmondhill

9Apr10

...out on a cold whimper. A sad coda to Russell's filmic career with what is essentially a theatrical monologue stretched to snapping point: drearily recited and rather boringly filmed. Lacking the dirty verve of Crimes of Passion, it has little to say that we don't already know. It's anti-glamour intentions pull-off, but are hardly sufficient to hold interest through what is otherwise a flabby rant.

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W184

Ken Russell, 1927 - 2011

By David Hudson on November 28, 2011

The British director was 84.

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Whore

By Publius on November 24, 2010

Whore is not as bad as many people would have you think. Sure, it’s nowhere close to vintage Ken Russell and barely even resembles his work at all. But it is lightly entertaining (in comparison to…  read review

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