Pink Narcissus


Pink Narcissus is a 1971 American arthouse drama film directed by James Bidgood and starring Bobby Kendall, Don Brooks and stage actor Charles Ludlam. It visualizes the erotic fantasies of a gay male prostitute.

Premise

Between visits from his keeper, or John, a handsome male prostitute, alone in his apartment, lounges, fantasizing about worlds where he is the central character. For example, he pictures himself as a matador, a Roman slave boy and the emperor who condemns him, and the keeper of a male harem for whom another male performs a belly dance.

Production

The film is mostly shot on 8 mm film with bright, otherworldly lighting and intense colors. Aside from its last, climactic scene, which was shot in a downtown Manhattan loft, it was produced in its entirety in Bidgood's small New York City apartment over a seven-year period and ultimately released without the consent of the director, who therefore had himself credited as Anonymous. He said in an interview, "See, why I took my name off of it was that I was protesting, which I'd heard at the time that's what you did..."

Provenance

Because the name of the filmmaker was not widely known, there were rumors that Andy Warhol was behind it. In the mid-1990s, writer Bruce Benderson began a search for its maker based on several leads and finally verified that it was James Bidgood, who was still living in Manhattan and was working on a film script. In 1999, a book researched and written by Benderson was published by Taschen about Bidgood's body of photographic and filmic work.
Bidgood's unmistakably kitschy style has later been imitated and refined by artists such as Pierre et Gilles.
In 2003, the film was re-released by Strand Releasing as the film had its 35th anniversary in 2006.

Music