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Fireworks (1947) (short)
In avante-garde filmmaking director Kenneth Anger's
first official, experimental film (his earliest surviving film),
shot over just one weekend and initially charged as being obscene
- it was a landmark gay movie:
- the opening voice-over by the sole character, the
Dreamer (homosexual Kenneth Anger Himself): "In Fireworks,
I released all the explosive pyrotechnics of a dream. Inflammable
desires dampened by day under the cold water of consciousness are
ignited that night by the libertarian matches of sleep, and burst
forth in showers of shimmering incandescence. These imaginary displays
provide a temporary relief"
- the main expressionistic (black and white, shadowy)
homoerotic dream sequence (with masochistic imagery), experienced
by a Dreamer, was inspired by the 1944 Zoot Suit Riots when all-American
sailors in white naval uniforms attacked flamboyantly-dressed Mexicans
- the surrealistic dream: a sleeping young man arose
from his bed, while he was fantasizing about a sailor (who carried
him into a bar with a GENTS restroom and was displaying the flexing
of his muscular upper torso); a larger gang of white-uniformed US
sailors with chains surrounded him, beat and raped him (a closeup
showed his face contorted in pain, as his nose began to bleed - fingers
were jammed into his nose - and cleansing milk (metaphorical semen)
was poured onto his face in slow-motion)
- the quick shot of the sailor with a roman candle
positioned in the opened zipper of his pants as a phallic symbol
before it exploded in his crotch
- body-horror imagery also included a cigarette lit
with a gigantic fiery branch, a burning Christmas tree (with decorations),
flaming masturbatory photographs (of young men embracing), the peeling
away of raw flesh by a hand to discover a compass underneath, a sculpture
of a hand with smashed fingers - and the conclusion with a final
image of two men lying together
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Surrealistic Dream Sequence
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