- Blow Job (film)
"Blow Job" is a
short film directed byAndy Warhol . Filmed in January 1964, the 35-minute [When projected at 16 fps.] film was shot with a 16-millimetreBolex silent camera onblack-and-white film. It depicts the face of an anonymous young man (DeVeren Bookwalter ) as he receivesfellatio from an off-screen partner, widely reported to be avant-garde filmmakerWillard Maas . While shot at 24 fps, Warhol specified that it should be projected at 16 fps, [ [http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/01/14/blow_job.html Blow Job ] ] slowing it down by a third.Despite the explicit subject matter, the camera shows only the expression on the young man's face. The sexual act itself is not seen. It is unknown whether it is a male or a female performing the act, and it is unseen, therefore the viewer must simply take it at face value that fellatio is indeed occurring
The identity of the person performing the act is disputed. Warhol states in his book "POPism" (New York:
Harcourt Brace , 1980) that five different boys performed the fellatio. This can be found on page 64 and 65 of the book. In this book, Warhol writes that he originally asked Charles Rydell, boyfriend of filmmakerJerome Hill , to star in the film, promising that there would be "five beautiful boys" to perform the act.However, when Warhol set up the film shoot at
The Factory on a Sunday, Rydell failed to show up. Warhol phoned Rydell at Hill's suite at theAlgonquin Hotel and asked where Rydell was. Rydell replied that he thought Warhol was kidding, and had no intention of appearing in such a film. When he declined Andy used "a good looking kid that happened to be hanging around the Factory that day", later identified as Bookwalter. By that time, the five boys had departed, and Maas was pressed into service. (Warhol's notoriously poor memory kept the five boys in place for the version given in the much later book "POPism".)In 1966, Warhol filmed a sequel, "
Eating Too Fast ", running 67 minutes and with sound, and featuring art critic and writer Gregory Battcock as the recipient.References
External links
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