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Cocksucker Blues

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Wikipedia article




'Cocksucker Blues' is an unreleased documentary film directed by the still photographer Robert Frank chronicling The Rolling Stones American Tour 1972 in support of their album 'Exile on Main St.'

Production



There was much anticipation for the band's arrival in the United States, since they had not visited there since the 1969 disaster at the Altamont Free Concert in which a fan was stabbed and beaten to death by Hells Angels and the incident was caught on camera. Behind the scenes, the tour embodied debauchery, lewdness and hedonism.

The film was shot 'cinma vrit', with several cameras available for anyone in the entourage to pick up and start shooting. This allowed the film's audience to witness backstage parties, drug use (Mick Taylor is shown smoking marijuana with some roadies and Mick Jagger seen snorting cocaine backstage), roadie and groupie antics, and the Stones with their defenses down. One scene includes a groupie in a hotel room injecting heroin.

Fate



The film came under a court order which forbade it from being shown unless the director, Robert Frank, was physically present. This ruling stemmed from the conflict that arose when the band, having commissioned the film, decided that its content was embarrassing and potentially incriminating, and did not want it shown. Frank felt otherwise, hence the ruling.

According to Ray Young, "The salty title notwithstanding, its nudity, needles and hedonism was supposedly incriminating and the picture was shelvedthis during a liberal climate that saw the likes of 'Cry Uncle!' and 'Chafed Elbows' playing in neighborhood theatres." 'Deep Throat' was released in the same year. A Rolling Stones concert film, 'Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones', was released instead, and 'Cocksucker Blues' was indefinitely shelved.

The court order in question also enjoined Frank against exhibiting 'Cocksucker Blues' more frequently than four times per year in an "archival setting" with Frank being present.[https://upbeatnews.com/spa/famous-movies-that-have-been-banned-all-over-the-world/44?rev_campaign_id=721722 Famous movies that have been banned all over the world]. 'Upbeat' website. Retrieved 27 October 2020. Frank personally introduced one such rare screening of the film on February 23, 1988 at Boston's Cinema 57 theater in Park Square in conjunction with promoting the release that week of his new film, 'Candy Mountain'.

Other screenings have included the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York on October 3, 2009 (curator Jeff Rosenheim, introducing the movie, mentioned that Robert Frank was "in the building," but pointed out that the building was over ); the Museum of Modern Art in New York in November 2012 as part of a two-week festival, "The Rolling Stones: 50 Years on Film"; the Cleveland Cinematheque on November 15, 2013; the Chuck Jones Theater during the 2015 Telluride Film Festival; and the Rotterdam, Netherlands 2015 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) as part of a Robert Frank retrospective, with Frank in attendance. At one point a Santa Monica, California theatre presented the film in a number of late night shows, though a stink bomb was placed in the ventilation on opening night to discourage attendance, but the film was shown anyway.

In popular culture



The fourth section of Don DeLillo's magnum opus, 'Underworld', is titled 'Cocksucker Blues'. The Stones' song/film is referred to in the narrative of that section.

See also



* List of American films of 1972

* 'Titicut Follies', documentary about a Massachusetts mental hospital legally barred from distribution over privacy concerns for over 20 years

References




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