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Multiple Maniacs (1970) [The Criterion Collection]

Posted By: Helladot
720p (HD) / BDRip IMDb
Multiple Maniacs (1970) [The Criterion Collection]

Multiple Maniacs (1970) + Bonus
BDRip 720p | MKV | 1280 x 720 | x264 @ 2560 Kbps | 1h 36mn | 2,17 Gb
Audio: English AC3 1.0 @ 160 Kbps + Commentary track | Subs: English
Genre: Comedy, Crime, Horror | Director: John Waters

John Waters’ gloriously grotesque second feature is replete with all manner of depravity, from robbery to murder to one of cinema’s most memorably blasphemous moments. Made on a shoestring budget in Waters’ native Baltimore, with the filmmaker taking on nearly every technical task, this gleeful mockery of the peace-and-love ethos of its era features the Cavalcade of Perversion, a traveling show mounted by a troupe of misfits whose shocking proclivities are topped only by those of their leader: the glammer-than-glam, larger-than-life Divine, out for blood after discovering her lover’s affair. Starring members of Waters’ beloved regular cast, the Dreamlanders (including David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Mink Stole, Susan Lowe, Edith Massey, George Figgs, and Cookie Mueller), Multiple Maniacs is an anarchic masterwork from an artist who has doggedly tested the limits of good taste for decades.


(Enlargeable)
Multiple Maniacs (1970) [The Criterion Collection]

Audio Commentary - in this new audio commentary, writer-director John Waters discusses in great detail why his films were never popular in the original grindhouse theaters, the influence foreign films had on their evolution, how Multiple Maniacs came to exist, the casting process and the lives and careers of many of the principal actors, the distribution history of the film, the 'controversial' material and how standards in the film business evolved during the years, some of the dramatic improvements that were made during the restoration of the film (with some very interesting comments about the audio quality in a key sequence), etc. The commentary was recorded in 2016 in New York.

Bonus included: "The Stations of Filth", video essay by scholar Gary Needham (10:40)