Mondo Trasho

Mondo Trasho

VHS cover
Directed by John Waters
Produced by John Waters
Written by John Waters
Starring Mary Vivian Pearce
Divine
David Lochary
Mink Stole
Danny Mills
Music by John Waters
Cinematography John Waters
Edited by John Waters
Production
company
Distributed by Film-Makers' Cooperative
Release dates
  • March 14, 1969 (1969-03-14)
Running time
95 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2,100[1]

Mondo Trasho is a 1969 16mm mondo black comedy film by John Waters. The film stars Divine, Mary Vivian Pearce, David Lochary and Mink Stole. It contains very little dialogue, the story being told mostly through musical cues.

Plot

After an introductory sequence during which chickens are beheaded on a chopping block, the main action begins. Platinum blond bombshell Mary Vivian Pearce begins her day by riding the bus and reading Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon.

Bombshell is later seduced by a hippie degenerate "shrimper" (foot fetishist), who starts molesting her feet while she fantasizes about being Cinderella. She is then hit by a car driven by Divine, a portly blonde who was trying to pick up an attractive hitchhiker whom she imagines naked. Divine places her in the car and drives distractedly around Baltimore experiencing bizarre situations, such as repeated visits by the Blessed Virgin Mary (Margie Skidmore) - during which Divine exclaims, "Oh Mary ... teach me to be Divine". Divine finally takes the unconscious Bombshell to Dr. Coathanger (David Lochary), who amputates her feet and replaces them with bird-like monster feet which she can tap together to transport herself around Baltimore.

Cast

Production

Depending on versions of the story; either Waters or the whole crew (except Divine) was either arrested or nearly arrested during production for illegally shooting a scene involving a nude hitchhiker on the campus of Johns Hopkins University.

Title

The film's title refers to a series of semi-related quasi-documentary films that were popular during the 1960s: Mondo Cane, Mondo Freudo, Mondo Bizarro, etc. The title also pays tribute to Mondo Topless, a film by one of Waters' favorite directors, Russ Meyer.

Music

Waters, in a 2008 interview, stated that the songs used in the film were taken right out of his own record collection. Waters says he did not pay the proper licensing fees to use these songs because he could not afford to. It is because of this, Waters says, that Mondo Trasho remains unreleased, as the still unsecured music rights would be too prohibitively expensive to clear.

Reception

Mondo Trasho currently holds a 50% 'Fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[2]

Waters himself has stated that he does not care for this movie, and claims it should have been a short film instead of a feature.

See also

References

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