Fireworks Logo

Latest Gay Additions...

  • Crime Scene Berlin: Nightlife Killer
  • Young Royals
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK vs the World
  • Toll
  • High & Low - John Galliano
  • Feud: Capote vs. the Swans
  • Since the Last Time We Met
  • Bill Douglas - My Best Friend
  • Rupaul's Drag Race
  • Meet Me Outside
  • Shoulder Dance
  • After Shave with Danny Beard (The)
  • Our Flag Means Death
  • Boy Culture: Generation X
  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK
  • Boys on Film 1-24
  • Golden Age of the American Male (The)
  • Queen of the Universe
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • Cooler Climate (A)
  • Eismayer
  • Burning Days
  • All Our Fears
  • American Horror Story
  • Mr. Leather
  • Jacked
  • Interview with the Vampire
  • Tom Daley: Illegal to Be Me
  • Passion
  • Unlearning to Sleep
  • BROS
  • My Policeman
  • Iguana Like the Sun
  • Why Not You
  • Big Proud Party Agency (The)
  • Adonis X
  • Law of Love (The)
  • It Runs in the Family
  • Queer as Folk

Anger Me

Country: Canada, Language: English, 71 mins

  • Director: Elio Gelmini
  • Writer: Elio Gelmini; Varlo Vitali
  • Producer: Elio Gelmini; Varlo Vitali

CGiii Comment

First and foremost...this is not a documentary, it's an interview.

Anger has been placed in front of an excessively busy blue screen and drowned out by the music.

To appreciate Anger, you have to appreciate the avant-garde - and, there are those who say that anyone can do the avant...that may be true...but, only a few stick to it for their entire life's work...Anger has done so.

Gelmini has squandered a great opportunity...Anger does come across as a thoroughly polite and decent chap - he has met and worked with some exceptional people...Cocteau, Langlois...

The one good thing that does come out of this is...you will watch and re-appraise Anger's work with a little more kindness.

He certainly deserves a film about himself...a film that does justice to the man and his work. Sadly, this is not it.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Biography of the late author/actor/filmmaker Kenneth Anger, covering his early life as a child actor up through his career as an author ("Hollywood Babylon") and avant-garde filmmaker (Scorpio Rising (1964), Invocation of My Demon Brother (1969)). Included are interviews with friends and colleagues and archival footage of Anger, as well as clips from some of his films.

Cast & Characters

Kenneth Anger as Himself;
Jonas Mekas as Himself