Sexual satire about a young farmer who has had many bad experiences with women. He showers love and affection upon his pet pig, Amanda, saying she alone is worthy to be his wife. His "marria... Read allSexual satire about a young farmer who has had many bad experiences with women. He showers love and affection upon his pet pig, Amanda, saying she alone is worthy to be his wife. His "marriage" to Amanda causes a scandal in the community, almost mass hysteria.Sexual satire about a young farmer who has had many bad experiences with women. He showers love and affection upon his pet pig, Amanda, saying she alone is worthy to be his wife. His "marriage" to Amanda causes a scandal in the community, almost mass hysteria.
- Sugford
- (as Fred Forrest)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
O'Horgans troupe put together a (barely) musical skit about a farmer unlucky in love.
Well, human love anyway.
So he falls for his pig. The devotion is almost touching.
Don't worry.....no bestiality here. This isn't one of THOSE underground films. None of that freaky stuff here.
Siskel and Ebert called this one of their turkeys of the week way back when. I found it in a video bin in New Jersey and watched it with a group of half drunk friends.
None of us knew what the hell was going on but we all stayed until the end.
Hypnotic....if you're in the right daring mood.
The stage version won international acclaim in its original production, it toured the U.S. and Europe, and with others of its kind, influenced almost all theatre that came after it. Luckily, we have preserved here the show pretty much as it was originally conceived, with the original cast and original director, Tom O'Horgan (who also directed HAIR and Jesus Christ Superstar on Broadway).
This is not a mainstream, easy-to-take, studio film -- this is an aggressive, unsettling, glorious, deeply emotional, wildly imaginative piece of storytelling that you'll never forget. And it just might change the way you see the world...
It's a musical of sorts, sourced from an Off-Off-Broadway stage piece which apparently generated some degree of enthusiasm in its time. FUTZ is also aggressively pushy with its strangely illustrated, cryptoglyphic sociopolitical commentary, touching mostly on issues of autonomy and sufferance. So, it is what it is...AN EXPERIMENTAL, METAPHORICAL, ZOOPHELIA HILLBILLY MUSICAL. While it's generally immersed in derisive absurdist humor, it alternately crosses some serious, even discomforting junctures along the way.
Sounds too exquisitely nonconformist to pass up, doesn't it?
Well...this raging avalanche of officiously arty grandeur might succeed as a fascinating rumination on creative onanism...it definitely has the requisite freak appeal for a very select entente of outsider types. Mainstreamers, however, won't surrender gently to this megalomaniacal, dope-fueled celluloid spitball.
4/10
Did you know
- TriviaOn an episode of "Siskel and Ebert At the Movies" which was dedicated to bad cinema, Roger Ebert declared this film to be the worst he had ever seen.
- Quotes
Cyrus Futz: We tried to go to church but they wouldn't let us in - so I read you the Bible at home.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Close Encounters with Vilmos Zsigmond (2016)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Jenny Lind, California, USA(outdoor scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1