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IMDbPro

Chelsea Girls

  • 1966
  • Unrated
  • 3h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Chelsea Girls (1966)
Drama

Lacking a formal narrative, Warhol's art house classic follows various residents of the Chelsea Hotel in 1966 New York City, presented in a split screen with a single audio track in conjunct... Read allLacking a formal narrative, Warhol's art house classic follows various residents of the Chelsea Hotel in 1966 New York City, presented in a split screen with a single audio track in conjunction with one side of screen.Lacking a formal narrative, Warhol's art house classic follows various residents of the Chelsea Hotel in 1966 New York City, presented in a split screen with a single audio track in conjunction with one side of screen.

  • Directors
    • Paul Morrissey
    • Andy Warhol
  • Writers
    • Ronald Tavel
    • Andy Warhol
  • Stars
    • Brigid Berlin
    • Randy Borscheidt
    • Christian Päffgen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Paul Morrissey
      • Andy Warhol
    • Writers
      • Ronald Tavel
      • Andy Warhol
    • Stars
      • Brigid Berlin
      • Randy Borscheidt
      • Christian Päffgen
    • 16User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos18

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    Top cast22

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    Brigid Berlin
    Brigid Berlin
    • Self - The Duchess
    • (as Brigid Polk)
    Randy Borscheidt
    • Self
    Christian Päffgen
    • Self
    • (as Ari)
    Angelina 'Pepper' Davis
    • Self
    Dorothy Dean
    • Self
    Eric Emerson
    • Self
    Patrick Flemming
    • Self
    Ed Hood
    • Self
    Arthur Loeb
    • Self
    Donald Lyons
    • Self
    Gerard Malanga
    • Son
    Marie Menken
    • Mother
    Mario Montez
    • Transvestite
    Nico
    Nico
    • Self
    Ondine
    Ondine
    • Self - Pope
    Rona Page
    • Self
    Albert Rene Ricard
    • Self
    Ronna
    • Self
    • Directors
      • Paul Morrissey
      • Andy Warhol
    • Writers
      • Ronald Tavel
      • Andy Warhol
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.71.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10nd_4@hot

    This film should be commercially released!

    In "arts and entertainment", films are usually viewed as being part of the entertainment side. Warhol moves them over to the arts side. This film, like others of Warhol's is "not watched, it's experienced". I think it's brilliant. But I wouldn't get nearly as much pleasure out of watching it if I didn't know who the stars were. So, I suggest you certainly read about the film and Warhol, before you watch this.
    9Catrician

    Unique and New

    What do most people know Andy Warhol by? It's probably one of three things. His paintings of soup cans, his incredibly long films about literally nothing (like the 7 hour "Empire" starring...the Empire State Building), or his raw legacy as a pop-icon and as a star of counterculture in the '60s. Few people really know that his was a rather prolific film director. Well, not prolific in the standard sense (he never seemed particularly passionate about his cinematic accomplishments), but as far as output of films, he's ahead of many. Now Chelsea Girls is the second Warhol film I've seen (behind Vinyl) and I don't plan on seeing anymore, because Chelsea Girls seemed to be a statement of almost everything Warhol wanted to say.

    Chelsea Girls is one of the most important films in a series of avant- garde movies in the 1960's. Besides Brakhage, Warhol is often considered to be the most influential and fresh experimental filmmaker of that time. But why? What makes some three-and-a-half-hour film about nothing so interesting, new, and yet still entertaining and interesting? It's the filming style and creativity of which it is portrayed.

    The film is presented with two separate film reels at once, but with only one of the reel's audio. So it's basically like watching one and a half movies at once. Originally, it was the projectionist's choice of which soundtrack was used, but at this point it has become more standardized with the update of digital film.

    There are a dozen, 33-minute reels, played two at once, making the film a total of three-and-a-half hours. All of the characters in the movie are those of Warhol's buddies; from dominatrices, to heroin dealers, to corrupt religious officials, to the underground rock star Nico herself.

    Oftentimes I'm very intrigued by films showing impoverishment. I can't exactly pinpoint why; it's just something that interests me. Chelsea Girls shows the opposite by displaying some of the most despicable characters ever filmed in cinema, giving an effective "slice-of-life" of these money-obsessed Fellini-esque individuals.

    While the second hour is a bit lacking as it ventures more into pointless surrealism when the rest of the film is focused more on the pure dramatic aspects of the characters, the first and third hours of Chelsea Girls are tragic, funny, entertaining, but also give insight and demonstrate brilliant chemistry from the entire ensemble. Additionally, if you ever get bored watching it, just let your eyes drift to the other screen for a while.

    Many will talk about the themes of Chelsea Girls. A theory I've taken a liking to it's filmed like a party, where you can hear some people talking, and want to hear everyone and see what's going on, but you know it's impractical (as would be watching Chelsea Girls one reel at a time). I truly believe that the last set of reels, however, is the most important in the whole, non-structured movie. In it, we hear the audio from a corrupt "pope" as he beats a woman, rants, and talks about how "Bride of Frankenstein" is the greatest movie ever, while in the other reel, we simply watch Nico crying while assorted rave lights flash onto her.

    This creates a mood of sadness, of weeping for this life, but also a sense of self-awareness. Is Warhol revealing his realizes the chivalry of his, and the cast's, antics? I believe so.

    Chelsea Girls is certainly one of the most unique films ever made, and a landmark achievement and must-see for anyone interested in Warhol or experimental cinema.
    matt-201

    "Everything is pretty."

    Maddening but exquisite--one of the most beautiful of all American movies. The genius of Warhol as filmmaker was his stubborn insistence--conscious or otherwise--on bringing the principles of portraiture in painting to movies. Warhol understood that the power of the portrait is as psychological as it is technical, and his strategies for eliciting "acting" were as excruciating as they are potent. In his filmed "still lifes" of Edie Sedgwick and Henry Geldzahler he seemed to extract a spiritual radiance through duration and discomfort as if from a syringe, and in "Chelsea Girls" the concentrated sadism of his directing style produces similarly unpredictable, human, extravagant results. Shown with two projectors (one randomly producing sound, the other silent), the film shows three and a half hours of faces--superstars and hangers-on hung out to dry in front of an impassive and directionless camera that, after the maestro's fashion, silently encourages the "performers" to entertain. Some twist in the wind, others outdo all expectations; something palpably human, essential, unprojected is born of all of them. The film is hard going when seen in a theatre, but by the time Warhol gets to the transcendent, almost wordless rhapsody of the final garishly colored reels, the trek pays off like a sunburst.
    Artemis-9

    Frankly speaking.

    As a fiction movie, it's nothing. As a documentary on a way-of-life, it's crap. As Art, of any kind, it's crap. As an angry, personal statement, it's overlong. As a collection of friends put together in a basement that happens to be a few derelict, crowded hotel rooms, it's a poor joke. As existentialism philosophy, it's below zero. This is one of a handful films that kicked me out of the theater before the end - and Gosh, have I seen bad stuff in my life of thousands of film viewing... (I resisted up to the first colour-reel, if you're suspecting I left early. I managed up to the first 140 minutes or so.) Frankly, and sincerely yours truly - take my advice: if you want to know something about Warhol, don't waste your time trying to locate this film.
    big8jacob123

    One of Warhol's Most Interesting

    This is definitely an interesting film as directed by Paul Morrissey, who was told what to direct.Brigid Polk was especially funny as the duchess. I am told they were all on speed, and were almost arrested as the hotel Switchboard listened to the duchess make deals. Warhol exploited people and that is fine if you like to be exploited. WHich everyone in the film was. Later when Edie Sedgwick tried to break away and have her footage cut out and refused to make movies anymore, she was banned from the studio when Warhol was profiting very well from the movies. When Mary Woronov tried to break away she was thrown down a flight of stairs, when she asked for profits from the movies. Warhol was a sadistic "artist" talented or not who exploited people. Later when Edie was had finally broke away from him he said"I wish I could film her committing suicide". WHat a great friend. I wish Edie were still alive and he was so she could smack him in the head

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mary Woronov's mother, on seeing the film, sued Andy Warhol, as she had not signed a release allowing Warhol to use footage of her in the film. Warhol then paid the actors $1000 each for their releases.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Ondine - Pope: By the way, "The Bride Of Frankenstein" is the greatest movie ever made. It's just fabulous... Isn't it?

    • Alternate versions
      Two segments listed in the original program for The Chelsea Girls were deleted from the film: 'The Afternoon' and 'The Closet'. 'The Afternoon' starred Edie Sedgwick who, according to Paul Morrissey, asked for her footage to be taken out of the movie because she had signed a contract with Bob Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman. 'The Closet' starring Nico and Randy Borscheidt is now a separate film.
    • Connections
      Featured in The South Bank Show: Velvet Underground (1986)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Chelsea Girls?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 1968 (Denmark)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Portuguese
    • Also known as
      • Девушки из Челси
    • Filming locations
      • Chelsea Hotel - 222 West 23rd Street, Chelsea, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Factory Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      3 hours 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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