Tiger Morse

Recently added

Paranoia
1

Paranoia

Nov 08, 1966
On the evening of November 8th, 1966, following the afternoon filming of The George Hamilton Story, a movie in which Warhol cast his mother Julia as an “aging peroxide movie star with a lot of husbands”, – “ We’re trying to bring back old people.” – he took his crew and a much larger cast to Kaleidoscope, fashion designer Tiger Morse’s boutique shop on Madison Avenue in New York City, to shoot his second unreleased film of the day. A nocturnal tale of downtown bulls in an uptown China shop, Paranoia is a portrait of the always captivating, always hilarious Morse as she converses with everyone in front of and behind the camera while genuinely attempting to keep the Superstars in the room from wreaking havoc on her uniquely curated curios.
Okay Bill
5

Okay Bill

Oct 05, 1971
The film tells the story of Bill, a young, successful stockbroker who zips off to Greenwich Village on his motorcycle when no one's looking to venture into the hippy counterculture world. His wife, Nancy, is the dream of every middle-class male. She is liberated enough to go around bra-less, enjoy sex, and be the perfect mother for their child. Nancy, however, is unaware of her husband's excursions and happily attends the local ecology awareness meetings without Bill. Bill soon becomes involved with Gordon, an Andy Warhol-type character whose protege, Roz, fascinates the square young businessman. After witnessing a wild party on Fire Island, Bill realizes that this crowd is not for him (shallow, lifeless) and that he does not even want to have sex with Roz because he is lonely for his wife. Nancy arrives unexpectedly on the island to reclaim her husband and together they walk off into the sunset hand in hand.
Four Stars
2

Four Stars

Dec 15, 1967
Four Stars (ou « **** ») est un film américain d'avant garde réalisé par Andy Warhol et sorti en 1967. Le film n'a été projeté qu'une seule fois dans sa version intégrale d'une durée de 25 heures, les 15 et 16 décembre 1967 à New York. Il est composé de bobines de 35 minutes, projetées simultanément et se superposant. Le titre du film est une allusion au système de notation utilisé par les critiques de cinéma, « quatre étoiles » représentant la note maximale.