Venus in Furs
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jess Franco
James Darren
Barbara Mcnair
Maria Rohm
Klaus Kinski
Dennis Price
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
On a beach near Istanbul Jimmy Logan, a young American jazz musician, finds the mutilated body of Wanda Reed, a beautiful woman Jimmy had earlier seen sadistically killed by Olga, a fashion photographer, Ahmed, a millionaire playboy, and Kapp, a homosexual. Jimmy leaves Istanbul for Rio de Janeiro, where he meets and has an affair with Rita, a nightclub singer. One night, a woman known as Venus enters the club, and Jimmy, struck by her resemblance to Wanda, is attracted to her. She seduces Kapp, now living in Rio, and he dies of a heart attack. She then has a lesbian encounter with Olga, who commits suicide. Jimmy, fearful of Venus, returns with Rita to Istanbul, and Venus follows. She meets up with Ahmed, and while they enact a story about a sultan and his sadistic slave mistress, Ahmed dies. Trailed by the police, Venus disappears in a cemetery, and Jimmy finds her fur coat draped over Wanda's grave. Returning to the beach, Jimmy finds his own body washed ashore.
Director
Jess Franco
Cast
James Darren
Barbara Mcnair
Maria Rohm
Klaus Kinski
Dennis Price
Margaret Lee
Adolfo Lastretti
Paul Müller
Mirella Pamphili
Crew
Howard A. Anderson Co.
Howard A. Anderson Co.
Henry Batista
Commonwealth United Entertainment Inc.
Milo G. Cuccia
Harry Eisen
Robert S. Eisen
Carlo Fadda
Jess Franco
Mike Hugg
Bruno Leder
Angelo Lotti
Manfred Mann
Mike Pozen
Richard M. Sherman
Robert B. Sherman
Synchrofilm
Malvin Wald
Nicholas Wentworth
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Gist (Venus In Furs) - THE GIST
Originally inspired by a conversation director Jess Franco had with jazz musician Chet Baker, Venus in Furs (which bears little relation to the famous Leopold von Sacher-Masoch novel except for the title) was first designed as "an unusual love story between a black trumpeter and a beautiful white girl." Franco, who was a musician and jazz aficionado himself, intended to model the male protagonist on Miles Davis but the American producers that the director was dependent on for a wider distribution nixed the idea, telling him "The American public are not ready to see a black man and a white woman in bed." They were fine, however, with the reverse situation and so Franco reworked the story, eventually casting James Darren in the lead. Darren was looking to broaden his range after a stint as a pop singer and teen pinup in such beach pictures as For Those Who Think Young [1964], all three Gidget films [1959-1963] and the sci-fi TV series The Time Tunnel [1966-1967]. Yet, Venus in Furs would remain an intriguing anomaly in his career as he would concentrate solely on television series such as T.J. Hooker after this.
Much more interesting is Venus in Furs's real attraction, Maria Rohm, and the eclectic supporting cast that includes Barbara McNair, Klaus Kinski, Dennis Price, Margaret Lee, Paul Muller (a regular fixture in Franco films) and British musician Manfred Mann and his band (including Mike Hugg) which provides the lively jazz-influenced score, some of it performed on screen by the band, where it becomes part of the film's trippy sound design. Rohm had appeared in several of Franco's films before but mostly in decorative parts that highlighted her exotic beauty. Venus in Furs provides her with her first challenging role, one that requires her to be both seductive and menacing in equal parts and she rises to the task, creating an enigmatic femme fatale who haunts the dreams of not just Jimmy but probably those of every male and possibly female viewer. Her first appearance in the film as the reincarnated Wanda, dressed in a white fur coat and high heels with nothing on beneath it except her silver stockings, is hard to forget.
Lesbianism, S&M, voyeurism, groovy fashions, literary references and decadent jet set parties that seem like a hangover from Fellini's La Dolce Vita [1960] - Venus in Furs has something for everyone. The colorful locales of Istanbul, Barcelona and Rio provide additional eye candy and the film occasionally breaks from its drug-induced state to stage a bizarre happening like the scene where Wanda and Olga are making out in the middle of a soiree, surrounded by hipsters who start painting their bodies and showering them with feathers. Don't you miss the sixties?
Despite some budgetary restraints, a constant problem with Franco, the director had relative freedom to do what he wanted on Venus in Furs and was relatively pleased with the result, even if the distributors changed his original title from Black Angel and altered his preferred ending. And of the countless films that Franco has made - more than 150 features under various pseudonyms such as Clifford Brown, David Khunne and Joan Almirall - Venus in Furs is considered by most of his fans and even some critics as one of his most accomplished features. It's not flawless, of course, and some will take issue with the often ludicrous, deadpan voice-over narration by Darren, an overuse of some once stylistic devices of the late 60s/early 70s such as the zoom lens, and the often uneven mixture of stock footage with new material. At the same time, these qualities which were often necessitated by the meager budget, help lend the movie an almost experimental, freeform tone.
In assessing the film in The Video Watchdog Book, Franco devotee Tim Lucas wrote, "The beauty of this film - a kind of inverted telling of The Bride Wore Black [1968], influenced by Antonioni's Blow-Up [1966]- is that it makes little narrative sense, while making perfect emotional sense. What better purpose can film serve? The fetishistic images come to a boil with a hot, obsessive jazz score....as Darren narrates the hallucinations with lines like "Man, it was a wild scene, but if they wanted to go that route, it was their bag!" These Sixties-isms only make the experience more appealingly distorted, a haunting, virtually unique fantasy."
Producer: Harry Alan Towers
Director: Jesus Franco
Screenplay: Milo G. Cuccia, Carlo Fadda, Jesus Franco, Bruno Leder, Malvin Wald
Cinematography: Angelo Lotti
Special Effects: Howard A. Anderson
Music: Mike Hugg, Manfred Mann, Stu Phillips (uncredited)
Film Editing: Henry Batista, Michael Pozen, Nicholas Wentworth
Cast: James Darren (Jimmy Logan), Barbara McNair (Rita), Maria Rohm (Wanda Reed), Klaus Kinski (Ahmed Kortobawi), Dennis Price (Percival Kapp), Margaret Lee (Olga), Adolfo Lastretti (Inspector Kaplan), Paul Muller (Hermann).
C-86m.
by Jeff Stafford
The Gist (Venus In Furs) - THE GIST
Insider Info (Venus In Furs) - BEHIND THE SCENES
Using Miles Davis as the model for his trumpet playing protagonist, Franco and his co-producer Harry Alan Towers co-wrote the first draft of the script but had to change it when studio executives from American International Pictures refused to distribute a film which had a black hero with a white girlfriend. It was then rewritten by Franco with contributions from Bruno Leder, Malvin Wald and, according to the IMDB credits, Milo G. Cuccia and Carlo Fadda, who look suspiciously like possible pseudonyms for Franco, who was notorious for using dozens of alternate names.
Franco admitted that raising financing for his films was almost always a challenge and in the case of Venus in Furs noted humorously that it resulted in "a co-production between 60 or 65 countries...so we had to have Italian actors and who knows what else."
The progression of the shoot on Venus in Furs went from Rome to Marbella (Spain) to Istanbul and then a studio in Barcelona. The Rio footage was added later.
Franco revealed that one of the unusual demands from the AIP executives, besides the title change to match the famous Sacher-Masoch novel, was to include a scene on the poster of Maria Rohm in a state of partial undress, dragging her fur on the ground behind her.
At first Franco wasn't sure James Darren was right for the part but then learned he had been a trumpet player in a band and had even known Chet Baker. Because of that connection, Darren felt he could capture some of Baker's personality and intensity on camera. The director also noted that Darren fell in love with Maria Rohm during filming though no details were provided on whether a relationship developed.
Klaus Kinski was well-behaved for the most part during the filming of Venus in Furs though when Franco tried to get him to enter into the fantasy aspects of the story he was often incredulous, challenging him with questions about the scene - "What is this?"
The stunning marble house in the film where Kinski's character lives was the home of producer Carlos Ponti, who had just divorced his first wife and was in the process of marrying Sophia Loren.
In an interview, Maria Rohm recalled some aspects of the Venus in Furs production, stating that "when Jess got his way, everything went ok. When he didn't, he phoned it in sometimes." She added that Franco wanted the film to be more erotic and explicit at times but the American distributor prohibited that in the deal.
On the subject of Klaus Kinski, Rohm was less positive, saying that a lot of the stories he told the press and people in the profession were highly exaggerated. One rumor she accused Kinski of starting was telling reporters that he, Margaret Lee and Rohm were involved in a sexual menage a trois. Rohm said she thought about suing him over that story but instead suffered in silence.
by Jeff Stafford
SOURCES:
Jess Franco interview on Venus in Furs DVD from Blue Underground
Maria Rohm interview on Venus in Furs DVD from Blue Underground
The Video Watchdog Book by Tim Lucas
IMDB
Insider Info (Venus In Furs) - BEHIND THE SCENES
In the Know (Venus In Furs) - TRIVIA
It is not known how many films Franco has actually directed since he has used so many pseudonyms over the years but it is estimated that he has directed close to 200 pictures. Like Hitchcock, he often appears in cameos and small parts in his movies but not because of vanity but as a money-saving measure.
Venus in Furs is not based on the famous novel of the same name by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch even though that title was imposed on Franco by the producers who felt that the association with the book would help the film's box office potential.
1969, the same year that Venus in Furs was released (it was also known as Paroxismus), another movie entitled Venus in Furs was released. It was an Italian film directed by Massimo Dallamano and starring Laura Antonelli. It WAS based on the Sacher-Masoch novel and went by the title Le malizie di Venere in Italy. Adding to the confusion, a low-budget American independent film entitled Venus in Furs was still in circulation. Released in 1967, it was directed by Joseph Marzano and featured a cast of unknowns. It too was based on the Sacher-Masoch novel and made the rounds of the sexploitation circuit. It is currently available on DVD from Something Weird video.
James Darren, who plays Jimmy, the haunted trumpet player of Venus in Furs, was most famous in the U.S. for starring in the Gidget film series as her surfer boyfriend Moondoggie. He also had some AM radio hits in the early sixties such as "Goodbye Cruel World" and "Her Royal Majesty." Venus in Furs was his only foray into Eurotrash features and he has since concentrated on TV series such as T.J. Hooker, Melrose Place and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
Barbara McNair, cast in the role of Jimmy's girlfriend Rita, was a popular African American vocalist who first attracted attention on Arthur Godfrey's TV show. Nightclub appearances and guest shots on The Dean Martin Show and The Tonight Show followed. She had a bit part in her first film, Spencer's Mountain (1963) but the film that introduced her to a wide audience in a major role was If He Hollers, Let Him Go! (1968), which generated some controversy over her nude scenes. After appearing in Venus in Furs, McNair had her own TV variety show briefly and appeared with Elvis Presley in his final movie, Change of Habit (1969).
Klaus Kinski, one of the most prolific actors in Eurotrash features, making everything from Edgar Wallace thrillers to giallos and spaghetti Westerns, worked with Franco on a total of seven films. Although he had a reputation as a notoriously difficult and temperamental actor, Franco maintains that they always got along fine together.
Dennis Price, one of the most popular character actors in British cinema, was one of Franco's favorite performers due to his extreme professionalism. Price, who at one time was starring in celebrated pictures such as Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), I'm All Right Jack (1959) and Victim (1961), was slumming in low-budget features toward the end of his career, partly due to decreasing job offers and an alcohol problem. Venus in Furs marked Price's first film for Franco and he would work with him several more times, including Vampiros Lesbos (1971) and The Erotic Rites of Frankenstein (1972). Franco recently said in an interview, "You could shoot 18 hours with him. Maybe he wasn't totally sober because he was definitely one who gave weight to the argument that Irishmen are always drunk. But even when he was drunk...he was as sharp as if it was 9 in the morning."
Margaret Lee was a familiar presence in European genre films, appearing in everything from sword and sandal epics (Samson and the Sea Beast, 1963) to spy thrillers (Agent 077 Operation Istanbul, 1965) to costume thrillers (Jess Franco's The Bloody Judge, 1970) and was frequently paired with Klaus Kinski in movies such as Circus of Fear [1966], Double Face [1969] and Slaughter Hotel [1971]. Ms. Lee now enjoys the sort of cult immortality that is bestowed on actresses like Barbara Steele and there are several web sites devoted solely to her.
by Jeff Stafford
SOURCES:
Jess Franco interview on Venus in Furs DVD from Blue Underground
Maria Rohm interview on Venus in Furs DVD from Blue Underground
The Video Watchdog Book by Tim Lucas
IMDB
In the Know (Venus In Furs) - TRIVIA
Yea or Nay (Venus In Furs) - CRITIC REVIEWS OF "VENUS IN FURS"
- Michael Weldon, The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film
"As in Necronomicon [aka Succubus, 1968], the constant merging of dream and reality with oneiric slow-motion shots and fluid camera movements, transitions and superimpositions, works very well and is shattered only by the crude money-saving inserts of tourist-board shots. Similarly, Darren's voice-over narration and dialogue lines are a constant irritant."
- The Encyclopedia of Horror Films (edited by Phil Hardy)
"Before he carved out a phantasmagoric wonderland of hard-core Spanish-language porn in the early '80s, Jess Franco - nee Jesus Franco, but he's worked under so many different aliases (at least 40) it hardly matters anymore - was a certifiable nut-job of the most exotic proportions. For every pseudonym he concocted, there are about four films. Most were rickety slapdash numbers that served to mystify, titillate and disgust - like a one-armed go-go dancer....Franco exhales Albert Camus existential smoke, but really the film is like a Marvel Team-up between Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Russ Meyer set loose in the Hammer Studios. Translation: It's trippy and campy as hell."
- Wesley Morris, San Francisco Chronicle
"Venus in Furs gives you a glimpse of what's great and what's grating about the typical Franco film. Some scenes are shot with quirky precision and painstaking attention to detail, while others are cobbled together cheaply. The inevitable reaction alternates elation with irritation. Elation at sampling something unique and unheralded. Irritation at the slipshod and the mundane."
- Cathal Tohill & Pete Tombs, The Labyrinth of Sex: The Films of Jesus Franco
"...this is one of the director's most striking and 'respectable' efforts...No, it doesn't make much sense on a purely rational level, but like the best jazz, Venus in Furs works best when you tuck away any rigid notions of logic and just go with the flow. For those willing to submit, it's one hell of a ride."
- DVD Delirium (edited by Nathaniel Thompson)
"Venus in Furs is one of those films that creates a mood more than it delivers a clear narrative. If style over substance annoys you, then you're in the wrong movie. It's charmingly dated in dialogue, and moves from exotic locales such as Turkey and Rio for pretty much no good reason. If you liked The Hunger or David Lynch's films, you'll find Venus in Furs a lot of fun along the lines of Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. It's chock-full of wonderful images: Barbara McNair singing on a tiled floor, Maria Rohm seductively caressing a Venus statue, and Klaus Kinski tied to a hook being whipped. The film has some purposefully psychedelic passages where colors and focus swirl around the camera in extraordinary ways. A lot of people dismiss this movie as merely a competent exploitation film, but it has enough technical proficiency to be considered a good film with an assured director behind it."
- Judge Cullum, DVD Verdict
"Regarded by many fans and also by the director himself as Franco's finest hour (I still think Vampyro's Lesbos is better but hey, there's no accounting for taste sometimes), Venus in Furs is a fantastic psycho-sexual thriller that just drips with tripped out atmosphere and sixties Euro-pop sensibilities. While it lacks the overtly blatant and sometimes pornographic sexuality of many of Franco's other films, there's no mistaking even a minute or two into the movie that yes, we are still in his world....Rohm is simply spellbinding in the female lead, looking as exciting clothed as she does in the nude and playing the role, which is one without a lot of dialogue, very nonchalantly and with some degree of cold, sexual menace to her character...from the Rollin-esque scenes of empty desolate beaches to the fantastic jazz score from Manfred Mann, Venus in Furs just works. Franco paints the picture in delirious hues of red, green and blue and adds his little touches all over the film (watch for him in a small cameo role) but he does it with a whole lot more style here than many of his detractors probably realize he has."
- Ian Jane, DVD Talk
"I have a general dislike of surrealistic cinema. Instead of being inventive or inspired I usually find such films silly, pointless and indicative of a lazy and/or way-too-stoned writer....Jess Franco's Venus in Furs - often touted as the Spanish auteur's greatest work - certainly leans to the avant-garde, yet mainly avoids the pitfall excoriated above. Suffused with an atmosphere of languid decadence, set to a smoky jazz/lounge beat, it's an erotic ghost story of obsession and revenge that in its best moments is strangely, compellingly hypnotic. Nothing is really explained in this (almost) Mobius Strip-like film but its dreamy spell is potent enough to make that of little consequence. As with improvisational jazz, you just have to surrender yourself to the vibe and go with it, man."
- Eccentric Cinema
"...poor mystery"
- Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide
Yea or Nay (Venus In Furs) - CRITIC REVIEWS OF "VENUS IN FURS"
Quote It (Venus In Furs) - QUOTES FROM "VENUS IN FURS"
Jimmy: When you don't know where you're at - man, I tell ya, time is like the ocean. You can't hold onto it.
Jimmy: Man, it was a wild scene. Like if they wanted to go that route, it was their bag.
Jimmy: Slowly I was getting back on solid ground. My music was in the groove. It was great. Like being born all over again.
Olga (to Wanda): I can't explain what we did but I didn't want you to die.
Jimmy: She was beautiful, even though she was dead.
Jimmy: How can you run from a dead person unless you're dead yourself?
Jimmy: I had to find somebody to talk to, somebody who could put the pieces together.
Rita (to Jimmy): Don't try to look for you or you'll go really crazy.
Rita (to Jimmy): Tell me how did she hook your mind?
Quote It (Venus In Furs) - QUOTES FROM "VENUS IN FURS"
Venus in Furs on DVD
Speaking of Miles Davis, Franco says that "My original idea had been to make an unreal love story between a black trumpet player and a beautiful white girl" but market concerns (ie: producers) said "The American public are not ready to see a black man and a white woman in bed. But the thing is they were fine with a white man sleeping with a black woman." And so Venus in Furs stars James Darren as a trumpet player who stumbles across the beach, into parties, and around the world from Istanbul to Rio - into the arms of various women, including one otherworldly beauty who haunts him while bringing death to others. Highlights include a jazz score by Manfred Mann (also in a cameo, along with Jess Franco, as jazz musicians) and, of course, the infamously temperamental Klaus Kinski.
The first party scene that sets the stage for a perverse murder seems to pay homage to Last Year at Marienbad (1961), but as soon as Kinski and his kinky cohorts go for blood viewers are reminded that they're far from Marienbad and, instead, in a place where the oft-repeated title song announces yet another death by orgasm, the slow motion effects are abused as much as the zoom, and the mind-games compete against different sexual fantasies for prominence. Although unrated, there's nothing too extreme here and the hedonistic tone pumps up the camp value.
In the essay The Labyrinth of Sex: The Films of Jesus Franco (Immoral Tales, Cathal Tohill & Pete Tombs) the jury is out: "Venus in Furs gives you a glimpse of what's great and what's grating about the typical Franco film. Some scenes are shot with quirky precision and painstaking attention to detail, while others are cobbled together cheaply. The inevitable reaction alternates elation with irritation. Elation at sampling something unique and unheralded. Irritation at the slipshod and the mundane."
Blue Underground's dvd release of Venus in Furs presents the film in its original widescreen ratio of 1.85:1, along with an interview with director Jess Franco (titled Jesus in Furs), an audio interview with star Maria Rohm, a theatrical trailer, poster and still gallery, and Jess Franco bio.
For more information about Venus in Furs, visit Blue Underground. To order Venus in Furs, go to TCM Shopping.
by Pablo Kjolseth
Venus in Furs on DVD
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Location scenes filmed in 1968 in Istanbul, England, Spain, West Germany, and Italy; stock footage of the Rio de Janeiro Carnival is included. Released in Italy as Paroxismus. Alternative Italian title: Può una morta rivivere per amore?. Jess Franco is credited as Hans Billian in Italian sources. Writers Leder, Fadda, and Cuccia are not credited by U.S. sources.