The Naked World of Harrison Marks is a 1966 British pseudo-documentary about adult film director and photographer George Harrison Marks starring Marks, Valentine Dyall, Pamela Green and June Palmer.[1]
The Naked World of Harrison Marks | |
---|---|
Directed by | George Harrison Marks |
Produced by | George Harrison Marks |
Starring | Pamela Green, June Palmer, George Harrison Marks |
Narrated by | Valentine Dyall |
Production company | Harrison Marks Production |
Distributed by | Gala |
Release date |
|
Running time | 84 mins |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Plot
editThe film looks at Marks' daily life and work, with added dream sequences.
Cast
edit- Valentine Dyall (narration)
- George Harrison Marks
- Pamela Green
- June Palmer
- Jerry Lorden
- Ann Wilson
- Terry Mahern
- Beryl Gilchrist
- Teresa Baron
- Karen Birch
- Jacky Brown
- Claire Burden
- Deloritte Chune
- Dawn Grayson
- Derek Nichols
- Christopher Williams
- Jutka Goz
- Chris Bromfield
- Vicky Groves
- Julie Jorden
- Ann Walker
- David Roberts
- Cindy Lomond
- Annette Johnson
- Sam Stuart
- Ken Hayes
- Audrey Judson
- Marina Jones
- Deborah De Lacy
- Sandy Lyndon
- Cleo Simmons
- Lee Southern
Production
editThe film was mainly shot at Harrison Marks' studios at Lily Place, London, with the occasional location such as Ewhurst Manor.[citation needed] It was during the auditions for the film that George Harrison Marks met his future wife, Toni Burnett.[2]
Release
editDespite censorship troubles with the BBFC due to its abundant nudity,[3] it ran for over a year in London's West End.
Critical reception
editThe Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A study of the life and works of Harrison Marks, photographer of nudes. Endless shots of nude models posed against a variety of garish backgrounds are interspersed with dispiriting scenes in which Harrison Marks judges a beauty contest, works on some glum-looking home movies, or acts out a coy farce about the difficulties involved in photographing a cat. Long, repetitive and exceedingly boring, the whole thing is shot in raffish colour and accompanied by a fulsomely silly commentary: "Harrison Marks is a dreamer, and the city of London is the centre of all his dreams" – cue for a few routine picture-postcard exteriors."[4]
Kine Weekly wrote: "Since he is producer, director, part author and star of the film, one can assume that it expresses the personality of Harrison Marks and the commentary, which Harrison Marks also interrupts at intervals, suggests that he is a photographer who can be compared with a composer, even perhaps a poet. There Is a long sequence in which he is disguised as Toulouse Lautrec. There is also a tiresome burlesque shooting a film and other amateurish episodes that almost entirely counterbalance the star's undoubted talents as a photographer with an eye for colour and design as well as for nudity."[5]
References
edit- ^ "The Naked World of Harrison Marks". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- ^ meisteryak (1 August 2016). "The (Naked) World of Harrison Marks (1965)". Pamela Green. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- ^ Simon Sheridan, Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema, Titan Books 2011 p. 52
- ^ "The Naked World of Harrison Marks". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 33 (384): 65. 1 January 1966. ProQuest 1305826044 – via ProQuest.
- ^ "The Naked World of Harrison Marks". Kine Weekly. 585 (3049): 18. 10 March 1966. ProQuest 2600947784 – via ProQuest.
External links
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