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Cruising
(1980)
In writer/director William Friedkin's
notorious, grisly slasher-thriller crime film about a police investigation
- it examined the seedy and dangerous underworld of gay S&M in
NY's West Village heavy leather bars (including clubs such as The Ramrod,
The Hellfire Club and The Mineshaft). NY
Times reporter Gerald Walker's 1970 novel of the same name was
the basis for the dramatic film, as well as recent articles detailing
unsolved gay murders by Village Voice writer Arthur Bell.
The plot of the sensationalized and often maligned cult
drama - a gritty police thriller - was about an NYPD police investigation
to find a self-loathing homosexual serial killer who was targeting
gays. The originally X-rated film was eventually reduced to R after
massive cuts of about 40 minutes of material (mostly graphic sex-club
footage that didn't directly affect the plot) that was censored and
edited out. [Note: Co-director James Franco's semi-documentary Interior.
Leather Bar. (2013) reconstructed or "imagined" the missing
40 minutes of hardcore footage that were cut from the film.]
The controversial film told about an alternative
or extreme lifestyle, and opened with a disclaimer that was forced upon
Friedkin by the MPAA and United Artists: "The
film is not intended as an indictment of the homosexual world. It is
set in one small segment of that world which is not meant to be a representative
of the whole." It displayed actual leather-clad
gay-bar patrons as extras in the meat-packing district rather than
actors, and was considered a precursor to some segments of Irreversible (2002, Fr.).
However, major protests and demonstrations by gay groups
at movie theatres - the first of their kind - accused the semi-exploitational
film of being anti-gay and homophobic prior to the AIDS crisis for
its depiction of the gritty, kinky, dangerous, sex-obsessed and depraved
lifestyle of homosexuals. The protest centered around the film's ultra-provocative
plot -- murders in gay nightclubs (stabbings to emphasize the penetration
metaphor), and the film's negative, one-sided and stereotypical view
of gays portrayed as crude psychopaths, sexual deviants, and sexual
predators engaged in violent fetishistic activity and various hardcore
sexual acts (i.e., a scene of fisting with a nearly naked man shackled
and hanging from the ceiling).
The film's box-office turned out to be respectable at
$19.8 million, on a budget of $11 million. It received three Golden
Raspberry nominations: Worst Picture, Worst Screenplay, and Worst Director
(losing twice to Can't Stop the Music (1980) and to Xanadu (1980)). Nine months
after the film was released, a mentally-disturbed man killed two people
and wounded six others near and outside The Ramrod with a sub-machine gun.
- in the film's opening, a series
of violent serial killer murders within the Big Apple's homosexual
underworld led to the discovery of body parts (a severed arm and
a torso) found in the Hudson River by a tugboat
Two NYC Patrolmen: (l to r) DiSimone (Joe Spinell) and Desher (Mike Starr)
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Two Transvestite Prostitutes (l to r): DaVinci (Gene Davis) and Friend (Robert
Pope)
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- in a gay neighborhood in Manhattan one night, two
patrolmen were in their squad car during a routine drive through the
6th Precinct; DiSimone (Joe Spinell) (who was resentful against women
after the breakup of his 10 year marriage) and his misogynistic partner
driver Desher (Mike Starr) noticed lots of gays on the sidewalk,
as DiSimone exclaimed: "One day this city's gonna explode...Look
at these guys, Christ, what's happening?"; they began to sexually
harrass two transvestite prostitutes: blonde-wigged DaVinci
(Gene Davis) and his Friend (Robert Pope), and ordered the two into
the back-seat of their squad car; Desher propositioned DaVinci to give
him oral sex: "Come up here. I wanna show you my night stick.
Move your ass. Get up here"
- as DaVinci moved to the front passenger seat, a black
leather-clad individual wearing sunglasses and black pants, seen
only from the rear, crossed the street behind the cop car and entered
one of the area's private sex-clubs that catered to gay men (briefly
viewed as he descended stairs)
- the individual entered into
the underworld of S&M in the sex night-club, where fetishistic homosexual
patrons wore leather jackets and publically performed soft and hard-core
sexual acts with same-sex partners
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Burns Inside a Private Gay Sex-Club
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- one of the sex-club patrons Loren Lukas (Arnaldo Santana)
sauntered over and propositioned the unidentified, leather-clad, sunglasses-wearing male (later identified
as Stuart Richards), who said he was from Mars; Lukas was pleased:
"Terrific. I never made it with a Martian before"
- shortly later, the two took a taxi together and entered a cheap room in the
St. James Hotel for sex, where Lukas (wearing a black jock-strap)
began kissing his male partner before they moved to the bed with
adult men's and wrestling magazines on the floor; at about 5 AM after
having "anal intercourse" and sleeping together, the nude Lukas was
taunted and threatened with a hidden kitchen knife removed from the
boot of his partner and held to his neck; he became fearful as he
heard the words of a taunting lyric: "I'm here, you're here, we're here,"
and was ordered to lie face-down on the bed; Lukas asked: "What are you gonna do?" and was told: "I
know what I have to do"; Lukas' hands and feet were bound before
he was lethally and viciously stabbed in the back multiple times;
the killer (with his mouth in gigantic close-up) then blamed his
gay victim: "You made me do that"
- during the ensuing investigation into Lukas' stabbing
murder, Captain Edelson (Paul Sorvino) learned from forensic scientist
Dr. Rifkin (Barton Heyman) in the morgue that DNA did not exist in
the sterile killer's ejaculate found in Lukas - the victim; due to
the increase in gay-related crimes and deaths, connecting violence
with the homosexual lifestyle, including another crime - the
unsolved murder of Paul Vincent, a gay college professor at Columbia
University, Captain Edelson called dark-haired police detective Officer
Steve Burns (Al Pacino) into his office
- to the straight-heterosexual cop
Burns, Edelson had called him for a "special assignment" -
to investigate the unusual rash of gay killings - by bluntly
(and teasingly) asking him: "Have you ever had your cock sucked
by a man?...Ever been porked? Or had a man smoke your pole?'; in shock
for being asked, Burns laughed and replied: "You gotta be kidding"
- after Burns was shown a bulletin board about the two
latest gay murders, Edelson asked Burns about going undercover: "How'd
you like to disappear?"; Edelson explained how
Burns resembled the profile of the serial killer's multiple victims
(including the "torso victims" from the river), and was the
perfect weight, age, dark hair and physical body type to help 'lure'
in and capture the killer: ("I wanna send you out there to see if
you can attract this guy"); however, it would put Burns into a non-mainstream
homosexual scene: ("They were into heavy leather. S & M.
It's a world unto itself"), yet it would help him to be ambitious
and advance his career within the department after obtaining a "gold
shield"; he would be dispatched to locate and identify possible suspects and
possibly to serve as 'bait' for the killer, in the Meatpacking District
of NYC that catered to gay clientele with various sordid sex clubs
The Latest Victim - Paul Vincent - Gay Columbia Univ. Professor
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Another Gay Victim: Actor Loren Lukas at St. James Hotel
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- there was one other requirement for the job: "And
nobody can know anything about what you're doing"; when asked
for his reaction, Burns excitedly answered: "Yeah, I love it"; Burns
was required to pose and transform himself into a gay man, meaning
that he was forced to keep his girlfriend Nancy Gates (Karen
Allen) in the dark for awhile during the "dangerous" case, without
being able to tell her any details about his new assignment; after
deflecting her questions, he admitted to her - intriguingly: "There's
a lot about me you don't know"
- Burns assumed the name "John Forbes" (an unemployed
commercial artist who just graduated from art school), moved into
a West Village apartment, and soon became friends with his next-door
neighbor - struggling gay playwright Ted Bailey (Don Scardino), whose
dancer roommate Gregory Milanese (James Remar) was
out-of-town at tryouts for a musical
- soon enough, Burns
began to regularly frequent gay bars (such as the Ramrod, Wolf's
Den, the Eagle's Nest, the Anvil, and the Cock Pit, among others)
to observe the scene; he learned the meaning of colored hankies in
one's back pocket from Hankie Salesman (Powers Boothe) - invitations
to either receive or give a b-job, to be a hustler or to be a buyer,
or to receive or give a "golden shower"; his
nightly routine included applying makeup, wearing leather garb, and
lifting weights; he watched further acts of sexual depravity,
including oral b-jobs, S&M bondage, and leather-masked and jock-strapped
males, as he was becoming infected by the contagious music and the
stares of gays in the crowd; one night, he retreated outside to nearby
Central Park to scope out the area
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Scenes of Burns Going Undercover in a Gay Bar and In the Park
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- as an undercover cop, Burns regularly reported back
to Edelson in a pool-hall bar about how he had acquired
inside information from bartenders about the "regulars," and
a name that kept "popping up" was Tommy Mancusi ("Tommy
the Joker"), the owner of the Cock Pit (who presumably had Mafia connections)
- meanwhile, another similar knife-stabbing murder
occurred in a wooded area of Central Park; Eric Rossman (Larry Atlas)
(who heard the tell-tale homosexual
lingo he had learned to initiate sex: "I'm
here, you're here, we're here...Where are you? I'm waiting for you!")
was stabbed in the back by his male pick-up
- in the next immediate scene, Burns walked along a
dark street, dressed suspiciously similar to the garb of the serial
killer; he and Nancy experienced aggressive sex after the murder
of Rossman; the next morning at breakfast, he urgently hugged her
and asserted: "Don't let me lose you. Okay?"; the headlines in the
New York Daily News reported: "KNIFING IN CENTRAL PARK - Homo
killer on the prowl"
- the next evening, Burns entered a gay sex club,
viewed from the same low angle that the leather-jacketed killer had
entered earlier; during "Precinct Night" where patrons were
costuming themselves as policemen (with police hats, nightsticks, handcuffs,
etc.), the nervous and sweating Burns - without the proper gear - was
asked to leave; he rushed outside where he was followed and propositioned
by a suspicious gay male named Skip Lee (Jay Acovone), but Burns
rejected his overtures ("Not tonight")
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"Precinct Night"
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Skip Lee (Jay Acovone) Spotting, Following and
Propositioning Burns Outside
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- a second murder took place - fashion designer Martino
Perry (Steve Inwood) was joined in an adult-male bookstore peep-show
back-room by the leather-jacketed killer; he was lethally assaulted
while performing an oral sex act during the viewing of a
25 cents movie reel of gay sex; the silhouette of the knife was seen
on the movie screen, and blood splattered as Martino was repeatedly
stabbed in the back; the serial killer again blamed the victim: "You
made me do that"
Martino Perry (Steve Inwood)
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Leather-Jacketed Partner - The Serial Killer
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25 Cents Peep Show
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Another Murder In a Back Room of a Gay Adult Bookstore/Videostore
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- pressure was mounting on Captain Edelson to solve
the gay-murder cases before the Democratic National Convention; he
was warned about the jeopardy facing his job by his superior Chief
of Detectives M. Berman (Allan Miller); a fingerprint of the killer
was found on the 25-cent quarter used to pay for the adult-film by the killer
- during another night while stalking for possible murder
suspects in one of the gay clubs, after Burns watched an example
of "fisting," he also asked a bartender for background
information on the gay man who had propositioned him; he learned
that the guy - Skip Lee, was prone to be violent: ("He's a bad dude...Leave
him alone. He's a scumbag"); during a frenzied dance Burns had with
a partner, Skip Lee observed him from afar; shortly later, informant transvestite
DaVinci informed the police that Skip Lee, a regular at the Cock
Pit and the Anvil, worked as a waiter-busboy at a fancy Penn Station
steakhouse known as The Iron Horse; it was determined that the restaurant's
steak knives conceivably matched the kiiller's weapon of choice
from forensic photos
- shortly later during
a sting operation, Burns met up with Skip Lee at a gay
club and led him to the W. 14th St. Motel, to a room that had been
wired with police surveillance; Burns encouraged
Lee to tie him up as he laid face-down on a bed, but Lee was hesitant;
the police burst into the room for an arrest where they found Burns
bound with his hands behind his back; Lee was naked but there was
no knife
- during the intense police interrogation following
Skip's setup, neither man said that they had done anything wrong;
Burns was confronted and bitch-slapped by a large black man wearing
jock-strap underwear and a cowboy hat, an NYPD officer who was inexplicably
involved in the brutal questioning; after the beating, suspect Lee
was coerced to confess to all the previous gay murders (and shown
photos of the victims) and also bitch-slapped, but ultimately was
found innocent (his fingerprints didn't match to the peep-show quarter
at the crime scene) and the operation against him was aborted
- Burns' undercover work was beginning to affect and
dampen his banal, missionary-position sex with his girlfriend
Nancy, and she was perplexed about his impotence and asked: "Is
it me? Are you turned off to me? Why don't you want me anymore?";
he admitted that he was losing his sexual attraction to Nancy:
("What I'm doin' is affectin' me"); she suggested that they
break up ("Maybe we should cut loose for a while" and he agreed
- exasperated by the violence and gay-bashing, and the effects on his personal life,
Burns was about ready to quit being undercover, and met with his boss
Edelson: ("I'm not getting paid enough to go through this....I
don't think I can do the job, Captain. I don't think I can handle it,
that's all") and feared that he had homosexual tendencies
("Things happening to me, you know"); however,
he was pressured to continue his undercover work by following up on
a lead in Professor Paul Vincent's murder, by perusing pictures (from
two years of Columbia Univ. yearbooks) of every student who ever took
a class from the Professor
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Stuart Richards (Richard Cox)
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- Burns learned from the University Registrar the apartment
address of Stuart Richards (Richard Cox), a current Ph.D student,
and one of the deceased teacher's former music undergrad students
who was found in a yearbook photo - Claremont Avenue in Morningside
Heights; Burns stalked after Richards and when
he was away from his 4th floor apartment on a jog, he broke in via
the fire escape; he found Richards' leather-jackets and other familiar
garb, and evidence in unmailed letters that Richards had written
to his deceased and disapproving father (John Richards in St.
Louis, MO) that revealed his dark and disturbed thoughts;
he also noticed that Richards had taken an interest in Augustine's City
of God; after awhile, Richards realized that he was being followed
after finding signs that his apartment had been violated and searched
- in an hallucinatory vision while sitting on a park bench,
Richards remembered his father Jack/John (Leland Starnes) (dead for 10 years)
urging him to eliminate impure gays and seek homicidal reprisal
against them: ("You know what you have to do") - or was his
father pressuring him to end his homosexuality?; Richards proceeded
to put on black boots (hiding his knife), a leather jacket, and a police-hat
to pursue his next victim
- at the same time, Burns experienced a volatile altercation
with neighbor Ted's gay partner and roommate Gregory Milanese - a
belligerent, crazed, and intensely-jealous dancer; in Ted's next-door
apartment, Gregory attacked Burns and drew a knife on him
- later, Burns was able to initiate a nighttime meeting
with Richards in Morningside Park (near Columbia Univ.) across from
his apartment; the two engaged in a demanding game of cat-and-mouse,
and then in a frightening, climactic scene that occurred in a park
tunnel, Burns removed his pants and Richards was asked to follow
suit: ("Bashful?...Then get 'em down. I wanna see the world.
Go for it"); as Richards slowly lowered his pants, Burns noticed
him remove a hidden knife in his boot; Burns defended himself against
being stabbed and aggressively put his own knife into Richards' abdomen
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Burns Meeting Killer Stuart Richards in Morningside
Park - and Stabbing Him in the Abdomen During an Assault in Tunnel
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- while Richards was recuperating in a hospital, Detective
Edelson informed him that his fingerprint was found at the site of
Martino Perry's murder in the peep-show booth, from the quarter used
for the adult peep-show movie-fee; Richards was pressured to confess
to all of the other related murders: ("If you confess to the murder
of Martino Perry, and Loren Lukas and Eric Rossman, and
four or five others we think you're involved in, we'll reduce
your sentence")
- by film's end, Burns' sweet gay neighbor Ted Bailey
was found stabbed to death and mutilated in his apartment with a
kitchen knife -- and Ted's gay partner Gregory was considered to
be the prime suspect, due to his previous altercation with Burns
- meanwhile, Burns continued to wear his leather-garb
and visit gay bars even after the Vincent murder case appeared to
be solved and the serial killer was thought to have been apprehended
- a last-minute, ambiguous final sequence
opened up the suggestion that the sexually-confused Burns, who lived
next door to Ted, had taken on the persona of the killer -- Had Burns
killed Ted or any of the other victims?
- Burns decided to move back in to his girlfriend's
apartment; as he was shaving his beard in the bathroom and Nancy
returned home, he told her: "I need to talk to you. I wanna tell
you everything"
- Nancy found parts of Steve's gay costume
(the killer's costume = leather jacket, biker cap, and pair of aviator
sunglasses) draped on a chair - and she innocently tried them on;
meanwhile, Steve was engaged in a long meaningful look into the mirror at himself; the mirror
image dissolved full-cycle to a shot of a Hudson River tug boat
where the film began
The Film's Ambiguous Ending
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Nancy Wearing the Killer's Costume
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Steve Gazing At Himself in a Mirror
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Unidentified Body Parts From Murdered Victims in a Morgue Drawer
A Black Leather-Clad Individual Entering a Private Sex Club - Seen
From Behind and Then From the Front
Gay Patron Loren Lukas (Arnaldo Santana) in the Gay Sex Nightclub Propositioning
The Leather-Jacketed Male for Sex
Lukas Bound in St. James Hotel Room and Lethally Threatened, Bound,
and Stabbed in the Back
The Corpse of Murdered Loren Lukas in Morgue
Captain Edelson (Paul Sorvino)
Police Detective Steve Burns (Al Pacino)
Burns Unable to Tell His Girlfriend Nancy Gates (Karen Allen) About
His New Assignment
Steve's Friendly Gay Apartment Neighbor Ted Bailey (Dan Scardino)
Conversation With Hankie Salesman (Powers Boothe) About the Meaning of
the Different Colors and Back Pocket Placement
The Serial Killer's Next Back-Stabbed Murder Victim in Wooded Central
Park - Eric Rossman (Larry Atlas)
Burns' Aggressive Sex with Nancy Immediately After the Murder of Rossman
New York Daily News Headlines: "KNIFING IN CENTRAL PARK"
Burns' Prime Serial Killer Suspect - Skip Lee (Jay Acovone)
Skip Lee - A Waiter-Busboy at The Iron Horse Steakhouse
Burns Was Untied By Police During an Arrest (In the Sting Operation in
a Motel)
Burns Faced Brutal Police
Questioning by a Member of the NYPD
Skip Lee Coerced to Confess, But Ultimately Found Innocent
Nancy Asking: "Why don't you want me anymore?"
Burns Stalking Richards on a City Bus
In an Hallucination, Richards' Dead Father John/Jack (Leland Starnes)
Urged Him: "You
know what you have to do"
Ted's Gay Partner-Roommate Greg Milanese (James Remar)
Greg Threatening Burns
With His Knife
Burns' Gay Neighbor Ted Stabbed to Death
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