Bruce and Pepper Wayne Gacy's Home Movies

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Bruce and Pepper Wayne Gacy's Home Movies
Directed by Bruce LaBruce, Candy Parker
Written byBruce LaBruce, Candy Parker
Produced byGayTown productions
Starring G.B. Jones
Bruce LaBruce
Dave Dictor
CinematographyBruce LaBruce, Candy Parker
Edited byBruce LaBruce, Candy Parker
Distributed byJürgen Brüning FilmProduktion
Release date
  • 1988 (1988)
Running time
12 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Bruce and Pepper Wayne Gacy's Home Movies also known as Home Movies is a short experimental film by Bruce LaBruce [1] and Candy Parker. [2]

Contents

Made in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1988, it is filmed in color and black and white on Super 8mm film and is 12 minutes long.

The conceptual premise of the film is that the audience is watching the home movies of Bruce Wayne Gacy and Pepper Wayne Gacy, the children of the notorious serial killer John Wayne Gacy. The film features various disturbing vignettes filmed in a dysfunctional home; a woman arrives (G. B. Jones) and begins beating up two men, a man (Bruce LaBruce) goes through a range of emotions watching a man (Dave Dictor) attempt to perform drunken oral sex on a woman on a bathroom floor while an oblivious small dog runs about, and a man eats in a deranged manner from a dog food bowl on the floor and howls.

The film stars Bruce LaBruce, G.B. Jones, Dave Dictor, Joe The Ho, David Gravelle.

Bruce and Pepper Wayne Gacy's Home Movies was first shown in 1990 and 1991 by LaBruce and Jones as part of the J.D.s movie screenings in London in the UK, Montreal and Toronto in Canada, then in San Francisco and Buffalo, U.S.A. [3] It is still being regularly screened at museums and film festivals worldwide. [4] [5]

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References

  1. NY Times, Movies and TV
  2. "Neurotica, Hannah, "Zinecore Radio", We Make Zines, 6 June 2009". Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2010.
  3. Cornelius, Michael G., "Bruce LaBruce", GLBTQ: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture, 2002 Archived October 26, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  4. The 8 Fest, January 2010
  5. Kulone Global, "LaBruce - The Retrospective!", July 2010

Further reading