Filmmaker Todd Verow On Dirty Movies, Queer-Splotation and Dive Bars

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Above: Tim Swain and Gil Bar-Sela in BETWEEN SOMETHING & NOTHING a film by Todd Verow. Photo by Todd Verow

I read Dennis Cooper’s transgressive, darkly disturbing novel Frisk in Grad School as part of a class on subversive literature (along with Marquis De Sade, Brett Easton Ellis and Mary Gaitskill). Soon after, I watched Todd Verow’s equally disturbing film version of the book.

Those books unlocked a door for me at that time, a door that led to a fearless sense of discovery and risk taking as as writer. Eventually, I wrote my debut novel Diary of a Sex Addict as a challenge to myself to stay literary, but push my own subversive boundaries to their limits.

Trolling through Vimeo the other night on the hunt for a late night flick, I came across Verow and his quite extensive catalogue of work. I took a chance, sent him a tweet asking for an interview and he said sure thing.

Scott Alexander Hess: When my first novel, Diary of a Sex Addict was released a lot of people asked me if it was a “dirty book” (it’s not, I tell them it’s literary subversive). With your films, do you ever run into this sort of thing? Has anyone ever asked you if you make “dirty movies”?

Todd Verow: People always ask me if I make “dirty movies” and even when they say it with disgust you can see the sly grin creeping into the corners of their mouth and you know that the answer they want to hear is “yes”. I don’t have a problem with the word dirty, I have described my cinematography as “dirty cinematography” for many years. (I despise pretty cinematography and use available light or lighting inspired by the way real things are lit whenever I can). I do hate the implication that “dirty movies” are less than “serious films”. I make films about people and sex and sexuality. People get dirty, and sex is dirty. I’ve been told that I have a shower scene in all of my movies, which I guess is true, so maybe my films are really dirty.

SAH: How was it interpreting Dennis Cooper’s work and would you do it again? If so, which book and why?

TV: We had a blast making Frisk (which was based on the Dennis Cooper novel). I had made a bunch of short experimental films and done cinematography on a few low budget features and was looking for a way to stat making feature films. The producer Marcus Hu, knew my work and approached me about making Frisk into a feature film. Several people had said the novel was “un-filmmable”, I love a challenge so I starting writing the script. When I finished my first version of the script they passed on it and me. My first script was far more extreme than the novel, much more bleak and disturbing. I still think it would have been a very interesting film but they passed on it and I forgot about it. A year or so later they came back to me and asked if I was interested in doing it again. I wrote a new script, which they approved and we shot it very quickly soon after that. I was very young then and I wasn’t really prepared for the reaction the film would get. I was there in San Francisco for the film’s premiere as the closing night movie of Frameline, the LGBT Film Festival (and it was gay pride day) when a riot broke out. I didn’t really understand why, had no one read the book? What were they expecting? Other screening were similar and while it is always rewarding to get a passionate response from an audience, I did tire of defending a work that was not personal, that wasn’t something from my heart. That’s why I have prefer to work from my own material, or at least material that I have a strong personal connection to. I have adapted a few other things for the screen, The Boy With The Sun In His Eyes was based on James Derek Dwyer’s novel and right now I am working on a script based on my father, Arthur C. Verow’s short stories called We Don’t Dance No More that I hope to start shooting next year.

SAH: You’ve been called a vanguard of the new queer cinema. Where is “queer cinema” headed. Do we need the category any longer? If so, what sets it clearly apart?

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Above: Verow, 2010 photo by Todd Verow

TV: Way back when new queer cinema wasn’t just about getting LGBT characters on film, it was about playing with the different mediums, experimenting with the narrative and form. New Queer Cinema films were often dark and disturbing, not mainstream films. There was a punk sensibility, that had as much to do with AIDS and activism as it did with just not giving a fuck what people thought about the films. That has changed over the years, and Queer Cinema has become a genre, a queer-splotation. The need for queer cinema is stronger ever, but the definition has changed. Queer Cinema isn’t just films by and about LGBT people, it is films about anyone who is an outsider, marginalized or different. Anyone can make a film now and for little or no money and when you make a film for nothing you have no one to answer to. You can be as original and outrageous as you want to be.

SAH: Tell us about one of the most challenging situations you have faced on a film set.

TV: Whenever I start a new film I remind myself every day that whatever can go wrong will go wrong. As long as you know that, expect it even then you can be prepared for anything. One of the most important qualities of being a director is being able to adapt, to think on your feet. There was one day, we were filming a drug/orgy scene for the movie The Endless Possibility of Sky and there was a blizzard happening outside. I thought it would be a great idea to get everyone to the roof of the building and film some of the scenes there, with the newly fallen snow merging with the skyline. Everything was going fine, and we got some great shots when we realized that the door had locked behind us and we couldn’t get off the roof. I remained calm, filming some final shots as the sun was setting and trying to figure out how we were going to get off the damn roof before we all froze to death. Luckily some guys in the building next door had been watching us filming and realized our dilemma. I threw them my keys and they went into our building and opened the door for us.

SAH: What’s next for you? And what drives you to keep producing work?

TV: I have a three new movies doing the festival circuit and coming out soon, Required Field which is an experimental film about a gay serial killer, This Side Of Heaven which is about an older trans woman desperately trying to hold onto her rent stabilized apartment and Sex & The Silver Gays a documentary that I co-directed with Charles Lum about a group of older gay men who get together every month for sex parties. I have started filming a new feature called Squirrels about three artistic people trying to survive in a studio apartment in modern day New York City. Then I will work on We Don’t Dance No More which is about a bunch of different characters living in Bangor, Maine. I enjoy making films, telling stories and overcoming all the challenges that are involved with filmmaking. I like to keep busy.

SAH: For the New Yorkers reading, tell us a favorite spot of yours in Manhattan.

TV: I don’t want to be one of those grouchy old New Yorker’s who complains about the way things used to be, but it is depressing how many places I used to love have closed. There are still some old school places open, Benny’s Burritos (sadly closed in the East Village where I live, but still alive and kicking in the West Village), Two Boots Pizza is still going strong though their cinema which I managed for a time closed almost 10 years ago. I’m not a fan of all the new artisinal cocktail lounges that keep opening, I prefer dive bars like THE COCK, or THE BOILER ROOM. As far as the cub scene goes, it’s always best to keep up with Susanne Bartsch, she is keeping nightlife interesting in NYC bless her, she currently has a club night on Tuesday’s at the Standard Hotel in the meeting packing district.

Todd’s films are available on Vimeo.

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Confessions of a Female Plastic Surgeon

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Celebrities are doing it, your co-workers are doing it, and even your inner circle is doing it. Your besties, however, are loath to admit they’ve had some “work” done. Is your colleague or friend looking a little younger these days? Or is that booty of theirs seeming just a little bit tighter all of a sudden? Trust me, it’s not the Zumba classes, nor is it the juice cleanse they recently powered through. They’ve had something done – a bit of Botox, some liposuction, or maybe a facelift — even if they vehemently deny it. According to Aviva Preminger, MD, a NYC female plastic surgeon, she’s seen it all.

Everyone is doing it

The truth is that everyone hides it! Women slink in for routine procedures (with spouses none the wiser), while guys go to extreme lengths to keep their nips and tucks under wraps. I once had a male patient who snuck out of the recovery room so he wouldn’t have to ask anyone to pick him up. Others enlist the services of taxis or assistants after surgery to ensure their wives do not find out. Believe me — guys are just as vain and insecure about their looks as women are!

A little goes a long way

As hard as we try, we cannot stop the aging process. But a few Botox injections can go a long way. In conjunction with a good skin care regimen including peels, retinol and antioxidant creams, Botox can help you hold off plastic surgery for years. I have plenty of girlfriends who are simply too lazy to bother with preventative skin care. My advice to all you idle ladies –invest in a quality eye cream, because for many of us, the eyes are the first to go. It doesn’t matter if you have ripped abs and the perky breasts of a 20-something-year-old, the eyes will give away your age. If this post finds you too late, a little eye lift can work wonders!

Save your skin

If you are truly serious about arresting the aging process — stop smoking and tanning right now. Your sun-worshipping days are over, and nicotine only accelerates skin damage on a cellular level. Speaking of skin, think again before getting that tattoo. Over the years, that sexy flower tattoo can move and bleed, morphing into something less recognizable. Tattoos just don’t age well and are hard to remove. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to surgically remove tattoo regrets after pricey laser treatments failed to do the job.

You can tell me ANYTHING

Think of your plastic surgeon as your confessor – a confidant who guards all secrets while she discreetly removes age spots, jowly chins, muffin tops and other unpleasant markers of middle age and weight gain. You don’t want to lie to us about pregnancy, smoking or even prior procedures. Most importantly, you don’t want to lie to yourself about what you want to have done. Be candid during consultations. If you want 36 DD breasts that would make Pamela Anderson proud, tell us. If you’re embarrassed about your lady parts, a labiaplasty is a quick and easy solution! Just for the record, we think duck lips and frozen faces are tell-tale signs of bad work, which is why it’s important to vet your doctor carefully.

Always remember that you get what you pay for. I have seen first-hand some of the horrors of botched surgeries, performed in the U.S. and abroad. There are many people who bill themselves as “cosmetic specialists,” who have no real medical training or expertise. I have met women who have had industrial silicone injected into their buttocks in someone’s kitchen. Cutting corners on costs isn’t worth it! Do your homework!

The best reason for plastic surgery is YOU

From my years of experience as a plastic surgeon in NYC, my most valuable advice is this: do not have surgery for anyone other than yourself. Getting your boobs done won’t mend a failing relationship or lock-in that promotion, but it can make you feel beautiful and confident. Do it for yourself, because you deserve it. You know what? There are few better reasons than that.

Story Written By
Dr. Preminger

About Dr. Preminger
Dr. Aviva Preminger is a board certified NYC female plastic surgeon. She is Ivy League educated and serves on the board of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) and is President-elect of the New York Regional Society of Plastic Surgeons. She graduated with honors from Harvard. After graduating at the top of her class from Cornell University Medical College, Dr. Preminger finished her surgical training at New York Presbyterian Hospital-Cornell/Columbia, where she honed her skills under New York’s leading reconstructive and cosmetic surgeons. In addition to running her boutique plastic surgery practice, she actively teaches medical students, plastic surgery residents and fellows. Dr. Preminger has a keen interest in professionalism and ethics in plastic surgery – two topics on which she has written about and lectured extensively.

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Supreme Court Denies North Carolina's Plea To Restore Swath Of Voting Restrictions

The Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected a last-ditch request from North Carolina to reinstate a controversial set of voting restrictions that would have taken effect in the lead-up to the November election.

In a one-sentence order that did not include any reasoning, the high court declined the state’s petition, which sought to put on hold a July ruling that found the voting law discriminated against African-Americans and compared it to a relic of the Jim Crow era.

The state failed to convince at least five justices that three provisions of the contested law ― its voter ID requirement, cutbacks to early voting and elimination of pre-registration for certain under-18 voters ― were worth putting back on the books. The state had argued the measures were necessary to avoid “confusion” that might keep people away from the polls. 

But civil rights groups countered that North Carolina’s own prior assurances in court plus “on-the-ground activity” by election officials ― including preparations at the county level to comply with the July ruling ― flew in the face of the state’s insistence that there was not enough time to get things in order for Election Day.

“Now, almost a month after the Fourth Circuit’s ruling, State and local elections officials have taken nearly all of the steps to comply with that ruling,” the voting rights groups said in a brief opposing North Carolina’s request. 

The Obama administration, which in 2013 suffered a big loss when the Supreme Court did away with a key section of the the Voting Rights Act of 1965, filed its own brief urging the justices to deny the state’s plea, and to not read too much into arguments in favor of a law that was properly found to be discriminatory.

The Supreme Court’s move is a significant setback for Gov. Pat McCrory (R), who had defended the law’s voter ID requirement as “common sense” and vowed to seek emergency relief from the high court soon after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit struck it down.

But McCrory didn’t follow through on his promise: It took the state 17 days to ask the Supreme Court to inspect the ruling ― a delay that may have played a role in the court’s action on Wednesday.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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19 Tweets About Married Life That Hit The Nail On The Head

No two marriages are exactly alike. That said, there are certain unifying experiences and feelings that husbands and wives, no matter where they’re from, will find relatable

Below, 19 tweets that hilariously capture the essence of married life in 140 characters or less.

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Qrates lets you press your hot beats onto vinyl

IMG_6240 Hello, fellow young people! I, like you, love vinyl. It offers richer, more realistic (pet) sounds and it is great for lugging from squat house to squat house and for sharing on a portable record player while you enjoy some fine beverages on the front stoop of your Williamsburg duplex. But how can you press your own music onto vinyl with a minimum of (hot) fuss?
A Tokyo-based team has the answer. Read More

With a Single Touch, the Predator Completely Disappears From This Incredible Poster

Artist Anthony Petrie thinks the pop culture art scene has gotten a little stale. So many rehashes of the same ideas, same properties, with the same old techniques. This is art! Do something different! Be bold! And with his upcoming solo show—and a little help from the Predator—he’s doing just that.

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The Moto Z Got a Giant Hasselblad Attachment and a Phone Jack

It’s been a couple of years since I’ve used a Motorola phone that I could confidently recommend to a friend (RIP Moto X 2013
). Today, that sentiment changed when I picked up the new Moto Z Play Droid and its funky camera attachment that magnetically snaps onto the back of the phone, called the Hasselblad True Zoom Mod.

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The Thinnest Laptop in the World Needs a Touchscreen Keyboard

At IFA in Berlin Lenovo announced a nice array of refreshed laptops and tablets, updating great devices
like the Lenovo Yoga 900 series (now the Lenovo 910) with 7th generation
Intel processors, but one device stood out among the rest. It’s the tiniest laptop Lenovo has on display, so tiny the company is classifying it as a tablet. The Yoga Book is just 0.38-inches thick, which makes it the thinnest laptop currently available, and makes ultra slims like the half-inch thick Samsung Notebook 9 and Apple Macbook look positively chunky.

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Xerox Made an Inkjet That Can Print On Anything

Your standard inkjet printer can mostly handle paper, occasionally transparencies, and maybe even blank DVDs while they were still a thing. But Xerox just revealed a towering machine it calls the Direct to Object Inkjet Printer because that’s exactly what it does—it prints on almost any 3D object.

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Brains of Nazi Victims Uncovered in German Psychiatric Institute

Dozens of brains and brain parts belonging to victims of the Nazi eugenics campaign—and possibly the Holocaust—have been uncovered during renovations at the Max Planck Psychiatric Institute in Munich, Germany.

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