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Wrangler:
Anatomy Of An Icon
TLA
Releasing
2008
Director:
Jeffrey Schwarz
Starring:
Jack Wrangler, Margaret Whiting, Debbi Whiting, Michael Bronski, Durk
Dehner, Samuel R. Delany, Jack Deveau, Christine Ebersole, Samantha Fox,
Al Goldstein, Rock Hudson,
Chi Chi La Rue.
Rod McKuen,
Sharon Mitchell, Michael Musto. Alan Oppenheimer, Robert Patrick, Marc
Shaiman, Bruce Vilanch
Unrated,
85 minutes
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More
Fun Than Fassbinder
by
Michael D. Klemm
A shorter version first appeared in abOUT,
October, 2008
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I had little hope
that Wrangler: Anatomy Of An Icon, the
new documentary about former porn star Jack Wrangler, would have much
to offer beyond the abundant scenery. To my surprise, I discovered a carefully
crafted chronicle of a man whose life proves the old adage that truth
is stranger than fiction.
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Jack
Wrangler was handsome and muscular and looked like the Marlboro Man. A
generation of gay men, tired of sissy screen stereotypes, was able to
embrace a new hypermasculine ideal. He made 85 films and revolutionized
1970s gay porn. Besides being able to deliver the money shot, he exuded
self confidence and intelligence, and connected with his audience. And,
yes, he was hot. Wrangler is
an intriguing documentary that captures a warts-and-all portrait of a
fascinating artist.
He was a geeky kid
who couldn't please his father. He wanted to be "larger than life" and
was drawn to cowboys on television, especially Michael Landon on Bonanza.
As a child, he was bitten by the showbiz bug after appearing in a
Sunday morning religious program. Following a string of small roles in
bad 60s television shows like The Mod Squad, (he once appeared
on The Dating Game too), he drifted into the emerging gay porn
industry and the rest, as they say, is history. But there was a complicated
man behind this stud. His fans were taken aback when he shifted later
to straight porn and were stunned even further when he married a woman
twenty years his senior - famed singer, Margaret Whiting.
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A
shrewd businessman, Wrangler was one of the first adult industry performers
to appreciate the value of promotion and marketing. Nowadays, we are used
to seeing dildos, cast from the appendages of porn stars, for sale on
the internet but this was new territory in the 70s. Wrangler explains
his foray into straight porn as being a marketing strategy and nothing
more. His love for Margaret Whiting is another matter altogether. Wrangler
stresses that, while he remains faithful to his wife, he is still
gay. They connect on a level that is beyond traditional norms; he truly
loves her and their relationship is one that cannot be neatly categorized
into the world of Jim Dobson and all those repressive Family Research
Councils. He also makes it clear that his commitment to Whiting is probably
why he dodged the bullet and escaped catching AIDS.
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Jack
Wrangler tells his story to the cameras himself, aided by remembrances from
his colleagues and commentators as varied as playwright Robert Patrick,
columnist Michael Musto, comedian Bruce Vilanch and poet Rod McKuen.
The interview segments with his daughter-in law (who initally disapproved
of their relationship) also provide valuable insights as well as some comic
relief. What could have been National Enquirer fodder, (his unusual
decision to marry, for example), never descends into mockery. The tale unfolds
with all its seeming incongruities yet, throughout it all, Wrangler's sincerity
and conviction stands tall. His career is explored within its historical
context. Director Jeffrey Schwartz does a fine job, for example, presenting
1950s repression and how queer panic helped form Wrangler's new persona.
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Examining
the history of the gay porn industry might not be as intellectually challenging
as looking back on the roots of queer cinema but sociological discussions
of both genres are vital to understanding our past. For those who lived
in large metropolitan cities, the films of Jack Wrangler often provided
the first opportunity for many gay men to see themselves represented positively
on the silver screen and they could get their rocks off at the
same time. And, I might as well admit it, these blue movies were a lot
more fun than the films of Fassbinder.
Much of Wrangler
is very playful. Snippets from his movies are often used
to illustrate his life story and ironic humor is plentiful. Archival footage
of old physique films and a campy homophobic cautionary short ala Reefer
Madness - 1961's Boys Beware - add to a general atmosphere
of irreverence. Wrangler
is not, however, a slapped together and farcical documentary bereft of
the cerebral; it is professionally filmed and edited and the only time
it faltered, for me, was its somewhat confusing chronology in the last
act.
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The
film also gets a personal nod from me for including Samuel
R. Delany, my favorite gay and African-American science fiction
writer, (and historian of sexual customs in old Times Square movie palaces
- see Times Square Red, Times Square Blue), as one of the talking
heads.
But... you're asking
- are there ample film clips of Jack Wrangler in action? Of course,
and there is much to enjoy for those who are only interested in matters
prurient. I'll be honest; I lost track of how many times that I hit the
rewind and pause buttons on my remote. Still, this isn't just a collection
of porn clips. There is something gritty and honest about his on-screen
visage that comes across as being so much more real than the polished
models seen in gay porn today. He wasn't just there to provide a wank,
he was a role model to many and that isn't a bad legacy. However, as Wrangler
himself points out, there is so much more to him and yet - even when he
writes a libretto to a ballet - the media still always prefaces
his name with "porn star." One thing is for certain, he sure marched to
the beat of his own drum. This is an informative, and very entertaining,
documentary.
More on Jeffrey Schwartz:
Vito |