Pecker


Pecker Information

Pecker is a 1998 American comedy-drama film written and directed by John Waters and starring Edward Furlong and Christina Ricci. Like all Waters' films, it was filmed and set in Baltimore; this film was set in the Hampden neighborhood.

The film examines the rise to fame and potential fortune of a budding photographer.

Plot

Set in a Baltimore neighborhood known for having the thickest local accent, Pecker tells the story of an unassuming 18-year-old who works in a sandwich shop and takes photos of his loving but peculiar family and friends on the side. Pecker (Edward Furlong), so named for his childhood habit of "pecking" at his food, stumbles into fame when his work is "discovered" by a savvy New York art dealer, Rorey Wheeler (Lili Taylor). Pecker's pictures "? grainy, out-of-focus studies of unglamorous subjects "? are far from professional, but they strike a chord with New York art collectors.

Unfortunately, instant over-exposure has its downside. Rorey's efforts to turn Pecker into an art sensation threaten to ruin the low-key lifestyle that was his inspiration. Pecker finds that his best friend, Matt (Brendan Sexton III), can't shoplift anymore now that Pecker's photographs have increased his profile. Shelley (Christina Ricci), Pecker's obsessive girlfriend who runs a laundromat, seems especially distressed when the press dub her a "stain goddess" and mistake her good-natured "pin-up" poses for pornographic come-ons.

When his family is dubbed "culturally challenged" by an overzealous critic, they begin to feel the uncomfortable glare of stardom. Pecker's mother (Mary Kay Place) is no longer free to dispense fashion tips to the homeless clientele at her thrift shop. Pecker's grandmother, Memama (Jean Schertler), endures public ridicule when her experience with a talking statue of the Virgin Mary is exposed on the cover of a national art magazine. Tina (Martha Plimpton), Pecker's fag hag older sister, is fired from her job emceeing go-go dancing at a gay bar because Pecker's edgy photographs chronicle the sex practices of the club's patrons. Even Little Chrissy (Lauren Hulsey), his six-year-old sister, feels the pressure of celebrity when her eating disorder is exposed, bringing unwanted attention from nosy child welfare agencies (she's mistakenly diagnosed with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and prescribed Ritalin.)

After Pecker's newfound fame disrupts the lives of his family and friends, Pecker turns the tables on the art world by refusing to participate in a scheduled show at the Whitney Museum of Art. Instead, he forces New York art collectors to come to Baltimore to see his latest photographs, which portray the same people who disparaged his family in an unflattering light (one photo shows Patricia Hearst adjusting her breasts in a mirror.)

Pecker is then asked what he plans to do next. He replies that he would like to direct a film.

Cast

  • Edward Furlong as Pecker, an unassuming 18-year-old whose photographs become the center of attention from a New York art collector
  • Christina Ricci as Shelley, Pecker's obsessive laundromat-running girlfriend
  • Lauren Hulsey as Little Chrissy, Pecker's younger sister with an eating disorder
  • Lili Taylor as Rorey Wheeler, a savvy New York art collector
  • Bess Armstrong as Dr. Klompus, a child services representative who puts Little Chrissy on Ritalin
  • Mark Joy as Jimmy, Pecker's crab shop owner father
  • Mary Kay Place as Joy, Pecker's thrift shop owner mother
  • Martha Plimpton as Tina, Pecker's fag hag go-go dancing emcee older sister
  • Brendan Sexton III as Matt, Pecker's shoplifter best friend
  • Mink Stole as Precinct captain
  • Patricia Hearst as Lynn Wentworth
  • Jean Schertler as Memama, Pecker's grandmother
  • Alan J. Wendl as Mr. Nellbox
  • Greg Gorman as Himself
  • Cindy Sherman as Herself
  • Mary Vivian Pearce as Homophobic lady
  • Anthony Roger as Billy Heckman/Death Row Dave, one of the dancers at the club where Tina works
  • Doug Roberts and Patsy Grady Abrams as Mr. and Mrs. Heckman
  • Susan Greenhill as Voice of Miraculous Virgin Mary
  • John Waters (uncredited) as Pervert on phone

Reception

Pecker received mixed to poor reviews. Describing it as "John Waters' first stab at making a mainstream movie," Edvins Beitiks' review in the San Francisco Examiner said it "starts out well and winds up no worse than most of the stuff that comes out of Hollywood" In his review for the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert noted a "tension between the gentler new Waters and his anarchic past. In the scenes in the male strip bar, for example, we keep waiting for Waters to break loose and shock us, and he never does, except with a few awkward language choices. The miraculous statue of Mary could have provided comic possibilities, but doesn't." Peter Stack of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that Pecker is "never truly funny, but it's an amusing novelty, gaining strength from smart characterizations and sly cogency about the way people are exploited under the limelight of celebrity."

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was released on September 22, 1998 by New Line Records.

  1. "Happy-Go-Lucky Me" - Paul Evans
  2. "The Love Chase" - Stewart Copeland
  3. "I'm a Nut" - Leroy Pullins
  4. "Memamam" - Stewart Copeland
  5. "Uh! Oh! (Part 1)" - The Nutty Squirrels
  6. "Straight Boys" - Vicky Randle and Stewart Copeland
  7. "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter" - Billy Williams
  8. "In the Mood" - Henhouse Five Plus Too (Ray Stevens)
  9. "Back to Hampden/Sneaky Shelly" - Stewart Copeland
  10. "Baltimore, You're Home to Me" - Dave Hardin
  11. "Thrift Shop Fashion Shoot" - Stewart Copeland
  12. "Don't Drop the Soap (For Anyone Else But Me)" - Stan Ridgway and Stewart Copeland
  13. "New York Montage" - Stewart Copeland
  14. "Swamp Thing" - The Grid
  15. "Woo-Hoo" - The Rock-A-Teens



This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pecker_%28film%29" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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