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Poison

  • 1991
  • Unrated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
Poison (1991)
A boy shoots his father and flies out the window. A man falls in love with a fellow inmate in prison. A doctor accidentally ingests his experimental sex serum, wreaking havoc on the community.
Play trailer2:27
1 Video
70 Photos
Body HorrorDramaHorrorRomanceSci-Fi

A boy shoots his father and flies out the window. A man falls in love with a fellow inmate in prison. A doctor accidentally ingests his experimental sex serum, wreaking havoc on the communit... Read allA boy shoots his father and flies out the window. A man falls in love with a fellow inmate in prison. A doctor accidentally ingests his experimental sex serum, wreaking havoc on the community.A boy shoots his father and flies out the window. A man falls in love with a fellow inmate in prison. A doctor accidentally ingests his experimental sex serum, wreaking havoc on the community.

  • Director
    • Todd Haynes
  • Writers
    • Jean Genet
    • Todd Haynes
  • Stars
    • Edith Meeks
    • Larry Maxwell
    • Susan Norman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    5.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Todd Haynes
    • Writers
      • Jean Genet
      • Todd Haynes
    • Stars
      • Edith Meeks
      • Larry Maxwell
      • Susan Norman
    • 31User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:27
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    Photos69

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    Top cast82

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    Edith Meeks
    • Felicia Beacon (segment "Hero")
    Larry Maxwell
    • Dr. Graves (segment "Horror")
    Susan Norman
    Susan Norman
    • Nancy Olsen (segment "Horror")
    • (as Susan Gayle Norman)
    Millie White
    • Millie Sklar (segment "Hero")
    Buck Smith
    • Gregory Lazar (segment "Hero")
    Anne Giotta
    • Evelyn McAlpert (segment "Hero")
    Lydia Lafleur
    • Sylvia Manning (segment "Hero")
    Ian Nemser
    • Sean White (segment "Hero")
    Rob LaBelle
    Rob LaBelle
    • Jay Wete (segment "Hero")
    Evan Dunsky
    Evan Dunsky
    • Dr. MacArthur (segment "Hero")
    Marina Lutz
    • Hazel Lamprecht (segment "Hero")
    Barry Cassidy
    • Officer Rilt (segment "Hero")
    Richard Anthony
    Richard Anthony
    • Edward Comacho (segment "Hero")
    Angela M. Schreiber
    • Florence Giddens (segment "Hero")
    Justin Silverstein
    • Jake (segment "Hero")
    Chris Singh
    • Chris (segment "Hero")
    Edward Allen
    • Fred Beacon (segment "Hero")
    Carlos Jimenez
    • Jose (segment "Hero")
    • Director
      • Todd Haynes
    • Writers
      • Jean Genet
      • Todd Haynes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.35.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8punishmentpark

    Strange, but fulfilling feature debut.

    Well, this is indeed a pretty weird mix of three seemingly unrelated stories, the debut feature film by Todd Haynes. I had seen nothing by him before, but I've been interested in seeing 'Safe' (1995) for a while now. And his recent film 'Carol' really seems worth a watch as well. I have 'Velvet goldmine' on DVD as well, but I'm not sure about that one, for more personal - rather inexplicable - reasons, I suppose.

    Back to 'Poison'. I found the whole thing to be pretty intriguing, though I'm not sure how it should all relate (other than the obvious human state of misery). A quote from the film, a certain statement about something being a lie and the truth at the same time, struck a cord with me; the film seems to be the director's attempt to put something really personal out there, but at the same time he hopes it pertains to something essential. A bit vague, I'll admit, but I'll comfortably leave it at that: I liked it quite a bit, even if things (altogether) didn't make sense, completely.

    The individual stories, about a boy killing his father, a man in prison meeting an 'old' friend and a scientist who simply makes a big mistake, somehow blended together well enough, reminding me of several other directors' films, such as Guy Maddin (haven't seen much of him - shame on me), Tom Kalin^ and John Paizs.

    So... a fine little gem it is: 8 out of 10.

    ^ Strangely enough, Kalin made a rather cult-ish debut film a few years before Haynes did, then Haynes did a much more straightforward (but certainly not mainstream, either) follow-up drama with Julianne Moore in the lead, and then - guess what - years later Kalin did the just the same...
    8MOscarbradley

    Haynes' first feature film marked him out as a major talent.

    Todd Haynes first full-length film was a triptych of stories inspired not only by the novels of Jean Genet but also by the schlock-horror B-Movies of the fifties and sixties. Sex, primarily homosexuality, is the main theme and is presented both poetically and with a good deal of self-deprecating humor, (one tale, modeled on "The Fly", is obviously about AIDS), and prefigures much of Haynes later work; "Far from Heaven" isn't far from the surface in the presentation of the story about a boy who kills his father and literally flies away. It's certainly not commercial and was clearly aimed at a specific art-house audience but it marked a breakthrough both in Independent American Cinema and in LGBT cinema. It also marked Haynes out as a major talent and someone to watch.
    LeSamourai

    oddly mesmerizing and unique

    Make sure that you are not tired when watching this film. Although this film introduces some outstanding performances by some little known actors, the film falls short. One of the three short stories of the film is shot in black and white and is strangely reminiscient of David Lynch's masterpiece "The Elephant Man." When Dr. Graves is ordered out to the fire-escape, I was just waiting for him to shout, "I'm not an animal; I'm a human being." The prisoner story, unlike the black and white story, is full of emotion and intensity. Issues such as homosexuality, abuse, and longing for love are enmeshed in this tale. The third story is shot documentary style. An unseen interviewer questions neighbors, family, and friends about the events leading up to the shooting and death of an abusive father. This movie will intrigue you, confuse you, and bother you. It's worth a watch.
    8NateManD

    An intoxicating experience of emotion.

    Todd Haynes became well known with his film "Poison", which was successful at the Sundance film festival. What I like about "Poison" is that is not another stereotypical gay film. It contains three separate stories, all shown out of sequence. So it's like watching three bizarre surrealist films within one movie. One story "Hero" is a mockumentary which deals with a young boy and his abusive father. After killing his dad, he mysteriously flies away. Another story deals with a disease like epidemic, which seems to be symbolic of aids. This part is filmed in a style of a campy 50's sci-fi film. The man drinks some sort of potion and is given the disease. A colleague still loves him even though he's infected. Then the last story "Homo" deals with two men in prison and their homosexual relationship. These two guys have known each other from their youth and the one has flashbacks of the torment he has faced. "Poison" is a unique experimental masterpiece of queer cinema, reminiscent of Derek Jarmon. The film went through much controversy with its NC-17 rating. But really, there's R-rated films which are much worse. "Poison" is definitely not a film for everyone, but if your looking for something strange and different you'll probably enjoy it.
    7lasttimeisaw

    as an experimental juvenilia, POISON throbs with vitality, ambition and knowing archness

    Queer filmmaker Todd Haynes' debut feature POISON dazzles as a multi-faceted cinematic triptych, three segments: Hero, Horror, Homo, all inspired by Jean Genet's novels (with his texts sporadically materialize on the screen as inner beacons), are intertwined altogether yet each is bestowed with a sui generis visual style that speaks volumes of Haynes' eclectic idioms.

    Hero takes the form of a grainy and slipshod pseudo-documentary, interviewing sundry characters about a deadly homicide further confounded by a surreal twist, a 7-year-old boy, shoots his father dead and then wondrously flies away from the window witnessed by his mother Felicia (Meeks), various interviewees recounts the boy's aberrant deportment before the incident, some are startlingly perverse, finally, through Felicia's account, the boy's ascension smacks of something punitive and defiant in the face of family dysfunction and violent impulse, rather dissimilar in its undertone and timbre from that WTF upshot in Alejandro González Iñárritu's BIRDMAN (2014, 7.6/10).

    Horror, shot in retro-monochrome and abounds with eye-catching Dutch angles, namely is a none- too-engrossing pastiche of the erstwhile B-movies and body horror, a scientist Dr. Thomas Graves (Maxwell), accidentally ingests the serum of "human sexuality" which he has successfully extracted, starts to transmogrify into a leprosy-inflicted monster, and his condition is deadly contagious, which threats lives around him, especially his admirer Dr. Nancy Olsen (Norman), who against all odds, not daunted by his physical deterioration. In comparison, this segment is less savory owing to its own unstimulating camp, where Hero ends with a subjective ascending, the upshot for a beleaguered gargoyle is nothing but plummeting.

    Last but not the least, Homo is plainly a more self-reflexive treatment conjured up à la Fassbinder's QUERELLE (1982), another mainstay of queer cinema derived from Genet's text. A prisoner John Broom (Renderer), grows intimate towards the blow-in Jack Bolton (Lyons), whom he has met before during his stint in a juvenile facility of delinquency, Jack's humiliated past emerges inside John's mind, now it is his turn to exert his suppressed libido. This chapter is as homoerotic as one can possibly imagine, a maneuver Haynes would have unwillingly relinquished en route pursuing mainstream acceptance, one tantalizing sequence of Broom groping an asleep Jack is divinely graphic and atmospherically transcendent.

    Credited as an experimental juvenilia, POISON throbs with vitality, ambition and knowing archness, though the end result is far from flawless, it potently anticipates many a Haynes' modus operandi, say, the segmental structure and interview-style in I'M NOT THERE. (2007, 8.0/10), his distinct prediction for the photogenic period setting and outfit in FAR FROM HEAVEN (2002, 9.2/10) and CAROL (2015, 8.9/10), not to mention his latest sortie into black-and-white mystique and paralleled storytelling in the Cannes-premiered WONDERSTRUCK (2017).

    Not many can embrace perversity as plucky as Mr. Haynes has done, whether it is a tragedy can easily take place around us in real life, or a man living through his most egregious incubus, or a blatantly idealized contest of one's sexuality (motifs like wedding, saliva and scars are all defying their accepted norms), just like a child's stretching hand in the opening credit, Haynes' first directorial outing jauntily treads through many taboo subjects and in retrospect, vindicates that it will be our profound loss if his talent fails to be acknowledged and utilized in full scale.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      John Leguizamo is credited as "Damien Garcia" due to an unspecified SAG rules problem.
    • Goofs
      A man runs past the bedroom window during the second interview with Gregory Lazar.
    • Quotes

      John Broom: [V.O] Prison was not new to me. I'd lived in them all my life. In submitting to prison life, embracing it... I could reject the world that had rejected me.

    • Alternate versions
      Edited, "R" rated version is available on video.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Celluloid Closet (1995)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 16, 1991 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gift
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bronze Eye Productions
      • Killer Films
      • Poison L.P.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $250,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $787,280
    • Gross worldwide
      • $787,280
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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