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IMDbPro

Lonesome Cowboys

  • 1968
  • X
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
611
YOUR RATING
Lonesome Cowboys (1968)
ParodyComedyCrimeDramaWestern

Five lonesome cowboys get all hot & bothered at home en the range after confronting Ramona Alvarez and her nurse.Five lonesome cowboys get all hot & bothered at home en the range after confronting Ramona Alvarez and her nurse.Five lonesome cowboys get all hot & bothered at home en the range after confronting Ramona Alvarez and her nurse.

  • Directors
    • Andy Warhol
    • Paul Morrissey
  • Writer
    • Paul Morrissey
  • Stars
    • Viva
    • Tom Hompertz
    • Louis Waldon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    611
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Andy Warhol
      • Paul Morrissey
    • Writer
      • Paul Morrissey
    • Stars
      • Viva
      • Tom Hompertz
      • Louis Waldon
    • 8User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos17

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    Top cast9

    Edit
    Viva
    Viva
    • Ramona D'Alvarez
    Tom Hompertz
    • Julian
    Louis Waldon
    • Mickey
    Eric Emerson
    • Eric
    Taylor Mead
    Taylor Mead
    • Nurse
    Joe Dallesandro
    Joe Dallesandro
    • Little Joe
    Francis Francine
    • Sheriff
    Julian Burrough
    • Julian - Brother
    Allen Midgette
    Allen Midgette
    • Brother
    • Directors
      • Andy Warhol
      • Paul Morrissey
    • Writer
      • Paul Morrissey
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    5.2611
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    Featured reviews

    alohamike99

    great trash

    This movie is great. Joe Dallesandro is young and full-on hot and sexy. The dialogue is pure camp. The performances are funny, goofy, and stupid. Totally crazy bordering on dumb scenes. Similar in style and feel to a pre-Pink Flamingo John Waters low budget film. At times you'll wonder how in the hell they ever got it made, or why they bothered to spend time on the project. Ultimately, you appreciate the time piece that it represents. These artists and the works they produced were the "burning bush" to that era's counter-culture Moses. Irreverent and living out of bounds.
    9artpf

    Brilliant!

    Andy Warhol proves he was a head of his time and a genius! For those who are unaware of the genius that is Warhol, you may not like this film because you come from a place of ignorance.

    It's a great film. Cinema Verite at its best.

    All the sound track pops and whistles are intentional.

    hey are part of the art.

    As is the loose acting and rough cuts.

    This movie is mesmerising on so many levels.

    It foreshadows every reality show of today. Just splendid.

    Warhol convinced a bunch of rich brats to be in a grotty flick and mix it up with a seedy bunch of drug addicts and homosexuals -- pre aids days!

    Brilliant
    10rwilson-7

    It's not really a 10...

    ...but I rate it as such because I saw this movie as it should be seen, in a suburban "art house" cinema in the Sacramento suburbs in 1969. An interesting audience; some older men wearing overcoats and a few "sophisticated" couples from the local colleges. And me. I was not exactly sophisticated myself at the time (being only 19), but I laughed out loud a lot, while the rest of the spare audience stared at their shoes. I enjoyed the audience even more than I enjoyed the movie. And I enjoyed the movie a lot.

    P.S. Taylor Mead should be made a saint. I would like to see him made a saint not only because he deserves it but also because he might then cancel the insane 10 line rule here. There are movies that don't require 10 lines of commentary, this being one of them.
    9akoaytao1234

    Morrissey's Stream of Consciousness Cinema

    This is practically a vignette of the lives of some 'cowboys' in Nowhere, Arizona and a 'married' couple whom they met. In the arid weather, they talk and mess around and lives on.

    I personally love this films. I think Trash and Flesh has a similar aesthetic in that it borders into incoherence. Its a free form narrative. Its like visual stream of consciousness. Morrissey happens to have his camera on, with the smallest inputs to their character. He just let his actors speak with almost no direction. The structure here is not what drives the film but MOMENTS. Its is a high risk , high reward film style that I can only described as a Abercrombie commercial meets Kenneth Anger.

    And it works. The film's success is heavily lifted by the charms of it actors, led by Viva, Tom Hompertz (who out sleazed everyone even the latter) and Joe. They are not the best actors but they have natural magnetism and quirky disposition. With the aid by Morrisey's janky but weirdly effective editing style, they become stars you cannot just look away.

    In my eyes, it just feels so alive. Its so uniquely different but it never bores me. I do get why people might hate it BUT I did it specifically for that. It moves when it needs to.

    Morrisey clearly would shift towards more classical narrative in his later films BUT I always feel that this and the other films that precedes this are his masterpieces. Its a narrative style that I personally still think about everytime. I still think that it precursors Akerman's Je Tu Il Elle and the slow cinema movement of the coming years.
    7czar-10

    The most unconventional western ever made.

    An outrageously funny spoof on the Western film, Lonesome Cowboys is a synthesis of Warhol's sorties into the New York underworld, but much more humorous and with closer adherence to a nonsensical plot. The film was photographed in Arizona, in a ghost town where (somehow) two of Warhol's superstars are discovered. The incongruous montebanks happen to be Viva, as chic and sarcastic as she was in Bike Boy and resembling a displaced model for Hound and Horn, and Taylor Mead. Mr. Mead is the zany of our time, and when five mysterious cowhands saunter into town, the hilarity commences. The cowboys are an odd assortment, a bit androgynous and city-wise, and they interact with the two in varying attitudes of lust and indifference in set-pieces of inspired film comedy. Often, Lonesome Cowboys reaches the ultimate in surrealist imagery: cowboy-deputy Mead performing the Lupe Velez Twist, his own choreographic distortion; or one of the cowboys performing ballet exercises at the hitching post. Viva's langorous seduction of the most innocent-looking among the cowboys is actually a satirical comment on sexual artifice. This erotic, sagebrush comedy has its cruel edge, and one feels that Andy Warhol attempts to make some statement about the nature of brotherly love and the impossibility of virtue rewarded in these times of fallen idols. Select just about any Warhol film from the mid-sixties and you'll find a scandal tucked away. Lonesome Cowboys's most notable run-in with the law was in Atlanta where it was seized after replacing Gone with the Wind in a mall theater. Lonesome Cowboys is filled with wildly comic setpieces, including a cowboy practising ballet moves at the hitching post and a peevish lecture on the misuse of mascara. These desperadoes are real trailblazers when it comes to libidinous appetites and it is here that Lonesome Cowboys distinguishes itself from the herd. Unflinchingly, Warhol shoots down the myth of the de-sexed cowhand.

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    Related interests

    Bill Pullman, John Candy, Joan Rivers, Daphne Zuniga, and Lorene Yarnell Jansson in Spaceballs (1987)
    Parody
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was shot at the end of January 1968 in Arizona, on location in Old Tucson and at the Rancho Linda Vista Dude ranch 20 miles outside the city where some John Wayne movies had been filmed. It was edited by Andy Warhol while he was recuperating from wounds suffered when he was shot by Valerie Solanas on June 3, 1968,
    • Alternate versions
      One version includes a title track by Bob Goldstein during the opening sex scene between Viva and Tom Hompertz who was an art student that Andy had met the previous year while lecturing at an art school in California. This version also has opening credits after this scene. In another version, there are no credits and no song - just an assortment of extraneous sounds during the opening scene.
    • Connections
      Featured in Andy Warhol (1987)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 12, 1971 (Denmark)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ramona and Julian
    • Filming locations
      • Oracle, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Andy Warhol Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $91,299
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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