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Keep on Truckin' An Interview with Joe Gage Gay porn, like every other artform, has its canon, and the films of Joe Gage belong in that rareified realm of early, pioneering porn also occupied by the likes of Wakefield Poole and Jack Deveau. Poole's work (Bijou) is lyrical and arty, Deveau's harshly urban and experimental (Drive). Gage could be called the porn poet of the queer working class. The "Gage Men," as they were known during the heyday of the 70s, appeared more sexy Average Joe than Abercrombie & Fitch. They tended toward the hairy and the hunky, the opposite of the sleek, pimple-free gym-bunny trash of modern porn.
There are identifiable characters and plots in the films, but the real attraction are the sexy, sweaty vignettes set in bars, desert shacks with convenient glory holes, and of course the hypermasculine backdrops indicated by the titles. I interviewed Gage in connection with a mini-fest (two of the films from the trilogy) at the gay film festival in Portland, Oregon, and he proved an engaging subject. Bright Lights: Can you say something about the circumstances of production for El Paso Wrecking Corp and L.A. Tool & Die? How did you find the guys? How easy were they to work with? How scripted were the films, and how improvised?
Any juicy anecdotes from those films? Romances, fights? As with any other kind of moviemaking, cast and crew flings often took place, and were almost always extinguished the moment principal photography was completed. No fights I can remember diva attitude was and is strictly off-limits. I had no reason to fire anybody for being an asshole until after I started working again last year: legend-in-their-own-mind behavior seems to be a recent development. How do you see your early films in terms of today's porn? The early films were made to mirror mainstream movies, with stories, characters, dramatic conflict and resolution. For the most part, today's hardcore features play more like living stroke magazine layouts. Not that there's anything wrong with that. I prefer something with a little more substantial to chew on, so to speak. How was it working with legendary stars like Richard Locke, Fred Halsted, Jack Wrangler, Will Seagers, Clay Russell, etc.? Any stories you can share? Did you stay acquainted with them after the films? What happened to all those guys?
Any thoughts on how AIDS changed porn? Your own work, or generally? Wakefield Poole (Boys in the Sand) declared on his great DVD interview last year that he would never work again until there was a cure; the introduction of condoms killed it for him. I was eroticizing rubbers before AIDS, and continue to do so. It's sad to put barebacking off-limits, but it's more important to play safe and to encourage others to do so. Some fans have spoken fondly of your featuring more butch, everyday guys rather than hairless gym bunnies. Any thoughts on this? I never went out of my way to emphasize the butch or straight attributes of my guys I always sought to portray them as representatives of the average, ordinary for the most part working-class citizen. On the other hand, I have no interest in documenting the by-the-numbers sexual routines of West Hollywood escort boys. There's no passion there, and the meter's always running.
I took a long hiatus, made or developed some mainstream films, wrote a couple of books, raised a family, and then decided to start up again. I've made some movies for MSR and Odyssey, and will start something for another company sometime after the first of the year. What else is there to say but Keep on truckin'… Thanks, Joe. November 2003 | Issue
42 ACCESS: Joe has his own website, here. There's also an excellent site by somebody called "BJ" with bios, reviews, and pix from the films of all the major porn pioneers. It's here. ALSO: More interviews and gay and lesbian cinema, plus reviews of Wadd: The Life and Times of John C. Holmes and Sex: The Annabel Chong Story |
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New book from the
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Action! Interviews with Directors
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Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
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Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
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Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles