Ken Park

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Ken Park

Promotional poster for Ken Park
Directed by Larry Clark,
Edward Lachman
Written by Harmony Korine,
Larry Clark
Starring Adam Chubbuck,
James Bullard,
Tiffany Limos
Release date(s) 2002
Running time 96 mins
Language English
IMDb profile

Ken Park is a controversial 2002 film with a screenplay adapted by Harmony Korine from stories by Larry Clark, and directed by Larry Clark and Edward Lachman.

The film revolves around the abusive home lives of several teenage skateboarders, and is a story of violence, alienation and teenage sexual experimentation, set in the rural town of Visalia, California.

Contents

[edit] Cast

[edit] Synopsis

The film contains graphic scenes of explicit unsimulated sexual behavior, and portrays suicide, murder, parental violence, alcoholism, smoking cannabis, incestuous sexual assault by a homophobic father of his sleeping son, BDSM, autoerotic asphyxiation, religious fanaticism, a fake marriage of a father with his daughter, a boy having sex with his girlfriend's mother, and at the end an idyllic sex scene with two of the boys and a girl named Peaches.

During an interview, Clark commented, "I decided that I wasn't going to turn the camera away, or shut the door, or shoot from the waist up."

[edit] Distribution

Alternate theatrical release poster.
Enlarge
Alternate theatrical release poster.

[edit] United Kingdom

The movie was not shown in the United Kingdom after director Larry Clark punched and attempted to strangle Hamish McAlpine, the head of the UK distributor for the film, Metro Tartan. Clark was arrested and spent several hours in custody, and McAlpine was left with a broken nose.[1]

[edit] United States

The movie has never been issued in wide release in the United States. It has not found a distributor since its initial showing at the Telluride Film Festival in 2002.

[edit] Australia

In Australia, the film was banned for its violence and sexual content, although many consider the ban to have been ineffectual. In response to the ban, a protest screening was held which was shut down by the police. The resulting publicity, coupled with the ease with which the film could be purchased or obtained via the Internet, meant that it was possible more people ended up seeing the film than would have had the film been allowed its inevitable short cinematic release.[citation needed]

[edit] External links

In other languages