Chafed Elbows  

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Chafed Elbows is a 1966 still image film directed by Robert Downey Sr.. The film was reviewed by Parker Tyler in Underground Film: A Critical History.

A manic comic parody underground film made for $12,000, The film was premiered at The Gate Theater in New York City and ran for over one month alongside Scorpio Rising.

Downey photographed most of the movie with a still 35mm camera and had the film processed at Walgreens drugstore. These pictures were animated alongside a few live-action scenes and almost all the dialogue was dubbed to rather hilarious effect. One scene was shot in Anthology Film Archives’s upstairs theater back in the days when the building was still a defunct downtown courthouse.

All 13 of the female roles were played by Elsie Downey, Robert Downey's wife, and the lead male role by George Morgan.

Plot

Hapless Walter Dinsmore undergoes his annual November breakdown at the 1964 World's Fair, has a love affair with his mother, recollects his hysterectomy operation, impersonates a cop, is sold as a piece of living art, goes to heaven, and becomes the singer in a rock band, but not necessarily in that order.


See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Chafed Elbows" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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