William Earl New Zealand journalist and director David Farrier‘s debut feature documentary, 2016’s “Tickled,” was a look at the underground world of competitive tickling and the bizarre cast of characters behind the subsequent fetish videos.
Farrier has followed “Tickled” with “Mister Organ,” a profile of a litigious man living in the shadows. In this case, it’s New Zealand’s Michael Organ, whom Farrier first stumbles upon as an overzealous parking lot attendant at an antiques store, before discovering more strange details about his life.
Before the film’s Oct. 6 theatrical debut, Farrier spoke with Variety about “Mister Organ” for our Doc Dreams series, where he detailed some of the safety issues he faced while shooting the movie, his frustrations with his subject and if Organ has seen the film himself. At what point in the process of learning about Michael Organ did you determine this had the potential to be a feature-length documentary? Much like “Tickled,” I had written about the story first.
This was based on a series of about five articles I’d written for a local website, The Spinoff. And much like “Tickled,” at a certain point, words just can’t do it justice.
Read more on variety.com
Get the latest stars news and celebrity rumours with exclusive stories, photos, videos and interviews.
Breaking up, scandals, engagements, divorces, gossip – all you need to know about the private lives of your favorite celebs.
Get to know the latest showbiz news along with exclusive interviews and even more. All this is waiting for you on the main page 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! Who, where, when, with whom, how, why and for what!? Stay tuned to know first!
Just follow us daily and we will provide you with the current news from the life of famous stars and celebrities.
Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
Registration certificate 06691200
Address:
Snowland s.r.o.
16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
Czech Republic
©2024. All rights reserved.