Bible! - aka Wakefield Pooles's Bible
Poolemar / Vinegar Syndrome (1973)
Adult, Comedy, Drama, Experimental/Avant-Garde/Art House, Queer Themes/Interest
In Collection
#863
6*
Seen ItYes
(4/5/2017 Home)
855011004246
IMDB   5.0
76 mins USA / Silent
DVD  Region 1   US - X
Bo White Adam
Caprice Couselle Eve
Georgina Spelvin Bathsheba
Robert Benes Uriah
Nancy Wachter Handmaiden
Nicholas Flammel David
Brahm van Zetten Samson
Gloria Grant Delilah
Alison Fields Purdah Person
Dan Johnson Purdah Person
Patti Perkins Purdah Person
Oscar Schulman Purdah Person
Jane Sobel Purdah Person
Willie Hermine Little Person
Cathy Hermine Little Person
Leopoldo Aldea de Zea Delilah's Servant
Don Farr Delilah's Servant
John Parr Delilah's Servant
Bruce Shenton Delilah's Servant
Julio Vélez Delilah's Servant
Bonnie Mathis Mary
Dennis Wayne Angel
Director/Choreographer
Wakefield Poole
Producer Marvin Shulman
Writer/Composer Wakefield Poole
Cinematography Wakefield Poole


Wakefield Poole's version of the tales from the Bible.
Edition Details
Release Date 2013
No. of Discs/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 4/5/2017
Location Personal Library
Owner Deitz
Store Amazon.com
Purchase Price $16.93
Condition New
Links Bible! at Core for Movies
- Review: Third Eye Cinema
TheMovieDb.org
Vimeo Trailer
IMDB
References
Streaming, VoD Fandor $
IMDb Voters <500

Notes

The weakest act of the film (if we exclude the coda) is the Adam &amp; Eve segment · I suppose there is some shock value in their nakedness · And certainly some in their copulation · But overall, the segment is rather banal · At the end of her roll in the sand, Eve is quick to take control; she says, "I'm so hungry" -the only words spoken in the film · And we move on to …
Poole puts a fun twist to the Bathsheba story, played as a Mack Sennet silent movie comedy · The bad guy is Uriah for neglecting his wife · Bathsheba is just a lonely housewife of Jerusalem · And David is portrayed as a peeping tom with raging testosterone · The scene opens with Bathsheba eating an apple …
In Pool's Samson and Delilah, Samson is a bully deserving of Delilah's revenge · That Samson was a bully is a widely accepted Biblical interpretation · This act is nicely staged, filmed and acted · It is my favorite of the three ·
The Annunciation at the end of the film could have been left off without it being missed · It's a bit too cheesy and cartoonish for such an important concept as the union of god and human · So perhaps Poole doesn't want us to take it too seriously · It ends with a flashing neon sign "Bethlehem Inn - No Vacancy " · Is Poole suggesting that this whole Biblical thing is nothing more than a visit to a cheap roadside motel?



The "gay interest" genre is due to Wakefield Poole's fame and forte in the genre of gay porno films.