Attitude

CULTURE CLUB

- by Juno Dawson

Hellraiser

Unbelievab­ly, some people at Attitude HQ have questioned Hellraiser’s credential­s as gay culture. This a blood- splattered hill I will gladly die on.

Exhibit A: Clive Barker, author of The Hellbound Heart, then director and writer of the fi lm it inspired, Hellraiser ( 1987), is gay. He came out when he was 18 and lives in Beverly Hills with his partner.

He was honoured by GLAAD in 2004, so all of his creative output, it could be argued, should be considered “gay culture.”

Barker’s sexuality underpins all his work. “I worked as a hustler in the 1970s,” Barker told The Guardian in 2017. “I met a lot of people you’ll know and some you won’t: publishers, captains of industry.

The way they acted — and the way I did, to be honest — was a source of inspiratio­n later.”

Exhibit B: Hellraiser, if you slice just below the surface, is queer as fuck. The plot concerns wayward Frank Cotton, a hedonist who performs “small favours” ( I’m reading into that “blowies”) to get his hands on a strange puzzle box. He’s told the box contains the ultimate sexual experience of pleasure and pain. “Sex is a great leveller,” says Barker.

“It made me want to tell a story about good and evil in which sexuality was the connective tissue… Hellraiser, the story of a man driven to seek the ultimate sensual experience, has a much more twisted sense of sexuality.”

Frank is somewhat miff ed when, instead of sexy ladies, a terrifying quartet of demons come for his soul. Barker explained: “The look of the Cenobites, such as the pins in their leader’s head, was inspired by S& M clubs. But I was emotionall­y inspired by them, too. On S& M’s sliding scale, I’m probably a six.

“There was an undergroun­d club called Cellblock 28 in New York that had a very hard S& M night. No drink, no drugs, they played it very straight. It was the fi rst time I ever saw people pierced for fun. It was the fi rst time I saw blood spilt. The austere atmosphere defi nitely informed Pinhead: ‘ No tears, please. It’s a waste of good suff ering’.”

From hell, Frank enlists his lover and sister- in- law Julia ( played by the sublime Clare Higgins) to seduce businessme­n so that he can drain their blood until he’s human once more.

The censors made Barker reshoot a scene in which Frank and Julia have anal sex — a very violent and gory vision.

Exhibit C: It’s camp as tits.

While Hellraiser is far more stylish and serious than its Eighties contempora­ries Friday the 13th or Nightmare on Elm Street, there’s something very twee about Julia, in yellow satin and shoulder pads, mashing up horny men with a hammer to procure a decent shag. Amen to that, sister.

The S& M vibe of the fi lm has made it a fi rm favourite with the kink comic- con crowd and the fi lm holds up more than 30 years later.

“I was validating a lifestyle,” Barker reminisced. “It was a celebratio­n of the beauty of these strange secret rituals.”

Also, does anyone else fi nd Pinhead strangely sexy? No? Just me then? OK, I’ll go.

“Barker was made to reshoot a scene where Frank and Julia have anal sex”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom