Mike Kuchar in Catch Fire

April 9, 2012

June in San Francisco ushered in an exhibition for the underground filmmaker and visual artist Mike Kuchar. “Mike’s Men: Sex, Guys, and Videotape!” was held at Magnet, a city-funded STD clinic in the heart of the Castro, that supposed gay mecca. In fact, the event proved to be one of the most successful attempts at bringing together queer men during Pride month. Superbly curated by Eric Smith, Mark Garrett and Margaret Tedesco, “Mike’s Men” was a collection of illustrations and four video shorts. The exhibition served both as a tribute to his lifelong career in avant-garde art, and an acknowledgement of Mike’s recent loss.

Read More

Mike Kuchar in Queerty

June 16, 2012

A little while back we profiled The Secret Life of Wendel Sampson, a psychedelic gem from the mind of pioneering queer filmmaker Mike Kuchar, who along with his twin brother, George, inspired generations of indie directors, including John Waters and Guy Maddin.

While George was the more prolific of the two, Mike still cranked out a stream of flicks, including A Tub Named Desire (1956), Sins of the Fleshapoids (1965) and The Craven Sluck (1967).

Now Mike has a solo exhibit running at Magnet gallery in San Francisco through the end of the month. “Mike’s Men: Sex, Guys and Videotape!” features the underground legend’s drawings, videos, posters and limited-edition prints from the 1960s to the mid-2000s. “As an illustrator, my aim is to amuse the eye and ‘spark’ imagination,” says Kuchar. “To soothe with sensual lines and excite with color. To create titillating scenes that refresh the soul and put a bit more ‘fun’ to viewing pictures.”

Read More

MIKE KUCHAR IN THE BAY AREA REPORTER | 100 Guys Named Mike

June 7, 2012

June was ushered in with Mike's Men: Sex, Guys and Videotape, a flashy, sassy art exhibit by underground filmmaker/artist Mike Kuchar at Magnet on 18th St. Curators Eric Smith, Mark Garrett and Margaret Tedesco have put together a show of the auteur/illustrator's work that will bring back warm (and sometimes hot) memories of the golden age of gay comic books.

Read More

MIKE KUCHAR IN BAY AREA REPORTER | Bulge Report

June 7, 2012

"But oh, boy, Statue in the Park sure is porn – the olden-day porn of the sticky-floored grindhouse showing grainy loops while some toothless fart masturbated in the back row and shifty-lookin' dudes with their jeans slung low loitered around the stinky urinal. There isn't full nudity in the movie, yet it reeks of trashy sex for about 10 of its 18 minutes. This is when we watch Mike Diana play janitor in a funky restroom, perhaps the very one where this loop is showing. He's real Times Square candy, of the sort you found in Times Square before it was Disneyfied, a sinuous blond street-kid whose freshness is likely to tarnish mighty quick."

Read More

SF CHRONICLE | Filmmaker Mike Kuchar talks of late brother George

May 31, 2012

Mike Kuchar swears he remembers being born. Not his own birth, exactly, but the arrival of his twin brother, George, minutes later.

"I can't get it out of my mind," he says. "I remember seeing him being slapped. And the weirdest thing about it is, I remember thinking, 'I hope he's going to cry the first time. Otherwise they'll hit him again.' "

The Kuchars are the Bronx-born film mavericks who gave the world such underground gems as "Hold Me While I'm Naked," "Confessions of a Teenage Rumpot" and "Sins of the Fleshapoids." Cheerfully dogged in their pursuit of an artistry that bypassed commerce and trends, the Kuchars are bona fide filmmaking heroes.

Read More

Mike Kuchar in Film Threat

October, 2010

Mike Kuchar made his first films as a teenager, in collaboration with his twin brother George, in the mid 1950s. He achieved legendary underground status for the fabulously original and trashy send-ups of Hollywood B movies which he made in the mid 1960s, such as “Sins of the Fleshapoids.” John Waters and many other filmmakers cite Mike Kuchar as a seminal influence.

Not many filmmakers who began over fifty years ago are still making new work now, and very few indeed could be said to be making their most radical, visionary, and most successful work, but Kuchar is doing just that. In his late 60s, he is producing a string of experimental video works at a dizzying rate that are not only unlike his previous work, they are unlike anyone’s previous work. These videos, typically featuring the performance of a collaborating actor, writer, or dancer, are brimming with visual inventiveness, musical sophistication, humor, and they show the stamp of the Kuchar’s mastery of the art of film in every frame.

Read More

George Kuchar & Mike Kuchar in SFGATE

August 6, 1997

In the 1960s, when independent films were still called "underground" and nascent filmmakers didn't fashion their work as Hollywood audition pieces, twin brothers George and Mike Kuchar were stars. They made 8mm and 16mm movies for peanuts, gave them titles like "I Was a Teenage Rumpot" and "The Naked and the Nude," and stocked them with lurid obsessions, taboo fantasies and raunchy thrills.

Read More