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Author Topic: Jim Morrison: College Dork  (Read 2313 times)
Mattman
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« on: March 10, 2005, 02:23:17 PM »

MIAMI - Florida historians have discovered a 40-year-old film clip of a clean-cut Jim Morrison that will give fans a different view of the Doors singer before his wilder days as a drug using rock legend who drank hard and died young.

The 1964 black-and-white public-relations film, shot at Florida State University (FSU), shows a nerdy-looking Morrison, who died in 1971 at 27 years old, acting the part of a young man whose university application has been rejected.

The 16-minute video has Morrison among wholesome scenes of college life, parades and football, a sharp contrast to his image as a long-haired, leather-clad rebel poet accused of exposing himself and simulating a sex act at a Miami concert in 1969.

"It's incredible.? He's so clean-cut and soft-spoken," said Jody Norman, archives supervisor at the State Library and Archives of Florida, and a Doors fan.

The web site ifilm.com, which features videos of all kinds, posted the clip under the heading: "Jim Morrison: College Dork."

In the film, the Florida native plays a dejected would-be university student who reads a rejection letter from a school and then earnestly questions why he can't go to college.

Norman said the film was among many turned over by FSU to the state archives and contained no idenfiication or credit for Morrison, who would have been around 20 years old when it was shot.? He was spotted by a sharp-eyed archivist who was reviewing the films.

"We knew he was at FSU for a period of time and he did some acting when he was there," Norman said.

The film was incorporated into Florida's archives and the part featuring Morrison, which runs one minute and 17 seconds, can be found at http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2665896.
« Last Edit: March 10, 2005, 02:26:11 PM by Mattman » Logged
damien24
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« Reply #1 on: March 11, 2005, 01:08:50 AM »

that thing made me laugh for some reason-
i saw that thing before that story was written- like a day or two-

i was in a very jim state of mind when i saw it-   
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BP
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« Reply #2 on: March 11, 2005, 05:29:23 PM »

stuuuuuuuuuuppppiid article. anyways a better read for fans

(It is ironic that Jim Morrison, UCLA film school's most famous alumnus, never made a film--or not at least in the conventional Hollywood sense. During his short life, Morrison made an experimental film--HwY--and completed a documentary on the Doors, Feast of Friends, with two friends, Paul Ferrara and Frank Lisciandro. During his second year at UCLA, in 1965, Jim took a film production course with Terry McCartney-Filgate, a Canadian documentary film maker who was a visiting teacher. Here, in an exclusive interview with American Legends, McCartney-Filgate, who now lives in Toronto, remembers Jim Morrison.)


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AL: What was UCLA film school like back in the early 1960s?

 
MF: It was a very exciting place. The head of the school was Colin Young who later founded the National Film School in Britain. He used to collect all sorts of odd people. Anyone who interested him could get in the program. In my class, I had a former policeman, an Arab, an Israeli....

 
AL: And two guys named Ray Manzarek and James Morrison.

 
MF:
 Yes. Actually, Colin gave me all the tough students. Since I was an outsider, not a regular faculty member, I got all the difficult characters. Morrison was assigned to my class because he got into some trouble. He threatened to beat somebody up, I think.

 
AL: Did you ever see that dark side of Jim Morrison?

 
MF:
 I remember once I was at his apartment off campus. He was sort of a rich kid, by UCLA standards. His dad was an Admiral. He had some money. Anyway, Jim was shooting a scene there for his student film. I had agreed to play a small role, running a projector. I noticed that Jim had made a dart board on his wall of Playboy centerfolds. I remember thinking: Jim is not very fond of women. When I told him this, he just laughed. He was not very communicative. He was a loner.

 
AL: What was Jim's student film like?

 
MF:
 It was a montage--a film that didn't have a story but that was made up of different images. I remember one scene, Jim's girlfriend danced on a television set wearing a garter belt. While she was dancing, a news clip came on showing a Buddhist monk burning himself. Jim could not have known that. It was, for a film maker, sheer good luck. Actually, Jim's film was not the most shocking--another student shot in the city crematory. But nihilism was sort of popular then and student film makers tend to be imitative. I presume Morrison had seen Triumph of the Will.

 
AL: Ray Manzarek was also one of your students.

 
MF:
 Ray was sort of a student guru. He would offer other students advice. He was very organized. Jim had talent, but Ray had organized film talent. Jim was undisciplined. He never completed his student film. He refused to double-splice it. This was the '60s. It was too much trouble. I gave him an incomplete.

 
AL: What adjectives would you use to describe Jim Morrison?

 
MF:
 He was a narcissist. The way he would stand around, crinkle his neck, and lean back. He already had this self-image....


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