The opening sequence shows a couple (Anthony Moscine, Anne Linden) having sex on a bed, kissing and rubbing each other. In true Andy Milligan form - the sex on screen is not very erotic or sexy. These are not bodies that are in perfect shape or very sexy in any way. We can almost smell their body odors as we see their scars, pimples, moles and other imperfections on full display on the screen. Any sex shown in a Milligan film is not intended to arouse or sexually stimulate the viewer. These are real, everyday people engaged in sexual activity, and not body perfect porn stars.
Milligan's wife-to-be, Candy Hammond, wastes no time disrobing for the camera when she first appears on screen. The viewer is treated to a quick glimpse of her pubic area when she runs into a bedroom after disrobing. She is nude in all of her scenes until she commits suicide in her final scene. Hammond always appears to be confident, if not aloof, about her nudity on screen as she frequently touches her breasts. Hammond would eventually marry Milligan in 1968 during the production of Compass Rose.
The viewer is also treated to the inside world of Caffe Cino. The walls of the cafe are plastered with posters, fliers and other visual ephemeral that keep the viewer looking everywhere. Decor and drapery hang loosely from the cafe ceilings. The entire environment is visual overload, which is likely the point. Actors perform strange drag impromptu dialogue on a small stage as patrons of the cafe watch casually while smoking cigarettes.
If you purchased the Severin films Blu-Ray set of Gutter Auteur: The Lost Legacy of Andy Milligan, the print of Compass Rose has sound which cuts in and out throughout the film. Small segments of the film have no sound at all, and sound sequences are often hard to decipher during conversations between actors. This is not a complaint from this reviewer. We are very fortunate to have this film to view, so we can overlook the sound imperfections.
The final scene of Compass Rose is a chaotic orgy of naked sadism. Twisted bodies squirm around in an S&M playground, smeared with food in the same basement that Milligan shot The Ghastly Ones (1968). The film ends abruptly with a statement on screen which mentions that Milligan never completed the film. The film was likely unreleasable due to sound problems.
Milligan's next project was - The Filthy Five (1968), another lost film in the Milligan canon. The Severin Blu-Ray of Compass Rose has an 18-minute interview with film historian Stephen Thrower about the film. Thrower gives us great insight into the career of Milligan and the making of the film. The Degenerate Blu-Ray set also includes Milligan's post-nuke film - The Degenerates (1967), Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me (1968), House of Seven Belles (1979), and the documentary - The Degenerate - The Life & Films of Andy Milligan. The three discs are packed with lots of extras. Don't miss it.
Steve D. Stones


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