The 29-minute experimental film Christmas on Earth caused a sensation when it first screened in New York City in 1964. Its orgy scenes, double projections and overlapping images shattered artistic conventions and announced a powerful new voice in the city's underground film scene. All the more remarkable, that vision belonged to a teenager, 18-year-old Barbara Rubin. A Zelig of the '60s, she introduced Andy Warhol to the Velvet Underground, Bob Dylan to Kabbalah and bewitched Allen Ginsberg. The same unbridled creativity that inspired her to make films when women simply didn't, saw her breach yet another male domain, Orthodox Judaism, before her mysterious death at 35. Lifelong friend Jonas Mekas saved all her letters, creating a rich archive that filmmaker Chuck Smith carefully sculpts into this fascinating portrait of a nearly forgotten artist. An avante-garde maverick, a rebel in a man's world, Barbara Rubin regains her rightful place in film history.
Chuck Smith
Director

Barbara Rubin
Self (archive footage)

Jonas Mekas

Amy Taubin

Bob Dylan

Andy Warhol

Paul Morrissey

Lou Reed

John Cale

Nico
In the Realms of the Unreal71%
Seduced and Abandoned62%
Tricked: The Documentary61%
A Plastic Ocean75%
Room 23761%
180° South72%
Directed by John Ford70%
Evil Influencer: The Jodi Hildebrandt Story62%
Cuadecuc, vampir61%
The Class of ‘9271%
Heart of a Dog65%
Night Will Fall76%
Spider-Man: All Roads Lead to No Way Home67%
Sherman's March67%
Black Sheep72%
My Mom Jayne80%
John Candy: I Like Me78%
Anna Nicole Smith: You Don't Know Me60%
Western Stars70%
Sidney70%