THE DEGENERATE: THE LIFE & FILMS OF ANDY MILLIGAN to World Premiere at Tribeca 2025

THE DEGENERATE: THE LIFE & FILMS OF ANDY MILLIGAN to World Premiere at Tribeca 2025
Documentary Premiere Accompanied by a Double Feature of Long-Lost Milligan Films, Restored by Severin Films

Severin Films and Monocular Films are immensely proud to announce their latest original documentary, THE DEGENERATE: THE LIFE & FILMS OF ANDY MILLIGAN, which will World Premiere this June at the 2025 edition of New York City's Tribeca Film Festival.

He was a pioneer of avant-garde theater, trailblazer of early Queer cinema, and remains one of the most divisive talents in exploitation/horror history. But what is the truth behind Andy Milligan and his “depraved, desperate, and damned” (Time Magazine) legacy? THE DEGENERATE: THE LIFE & FILMS OF ANDY MILLIGAN explores the bile, brutality, and intermittent brilliance of “The Fassbinder of 42nd Street” (Artforum).

The picture is directed by Josh Johnson (REWIND THIS!) and Grayson Tyler Johnson (BOB MORGAN'S JUST GOING TO TELL SOME STORIES) and features interviews with Gerald Jaccuzo, Hope Stansbury, Jimmy McDonough, Stephen Thrower, Sam Sherman, John Borske, Robert Berlin, Ken Lane, Bob Likola, and Alex DiSanto - as well as excerpts from a recently discovered interview with Milligan himself, the only one known to exist. 

The film is produced by Josh Johnson; executive produced by Carl Daft and David Gregory; and co-produced by Andrew Furtado, Nicole Mikuzis, and Deanna Rooney.

Milligan’s low-budget productions – on which he served as writer, director, cinematographer, editor, set decorator, and costume designer and included such "classics" as THE GHASTLY ONES, BLOODTHIRSTY BUTCHERS, GURU THE MAD MONK, TORTURE DUNGEON, and THE RATS ARE COMING! THE WEREWOLVES ARE HERE! – were predominately period melodramas fueled by themes of sadism, incest, and misogyny bathed in bottom-of-the-barrel gore effects, filmed on Staten Island (and for a brief period, London) and forever consigned to grindhouse purgatory. Yet via revealing interviews with a gallery of Milligan’s performers, enablers, co-conspirators, and his biographer – along with copious clips from his deranged oeuvre – a portrait emerges of a gutter auteur who battled and antagonized his own demons to become one of the most transgressive outsider artists of the 20th century.