SUBMIT TO ME FILM T-SHIRT

A cult underground film t-shirt available in black cotton.

Part art film, part fever dream, and entirely uncompromising — Richard Kern’s Submit To Me (1985) remains one of the defining works of New York’s underground no-wave cinema movement. Shot on grainy Super 8, it’s a raw, voyeuristic dive into desire, control, and the sinister beauty that lurks behind the human urge to look.

Kern’s camera became both confessor and conspirator — revealing a world of downtown decadence where performance, pain, and pleasure collided under flickering light and feedback noise. This was the New York of Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, and the Cinema of Transgression: defiant, dangerous, and utterly DIY. Submit To Me wasn’t just a short film — it was a manifesto in motion, a rejection of mainstream art’s polish in favour of truth’s grime.

“Art should wound you awake.” — Lydia Lunch

The Submit To Me Film T-Shirt captures that uncompromising spirit — the jagged edge of 1980s East Village art where rebellion was filmed on borrowed cameras and projected on cracked walls. It’s a salute to the outlaw artists who saw beauty in breakdown and used film as a weapon against conformity.

This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a declaration — a reminder that real art never asks for permission. It just hits “record.”

💬 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)

Q1: What is Submit To Me?
A1: Submit To Me (1985) is a short experimental film by Richard Kern, a key figure in the New York no-wave movement, exploring voyeurism, desire, and the darker edges of human psychology.

Q2: Why is the film so influential?
A2: It stripped cinema back to its primal core — raw, honest, and confrontational. Kern’s work helped shape underground aesthetics in film, photography, and music videos for decades to come.

Q3: Who were the key figures of the Cinema of Transgression?
A3: Artists like Richard Kern, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd, and David Wojnarowicz, who created provocative, low-budget works that challenged censorship, conformity, and polite art.