Serbian film Cinematographer interview
Mark Kermode radio review
Directors reaction to bbfc cuts
written interview with director
Comment from director: What “drugs” were
the Serbian people on to have put up with mistreatment from their government
for so long:? SEE FILM DIRECTOR’S INTERVIEW IN ENGLISH!!! It explains a lot about motifs 4 a movie.
http://www.filmski.net/vijesti/dugometrazni-film/7053/srpski_film_sokirao_ameriku
Quint at SXSW says people
have been hung for crimes against humanity less offensive than A SERBIAN FILM!
Published at: Mar 16, 2010 4:50:14 AM CDT
Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with another review
from South By Southwest and this one is a doozy.
There came a moment a little more than half-way through A SERBIAN FILM where my
jaw was literally hanging open. I had always assumed that was a figure of
speech, an exaggeration of the moment of shock and sometimes I’ve feigned it
when giving my friends a look during a particularly fucked up moment in a movie
(which usually tend to be Japanese), but this time I realized that does happen
in real life.
This moment I cannot reveal. It’s not that I don’t want to reveal a big spoiler
in case you see the movie… there is a little bit of that, but the main reason
is that taken out of context it will sound like shock for the sake of shock,
something so offensive that it will probably make you write the movie off sight
unseen.
I’m a pretty open audience member. I’ve seen some horrible shit… centipedes
crawling out of an Asian lady’s vagina, animal endangerment and mutilation (thanks
again to the crazy Asians and a special nod to the Italians), people taking a
shit, people eating shit, people becoming shit, cocks being split, cocks being
removed, cocks being jerked off until an orgasm of blood erupts from the head…
There’s a lot of weird shit out there and I’ve seen much of it, usually at the
Alamo Drafthouse.
I’m not saying A SERBIAN FILM takes the cake for most offensive, but I can say
without any exaggeration that this film was the first in a long, long time to
make me feel genuinely shocked at what I was seeing. I mean deeply disturbed
kind of shock.
A SERBIAN FILM is an ugly film, not in technical quality (it’s actually quite
professionally done), but in its tone and feel much the same way Paul
Schrader’s films are ugly films. It’s a film that slaps you across the face and
dares you to stick with it and if you do you’re either going to be fuming mad
at the filmmakers for putting you through all that shit or you’re going to be
moved.
Gaspar Noe, Lars Von Trier, Jon Waters and David Lynch have all made films like
that and now Srdjan Spasojevic (director) and Aleksandar Radivojevic
(co-writer) have joined those ranks with this allegorical tale of the state of
politics and living conditions in Serbia.
Basically we follow a famous porn actor (played by Srdjan Todorovic, the
Serbian Kevin Bacon according to writer Radivojevic at the Q&A) who has
quit the business, taking bit roles when his family needs money. But basically
he’s a family man, raising an adorable little boy with his incredibly
understanding and beautiful wife.
Enter Sergej Trifunovic’s Vukmir, a charming artist in a suit and fancy house
that has more money than God, apparently. He’s eccentric, but an artist and big
fan of Todorovic’s Milos. Vukmir believes that pornography is art and wants to
prove it by making a film with Milos and his famous ability to will an erection
with zero stimulation.
Going into the movie the buzz was that this was a movie that Alamo founder Tim
League described as one of the most fucked up movies he’s ever seen, so
naturally I knew Vukmir wasn’t up to any good, but even with that expectation I
wasn’t prepared for what happened when Milos signed on the dotted line.
There’s a little bit of Fincher’s The Game in this movie as the world starts to
unravel around this guy, but unlike The Game there’s no big twist that lets us
sigh with relief. Instead the movie hits us with escalating horrors that reach
a boiling point at a certain point, culminating in what’s essentially a giant
knife being plunged into the audience’s heart… then the movie fades back up and
twists the knife one last time before going to credits.
A SERBIAN FILM isn’t torture porn, it’s not exploitation, but I’m sure it’s
going to receive those labels. I’ve already heard comparisons to a piece of
trash called Murder Set Pieces, which is absolutely unfair. I sat through that
horrendous film and it’s miles apart from Serbian Film, which, at the end of
the day, is a big proclamation about life in Serbia and how victims are
controlled like puppets via their very own victimizations.
Murder Set Pieces is offensive for the sake of being offensive and is sold that
way. It’s hollow, the kind of film anybody who rails against horror as a genre
thinks every horror movie is.
Love it or hate it, A SERBIAN FILM is saying a lot and is extremely
intelligently executed. It’s the kind of movie that grabs you by the collar and
drags you through shit you’d rather not. It doesn’t allow you to be passive.
You’re involved, like it or not, which is going to cause people to bail and I
can’t blame them. It’s tough.
The allegory is there, but not highlighted and because it’s an Eastern European
political allegory not many in the US will understand it even if they sense a
deeper meaning. I know I didn’t fully grasp the concepts behind the movie…
hell, I still don’t even after a very illuminating and passionate Q&A with
the writers and director.
All the performances are top notch, the writing is multi-layered and
suspenseful, the cinematography (on the Red camera) was extremely professional
and the direction was assured, which all helped to give credence to the message
behind the offensive imagery.
This film can and probably will cause protests and righteous indignation. But I
can tell you this: you might be offended by this movie, but you will not be
bored by it. It crosses the line like it wasn’t even there, then goes across
another line that you didn’t know existed before coming to a close. You might
not trust you’re in the sanest of hands and you’d probably be right, but if you
do end up seeing the film it will have an impact on you. It will challenge you,
it might enlighten you, or it’ll just piss you right the fuck off.
http://blog.moviefone.com/2010/03/16/sxsw-review-serbian-film/
ReplyDeletehttp://www.filmski.net/vijesti/dugometrazni-film/7053/srpski_film_sokirao_ameriku
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_noYL0mzW4Q&feature=related
Comment from director: What “drugs” were the Serbian people on to have put up with mistreatment from their government for so long:? SEE FILM DIRECTOR’S INTERVIEW IN ENGLISH!!! It explains a lot about motifs 4 a movie.