‘Sexy Durga’ Release Certification Rescinded by Indian Censors
By Naman Ramachandran
The on-off saga of releasing “Sexy Durga” in India has come to a sorry conclusion, for now. The film did not play at the International Film Festival of India (IFFI), Goa, despite a court order requiring that it should be. Instead, it must now be re-certified by India’s Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC).Sanal Kumar Sasidharan’s film won the Hivos Tiger award at Rotterdam earlier this year and played at the Singapore International Film Festival last week. But it is proving too controversial to play in its country of origin.Along with “Nude,” the film was dropped from the Goa festival line-up on technical grounds. The head of the Panorama section’s selection committee and two others resigned, while several other jury members signed a letter of protest.
Sasidharan moved the Kerala High Court, who ordered the festival to screen the film. The version to be screened was a censored version certified by the CBFC where the title was changed to ‘S Durga’ (Durga is the name of an Indian goddess and a popular female name) to avoid offending Hindu religious sentiments. Swear words were also muted. India’s information and broadcasting ministry appealed against the court decision, but it was quashed.
The Panorama selectors, with three new members replacing the ones who resigned, viewed the film again on Nov. 27, the penultimate day of IFFI, and put it to a vote. The jury voted 7-4 in favor of screening the film.
On Nov. 28, the last day of IFFI, the CBFC issued a letter to the film’s producer Shaji Mathew stating: “We have received complaints from the IFFI (selectors) at Goa that the title of the film on the title card is shown by the film maker as “S### Durga” (where the # means rectangular white boxes) which has totally different implications and are effectively undermining and attempting to defeat the very basis of the title registration and changes effected thereby.”
The CBFC said that the filmmakers are in violation of the Cinematograph Act and the film will be re-examined. Until then, the film cannot be exhibited. IFFI concluded without screening the film. The CBFC letter provided an excuse to the festival and the ministry who would have been in contempt of court if they had not screened the film.
The censored “S Durga” played at the Mumbai Film Festival and at a commercial screening in Thiruvananthapuram without a hitch. It will now have to go through another battle before the rest of India can watch it.
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/sexydurga2.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-12-02 09:52:482024-10-07 14:34:48Breaking News : Variety // ‘Sexy Durga’ Release Certification Rescinded by Indian Censors
An imaginative commingling of Spaghetti Western elements and post-Apartheid South African melodrama.
By Joe Leydon
CREDIT: GRAHAM BARTHOLOMEW
Director:
Michael Matthews
Cast:
Vuyo Dabula, Hamilton Dhlamini, Zethu Dlomo, Kenneth Nkosi, Mduduzi Mabaso, Aubrey Poolo, Lizwi Vilakazi, Warren Masemola, Dean Fourie, Anthony Oseyemi, Brendon Daniels, Jerry Mofokeng. (Sesotho, English, Afrikaans, Xhosa dialogue)
2 hours
The very notion of a contemporary melodrama set in post-Apartheid South Africa tricked out with the narrative and visual tropes of Spaghetti Westerns and revisionist American oaters might seem, at first blush, too film-geek clever by half. But “Five Fingers for Marseilles” turns out to be an impressively effective and engrossing cross-cultural hybrid that has a great deal more than novelty value going for it. Director Michael Matthews and scripter Sean Drummond skillfully employ recycled genre elements to enhance the mythic qualities of their slow-burn narrative and reinforce the underlying sense that their archetypical characters are fulfilling destinies as inescapable as the fates that might befall major players in a conventional Wild West saga.During the lengthy pre-credits prologue, which unfolds during the later days of the Apartheid era, we’re brought to the outskirts of Marseilles, one of several Eastern Cape railroad towns named after European capitals, and introduced to the “Five Fingers” — childhood friends bound by their yearning to rebel against the white oppressors who routinely exploit and brutalize their people. Initially, they are content to use rocks and slingshots against the cops. But when one of their number is arrested, young Tau (Toka Mtabane) fatally shoots two policemen — and then flees the area, leaving his comrades to deal with the aftereffects of his crime.
Two decades later, Tau (played as an adult by Vuyo Dabula) is a notorious outlaw who has earned every bit of his bad reputation. Released from prison after serving hard time for robbery, he attempts to turn over a new leaf by renouncing violence and returning home to Marseilles. Unfortunately, very much like the traditional Western gunslingers who repeatedly vowed to hang up their pistols and go back to their roots, Tau finds himself unable to follow through on his good intentions.
For a long time, Tau tries to stay out of trouble and keep a low profile, even as he discovers telltale signs that, after the end of Apartheid and the overthrow of white oppressors, newly empowered black locals — including some of his erstwhile comrades — are posing a different sort of threat to the community.
Bongani (Kenneth Nkosi), once a member of Tau’s inner circle, has become mayor with promises of career opportunities and civic improvements for the citizenry of what now is known as New Marseilles. And, who knows, he might actually do more good than harm if his plans pan out. But to maintain power, and his comfortable lifestyle, he’s made deals with two devils: Luyanda (Mduduzi Mabaso), a former Five Finger rebel who grew up to be the town’s brutish police chief; and Sepoko (Hamilton Dhlamini), aka Ghost, a raspy voiced, flamboyantly villainous gangster who really doesn’t need the permission he’s been granted by Bongani to take what he wants from the town.
Tau would prefer to steer clear of the bad guys. But a man’s got to do what a man’s got to do, especially when he’s prodded by Lerato (Zethu Dlomo), an old friend and implied romantic interest, and her young son, Sizwe (Lizwi Vilakazi), who’s all too eager to view Tau as a role model. “You don’t want to be anything like me,” Tau warns the boy. But, of course, he does. And his desire has consequences.
“Five Fingers of Marseilles” was filmed on location in and around the North-Eastern Cape village of Lady Gray — Shaun Harley Lee’s vigorous and evocative lensing ranks high among the film’s selling points. But the terrain will be instantly familiar to audiences as the sort of harsh frontier setting where Sergio Leone and Sergio Carbucci once had rugged antiheroes clash with gaggles of tough customers. Bad men bestride this movie-informed landscape with guns on their hips and, in many cases, cowboy hats (or reasonable facsimiles thereof) on their heads. (There are even horses on view now and then.)
Dabula is able to bring humanizing shadings of character — guilt, regret, moral outrage — to what is essentially a South African variation of Clint Eastwood’s Man With No Name. But he also rises to the occasion as a near-superhuman hero when Matthews and Drummond go full Spaghetti Western, most notably in a scene where Tau somehow survives sadistic torture as resiliently as Eastwood’s taciturn bounty hunter (or Franco Nero’s Django) ever did.
Beyond all the Western allusions and evocations, the film commands attention with a deliberately paced and well-observed story that focuses on, among other things, the inescapable influence of the past and the unavoidable corruption spawned by ambition. (Meet the new bosses, arguably worse than the old bosses.) When everything in a movie seems geared to trigger a climax straight out of “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” however, it’s easy to be distracted from the meatier issues. On the other hand, “Five Fingers for Marseilles” is no less satisfying for being almost too entertaining for its own good.
Film Review: ‘Five Fingers for Marseilles’
Reviewed at Fantastic Fest, Austin, Sept. 24, 2017. (Also in Toronto Film Festival — Discovery.)
PRODUCTION: (South Africa) An Indigenous Film Distribution presentation of a Be Phat Motel Film Co., Game 7 Films production in association with Above the Clouds, Stage 5 Films, the National Film and Video Foundation, the Dept. of Trade and Industry. Producers: Asger Hussain, Yaron Schwartzman, Sean Drummond, Michael Matthews. Executive Producers: Jeff Hoffman, Paulo Areal, Dumi Gumbi, Josh Green. CREW Director: Michael Matthews. Screenplay: Sean Drummond. Camera (color): Shaun Harley Lee. Editor: Daniel Mitchell. Music: James Matthes.
WITH: Vuyo Dabula, Hamilton Dhlamini, Zethu Dlomo, Kenneth Nkosi, Mduduzi Mabaso, Aubrey Poolo, Lizwi Vilakazi, Warren Masemola, Dean Fourie, Anthony Oseyemi, Brendon Daniels, Jerry Mofokeng. (Sesotho, English, Afrikaans, Xhosa dialogue)
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/Five-Fingers-For-Marseilles_2.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-11-20 18:27:342024-10-07 14:34:53Breaking News : VARIETY // Film Review: ‘Five Fingers for Marseilles’
BiFan winner ‘Black Hollow Cage’ sells to North America
BY TOM GRATER8 SEPTEMBER 2017
BLACK HOLLOW CAGE
Paris-based Reel Suspects has scored an early TIFF deal for North American rights on its sci-fi horror Black Hollow Cage.
Toronto-based distributor levelFILM has picked up the title and is planning a theatrical release in early 2018.
Directed by Sadrac Gonzales Perellon, the film had its premiere in July at Switzerland’s Neuchatel International Fantastic Film Festival and subsequently played at Korea’s BiFan, where it scooped the grand jury prize.
The film follows a girl who lives secluded in a house in the woods with only the company of her father and a wolfhound. She finds a mysterious cubic device with the ability to change the past.
The deal has been negotiated by David Hudakoc and Leslie Semichon during the first day of TIFF.
David Hudakoc, managing partner at levelFILM, said: “We are excited to partner with Reel Suspects and to release Black Hollow Cage. Sadrac Gonzalez-Perellón is an incredible talent and this intelligent, stylized and gripping film is one we can’t wait to bring to audiences.”
Matteo Lovadina, Reel Suspects CEO: “We are happy to partner with levelFILM on this feature, and bring it to north American audiences. We are sure that it will attract the public thanks to its crossover potential and incisive narrative.”
“With Theatrical releases already planned in South Korea, Japan, Spain, UK, China and now USA and Canada, Black Hollow Cage confirms to be one of the most attractive genre films of the year”.
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/BHC5.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-09-20 02:24:022024-10-07 14:34:58Breaking News : SCREEN // BiFan winner ‘Black Hollow Cage’ sells to North America
The Man with the Magic Box, the new film by talented Polish filmmaker Bodo Kox, will be the headliner at the Toronto Film Festival (from 7 to 17 September) for the French company Reel Suspects. The company is led by Matteo Lovadina and will launch the sales for the film in Canada. Showcased in July in Work in Progress at Karlovy Vary, this feature film (whose script has been written by the director) begins in a close and dystopian future. By moving into an old building and listening to a strange radio he finds in a closet, Adam travels in time back to the 1950s. But what begins as a hallucination or a dream becomes a politically subversive reality that threatens his existence in 2030.
“The Man with the Magic Box is an amazing film, very creative and original, with a cinematographic approach that surpasses boundaries,” highlights Matteo Lovadina. “The female character at the centre of the story fits in perfectly with this new movement that places women in the foreground, devoid of sexualisation, a heroine, a woman who inverts conventional roles. This film also reinforces our traditional attachment to avant-garde Polish directors, following Demon[+] de Marcin Wrona, and our editorial line, which has always focused on films from European genres.”
Icon of off-beat Polish cinema (Marco P. and the Bike Thieves, Doppelganger), Bodo Kox moved into the mainstream in 2013 with his previous opus The Girl from the Wardrobe[+], unveiled at Karlovy Vary and which, among other awards, notably took home the Eagle for Discovery of the Year at the Polish Film Awards in 2014.
With Piotr Palak and Olga Boladz in the lead roles, The Man with the Magic Box, which is currently in the final stages of post-production, has been produced by the Poles of Alter Ego Pictures and the Italians of Vargo Film, and has notably been supported by the Polish Film Institute and Creative Europe – Media Development.
The line-up of Reel Suspects at Toronto also includes the Portuguese production Levianoby Justin Amorim (a debut feature film on adolescents who join forces to find two family members who mysteriously disappeared on the same night), the Latvian psychological thriller Firstborn by Aik Karapetian (whose international premiere will take place next Thursday in Paris at the L’Etrange Festival), the Spanish film Black Hollow Cage by Sadrac González-Perellón (Prix du Jury this summer at BiFan – the fantasy film festival of Puchon, and which will be in competition at Sitges in October), and Children of the Night[+] by the Italian Andrea de Sica (crowned best young director by his country’s cinema journalists at the Nastri d’Argento 2017).
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/MG_4074.jpg27153621Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-09-20 02:18:262024-10-07 14:36:12Breaking News : Cineuropa // The Man with the Magic Box in the line-up of Reel Suspects
Portuguese-Canadian Justin Amorim’s feature debut makes its market premiere at Cannes
Matteo Lovadina’s Paris-based Reel Suspects has acquired worldwide sales rights to Portuguese drama-thriller “Leviano,” the feature debut of Portuguese-Canadian director Justin Amorim.
The film market premieres at the Cannes Film Market in a screening on Saturday, May 20.
Set up at Portugal’s Promenade Productions, “Leviano” tells the story of three sisters whose life is turned upside down after their mother mysteriously goes missing during her 50th birthday party.
The sisters join forces with two brothers that discovered that the sisters’ brother also went missing on that same night. All they embark on a journey of self-discovery towards the unknown.
The cast includes Portuguese film and TV actors Diana Marques Guerra (“Filha do Mar”), Anabela Teixeira (“Florbela”), Ruben Rua (“A Unica Mulher”) and Joao Mota (“Coração d’Ouro”).
Film’s characters are based on women the 23-year-old writer-director Amorim has met in his own life, according to Matteo Lovadina.
“Justin captures the hidden side behind the mirror, standing out as a potential prominent portrait specialist of his generation,” added Lovaina, who considers “Leviano” “a universal story that translates effortlessly in every country.”
“Buyers and festival directors should appreciate the homage to films like Sophia Coppola’s ‘The Bling Ring’ and Harmony Korine’s ‘Spring Breakers,’ Lovaina added.
At the Cannes Film Market, Reel Suspects, one of France’s few upscale foreign-language genre specialists, is kicking off sales to psychological thriller “Firstborn,” the awaited film by Armenian helmer Aik Karapetian, who caught attention with (“The Man in the Orange Jacket”); Italian Andrea de Sica’s feature debut “Children of the Night,” a RAI Cinema co-production; and Yu-Lin Wang’s LGBT drama “Alifu, the Princess.”
Reel Suspects is also initiating pre-sales on “Malila,” a drama project by Thai director Anucha Boonyawatana (“The Blue Hour”), and Antichrist re-born film “Piargy,” by first-time helmer Ivo Trajkov.
Further titles handled by the French sales agent include Spanish director Sadrac González-Perellón’s sci-fi thriller “Black Hollow Cage” and Sanal Kumar Sasidharan’s “Sexy Durga,” winner of Rotterdam’s 2017 Hivos Tiger Award.
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/LEV03.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-05-14 07:57:132024-10-07 14:35:36Breaking News : Variety // Reel Suspects Nabs Worldwide Sales Rights to Drama-Thriller ‘Leviano’ (EXCLUSIVE)
– At Cannes, the French company will be kicking off sales for the new film by Aik Karapetian, following the acclaimed The Man in the Orange Jacket
Firstborn by Aik Karapetian
Concentrating mainly on European genre film and emerging talents, Paris-based company Reel Suspects, managed by Matteo Lovadina, has just added the Latvian psychological thriller Firstborn by Aik Karapetian to its line-up; the movie will be premiered at the Film Market of the 70th Cannes Film Festival (17-28 May).
(The article continues below – Commercial information)
Firstborn is the third feature by the filmmaker, who is of Armenian heritage but is Latvian by adoption, following People Out There[+] (revealed at Karlovy Vary in 2012 in the East of the West section) and the highly original horror film The Man in the Orange Jacket[+], which enjoyed a solid international festival run in 2014, passing through such gatherings as the Fantastic Fest in Austin, the London Film Festival, Black Nights in Tallinn, Turin and Les Arcs.
Written by the director, the story revolves around a middle-aged intellectual who commits an act of unintentional homicide whilst trying to regain his dignity in the eyes of his wife, but soon after, it occurs to him that there is a strange connection between the victim, the sudden pregnancy of his wife and the mysterious blackmailer who tries to force him to do yet another awful thing.
The lead roles have been entrusted to Kaspars Znotiņš, Maija Doveika and Kaspars Zāle. Firstborn was produced by Roberts Vinovskis for Locomotive Productions.
Matteo Lovadina said he was “very happy to work on Aik Karapetian’s third feature. Festivals and buyers have high expectations for his new opus, which should be able to travel quite easily because it’s an outstanding film that skilfully blends genres, bringing together elements of a thriller and a suspenseful drama, which will have an effect on everyone.”
“J’ai décidé de faire un genre de cinéma différent, mon propre genre de cinéma”
Andrea De Sica • Réalisateur
par Sixtine Neulat
– Cineuropa s’est entretenu avec Andrea De Sica au sujet de son premier long métrage, Les Enfants de la nuit, dévoilé en première internationale au BIFFF
Petit-fils du grand Vittorio De Sica et fils de Manuel De Sica, un compositeur de musique de film, Andrea De Sica a dévoilé son premier long métrage, Les Enfants de la nuit[+], en première internationale au Festival international du film fantastique de Bruxelles (BIFFF). Ce film, coproduit entre la Belgique et l’Italie, raconte l’histoire de Giulio (Vincenzo Crea), un jeune garçon de 17 ans qui parvient à surmonter la solitude et la discipline de fer imposée dans sa pension élitiste grâce à l’amitié qu’il noue avec son camarade de classe, Edoardo (LudovicoSuccio).
(L’article continue plus bas – Inf. publicitaire)
Cineuropa : Vous avez déjà réalisé des courts métrages, une série et des documentaires. Comment avez-vous su que le moment était venu de passer au grand écran ?
Andrea De Sica : J’en avais envie depuis très longtemps. Étant donné que la famille est très importante en Italie, j’avais un peu ce poids sur mes épaules et je voulais être bien préparé avant de réaliser ce premier long métrage. La série que j’ai réalisée m’a beaucoup apporté. Comme elle était destinée à un jeune public, j’ai dû travailler avec des enfants de 13 ans, ce qui a été très enrichissant. Dès lors, j’ai commencé à penser à mon premier long métrage. Néanmoins, il faut beaucoup de temps pour trouver un producteur, des financements, écrire un bon scénario… J’ai mis 4 ans pour en arriver là, mais c’est le temps qu’il faut pour réaliser un premier film de nos jours.
De quoi Les Enfants de la nuit est-il né ? D’un ami à moi qui était dans un internat. Il était très mystérieux, charmant, élégant, c’était un très bel homme. Mais un soir, il est devenu fou et a presque tué un autre ami. Cette histoire m’a profondément bouleversé, j’ai commencé à me demander ce qu’il s’était passé pendant ses années en internat. J’ai donc décidé de m’intéresser à ce monde de plus près, d’essayer de comprendre à quoi pouvait ressembler l’enfance d’un futur dirigeant et le chemin qu’il devait parcourir pour en arriver là.
Comment le tournage s’est-il déroulé ? C’était un peu difficile de tourner avec des enfants. C’était stressant parce qu’il y a de nombreux rôles, le film a différentes tonalités et il faisait très froid dehors. En outre, nous devions faire attention à ne pas donner un ton trop ironique ou trop mélodramatique au film. Mais dans l’ensemble, c’était une expérience fabuleuse parce que nous étions complètement isolés, toute l’équipe dormait à l’hôtel (l’internat dans le film).
Pourquoi avez-vous choisi Vicenzo Crea pour incarner Giulio ? Parce qu’il correspondait parfaitement au personnage, peut-être parce qu’il est aussi jeune que lui et vient du même milieu. En réalité, Vicenzo Crea n’est pas du tout comme Giulio, mais il a cette force en lui, qui lui permet de jouer aussi bien un jeune de la haute société, tout à fait normal et élégant, que d’incarner le rôle du méchant. Je trouvais cela incroyable.
Vous avez composé la musique du film vous-même. Comment avez-vous procédé ? Quel est le rôle de la musique ? La musique donne la tonalité du film. J’avais envie de créer un environnement comparable à celui des thrillers, dominé par la peur et l’angoisse. Je pense que la musique donne une certaine cohérence au film, elle permet de guider le public tout au long de l’histoire. Quand j’ai commencé à la composer, je ne savais absolument pas comment m’y prendre pour faire une musique de film. Mais j’ai acheté un synthétiseur, je me suis lancé et un mois plus tard, j’ai envoyé une démo à mon producteur. Il s’est montré très enthousiaste, alors j’ai continué. En revanche, je ne sais pas si je serais prêt à renouveler cette expérience. J’ai eu l’impression de me consacrer davantage à la musique qu’à la réalisation du film en soi.
Votre père (Manuel De Sica) était un compositeur de musique de film, et votre grand-père (Vittorio De Sica) un réalisateur de renom. Dans quelle mesure vous ont-ils inspirés ? Mon père était comme un gourou pour moi. Je lui dois toutes mes connaissances en matière de cinéma. En revanche, je n’ai jamais connu mon grand-père. Mais depuis tout petit, j’ai toujours senti sa présence. Les gens le connaissent partout où je vais, c’est un peu une légende. J’adore ses films, je pense que c’est un des cinq plus grands noms du cinéma au monde. Toutefois, je n’ai jamais ressenti le besoin de me comparer à lui. C’est d’ailleurs certainement la raison pour laquelle j’ai décidé de faire un genre de cinéma différent, mon propre genre de cinéma. Finalement, je crois que le plus important c’est de faire les choses à sa façon, de montrer que vous avez une façon de faire. Mes courts métrages et mes documentaires m’ont permis de développer mon propre style.
Avez-vous rencontré des difficultés pour trouver des financements ? C’est toujours difficile quand on débute parce que personne ne nous connaît. Mais j’ai eu de la chance, j’ai de très bons producteurs, la coproduction s’est bien déroulée et l’équipe de Vivo Film a été superbe. Nous avons également obtenu des financements d’Eurimages et d’Italie. Finalement, pour un premier film, j’ai obtenu les financements nécessaires sans trop de difficultés, et j’espère qu’il en sera de même pour mon prochain film. En revanche, tout ce processus a pris beaucoup de temps, surtout en Italie. Il faut donc être très patient.
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/CHI3.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-04-20 17:12:102024-10-07 14:35:24Breaking News : Cineuropa // Andrea De Sica • Réalisateur
Unremitting sadism is the hallmark of this unpleasant impressionistic mood piece meant to draw attention to the degradation of women and man’s cruelty to man.
A clandestine hitchhiking couple on a rural road in India are sadistically toyed with by two men who give them a ride in Sanal Kumar Sasidharan’s unscripted, deeply unpleasant third feature “Sexy Durga.” Working a “Kinatay” vibe that subjects both characters and the audience to an extended nightmare, this murky descent into unrelieved dread is meant to call attention to the dehumanizing way women are often treated. While it’s true the film foregrounds the unrelenting misogynistic threat of physical abuse, it can also be argued that Sasidharan indulges in torture porn to the benefit of no one, least of all women’s rights. Designed as an impressionistic mood piece combining nonfiction bookends with a minimalist fictional narrative, this uber-art-house slog will see scattered fest play, but little else.
The title is a teasing misnomer: Durga is one of the major goddesses in the Hindu pantheon, but it’s her sometime association with Kali, best known outside India as the goddess of destruction, that creates resonance. Since the main female character is also named Durga (Rajshri Deshpande), the idea is to highlight the stark division between Durga as worshipped goddess and Durga as degraded woman. Theoretically it might have seemed like a clever idea, and one can imagine a gallery installation (with a long artist’s statement) making it work, but instead Sasidharan (“An Off-Day Game”) cruelly torments the viewer with the characters’ fears, offering no intellectual justification for the inflicted distress apart from the title itself.
Although the opening images are some of the most difficult to sit through, they’re also the most classically cinematic. The south-Indian ceremony known as Garudan Thookkam renders homage to Kali and involves men in a trance state whose backs are pierced with large hooks and then dangled from grills attached to trucks and driven around the temple. Like the Native American Sun Dance, it appears to outsiders as an appalling, self-imposed form of macho brutality, and Sasidharan doesn’t shy away from gut-wrenching scenes of flesh being punctured and then inhumanly stretched. Remarkably – and this testifies to the undeniable talent of both the director and his cinematographer Prathap Joseph – the movie doesn’t sensationalize the event, and while it’s horrific to watch, there’s nothing lurid about the way it’s captured.
Following these disorienting images, the film switches to the main story: Kabeer (Vishnu Vedh) and Durga rendezvous late at night on the side of a poorly trafficked road. It’s clear they’re escaping from someone, but no background is ever offered; all we learn is that she’s a Hindi-speaker from the north, and he’s a Malayalam-speaking Muslim. They’re headed to the train station, and are picked up by two men (Sujeesh K. S., Arun Sol) in a minivan. The duo project a palpable sinister air, but Durga and Kabeer need to get to the station, so they accept the lift. For the remainder of the film, shot with little lighting, the two men toy with their prey, maintaining an oppressive atmosphere of barely repressed violence that seems to be leading inexorably toward rape.
Each time the panicking lovers succeed in exiting the van, they maddeningly get back inside again when they can’t find any other means of transportation. Warned of the dangers of staying outside at night in this remote locale, they choose almost certain violence in the minivan over the possibility of salvation from other quarters; by the time the tormentors (claiming to be good Samaritans) don masks and a clown nose, the grotesque farce has irredeemably lurched into unforgivable sadism.
Some may argue that the film’s ability to elicit such an appalled response is a sign of its success, but success at what? Illustrating man’s inhumanity to man, and, more particularly, woman? The incessant misanthropic nihilism offers no glimmer of hope, and feels designed mostly to elicit a sense of revulsion. Add claustrophobia, successfully conjured via the confining nature of the minivan and the disorienting penumbral lighting, and audience suffocation is nearly complete. Basil C. J.’s screeching death-metal aural assault provides the icing on the cake.
Berlinale: Reel Suspects Acquires International Rights on ‘Black Hollow Cage’
John Hopewell
Chief International Correspondent@john_hopewell
Paris-based upscale genre specialist adds to its European Film Market slate
PARIS — Reel Suspects, one of France’s few upscale foreign-language genre specialists, has acquired international sales rights to English-language sci-fi thriller “Black Hollow Cage,” a movie made out of one of the European countries with the biggest modern genre output – Spain.
Reel Suspects CEO Matteo Lovadina and his team will introduce the film to buyers during next week’s European Film Market at the Berlin Festival. Variety ha had exclusive access to its trailer.
“Black Hollow Cage” marks Spanish director Sadrac Gonzalez-Perellon’s second feature after “Myna Has Gone,” which won a Special Jury Recognition for acting at the 2009 Austin Film Festival.
Yoking two great Spanish film traditions – the dysfunctional family drama and genre auteur fantasy – “Black Hollow Cage” centers on Alice, a 13-year-old who has lost her mother and half of her right-arm in a car accident and so takes comfort in the company of Beatrice, a dog who can apparently talk via an electronic translation device, and whom Alice calls Mom. Alice discovers a large black cube in the woods via which she receives messages from a person who seems to be her future self, warning her of dire events that she must stop.
As the trailer suggests, unexpected runways, which Alice’s father takes in, further complicates Alice’s relationship with her father, whom she still blames for the accident. After another shattering tragedy, Alice determines to use the cube to go back in time and change the past.
Produced by Javier Aguayo and executive produced by Diego Rodriguez and Helena Altabas for Barcelona-based Asallam Films, which Altabas launched in 2015, “Black Hollow Cage” stars Julian Nicholson and Lowena McDonell (“Punta Escarlata”).
Describing “Black Hollow Cage” as a film about forgiveness, Gonzalez-Perellon followed two maxims when writing it, he said in a director’s statement: a story allowing for a “strenuous, beautiful mise en scène” which was sometimes technically complex; characters which avoid cliche.”
Lovadina called the film “an elegant mix between the cold and quiet horror of ‘Goodnight Mommy’ and the total breakdown of linear time proposed in films such as ‘Timecrimes,’” situating “Black Hollow Cage” on the sharp edge of a father-daughter relationship stoked by a feeling of guilt after a trauma.”
FILED UNDER:
Berlinale
Reel Suspects
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/BHC3.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-02-02 01:43:452022-10-19 14:56:37Breaking News : Variety // Berlinale: Reel Suspects Acquires International Rights on ‘Black Hollow Cage’
A startling debut viewing present-day Mexico through a violent, surreal lens. TWITTER
1/13/2017
Two siblings take refuge in an increasingly bizarre hideout in Emiliano Rocha Minter’s horror-show allegory.
An innocent brother and sister find shelter with a madman in Emiliano Rocha Minter’s We Are the Flesh, a debut whose quotient of sex and gore lives up to its English title. A violent allegory whose literal plot is largely up for grabs, it grows increasingly surreal as it goes, delving into a psychological state that greets societal collapse with more glee than despair. Viewers expecting a garden-variety horror flick will likely recoil, but those seeking new voices in Mexican cinema may well hail Minter’s effort. Repulsive as it is, this is a vision art houses would be wrong to ignore.
Noe Hernandez (Miss Bala) plays the devilish older man, who is squatting in a large abandoned building, violently destroying its furniture for firewood as he escapes whatever horrors — is it apocalypse, war, or merely poverty? — await outside. The siblings, eventually referred to as Fauna (Maria Evoli) and Lucio (Diego Gamaliel), make their way in, and he eventually agrees to let them stay — putting them to work, without explanation, on a large cardboard-and-packing-tape structure.
That convoluted space seems to have a life of its own, growing more convincingly cavelike as the unnamed man begins to christen it with transgressive acts. He coerces the brother and sister to start a sexual relationship (first observed in the hot pinks and yellows of thermal-imaging photography, then with pornlike frankness); later he will initiate a cannibalistic orgy with sacrilegious overtones.
While Evoli and Gamaliel negotiate their characters’ wavering acceptance of this environment, Hernandez supplies a mad conviction to match the director’s own: Staring into space with a demented kind of beatific smile on his face, he may be hiding from the end of the world, but seemingly intends to celebrate it as well, announcing that “this place is the last monument of a rotten society.”
About that society: Late in the picture, the protagonists capture a Mexican soldier, whose throat they slit ceremonially; that’s as explicit as the film gets in its reference to a real-world country awash in extreme violence and corruption. A producer’s note in press materials refers to ancient Aztec myths combining creation and destruction. Such myths lose most of their shock value when encountered in archaeological museums and textbooks; We Are the Flesh attempts, with some success, to resuscitate their horrors for our own terrifying times.
Distributor: Arrow Films
Production companies: Piano, Detalle Films, Sedna Films, Estudios Splendor Omnia, Simplemente
Cast: Noe Hernandez, Diego Gamaliel, Maria Evoli
Director-screenwriter: Emiliano Rocha Minter
Producer: Julio Chavezmontes
Director of photography: Yollotl Alvarado
Production designer: Manuela Garcia
Costume designers: Ana Maya Farthing-Kohl, Teresa Alvarado
Editors: Yibran Assuad, Emiliano Rocha Minter
Composer: Esteban Aldrete
In Spanish with English subtitles
Not rated, 79 minutes
https://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/WEA05.jpg7681024Matteo Lovadinahttp://www.reelsuspects.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/logo-def.pngMatteo Lovadina2017-02-02 01:41:342018-05-29 09:45:24Breaking Nws : THR // ‘We Are the Flesh’: Film Review
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