Les parents d'une adolescente handicapée partis chacun avec leur amant respectif se retrouvent à leur grande surprise dans la maison de campagne familiale. Leur fille arrive et propose un je... Tout lireLes parents d'une adolescente handicapée partis chacun avec leur amant respectif se retrouvent à leur grande surprise dans la maison de campagne familiale. Leur fille arrive et propose un jeu de devinettes, la roulette chinoise.Les parents d'une adolescente handicapée partis chacun avec leur amant respectif se retrouvent à leur grande surprise dans la maison de campagne familiale. Leur fille arrive et propose un jeu de devinettes, la roulette chinoise.
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- Citations
[English subtitled version]
Gerhard Christ: Won't you answer me, Kolbe? I asked if you love my wife.
Kolbe: Love? We've gotten used to each other.
Gerhard Christ: Of course, but it *was* love?
Kolbe: Who knows? Maybe it still is. Maybe that's love too - getting used to someone.
Gerhard Christ: You're probably right.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Omnibus: Signs of Vigorous Life: The New German Cinema (1976)
Both films could adopt themselves comfortably into a theatrical play not the least courtesy of their (mostly or exclusively) in-door locales, for Chinese ROULETTE, it has a secular tone, 90% of the film takes place inside a rural mansion, with familial secrets, connubial deceptions, mother-daughter hatred, the divide of social strata, vindictive self-destruction viciously unfold and infuse a deleterious corruption even to the onlookers, all is triggered by the innocuous eponymous game. While QUERELLE is projected on more ritualized dark amber light sepia background setting stimulating a claustrophobic oppression of lust and desire within a handful locations (the faux-deck of a ship ashore, the phallus worship Hotel Feria Bar, an underground tunnel for hideaway), a male-dominant sexual obsession mingled with blatant homosexual thrust to an astounding incestuous extremity, brilliantly done via an intuitive candor.
Mirror is a recurrent item in both films, exposes the other-half which reflects the true id inside one's soul, in Chinese ROULETTE the stunning flux of the stationary tableaux interlacing two or three out of the eight characters orchestrates a scintillating picture of a guilt-and-punishment visual symphony with swishy panache; in QUERELLE, mirrors reduce their occurrence but the conscientiously measured compositions transpire an even more ostentatious narcissism with a sultry plume of hormone-excreting rugged contours of male bodies.
QUERELLE is adapted from Jean Genet's novel "QUERELLE DE BREST", whose literature text also introduced through the soothing voice-over of an unknown narrator, the film does stage a sensible amount of poetic license to filter a vicarious compassion through a singular mortal's inscrutable behavioral symptoms; in Chinese ROULETTE, a prose (or poem) soliloquy of androgyny also contrives to reach the same effect (but sounds a trifle recondite when contextualizing it under the film's incumbent situation). Anyhow Fassbinder is a trailblazer in defying the mainstream's prejudices, and very capable of visualize and dissect the tumor of humanity.
The cast, there are 8 characters in Chinese ROULETTE, with almost equal weight in the screen time, but it is the youngest one, Andrea Schober (under Fassbinder's guidance for sure), the crippled girl seeks for revenge to her parents' betrayal and negligence, teaches all of us a lesson (how selfish we are to find a scapegoat for every bit of repercussions happen to us) with such acute insight, fearless audacity and extreme measures. While big name (Anna Karina) and other Fassbinder's regulars (Margit Carstensen, Brigitte Mira, Ulli Lommel) all end up licking their own wounds in the corner.
In QUERELLE, Brad Davis (a real-life AIDS fighter then) is valiant, his masculinity and sinewy physique defies all the stereotyped treatment of gay men in the media, injecting a raw and visceral complexity into Querelle's spontaneous promiscuity and sporadic anger. Hanno Pöschl may fall short to guarantee the vigorous duality required for his two roles, but the gut- bashing combats (or playing) between two brothers fabricate the most erotic intimacy has ever been presented on the screen. Two veterans, Franco Nero is either recording his secret affection in the cabinet or wandering near Querelle from oblique angles; the fading beauty Jeanne Moreau, hums "Each man kills the things he loves", and is lost in her own fantasy of the banquet she can savor.
Personally I incline towards QUERELLE's unconventional approach to kill off the ambiguities of sexual orientation and examine the most primal desire made with blood and flesh, but Chinese ROULETTE achieves another form of success, it maintains a serene aplomb above all the vile assault and bitter turbulence, like the unspecified pistol shot at the coda, no matter who bites the dust, a bullet is never an ultimate solution to all the problems.
- lasttimeisaw
- 23 févr. 2013
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 100 000 DEM (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 8 144 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 11 623 $ US
- 16 févr. 2003
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 8 148 $ US
- Durée1 heure 26 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1