ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,5/10
1,5 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMegalomaniac questions the invisible line between victim and executioner and how it is crossed. A film about the weight of patriarchy and the illusion of Manichaeism.Megalomaniac questions the invisible line between victim and executioner and how it is crossed. A film about the weight of patriarchy and the illusion of Manichaeism.Megalomaniac questions the invisible line between victim and executioner and how it is crossed. A film about the weight of patriarchy and the illusion of Manichaeism.
- Prix
- 7 victoires au total
Avis en vedette
Urgh. This year's seeking profundity by brutalising young women effort.
Clearly talent in front and behind the camera, all completely wasted on a tick box exercise in outrage - the aforementioned misogynist violence (and some of it is indefensible), rape, incest, auto cannibalism and so on and so forth.
Striving for the heights of Kieslowski or Haneke and falling down because everything it does has been done before and can only be that shocking once or twice but here we are 20 years later with people attempting to pull the wool with the same old shtick.
I didn't hate it but it profoundly bored me.
Clearly talent in front and behind the camera, all completely wasted on a tick box exercise in outrage - the aforementioned misogynist violence (and some of it is indefensible), rape, incest, auto cannibalism and so on and so forth.
Striving for the heights of Kieslowski or Haneke and falling down because everything it does has been done before and can only be that shocking once or twice but here we are 20 years later with people attempting to pull the wool with the same old shtick.
I didn't hate it but it profoundly bored me.
Trying to adjust to everyday life, a woman and her brother who are the children of an infamous serial killer manage to find themselves forced into exploring the same barbarian means of their father when society causes them to revert to his old methods of torture and depravity to deal with their problems.
This was a generally fine if somewhat one-note piece. What works out for this one is purely the film's excess that comes off far more than simply gore, bloodshed, and depravity for the sake of it. Wallowing openly in the brutal antics dealt to the victims of the rampage including being bashed with hammers, sliced with knives or much worse, the rape of several victims, or even going through her psychological breakdown employed here serves to generate an oppressive feeling of brutality and madness that is all the better due to the squeamish effects-work during these scenes. That has a lot to do with the effectiveness of the story here as well due to the two-pronged setup that's employed. The first feature, about the lives of the two children living together under the shadow of their father who's an infamous, uncaught serial killer in the community, gives this a distinct relationship that's explored rather well. Her living under his domineering touch while trying to adjust to normality in the company of others is a nice bent that manages to provide a great insight into her meek and fragile exterior that contrasts loudly with his brutish and maniacal serial killing ways. Moreover, that mindset gets brought into play with the gradual extent of her descent into madness that echoes the same trajectory of their father. Realizing that he's attempting to replicate the same type of vicious killing spree against her desire for normality, the snap and eventual recognition that she's become something similar through the antics of those around her due to the sexual assaults and torment she receives makes it feel all the more earned which helps to sell it even more. Aided along by the nightmarish visions of past victims running around the house that take on a supernatural bent, this has a lot to like overall. There's not much to hold it down as it's mainly hurt by the aforementioned one-note setup. That is how the film spends the middle part of its running time engaging in the same type of stereotypical treatment of most serial killer films by not doing much differently with the idea of the emotional build-up to the killing. Rather than doing something new, going back to the familiar well sexual abuse and fractured family relationships are at the heart of everything and it's not that impressive so it leaves long stretches of time where very little is interesting. It's not a huge negative but this does bring it down somewhat.
Rated Unrated/R: Extreme Graphic Violence, Graphic Language, Nudity, and Rape.
This was a generally fine if somewhat one-note piece. What works out for this one is purely the film's excess that comes off far more than simply gore, bloodshed, and depravity for the sake of it. Wallowing openly in the brutal antics dealt to the victims of the rampage including being bashed with hammers, sliced with knives or much worse, the rape of several victims, or even going through her psychological breakdown employed here serves to generate an oppressive feeling of brutality and madness that is all the better due to the squeamish effects-work during these scenes. That has a lot to do with the effectiveness of the story here as well due to the two-pronged setup that's employed. The first feature, about the lives of the two children living together under the shadow of their father who's an infamous, uncaught serial killer in the community, gives this a distinct relationship that's explored rather well. Her living under his domineering touch while trying to adjust to normality in the company of others is a nice bent that manages to provide a great insight into her meek and fragile exterior that contrasts loudly with his brutish and maniacal serial killing ways. Moreover, that mindset gets brought into play with the gradual extent of her descent into madness that echoes the same trajectory of their father. Realizing that he's attempting to replicate the same type of vicious killing spree against her desire for normality, the snap and eventual recognition that she's become something similar through the antics of those around her due to the sexual assaults and torment she receives makes it feel all the more earned which helps to sell it even more. Aided along by the nightmarish visions of past victims running around the house that take on a supernatural bent, this has a lot to like overall. There's not much to hold it down as it's mainly hurt by the aforementioned one-note setup. That is how the film spends the middle part of its running time engaging in the same type of stereotypical treatment of most serial killer films by not doing much differently with the idea of the emotional build-up to the killing. Rather than doing something new, going back to the familiar well sexual abuse and fractured family relationships are at the heart of everything and it's not that impressive so it leaves long stretches of time where very little is interesting. It's not a huge negative but this does bring it down somewhat.
Rated Unrated/R: Extreme Graphic Violence, Graphic Language, Nudity, and Rape.
It's not terrible, but a film about serial killers shouldn't be this boring for such a long period of time. It's also uncomfortable and keeps that line for the entire duration of the film which turns out to be repetitive and very single-note. I also need to mention the stupidity of some characters (I wouldn't see someone chained and stay in that place for even 5 seconds; I can't understand the mind of rapists but it's difficult to think they would accept that invitation too...).
I like some technical aspects of it. I like how artsy some shots and directional choices look. Great score too and good acting. It's just not enough in terms of storytelling, engagement, or what it is trying to say (besides trauma and influence).
I like some technical aspects of it. I like how artsy some shots and directional choices look. Great score too and good acting. It's just not enough in terms of storytelling, engagement, or what it is trying to say (besides trauma and influence).
It's a typical sick Brutal Horror Movie from France. We remember cult classics like "Inside", "Frontiers", Martyrs and "High Tension" and you can confidently put this film behind them. There are some Brutal and disturbing scenes. The Movie has a Dark Atmosphere from Start to Finish. The Actors aren't the Best, but they're trying Hard - Eline Schumacher does a very good job as a tormented victim and as a sick Psychopath.
This film shows a closer perspective between serial killers and his poor victims.
Be warned, the film is partly contemptuous of people. It's only for die-Hard fans of the Brutale Serial killer theme
Is not suitable for every viewer.!!!
This film shows a closer perspective between serial killers and his poor victims.
Be warned, the film is partly contemptuous of people. It's only for die-Hard fans of the Brutale Serial killer theme
Is not suitable for every viewer.!!!
Beautiful surreal imagery, gruesome violence and dark atmosphere dominate the first and last ~5 minutes of the film.
I will not go into detail as to what happens inbetween but it would make your skin crawl in a different movie. Here, it is neither staged in gruesome detail nor cleverly implied, nor is the protagonist's emotional reaction to her mistreatment of particular interest to the film maker. The normalcy of it all and her overall numbness could in themselves be horrifying, but a thin plot about human pets, off-screen mass-murder and familial conflict keeps us from really getting to know Martha.
For the most part this was a disappointment and yet my interest in the work of Karim Ouelhaj is piqued. Those few minutes of genius bookending the film speak to a strong personal sense of style, the mark of a horror auteur.
On an overwhelmingly positive note: the noisy industrial soundtrack, especially the piece that plays during the end credits, is excellent. I do hope Karim embraces his more poetic tendencies and collaborates with Gary Moonboots on another film.
I will not go into detail as to what happens inbetween but it would make your skin crawl in a different movie. Here, it is neither staged in gruesome detail nor cleverly implied, nor is the protagonist's emotional reaction to her mistreatment of particular interest to the film maker. The normalcy of it all and her overall numbness could in themselves be horrifying, but a thin plot about human pets, off-screen mass-murder and familial conflict keeps us from really getting to know Martha.
For the most part this was a disappointment and yet my interest in the work of Karim Ouelhaj is piqued. Those few minutes of genius bookending the film speak to a strong personal sense of style, the mark of a horror auteur.
On an overwhelmingly positive note: the noisy industrial soundtrack, especially the piece that plays during the end credits, is excellent. I do hope Karim embraces his more poetic tendencies and collaborates with Gary Moonboots on another film.
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 7 028 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 45m(105 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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