carlvdl
Joined Jun 2005
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Reviews5
carlvdl's rating
For fans of French horror of the past decade or so, this is not to be missed. I put off watching it for quite some time, partly due to wanting to savour this genre over as long as possible, but also based on the description alone I knew I'd have to steel myself to finally sit down and watch it.
Martyrs never lets you go for a minute, but I must admit, is strongest and most jarring during the first half. Once you're in the second half, there is still a sense of dead, but you know it can't really get any worse. The final lead up ventures more into cerebral, even philosophical or religious territory.
One small gripe for those wanting perfect realism, technology or physics wise: shotgun blasts don't send people flying backwards like a projectile, makes for an impressive effect though!
Here's the plot: two girls (Anna and Lucie) meet and befriend one another at an orphanage. One of the girls (Lucie) escaped from captivity where she was subject to extreme mistreatment by a cult obsessed with the experience of life after death. Once grown into (excessively beautiful and exotic, for those of you for whom that's important) women 15 years later, Lucie locates her former tormenters, and draws Anna into an episode of vengeance and depravity from which neither can escape.
Again, some horror can have 'light' moments, where the viewer can even revel, be joyous, even at some of the violence, which may appear as righteous given the circumstances. Not so with Martyrs. There are no winners here, from start to finish - true horror.
Martyrs never lets you go for a minute, but I must admit, is strongest and most jarring during the first half. Once you're in the second half, there is still a sense of dead, but you know it can't really get any worse. The final lead up ventures more into cerebral, even philosophical or religious territory.
One small gripe for those wanting perfect realism, technology or physics wise: shotgun blasts don't send people flying backwards like a projectile, makes for an impressive effect though!
Here's the plot: two girls (Anna and Lucie) meet and befriend one another at an orphanage. One of the girls (Lucie) escaped from captivity where she was subject to extreme mistreatment by a cult obsessed with the experience of life after death. Once grown into (excessively beautiful and exotic, for those of you for whom that's important) women 15 years later, Lucie locates her former tormenters, and draws Anna into an episode of vengeance and depravity from which neither can escape.
Again, some horror can have 'light' moments, where the viewer can even revel, be joyous, even at some of the violence, which may appear as righteous given the circumstances. Not so with Martyrs. There are no winners here, from start to finish - true horror.
Camp 14: Total Control Zone documents the harrowing details of 'life' in North Korea's forced labour camps from 3 perspectives, a former inmate born within one of the camps who managed to escape, a former guard, and a former member of the secret police.
I do not want to give the story away for those who have yet to see it, but what these stories reveal is a world where a level of cruelty and disregard for human life exists that struggles to be dreamt up in infamous works of fiction by Pasolini or de Sade (some details a chilling reminder of scenes from 1975's 'Salo').
The police and guards, who are the purveyors of this cruelty (and there must be a lot of them given the claimed 200,000 interned) can't all statistically be psychopaths. Operating under a ruthless system, they'd doubtlessly be users of the Nuremberg Defence.
We read about the actions of the psychopath serial killer, which are a conundrum in themselves, but when this sort of behaviour manifests itself across a whole society, it becomes ... well, I can't find the right word.
What sort of fear and desperation would lead to a society being created based on force feeding the populace lies and leader worship, ignorance replacing civic dialogue, with forced labour, torture and death being the only solution to needing a justice system (and for that matter, unemployment)?
Only through a miraculous if not morbid event does the protagonist (Shin Dong-Hyuk) manage to escape the camp, and we are thankful he does, in order to experience freedom and provide the rest of the world with a brief but revealing peek into the horror show.
Some of his revelations will prompt the viewer question the nature of human instincts. Seemingly we are born with no emotional attachment to our family or fellow human beings, only the will to survive appears to be firmly ingrained in us.
As Camp 14 draws to a close, we get a sense of ennui and confusion from Shin at his new surroundings. He appears far from joyful at having left the life he was born into, inexplicable to the rest of us, as inexplicable and impenetrable as the conditions in which he was born into.
I do not want to give the story away for those who have yet to see it, but what these stories reveal is a world where a level of cruelty and disregard for human life exists that struggles to be dreamt up in infamous works of fiction by Pasolini or de Sade (some details a chilling reminder of scenes from 1975's 'Salo').
The police and guards, who are the purveyors of this cruelty (and there must be a lot of them given the claimed 200,000 interned) can't all statistically be psychopaths. Operating under a ruthless system, they'd doubtlessly be users of the Nuremberg Defence.
We read about the actions of the psychopath serial killer, which are a conundrum in themselves, but when this sort of behaviour manifests itself across a whole society, it becomes ... well, I can't find the right word.
What sort of fear and desperation would lead to a society being created based on force feeding the populace lies and leader worship, ignorance replacing civic dialogue, with forced labour, torture and death being the only solution to needing a justice system (and for that matter, unemployment)?
Only through a miraculous if not morbid event does the protagonist (Shin Dong-Hyuk) manage to escape the camp, and we are thankful he does, in order to experience freedom and provide the rest of the world with a brief but revealing peek into the horror show.
Some of his revelations will prompt the viewer question the nature of human instincts. Seemingly we are born with no emotional attachment to our family or fellow human beings, only the will to survive appears to be firmly ingrained in us.
As Camp 14 draws to a close, we get a sense of ennui and confusion from Shin at his new surroundings. He appears far from joyful at having left the life he was born into, inexplicable to the rest of us, as inexplicable and impenetrable as the conditions in which he was born into.