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6.3/10
1.2K
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A noise enthusiast discovers that by changing the background music from pleasantly calming to industrial "noise" music, he can incite riots and a revolution against the looming power of the ... Read allA noise enthusiast discovers that by changing the background music from pleasantly calming to industrial "noise" music, he can incite riots and a revolution against the looming power of the government.A noise enthusiast discovers that by changing the background music from pleasantly calming to industrial "noise" music, he can incite riots and a revolution against the looming power of the government.
Alexander Hacke
- Pirate
- (as Alexander von Borsig)
Mark Chung
- Pirate
- (as Marc Chung)
6.31.2K
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low but high
this low budget film, containing lots of technical mistakes, like a blue lettered title in a blue sky, also is an artfilm. it is using a language of pictures (which is wrongly called MTV-style) like the early and contemporary videoart: compilations of tv-pics, computer animations and filmtakes cutted in fast rhythms with an amazing non-musical soundtrack of voices and sounds, best example is the part in the gamehall, where the players melt with the game machines. another film which also use some tv/animation-parts is roland emmerich´s early film "das archenoah prinzip" , but in it there are not this fast rythms and it uses an electronic ambient sound combined with silence. back to decoder, irritating light and dialogues like ingmar bergman make this sci-fi to one of my favorite german films.
sad: there are no more movies of this crew (i never heard of any other film from one of them)
sad: there are no more movies of this crew (i never heard of any other film from one of them)
Zeitgeist of the Berlin 1980s! counterculture!
Decoder is a bizarre, neon-drenched, proto-cyberpunk, bureaucratic surveillance drama film from West Germany featuring FM Einheit of German industrial band Einstürzende Neubauten as a young noise freak with hacking ambitions employed in a hamburger shop. He discovers that replacing the Muzak (background music played in retail stores, elevators) imposed by the government with industrial noise will alter people's behaviour. Inspired by an encounter with a noise-pirate high priest (played by Genesis P-Orridge of industrial pioneers Throbbing Gristle), he rebels against the Government for using music as weapon of corporate mind-control and environmental sedation leading to consumerism and massification. He then plays his mix partly made up of the distorted bleat of a screaming frog, only to turn into the countries most wanted noise terrorist for inciting riots.
Decoder is inspired by the Electronic Revolution (1970) by William S. Burroughs, who appears in the film, it has a strong anti-consumerist message, quotes about Lady Di (Diana), biblical metaphors using frogs as symbols for the vagina. The film is also notable for starring no real actors, Bill Rice (East village avant-garde artist) is Jaeger, a peep-show obsessed company man tasked with starring at snowy surveillance monitors all day, is assigned to putting an end the F.M.'s operation. Christian F. plays FM's girlfriend, a punk peepshow worker who prefers the company of her pet frogs to humans.
Muscha's Decoder is a cult classic and a criminally under-seen masterpiece of German weirdness, before the Internet and cyber warfare shot on 16mm, peppered with bright pink, blue, and green hues with camera work by the Viennese / New Yorker Hannah Heer. It should be considered required watching for anyone who love Shinya Tsukamoto's classic cyberpunks, Sogo Ishii's Electric Dragon 80.000 V and films such as They Live, Vortex (1982) and Liquid Sky. The film is battered in 80s industrial/electronica culture by intense soundtrack from the likes of Einsturzende Neubauten, Soft Cell, The The, and Psychic Tv.
Decoder is inspired by the Electronic Revolution (1970) by William S. Burroughs, who appears in the film, it has a strong anti-consumerist message, quotes about Lady Di (Diana), biblical metaphors using frogs as symbols for the vagina. The film is also notable for starring no real actors, Bill Rice (East village avant-garde artist) is Jaeger, a peep-show obsessed company man tasked with starring at snowy surveillance monitors all day, is assigned to putting an end the F.M.'s operation. Christian F. plays FM's girlfriend, a punk peepshow worker who prefers the company of her pet frogs to humans.
Muscha's Decoder is a cult classic and a criminally under-seen masterpiece of German weirdness, before the Internet and cyber warfare shot on 16mm, peppered with bright pink, blue, and green hues with camera work by the Viennese / New Yorker Hannah Heer. It should be considered required watching for anyone who love Shinya Tsukamoto's classic cyberpunks, Sogo Ishii's Electric Dragon 80.000 V and films such as They Live, Vortex (1982) and Liquid Sky. The film is battered in 80s industrial/electronica culture by intense soundtrack from the likes of Einsturzende Neubauten, Soft Cell, The The, and Psychic Tv.
Music, sounds and information used as weapons
FM discovers a way of undermining the burger peddlers in fast food joints by playing the screams of a tortured frog. But in this authoritarian CCTV ridden surveillance society where information is power his activities have not gone unnoticed by the powers that be. Released in it's native West Germany in 1984 this feature film is a bizarre, absurdist SF fantasy set in a world beset with an increasing number of riots, television screens everywhere, peep shows, and even fast food joints. Director Muscha's film (apparently originally to have been called 'Burger War') has a screenplay by Klaus Maeck, Volker Schaefer and Trini Trimpop dealing with themes of conformity and control, order and disorder (potent themes in Germany), and where music, sounds and information are increasingly used to counter the controlling power of the authorities (and vice versa) in information wars (information is like a bank, with some people rich and others poor, according to Genesis P Orridge's character). Filmed in Hamburg, Berlin and London, and also featuring FM Einheit (as FM), Bill Rice (as Jagger), Ralph Richter, William S Burroughs (whose writings are said to have loosely inspired this film), and Christiane Felscherinow (Christiane F to you and me), it's described as a 'cyberpunk' film, and has a subversive streak running through it - the H Burger training scene, and war mongering video games (militarism for kids) intercut with war scenes and military exercises. And then there's all those damn frogs.
A Violent Art-House Collage
Based around a simple premise circling around a burger shop employee who discovers the power of weaponized industrial noise music and its capability of inciting riots against the government in West Germany, Decoder brings together the efforts of multiple underground artists in this rich and enthralling sci-fi hidden cult gem.
Decoder compensates its lack of technicality (which the film itself is never afraid of exposing) with a great poetic quality present all through the film and with a very inventive dreamlike cinematography focusing especially on lighting, creating haunting scenarios and succeedinñg at delivering a unique vision of a dystopian West Germany that never was but lives within the film's own vision. The particular cast of characters drive the film's themes, along with heavy symbolism and a great soundtrack counting with the likes of Einstürzende Neubauten and Psychic TV, Decoder truly is a cinematic countercultural manifest, which demands more than one viewing in order to catch all of its quirks.
This is a film that never shies away from presenting its own vision, championing itself above the apparent downturns that could play against an independent film by fully utilizing its resources to its artistic benefit, this film is the definition of a cult classic.
Decoder compensates its lack of technicality (which the film itself is never afraid of exposing) with a great poetic quality present all through the film and with a very inventive dreamlike cinematography focusing especially on lighting, creating haunting scenarios and succeedinñg at delivering a unique vision of a dystopian West Germany that never was but lives within the film's own vision. The particular cast of characters drive the film's themes, along with heavy symbolism and a great soundtrack counting with the likes of Einstürzende Neubauten and Psychic TV, Decoder truly is a cinematic countercultural manifest, which demands more than one viewing in order to catch all of its quirks.
This is a film that never shies away from presenting its own vision, championing itself above the apparent downturns that could play against an independent film by fully utilizing its resources to its artistic benefit, this film is the definition of a cult classic.
Tech / Noir
Industrial and urban landscapes, a predominance of dark tones, laconic dialogues, and an electronic soundtrack - the four main components of this film, which can be classified as a rather rare subgenre of techno-noir. The atmosphere and surroundings, as quite regularly happens in an art house, significantly prevail over everything else.
In order to somehow minimally connect the mentioned elements into a single whole, a storyline was conceived dedicated to a certain F. M., who spends a little more than all his free time on musical experiments. One day he discovers that the population is under the control of a corporation hidden in the shadows called "Muzak". As it's main instrument, it uses specifically processed, hypnotic music, in fragments of which hidden messages are sewn (here one cannot help but suggest analogies with the works of John Carpenter, be it "Aliens Among Us" (1988) or the more peculiar "Videodrome" (1982)). If you edit one of the tapes with such recordings, you can get the opposite effect. Quite naturally, his hobbies fall into the attention spectrum of mysterious people and an agent with the call sign Yeager is sent to hunt for him. The main character also has a girl who performs in a peep show and is interested in frogs.
It would be possible to dwell in more detail on certain subtleties and twists and turns of the plot, such as the same diner where paramilitary orders reign, but this makes not much sense, since they serve only as a necessary background for the audiovisual elements. The artistic component is periodically diluted with real documentary inserts. In particular, the riots shown in the films are a real chronicle, and the action itself probably takes place somewhere in the western part of Berlin. In the context of local electronic-industrial music, there are a couple of notable tracks. In contrast to the somewhat similar in spirit, but much more highly specialized "Liquid Sky" (1982), it almost does not flow into obsessive, white noise - certainly a plus for the overall action.
In the end, I note that with all that has been said, the picture is still specific, an extraordinary example of a cult project, but for a narrow circle of people, that does not pretend to be anything more. In other words, if you liked certain elements from the first "Terminator" (1984), then this picture may either fine to watch or seem like just a set of strange, incoherent clips.
In order to somehow minimally connect the mentioned elements into a single whole, a storyline was conceived dedicated to a certain F. M., who spends a little more than all his free time on musical experiments. One day he discovers that the population is under the control of a corporation hidden in the shadows called "Muzak". As it's main instrument, it uses specifically processed, hypnotic music, in fragments of which hidden messages are sewn (here one cannot help but suggest analogies with the works of John Carpenter, be it "Aliens Among Us" (1988) or the more peculiar "Videodrome" (1982)). If you edit one of the tapes with such recordings, you can get the opposite effect. Quite naturally, his hobbies fall into the attention spectrum of mysterious people and an agent with the call sign Yeager is sent to hunt for him. The main character also has a girl who performs in a peep show and is interested in frogs.
It would be possible to dwell in more detail on certain subtleties and twists and turns of the plot, such as the same diner where paramilitary orders reign, but this makes not much sense, since they serve only as a necessary background for the audiovisual elements. The artistic component is periodically diluted with real documentary inserts. In particular, the riots shown in the films are a real chronicle, and the action itself probably takes place somewhere in the western part of Berlin. In the context of local electronic-industrial music, there are a couple of notable tracks. In contrast to the somewhat similar in spirit, but much more highly specialized "Liquid Sky" (1982), it almost does not flow into obsessive, white noise - certainly a plus for the overall action.
In the end, I note that with all that has been said, the picture is still specific, an extraordinary example of a cult project, but for a narrow circle of people, that does not pretend to be anything more. In other words, if you liked certain elements from the first "Terminator" (1984), then this picture may either fine to watch or seem like just a set of strange, incoherent clips.
Did you know
- TriviaThe riot footage seen in this film is of actual riots that occurred at the time this movie was being shot.
- ConnectionsFeatured in William S. Burroughs: Commissioner of Sewers (1991)
- Soundtracks3 Orange Kisses From Kazan
Matt Johnson, The The
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