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Cowards Bend the Knee

Original title: Cowards Bend the Knee or The Blue Hands
  • 2003
  • Not Rated
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Darcy Fehr and Melissa Dionisio in Cowards Bend the Knee (2003)
DramaRomance

It's time for hockey! There's no telling what will happen when the Winnipeg Maroons' own star player Guy becomes embroiled in the twisted lives of Meta, a vengeful Chinoise, and her hairdres... Read allIt's time for hockey! There's no telling what will happen when the Winnipeg Maroons' own star player Guy becomes embroiled in the twisted lives of Meta, a vengeful Chinoise, and her hairdresser/abortionist mother Liliom. Innocent Veronica, caught in the middle, is treated to both... Read allIt's time for hockey! There's no telling what will happen when the Winnipeg Maroons' own star player Guy becomes embroiled in the twisted lives of Meta, a vengeful Chinoise, and her hairdresser/abortionist mother Liliom. Innocent Veronica, caught in the middle, is treated to both services! Meanwhile poor, dithering, cowardly Guy can only stand by and watch.

  • Director
    • Guy Maddin
  • Writer
    • Guy Maddin
  • Stars
    • Darcy Fehr
    • Melissa Dionisio
    • Amy Stewart
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Guy Maddin
    • Writer
      • Guy Maddin
    • Stars
      • Darcy Fehr
      • Melissa Dionisio
      • Amy Stewart
    • 10User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos43

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    Top Cast49

    Edit
    Darcy Fehr
    Darcy Fehr
    • Guy Maddin
    Melissa Dionisio
    • Meta
    Amy Stewart
    Amy Stewart
    • Veronica
    Tara Birtwhistle
    • Liliom
    Louis Negin
    Louis Negin
    • Dr. Fusi
    Mike Bell
    • Mo Mott
    David Stuart Evans
    • Shaky
    Henry Mogatas
    • Chas
    Victor Cowie
    • Maddin Sr.
    Herdis Maddin
    • Grandma
    Marion Martin
    • Mrs. Maddin
    Aurum McBride
    • Baby
    Bernard Lesk
    • Stickboy
    Erin Hershberg
    • Customer…
    Erika Rintoul
    • Customer
    Charlene Van Buekenhout
    • Customer
    Sherrill Hershberg
    • Customer
    Kathryn Stuart
    • Customer
    • Director
      • Guy Maddin
    • Writer
      • Guy Maddin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.91.5K
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    Featured reviews

    tedg

    Dead Life

    When you love someone deeply, everything seems deep. When you love them in reality, sometimes the experience is ordinary.

    Real films have that element of romance and in a way a filmmaker has arrived in my life if he or she makes a film that doesn't affect me. But of course that's after this person has already burned a door into my heart.

    Maddin is on my list of the very best filmmakers, and on a much shorter list of the ones that matter and are still working. He's changed the way I dream. Some of the visual humming I do to myself is his tunes. So I consider it a sort of triumph to have a relationship with him where he says something that matters to him, and he says/shows it with the same skill as before... and it doesn't matter to me.

    Its a sort of transcendent Zen thing to be able to know something so deeply to be able to discard it easily.

    This is a film put together from his own life. Its a different sort of narrative adventure than we usually get from him. Usually we have an inner substrate, a narrative model made explicit in the movie that is preserved enough for us to see the contrast between it and the way we are seeing it. A virgin's diary, a sad song. Here, the narrative is a life proper. The reason it fails for me is that I already know what I need to about this mind, because he gave us sticky artifacts that are sent out into an ether where souls flit. This time, he cannot do that, the artifacts stick to his embodied life, not mine. For me to accept this, I'd have to have some sort of resonance with him as a human.

    And I don't. I cannot. Its part of the arrangement when you begin as we have: he's the sender, I'm the lucid receiver. We both cannot be receivers, the way he has structured his art. I think I will advise you to stay away from this if you are serious about Maddin. It will take me some time to recover the ability to accept things from him as selfless, world-connected art.

    He knows this. There's a bunch of business about humans as wax statues.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
    8Polaris_DiB

    Out-Lynch's Lynch

    Understand that I'm getting a bit tired of people comparing every strange movie that comes along to a David Lynch film too. Unfortunately, Lynch is the norm and just about one of the most accessible strange filmmakers out there, so sometimes the comparison is needed for a starting point, like in this case.

    This movie is, roughly speaking, the story of a swinging hockey player who gets entrapped in a bunch of relationships, including most prominently one with a scarred daughter who wants her father's death revenged. Her father's killer? Her mother. It includes but is not limited to perverse sexuality, weird psychoses, and severed arms.

    It's shot in black and white and is a silent film, which creates for it a sort of removed surreality/abstractness which is, honestly, reminiscent of Eraserhead and Lynch's Lumiere and Company short.

    What makes it Maddin's, though, is the use of imagery from his childhood (the barbershop, the hockey players, etc.) set to a blatant sexuality which goes beyond just being blatant but enforces it: you see the sexual image, and then the words follow saying exactly what you were thinking. No more subtlety and deranged fetishes, this is straight-forward Freud and primal scene.

    Because of this, this film as a whole remains true to itself and never lets go of its own private Universe, one that we could never live in and yet, terribly, can relate to, figure out, and eventually even understand.

    Beyond that, there's not much that can be talked about this movie besides the fact that it there's no common approach to it. It has no genre (besides maybe Silent film) and is disconcerting, requiring a certain level of viewer interaction that most movies don't ask for. For fans of strange and insane cinema, it's great; for anybody looking to be entertained, this is most definitely not for you.

    --PolarisDiB
    10framptonhollis

    a masterpiece of the bizarre

    By turns a dark comedy, horror film, Gothic love story, and heartbreaking drama, "Cowards Bend the Knee" is a magnificent carnival of the bizarre. It carries the typical Guy Maddin style, which imitates silent, experimental cinema-normally mixing it with dark humor and surprising poetry. In this film, Maddin uses his style to the best of its ability by a forming a unique, genre bending masterwork of the avant garde. Mixing slapstick, sex, and scares Maddin creates an otherworldly and wholly surreal experience around a wacky plot that involves revenge, decapitated hands, hockey, abortion, and a fake breast.

    Sounds weird, right? Well, it is. It really, really is.

    ...and for fans of weird, surreal cinema it's a real treasure. I found myself laughing and shaking during this wild feast for the eyes. It has its moments of disorientation and confusion, but within those moments lies a deep and subtle beauty. Guy Maddin is similar to Jim Jarmusch because his films are like cinematic poems, but while Jarmusch seems to be making beat poetry, Maddin makes completely off the wall, experimental poetry!
    9dewanevl

    A unique voice in cinema

    Many people have compared Maddin to David Lynch - although there are some psycho-sexual similarities, they have it wrong. He's the Tom Waits of film. To watch his films requires not the suspension of disbelief, but an open subconscious.

    Throw your mind away and enjoy this film. Hockey players ensconced in sperm and a combination beauty salon, brothel, day care center and abortion clinic all make appearances here. And an interesting story mixing "Hands of Orlac" in reverse and...well, a lot of Maddin. Unlike any film experience you'll see, but you'll come away a better and more open person because of it. And Melissa Dionisio is the most stunning actress I've ever seen on screen.

    For people new to Maddin, I'd recommend starting with The Saddest Music in the World, which really works as a movie and a story and almost makes sense from a realistic point of view.

    I come away from his films glad that we have somebody who thinks like that, and glad that he put it on film.
    3claudecat

    My Least Favorite Guy Maddin film

    I've seen many of Guy Maddin's films, and liked most of them, but this one literally gave me a headache. John Gurdebeke's editing is way too frenetic, and, apart from a tour-de-force sequence showing a line of heads snapping to look at one object, does nothing but interfere with the actors' ability to communicate with the audience.

    Another thing I disliked about this film was that it seemed more brutal than Maddin's earlier works--though his films have always had dark elements, his sympathy for the characters gave the movies an overriding feeling of humanity. This one seemed more like harshness for harshness' sake.

    As I'm required to add more lines of text before IMDb will accept my review, I will mention that the actor playing "Guy Maddin" does manage to ape his facial expressions pretty well.

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally presented as a gallery installation at the International Film Festival Rotterdam in January 2003, and then two months later at The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery in Toronto, in which viewers watch the movie through ten peepholes lining a wall, each one revealing a different six-minute chapter of the film.
    • Connections
      Featured in Weird Sex and Snowshoes: A Trek Through the Canadian Cinematic Psyche (2004)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 29, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Cowards Bend the Knee or the Blue Hands
    • Filming locations
      • Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $25,860
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,030
      • Aug 15, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $25,860
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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