IMDb-BEWERTUNG
3,3/10
146
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuParis. In a nightclub, two girls, Annie and Pascale, follow two boys. They are drugged and wake up in a boat hold.Paris. In a nightclub, two girls, Annie and Pascale, follow two boys. They are drugged and wake up in a boat hold.Paris. In a nightclub, two girls, Annie and Pascale, follow two boys. They are drugged and wake up in a boat hold.
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Silvia Solar
- Catherine
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
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L'oasis des filles perdues stands as a stark reminder that good intentions and exploitation sensibilities rarely make comfortable bedfellows. This French-Spanish co-production attempts to weave a cautionary tale about human trafficking through the lens of 1980s Euro-sleaze cinema, but the result feels more like a fever dream conceived during a particularly restless night in a Pigalle editing suite.
The film's opening act possesses a grimy authenticity that effectively captures the neon-soaked atmosphere of early 80s Parisian nightlife. The disco sequences, while dated, pulse with a genuine energy that momentarily masks the production's obvious budgetary constraints. Françoise Blanchard and Nadine Pascal, as the ill-fated Annie and Pascale respectively, deliver performances that transcend their material's limitations. Blanchard, in particular, brings a vulnerability to her role that makes her character's plight genuinely affecting, even when the script fails to provide her with meaningful dialogue or character development.
The cinematography by Raymond Heil oscillates wildly between competent and amateurish, often within the same scene. While certain interior shots demonstrate a keen eye for atmospheric lighting, the film's technical shortcomings become glaringly apparent during its action sequences and location work. The sound design suffers from the typical ailments of low-budget international productions of this era - dialogue that feels disconnected from the visuals and a musical score by Daniel White that wavers between appropriately ominous and laughably overwrought.
Where "L'oasis des filles perdues" truly stumbles is in its tonal inconsistency. Jara seems unsure whether he's crafting a serious social commentary on exploitation or indulging in the very sensationalism he appears to critique. This uncertainty permeates every aspect of the production, from the uneven pacing that lurches between languid character moments and sudden bursts of violence, to the film's uncomfortable relationship with its own exploitative elements.
The supporting cast, including Antonio Mayans in a typically menacing role, delivers workmanlike performances that serve the narrative without elevating it. The film's middle act, set aboard the transport vessel, contains some genuinely tense moments that hint at what might have been achieved with a more focused script and additional resources. However, these fleeting moments of effectiveness are overshadowed by sequences that feel either rushed or unnecessarily protracted.
The desert locations provide a suitably harsh backdrop for the story's climactic chapters, and the production design of the titular "oasis" brothel demonstrates creative problem-solving within obvious financial constraints. Yet the film's final act devolves into a series of predictable confrontations that rob the narrative of any genuine suspense or emotional payoff.
The film's opening act possesses a grimy authenticity that effectively captures the neon-soaked atmosphere of early 80s Parisian nightlife. The disco sequences, while dated, pulse with a genuine energy that momentarily masks the production's obvious budgetary constraints. Françoise Blanchard and Nadine Pascal, as the ill-fated Annie and Pascale respectively, deliver performances that transcend their material's limitations. Blanchard, in particular, brings a vulnerability to her role that makes her character's plight genuinely affecting, even when the script fails to provide her with meaningful dialogue or character development.
The cinematography by Raymond Heil oscillates wildly between competent and amateurish, often within the same scene. While certain interior shots demonstrate a keen eye for atmospheric lighting, the film's technical shortcomings become glaringly apparent during its action sequences and location work. The sound design suffers from the typical ailments of low-budget international productions of this era - dialogue that feels disconnected from the visuals and a musical score by Daniel White that wavers between appropriately ominous and laughably overwrought.
Where "L'oasis des filles perdues" truly stumbles is in its tonal inconsistency. Jara seems unsure whether he's crafting a serious social commentary on exploitation or indulging in the very sensationalism he appears to critique. This uncertainty permeates every aspect of the production, from the uneven pacing that lurches between languid character moments and sudden bursts of violence, to the film's uncomfortable relationship with its own exploitative elements.
The supporting cast, including Antonio Mayans in a typically menacing role, delivers workmanlike performances that serve the narrative without elevating it. The film's middle act, set aboard the transport vessel, contains some genuinely tense moments that hint at what might have been achieved with a more focused script and additional resources. However, these fleeting moments of effectiveness are overshadowed by sequences that feel either rushed or unnecessarily protracted.
The desert locations provide a suitably harsh backdrop for the story's climactic chapters, and the production design of the titular "oasis" brothel demonstrates creative problem-solving within obvious financial constraints. Yet the film's final act devolves into a series of predictable confrontations that rob the narrative of any genuine suspense or emotional payoff.
Wusstest du schon
- VerbindungenEdited from Agente Sigma 3 - Missione Goldwather (1967)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
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- Auch bekannt als
- Oasis of the Lost Girls
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 34 Minuten
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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