An actress of political torture movies made by her husband has to finish his latest film and arrange a screening for distributors while the husband, who is also secretly an anarchist revolut... Read allAn actress of political torture movies made by her husband has to finish his latest film and arrange a screening for distributors while the husband, who is also secretly an anarchist revolutionary, is away for some resistance operation.An actress of political torture movies made by her husband has to finish his latest film and arrange a screening for distributors while the husband, who is also secretly an anarchist revolutionary, is away for some resistance operation.
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The Greek/French director Nikos Papatakis has not made too many films, and this one may be the closest he had ever reached towards cinematic mastery. An extremely radical political drama, this film chronicles the journey of the protagonist Galai (played with a certain maddening quality by Olga Karlatos), an actress of political torture B-movies made by her husband Hamdias. Now Hamdias is also secretly a anarchist revolutionary of the Palestinian Liberation Front, absent throughout the course of the film due to some underground operation, leaving Galai and his editor to finish his latest torture film and arrange a screening for distributors. Under this complex premise, Papatakis explores and criticizes the role of artists, intellectuals, filmmakers etc who take pride in calling their art 'revolutionary' while living under the safeguard of their bourgeoisie producers and patrons.
Exaggerated and talkative at places, one can easily understand the lack of love it received (just look at its modest rating itself) because of its anti-israel and its anti- 'white-liberator' stance. Having said that, one might argue that its brilliant final act is politically somewhat ambiguous. The film within this film (the torture film made by Hamdias) is harrowing enough to call for such dramatic expanse. A definitely difficult watch, understandably more so by the European audience, but extremely rewarding as you begin to identify with the opinions presented here.
Exaggerated and talkative at places, one can easily understand the lack of love it received (just look at its modest rating itself) because of its anti-israel and its anti- 'white-liberator' stance. Having said that, one might argue that its brilliant final act is politically somewhat ambiguous. The film within this film (the torture film made by Hamdias) is harrowing enough to call for such dramatic expanse. A definitely difficult watch, understandably more so by the European audience, but extremely rewarding as you begin to identify with the opinions presented here.
A very impressive movie where the main character has to face humiliation and sufferings, while the narrator keeps observing her without doing anything to relieve her. The dramatic side of this movie is really fascinating and makes it a strong aesthetic choice. Olga Karlatos, the principal actress, is beautiful and radical. In the heart of the movie lies a true love relationship between the actress and the director. Love is also made of tortures. The movie also deals with the problem of torture during the Algerian independence war. It denounces radical patriotism. The director, Nico Papatakis, was also a producer. He helped John Casavetes to finance "Shadows". He also produced Jean Genet's only movie.
Did you know
- TriviaIn this film, the main character, Galai, is an actress who tries desperately to find the authentic cry that is uttered under torture. In this search, she goes so far as to subject herself to torture in real life. In these parallel stories, Olga Karlatos, who plays Galai, revealed that most of the torture scenes in the film were not simulated. "Although I didn't go to the same extremes, I did experiment with electrocution to familiarize myself with the feeling," she said, adding that also the cigarette scene was real. "We only got to do it once, with no rehearsals, so I couldn't miss it. But I did. And I still live with the scar. She's about a centimeter. Over time, it has flattened out, but there is still a white spot and a circle. It did not endanger my life but it was a great lesson in interpretation for me," she said.
- Alternate versionsIn 2005, Papatakis decides to create a new version by trimming the duration down to 1 h 32', shooting a new introduction sequence and adding some special effects.
- ConnectionsReferences Love Me... Please! (1969)
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- In Hell
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- Runtime2 hours 10 minutes
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- 1.66 : 1
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