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Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye

  • 2003
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
3.3/10
229
YOUR RATING
Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye (2003)
Drama

In a seemingly abandoned house, a group of people engage in wordless acts of passion. From evening to morning, the sexual couplings among the members of the house become increasingly harrowi... Read allIn a seemingly abandoned house, a group of people engage in wordless acts of passion. From evening to morning, the sexual couplings among the members of the house become increasingly harrowing as daylight arrives.In a seemingly abandoned house, a group of people engage in wordless acts of passion. From evening to morning, the sexual couplings among the members of the house become increasingly harrowing as daylight arrives.

  • Director
    • Andrew Repasky McElhinney
  • Writers
    • Georges Bataille
    • Dan Buskirk
    • Edward J. Eberwine III
  • Stars
    • Melissa Elizabeth Forgione
    • Querelle Haynes
    • Kevin Mitchell Martin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.3/10
    229
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrew Repasky McElhinney
    • Writers
      • Georges Bataille
      • Dan Buskirk
      • Edward J. Eberwine III
    • Stars
      • Melissa Elizabeth Forgione
      • Querelle Haynes
      • Kevin Mitchell Martin
    • 13User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
    • 46Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast6

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    Melissa Elizabeth Forgione
    • Blind Woman
    Querelle Haynes
    • Sailor
    Kevin Mitchell Martin
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Sean Timothy Sexton
    • Georges Bataille
    Courtney Shea
    • Second Woman
    Claude Barrington White
    • Black Man
    • Director
      • Andrew Repasky McElhinney
    • Writers
      • Georges Bataille
      • Dan Buskirk
      • Edward J. Eberwine III
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    3.3229
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    Featured reviews

    1ImmortalityBlues

    Sexually Arousing But Disappointing

    Okay, the sex scenes (read: the entire film minus one boring staircase walking scene) were well done (by porn standards), "classy", "artsy", etcetera. Having not read the novel yet I was hoping that there would have simply been more to this film other than pornography. I knew that the novel was supposed to be very erotic and unapologetically so, but is that all there is to it? Does the novel simply narrate a bunch of screwing and blow jobs? Here's how simply this film can be broken down, scene-by-scene, without leaving anything out:

    --Stock footage of a woman giving birth while the narrator reads a brief biography about Georges Bataille.

    --Two guys have sex.

    --Two women have sex.

    --Girl stumbles up flight of stairs for like 15 minutes while other women scream from somewhere.

    --Girl pisses on the floor/stares out filthy window.

    --Two girls and some guy have sex.

    --10-15 minutes of black screen and electronic noise.

    --The End.

    Perhaps if there were at least some interesting narration from the novel during this stuff it would have had more of an impact as a piece of compelling art rather than a slightly artsy porn flick. I guess I just need to read the book.
    8supernewman11

    How to Not Approach SofE

    The problem with many of the reviews for this film on this site is they aren't approaching the film at its level. This is a very important thing to do. You don't go into an action film with melodrama expectations, for instance.

    When you watch an experimental film, that was also presented as an art installation utilizing multiple screens (not all visible from one place) playing simultaneously with their sound audible everywhere, you don't go in expecting a traditional narrative with clear character psychology and an obvious point, like we are trained to read from traditional film. Likewise, we shouldn't be going in expecting it to be a direct adaptation of Bataille's novella. Again, an experimental adaptation is nothing like a traditional adaptation. This film adapts it in transgressive intent, some generalized thematic concerns, etc. etc.

    Also, this isn't porn. I know that may be hard for some people to understand, but it's best to really understand what porn is and what it does to understand this. Porno, functionally, reduces to a minimum anything that gets in the way of lust, of sexual passion, of sexual gratification, etc. etc. This film does not do this, it maximizes these obtrusive elements. A fifteenish minute scene of a woman walking up stairs, the Zapruder footage, the general method of transitions between sexual encounters, these aren't building up the sexual appetite but attempting to subvert them. There is too much in way of interruption and motif for this to be a 'pornographic film'.

    I would also suggest reading the novella before watching this film. And that doesn't mean skim through it, or pseudo read it, taking care to only grasp the narrative structure and do little to grasp his motifs, themes, concerns, and overarching thesis. Once you understand what the book was doing and saying, or at least have an idea of what you think the book was doing and saying, you may have a better time approaching this film.

    The most important thing to keep in mind - it's an experimental art film, you don't approach films like this the same way you would approach blockbusters.

    Lastly, would people please stop putting up scene breakdowns? Not only is it reductive to the overall action, but they are also always incorrect and missing parts.
    8justinrkirk

    Audacious, provocative, abnormally beautiful and uncomfortable. Bataille would have dug this mucho!!!

    George Bataille's Story of the Eye is a nearly silent film with just music, drones and noise (the only dialogue is some voiceover at the beginning and the name `Jackie O' which one of the women mutters as a phrase three times about half way though the film), its shot on DV as if in Dario Argento Technicolor, the sound design rivals Eraserhead and, most unusually the film features hard-core sex acts (gay, straight and bi) which serves to illustrate the physiology of the film's characters.

    The actors are all incredibly beautiful (the tap dancing girls are HOT!) and brave (no one seems to be faking anything) and the fluid camera studies them like a Victorian naturalist lost in an overheated, imagined Punked-Out Congo. It's dream-like and narcotic it its personality but also rather witty and dry and `English.' My girlfriend was really into the scene with the Sailor and the Black Leather Man but her best friend found it `really too weird and smutty' and left the room about 20 minutes into the film. I think it helps to know George Bataille's essays on sex, sensuality, spirituality and death or really like films like `Salo,' `The Pillow Book,' `Eyes Wide Shut' or `Romance.'

    I've never seen a flick like this; a friend of mine lent me an advance video screener which might have been missing the final 10 minutes because the screen goes black and there is just chaotic sound then color bars.

    I close my eyes and pictures from this movie flood my mind so clearly -- I can't wait to see this on the big screen. It's a big turn on for both the mind and body.
    10jungleary

    brilliant transgressive artcore

    This is artcore. leave your preconceived notions of cinema at the door. open yourself to the images. let this film digest you.
    10mauriceschuhmann

    Bataille movie

    Georges Bataille's History of the Eye is one of the most interesting french erotic / pornographic novels of the 20th century. At the same time, it's really distressing in the context of Batailles own biography. This base is not easy for an adaption and should not be interpreted word by word to the medium movie. Andrew McElhinney made an art-porn movie inspired from Bataille as well as from Querelle (Fassbinder). Bataille is giving a framework for this masterpiece.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The movie is the subject of the academic monograph, REALISM, REAL SEX, AND THE EXPERIMENTAL FILM - MEDIATING EROTICISM IN 'GEORGES BATAILLE'S STORY OF THE EYE' by Dr. Beth Johnson (Palgrave MacMillan, 2009).

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 12, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Story of the Eye
    • Filming locations
      • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production company
      • ARM/Cinema 25 Pictures Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 21 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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