Review By Dennis Harvey Variety June 21-27, 2004
After making a modest festival splash with 2000's A
Chronicle of Corpses, a rigorously formal 18th century Americana Gothic,
the very young U.S. underground auteur Andrew Repasky McElhinney goes in
another direction entirely -- albeit one affirming his certifiable coolness
-- with vid-shot Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye. Less literal
adaptation than equally extreme contempo fantasia on French cult author
Georges Bataille's experimental novel, this unauthorized feature is a punk-pornocopia
equivalent to Last Year at Marienbad. Graphic, unfaked sexual content
will make it a theatrical impossibility in all but extreme fringe situations,
as surely as same will guarantee degree of cultish homeviewing notoriety
and adoration.
After medical stock footage vividly showing a breach birth (under voiceover narration summarizing Bataille's controversial legacy), pic begins in earnest with a gaunt Edward Scissorhands-looking young man masturbating while two women -- disguised in giant top hats, their breasts and bellies painted like puppet faces -- tap-dance on a club stage. Then a blond white lad in sailor suit services a black man in full leather regalia, their penetrating idyll (set to Satie-type piano noodlings) closed by an apparent assassin's bullets. Rest of the film is filled with bizarrely fetishistic extended vignettes: A blindfolded nude woman gropes her way toward a 20-minute lesbian encounter; a fragile punky woman trembles up a deteriorated building's endless staircases until she encounters canines, urinates inappropriately, has a hysterical laughter interlude, joins another woman in grimly unsuccessful self-gratification and finally forms a trio with the Edward Scissor-y man. After so many longeurs, the final shot is startlingly brief and (ahem) climactic. Occasional intertitles quote French surrealist author Bataille, but McElhinney's movie is a homage paid to the latter's spirit rather than his letter. Evaluating this project in conventional feature terms is a lost cause; relevant contexts are purely avant-garde and pornographic. Suffice it to say that helmer's careful attention to framing camera, music and content signal primary allegiance to Art rather than Smut -- though it's inherent in p.ov. that any line between should be thin. |
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