Friday, May 3, 2013
Dillinger Is Dead (1969)
It's hard to describe what goes on in Dillinger Is Dead (dir. Marco Ferreri), one of the weirdest films I'v seen in a good while, with a straight face. Yeah.... it's about this guy - in his day-job, he designs gas masks - who makes a late-nite dinner at home, he listens to some otherworldly pop music on the radio and then he eats and watches a couple of home movies and meanwhile he, um, fixes up an old gun he accidentally found in a messy closet. And every now and then, he goes into the bedroom to check on his wife (which means do cruel things to her) who sleeps deeply after having taken a few sleeping pills. No story. No obvious character development. No logical denouement. Or maybe, yeah, in some sense. I watched Dillinger Is Dead late at night. The house was asleep. My head was spinning after a long day. This was the perfect setting for this strange little film. I will readily confess that at times, this is an awfully boring film. Hell, you are watching a guy making dinner and disassembling a gun! But I continued watching, and somehow, I was pulled into this dreamy world of druggy pop music (good choices of tunes) and tasteless yet fascinatingly odd home interior design. At the same time, I am completely aware that the director is an asshole who throws in a bunch of frames with nakes woman parts just for the titillation of it. Ferreri directs like an Antonioni who has kept his penchant for good-looking alienation (the first minutes could be a scene in Red Desert), but who has thrown all notions of radical politics (at least I don't see any) and 'good taste' into the bin-bag. The film is over the top, it is a bit pervy and it makes the oddest choices. In some ways, Dillinger Is Dead is beyond good and bad. It is what it is. In other ways, that I say that might reveal a personal flaw of character. I could, as one reviewer put it, say that this is a film about 'corrupt responses to a corrupt world'. I could also say that it is a sexist and self-indulgent heap of trash. Another reviewer says that the film is a direct cinematic translation of Marcuse's ideas about late industrial society. Well, maybe. Along with a gun that the gas mask designer paints red, with white polka dots.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment