From the daily archives:

Sunday, September 10, 2006

The Pervert's Guide to Cinema

The Pervert’s Guide to Cinema (UK/Austria/Netherlands, dir­ector Sophie Fiennes): Not as sala­cious as it sounds, this is a three-part doc­u­mentary (each episode is 50 minutes) fea­turing Slovenian super­star philosopher/psychoanalyst Slavoj Zizek. Zizek takes us on a journey through many classic films, exploring themes of sexu­ality, fantasy, mor­ality and mor­tality. It was dir­ected by Sophie Fiennes, of the multi-talented Fiennes clan (she’s sister to actors Ralph and Joseph).

I enjoyed this quite a bit, although I think it will be even more enjoy­able on DVD, since there is such a stew of ideas to be digested. Freudian and Lacanian ana­lysis can be pretty heavy going and seeing the whole series all at once became a bit dis­or­i­enting by the end of two and a half hours. It didn’t help that an ill-advised coffee and pos­ses­sion of a bladder led me to some dis­com­fort for the last hour or so.

My only real issue with this is that Zizek picked films that were quite obvi­ously filled with Freudian themes. He spends quite a bit of time on the films of Hitchcock and David Lynch, not exactly mas­ters of sub­tlety. I would have liked to see him try to sup­port his the­ories by using a wider range of films, although that’s really just me saying I’d like to see part four and five and six.

Zizek is very funny, and part of the humour was watching him present what amounted to a lec­ture while inserting him­self into the actual scenes from some of the films he’s dis­cussing. So, for instance, we see him in a motor­boat on his way to Bodega Bay (from Hitchcock’s The Birds) or sit­ting in the base­ment of the Bates Motel (from Psycho). Which is not to say that his the­ories are not pro­voc­ative. Even when I found myself dis­agreeing with him, it def­in­itely made me think a little more deeply about the films. Which is exactly what he’s trying to accomplish.

Visit the film’s web site

8/10(8/10)

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