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6/10
A freshness and vitality difficult to ignore
3 November 1999
Current literature surrounding this movie tends to offer critical praise and include words like 'brave' or 'ground breaking'. In actual fact the idea is not at all original and several other movies (Belle de Jour? Last Tango in Paris?)have been down the road of female sexual discovery/destruction, the motivation for which is merely a McGuffin. However, it is notable for having been written & directed by a woman and yet still proffering the concept that sexual promiscuity will inevitably lead to destruction rather than liberation (and hopefully dispelling the ridiculous accusation of misogyny upon male directors tackling this subject, especially with the arrival of Breillat's recent 'Romance').

Despite that it is not necessarily as radical as some would have us believe, it is directed with a freshness and vitality which is difficult to ignore. Morton's performance is superb and the gritty 'television' style camera-work is perfectly apt.
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Funny Games (1997)
6/10
Moderately Effective as Absurdist Drama
11 October 1999
I found it difficult to read Funny Games as 'questioning the role of screen violence' as it had been billed but it worked quite well as an absurdist drama on sadism with its surreal and pointless torture reminiscent of the works of sadism's namesake De Sade, the element of complete control over the victims final moments being as important as the violence itself - on this level it is pure poetry, especially in the coda scene where the cyclical nature of duo's 'games' is shown. In relation to the lure and power of screen violence however, even for this particularly squeamish viewer, no depths are plumbed.
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Decoder (1984)
8/10
Paranoid Politics and Plenty of Pop
11 October 1999
Warning: Spoilers
I eventually managed to get hold of a copy of Decoder after reading with great interest about it in Jack Sargeant's book "Naked Lens - Beat Cinema" and it is indeed a must see for Burrough's fans as not only does it feature him in a speaking role but it is also largely based on his ideas.

The story is (roughly) this: Pop performer F.M. Einheit discovers that different sonic frequencies and induce different patterns of behaviour in listeners, first in his own studio but later in the local "H-Burger" restaurant where the passive muzak appears to be wiping people's emotions.

The government headquarters responsible for this are represented by a huge 'fascist' building full of winding spools. Bill Rice, the government official who works there meanwhile goes on a journey of sexual discovery in the local red-light district.

Einheit meanwhile, after several arguments with his girlfriend (played by former child prostitute Christianne F.) and dream sequences featuring William S. Burroughs finds himself amongst underground rebels led by Genesis P. Orridge (the avant garde pop performer in groups like Psychic T.V. and Throbbing Gristle, himself a fan of Burroughs) who explains to F.M. about how the government have been 'controlling' the public through muzak. After this revelation he steals the tape from H-Burger and remixes it so that it induces panic, the rebel army replace the tapes in all the burger bars which are strangely now shown as Burger King and McDonald's rather than the fictional H-Burger.

Suffice to say, revolution ensues and Rice is killed.

Much of the film is done with heavy monochrome lighting and plenty of stock footage (some of it pretty nasty) and has a soundtrack of early eighties electronica. At times Decoder is very amateur (indeed Bill Rice is the only 'actor' in the cast) but the very 'underground' feel of the film and (the copy I have is very grainy indeed) adds to the sense of reality - like it really is something dangerous and grubby passed quietly amongst those who dare to find out - anyone seriously interested in Burroughs or early eighties music should see this film, others will probably find it difficult, boring and dated.

It is interesting and apt that it should be credited to the year 1984, as it is probably much more important (if inferior)than the film of the 1984 released in that year - although I think on behalf of the makers of Decoder it was entirely unintentional.
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Radio On (1979)
Gently stirring road movie
29 September 1999
I had the pleasure of attending a screening of 'Radio On 'presented by its director Chris Petit.

Often described as "austere", and rightly so, the influence of Wim Wenders is immediately clear, but unlike Wenders' which films try to hide a sense of self importance behind lengthy banality it is this film's very understatedness that is the key to its (limited) success.

Halliwell's described this as a film "barely able to summon up any interest in its characters" although it is the very detached and unemotional stance of Petit towards his lead that makes this such an unbearably real portrayal of disenchantment, we begin to feel disenfranchised with humanity itself.

Pointless Trivia: At the premiere screening of this film no one recognised the lead actor amongst the crowd as he has a shock of orange hair undetectable in a black and white movie).
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