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SXSW: Mike G Wallows In Cannibalism And Horsey Sex With ZOO And GRIMM LOVE!!

Published at:  Mar 15, 2007 10:11:29 AM CDT

SPOILER ALERT !!


Merrick here...




Mike G sent in a nice write-up about two sex-themed films screening at SXSW this year.

I've heard alot about ZOO and the movie makes me uneasy in many ways - not the least of which is because I grew up around Arabian horses (but never had any desire to do them).

Here's Mike G...




First, the two films addressing sexual aberrations:

ZOO

Zoo debuted at Sundance this year and was instantly scoffed with press scrutiny. The film illustrates a hidden community of men who experience a heightened sense of emotional connection and physical attraction to animals, known as Zoophilia.

The small group of men ritually meets in the rural farmlands of Washington to share their socially stigmatized predilection. The men soon form a close bond behind the daily routine of desk jobs and blue-collar labor. Their sexual aberration drives them to document their physical relationships with the resident horses on the property.

This unimaginable relationship between man and horse is the curious foundation for Zoo. With disjointed audio interviews and news bytes, director Robinson Devor loosely paints a dramatized re-enactment of the events, which ultimately result in the death of one of the groups’ members, known only as Mr. Hand. Although no distinction is made between Zoophilia and Bestiality from the audio excerpts, a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh rebuts the major concern raised by the investigating Animal Cruelty organizations, while addressing the key difference; how is having sex with a Horse against the animal’s will?

This pressing question creates the awkward allure of Zoo. Although the subject matter is intriguing enough to maintain audience interest, Devor paints himself into a corner with monotonous slow-motion montages of the Washington skyline, as abused by Discovery channel nature shows, and ceaseless music that exploits our sense of anticipation with its histrionic violin pads.

Also, the most notable expert witness is a cast member who shares an irrelevant diatribe about his experience with death. This obvious contrivance to include a distracting philosophical perspective just further dismantles the film’s progress. The first five minutes of the film’s exposition have the same circling momentum of the last five minutes. Although Zoo’s objective, according to the film’s editor, is to show the chastising reactions of the groups’ community and friends, the purpose is as nebulous as the blurred scenes that comprise it.

Grimm Love

In 2005, two men in Germany met fatefully through an online Cannibalism community. One, who after suffering from schizophrenia and having to tend to his bed-ridden mother, gains a fascination for the process of butchering a human being. And the other, an emotionally distressed masochist having to deal at an early age with the suicide of his mother, yearns to be consumed by another person. The final moments, reminiscent of Ichi the Killer, are videotaped as the collaboration of absolute masochism and sadism is fulfilled.

Grimm Love is the true story of these two men, and a (presumably fictitious) graduate student documenting the psychological motives behind their serendipitous relationship. The student, played by Keri Russell, researches the childhoods and families of the men and consequently is drawn to the their morbid romance with cannibalism. This curiosity fuels further emotional involvement with their story and an insatiable lust to understand the underlying motives. Are they just trying to find their counterpart in life? Is this desire to be consumed an extension of the heart’s forlorn nature? Her fascination is ultimately satisfied, as the videotape of the fateful night is delivered to her doorstep.

The film is beautifully shot by first time director Martin Weisz, which also directed upcoming The Hills Have Eyes 2. Weisz skillfully lights the shots with dark green tones and paints an aura of tragedy in the eyes of the cast. A great sense of tension is created with the unyielding shots of butchering utensils and schizophrenic flashbacks. Each scene grows increasingly odd with the cannibalistic undertones rising to the surface, but their emphasis on finding a person who can truly understand our nature is more important.

It is easy to label Grimm Love simply as Horror, but somehow the adorning relationship with violence creates a highly complex dialogue between sex and violence. This complication is effective in helping the audience feel more terrified and gaining little clarification on the motives of the two men. We hope to rationalize the behavior so we can obtain a sense of safety in our seats, but Grimm Love does not provide answers to the questions it poses.

It simply begs the question, what do your aberrant curiosities lead you to do? And, if you could experience them vicariously, would you?

Sincerely,

Mike G







    + Expand All

    Readers Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 9:33:02 AM CDT

    first

    by darthhirsty

  • Mar 15, 2007 9:44:37 AM CDT

    I am all about Grimm Love - that case was fucked

    by doctor_sin

    SPOILER QUESTION: Do they show the *****-eating? In a way, I hope so because I heard the film was unrelenting.Sounds fucking disturbing...that real videotape has never been seen, has it?Zoo sounds like a film with good intent mired by the fact that nobody wants to appear on camera to talk. Just sounds like the director had to fill it full of something to make it a documentary.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 9:47:43 AM CDT

    CANNIBALS GOTTA EAT!

    by theuglybaby

  • Mar 15, 2007 9:48:17 AM CDT

    "Wilburrrrrr! That's not a CARROT!!"

    by theuglybaby

  • Mar 15, 2007 9:55:37 AM CDT

    How did they get Kerri Russell??

    by carmillavondoom

    She must be a strange girl...very hot.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 10:00:00 AM CDT

    The few German critics who saw "Grimm Love"...

    by derlanghaarige

    ...hated it, but it won awards on several festivals, outside of Germany. Oh, and in case you haven'T heard of it: It's banned here in Germany! Not because of violence (what many kids think), but because the real cannibal sued the producers and won! But it's free for the rest of the world.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 10:03:34 AM CDT

    BTW: Because GRIMM LOVE is banned in Germany...

    by derlanghaarige

    ...many kids bought a DVD of another cannibal-film, because they confused it with that one. So if you hear anybody complain about "hours of gay sex" and "close ups of chewing a penis", they didn't saw GRIMM LOVE.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 10:04:35 AM CDT

    Rammstein: Mein Teil

    by derlanghaarige

    Great song about that cannibalism case, btw.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 10:59:59 AM CDT

    feel good movies of the year

    by iwontwin

    how happy!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 12:16:00 PM CDT

    Can't wait for the inevitable "copycat" kids

    by doctor_sin

    Who see stuff in the movies and then imitate it.I have lived a long life to be able to see a rampant flood of horsefuckery on my local newscast.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 4:56:39 PM CDT

    No shame in that, Darth John

    by dynamixro

    We all know how addictive Coca Cola can be.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 15, 2007 5:14:18 PM CDT

    Here horsey horsey horsey!

    by quin the eskimo

    I got you a carrot!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 16, 2007 1:25:09 AM CDT

    Darth John

    by docpazuzu

    "Call the poliiiiiiiiccccce!"

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 16, 2007 10:27:06 PM CDT

    Grimm Love is not what you expect.

    by zeddie

    The first thought I had after seeing Grimm Love knowing it had been banned in Germany by Meiwes on the grounds that it was expolitative, was that he hadn't seen it.

    This is a subtle film about people with extreme sexual needs.
    It's neither gorey nor exploitative. It is a kind of a love story.

    Keri Russell is a framing device, which is distracting during the first half but, is well used in the last act.

    Do you think it'll get a release in the US?

    Reply to Talkback

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