On Sunday, they had the worst films scheduled. It was pretty hard to decide which ones to watch as most films were similar, all equally unimpressive.
Katalin Varga was playing at noon. Since it had won a couple of awards at MAMI recently, thought of giving it a try.
All the movies I watched had one common theme. They all dealt with abuse on women be it rape, murder or both. Of course the treatment were different as chalk and cheese, which differentiated the movies from being good or crap.
Katalin Varga
Dir: Peter Strickland
Romania/ 82 min
I honestly didn’t expect a clichéd storyline like this to be treated so differently. The movie tells the story of Katalin (Hilda Peter), who was raped by Antal (Tibor Palffy), looking for vengeance.
What also helps the movie to seem so different is the setting. It is a completely different world. So secluded. Where people still travel using horse drawn carts. Yet folks use mobile phones. Also using forests as backgrounds rather than landscapes give the movie a certain eeriness that goes perfectly with the theme of the movie.
The cinematography and the shot composition is something else. Almost the entire movie is shot in low, diffused light as most of the time it is either early morning or night. It looks so surreal. Hilda Peter gives a very nuanced performance.
I’m Tired of Killing Your Lovers
Dir: Nikos Panayotopoulos
Greece/ 105 min
This is first movie I watched of Nikos Panayotopoulos. It will probably be the last. What a pathetic waste of time I had! The movie made no sense whatsoever.
The movie tells the story of Theofilos (Nicos Arvanitis), who is a book publisher and his obsession towards Sia (Theofania Papathoma), a performer. Then there is Theofilos’ rich aunt who is suddenly killed by her young lover. Theofilos steals some jewelry from his dead aunt’s place. Later he gets framed for the murder and lots of chaos happens.
The movie is exactly as chaotic as the storyline seems. Except for Theofania Papathoma who looks hot, there is nothing redeemable in the movie.
Wastage!
Backyard
Dir: Carlos Carrera
Mexico/ 120 min
Now Carlos Carrera is one director I admire a lot. Especially after I watched The Crime of Padre Amaro. So I really wanted to watch Backyard. Thankfully, it didn’t disappoint.
Backyard tells the story of rape and murder of women in the rural areas of Mexico near the US border. It also tells about the corruption in the Mexican administration.
Borderland (2006), a movie starring Jennifer Lopez and Antonio Banderas had a similar storyline. But since it was a Hollywood film, the execution was very superficial rather than showing the actual problem.
Thankfully Backyard goes deep into the core issue. The rural Mexico is so drastically different to look at. Sometimes the entire frame seems like a desert storm. It makes one feel claustrophobic to stay in such places.
The ending is very pessimistic but that is the actual reality. It is an important film that tells a powerful story which needs to be lauded.
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