Text © Richard Gary / Indie Horror Films, 2016
Images from the Internet
Hellbound Productions / Unearthed Films / MVD Visual
73 minutes, 2013 / 2016
www.facebook.com/madnessofmany
www.facebook.com/hellbound666productions
www.unearthedfilms.com
www.mvdvisual.com
It could be said that this film is on the sexist side. I mean, we see the female form being tortured, but there is no mention of comeuppance of the males who do the perpetrating. So, do we say that there is a lot of females abused when they are all supposed to be the same one, or is that a cop-out? I don't have an answer for that, but it wasn't comfortable for me in that aspect.
Images from the Internet
Madness of Many
Written, produced, directed,
make-up effects and edited by Kasper JuhlHellbound Productions / Unearthed Films / MVD Visual
73 minutes, 2013 / 2016
www.facebook.com/madnessofmany
www.facebook.com/hellbound666productions
www.unearthedfilms.com
www.mvdvisual.com
Danish
director Kasper Juhl may be young (b. 1991), but he has a good sense of the
camera, as shown by this artistic and abstract treatise on life and pain (which
Juhl claims as his own philosophy in the commentary). And while this is neither
here nor there as it is not reflected in the film directly, Juhl is also the
lead singer of the death metal band Abscission (aka dead, fallen leaves).
Told
mostly through soliloquy narration, we meet/meat Victoria White, as she flatly
describes a childhood full of sexual assault by her family. But this is only the
start of her ordeal, as we are given verbal details that are eventually
manifested into the visual. I should note here that although filmed in
Scandihoovia, the entire dialog is in English.
Thanks to
all of this pain in her life, we quickly find that she is a bit of a nihilist, claiming
that she was “born to be exploited by others.” Despite this, she is not ready
to end it all, stating she is more afraid of dying than its result. By the way,
this is also an idea posited by English writer Henry Fielding in his 1751 novel
Amelia, where it is stated “…it is
not death, but dying, which is terrible” (yeah, I admit it, I’m a Fielding
fan).
After
being drugged and subsequently tortured for a year after escaping her parents,
she starts to develop multiple personalities to avoid the pain. This is quite
cleverly handled by having different actresses playing the same role, in
different situations. Body type, face, and even tattoos differentiate Victoria’s
shattered lives. Ironically, the man/men (credited as The Shadows) who torture
her is/are never given a face (occasionally we see white masks or are blurred
and distorted), though she has many.
By using a
high level of abstraction, Juhl uses a lot of different devices to play out
Victoria’s mind, such as removing or muting the colors to the point of near
grayscale or high black and white contrasts. But the point of where artistic
merit end and being opaque is a delicate one, and it is a line that is crossed
often. Many of the scenes last way too long without promoting the story (what
there is of it), such as watching someone putting on eye make-up, or puking up
blood (sometimes through the literal hands of a Shadow down a throat, others by
self-infliction).
Which
brings me to the gore: this film has been compared to A Serbian Film (2010), but it does not come anywhere near that. In
fact, American Guinea Pig was much
more effective and relentless, and Flowers
(2015) handled the art side of personal pain with a bit more flair and was more
accessible without losing any of the creativity. When it is applied here, it’s quite effective. I mean, there’s lots of
manhandling of the woman/women, such as multiple scenes of choking, but the
ultra-violence is kept sparingly until the final act. That being said, even
early on, when it’s more intense it works.
As for the
psychological torture aspect, honestly, I was more freaked out by the similar
themed (i.e., abuse leading to Multiple Personality Disorder) two-part
television film Sybil (1975). The
whole rising of enlightenment through pain may have some thinking of the recent
50 Shades of Gray, but honestly it
reminded me more of The Who’s Tommy (“I’m
free!!”).
Juhl
explains that he likes slow-paced films, which is good because he has
definitely made one. It will take a lot of patience to sit through it,
especially in this, the post MTV editing / instant gratification period of
cinema. Even the final credit roll by very slow, with no sound through most of
it.
There are
some nice albeit limited amounts of goodies here in the extras section, such as
a long list of Unearthed Films trailers and a decent commentary by Juhl, but if
you want to dive in deep, there is also a three-disk version available
(including the soundtrack CD and many other features not in the basic DVD
package, including some “Making Of” documentaries, a short film by the director,
and deleted scenes), of which 1000 were produced. Collectors’ item!
I know
I’ve whined a bit about it, but it’s a very strong piece if you have the
patience to swim through the philosophizing of good and evil, pain and
pleasure, and story and idea, you may connect to it. I’m looking forward to
seeing what else is under Juhl’s directorial sheet, but just know with this
one, if you’re expecting something relentless it may be a bit of a letdown. For
those out there who like a thoughtful piece of torture porn, well…
Unrelated
to this DVD bonus:
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