The movie's soundtrack on CD, Behind the scenes: Bebisscenen (6 min), Q & A with director and producer from Brussels Fantasy Film Festival 2010 (45 min), Original trailer, Njutafilm trailer show, reversible cover art 3 DISC BLURAY DVD SOUNDTRACK CD
S**S
Serbia was one of the first modern-day Euro victims of neo-fascism.
Let's get this straight.This film is not a porno,nor does it overtly critique the porn industry.It accuses multinationals, and mainstream news media, for its part in creating andthen covering-up war crimes, and if you do not know what this means see one of the greatest books of the century NEWSPEAK in the 21st Century Every day we see images that are much much more shocking - because they are real images of real people suffering, on TV news - than anything in this film. Turn off mainstream corporate TV news if you want to censor something that is really sick, but do not censor this film. Whether or not you can face watching a film that, to all intents and purposes is less shocking than I Spit On Your Grave [DVD ] was in its day, do not let the hype put you off, nor the frenzied hatred that has been invoked in those who utter such bile in their rabid attempts to stop you from seeing this.This film points a finger at the war-mad corporate machine that drives governments, and that is backed-up by its own (well-controlled and out on a leash) mainstream media, that lives off the endless death, carnage and suffering perpetrated on millions of innocents (e.g. to date over 1 million dead in Iraq since 2003) to feed the hunger that brings back the viewer, time and time. for more so-called 'news', filtered information that is propagandized by TV corporate cartels who decide what is and what is not the news that you will see. You don't believe that? Then check out Censored 2010 (Censored: The News That Didn't Make the News -- The Year's Top 25 Censored Stories) or any of the other books by that title, one of which is issued every year, and has been for the last 30 years. Every year you will find would-be block-buster news stories that were simply 'blocked' by mainstream news, the few with all the broadcasting power.If you think that sounds crazy please see this website for MUST-SEE films, really great flix of our age, that are quietly "banned" by corporate media and blanked by the multinational news cartel: [...]"A Serbian Film" plays with an extreme, yet an imagined part of the world of porn, the so-called 'snuff' movie, a mythical & invisible pillar in the darkest heart of the temple of pornography (where, supposedly, some unfortunate porn stars have been lured to meet their fate ... for the 'exquisite' delectation of a select few super-addicts who can no longer get satisfaction from plain old sex on the screen. No snuff movie has ever been proved to have existed but it is a useful and scary tool in showing how state-sponsored terror often ignores the rule of International law(let alone common decency) and bombs or attacks countries to preempt ... "a smoking gun in the shape of a mushroom cloud" (as war criminal C.Rice put it); or to 'protect' the poor and defenseless natives (by killing other poor and defenseless natives) and then lets its news cameras in to film the aftermath, the shoe in the rubble, the bloodbath in the sand, the severed bits'n'pieces under makeshift blankets; and the real pain and anguish or survivors and loved ones, all for a strange visual pleasure, for the consumption of 'news' over dinner, or on the move - watch it on the way to work on BBCiplayer - and reassurance of the public that protection is available, at a price.This film is not a film that abuses minors; nor does it espouse child abuse - no more than Stanley Kubrick did in "The Shining". No one in their right mind would say "The Shining" was abusive to minors, though it places youngsters like the twin girls aside gushing torrents of blood; and it puts Danny (and 'Tony', 'the little boy who lives in his mouth') in stark view of the blood that gushes when the axe-wielding maniac protagonist chops-up chef Halloran, and threatens to do the same to his son, as he chases Danny from the bathroom to the snow-covered maze."A Serbian Film" is attacked by censors because it shows a child - dressed and doing absolutely nothing to do with sex - on a television screen, whilst unsavory acts are happening in the room where the TV is situated! The denouement and other scenes involving children are not explicit, and certainly not abusive, however, they are shocking to the viewer, as they are meant to be. Compared to what Danny went through in "The Shining", nearly 40 years ago, the kids who act in this film are surly guaranteed to come out of it with less mental scarring than the poor lad who played "Danny" did. They are seen acting upset and shocked, yes, that much is true, though they are not subject to sexual abuse or used in scenes where difficult scenes are acted out. Remember that thing called editing? Editing often gives us a different impression but that's all it is. Editing can associate a sea-horse with "The Grand National" horse-race but it does not mean the little marine creature actually raced there.This film attacks the pornographic pointing of mainstream news lenses; the invasion of places and lives where those cameras were not welcome, where they should not be; places where, because they are present, propaganda and manipulation become possible.Serbia - and Yugoslavia before it - was one of the first, modern-day, European victims of a neo-fascism that has been on the rise in governments in the west since the days of Presidential-usurper L.B.J. (upon whom Jackie Kennedy recently was heard to lay blame, for the assassination of JFK - fact : her tapes were just released, mid-August 2011).The end of Yugoslavia and what happened between the warring parts (no sides taken by this reviewer) and the other people there (the majority, i.e. the non-combatants), is at the cutting edge of this film's visor; seen through the lens that spies-out a family that had thought it had managed to 'retire' from the dangers of the world. It reminded me of the protagonist's family in Michael Mann's Manhunter [DVD] [1989 ]: a man, his wife and their child; he is trying to get over his past occupation and infamy - as a John Holmesesque porn star - for the sake of the unity of his family. His wife is fully understanding, intelligent and loving; and they have a dream kid.The family has just about survived being 'bought and sold' by the sex industry; dad has chewed-up and spat out just about every porn starlet on video, and his shelf-top collection of his old porn movies demonstrates so. He is soon lured, once more, by the hard cash of the porn set, but this time he is contracted, unknown to him, by a snuff movie cartel that reaches to the highest (and lowest levels). This cryptocracy of snuff-movie producers, played by darkly attired, heavily 'weaponized' "Blackwater" lookalikes (that post-war lot, now called "Xe", who work for neo-conservative governments in the west) who employ a legion of 'terminators', young, fit and muscle-bound dudes in black with big ... movie cameras! These Steven Segal types look like NSA Black Opz boys from the darkest of CIA lists (like that one from c.1997, known simply as "Al Qaeda" ... when that name represented little more than a list of CIA-backed fanatics carrying guns into mercenary arenas of slaughter) from where Sarah Palin might have liked to have drawn her front-line fodder; the kind of dudes she wanted to use to execute Julian Assange, for example. Terminators set loose, in the pay of very high echelons within the global corporate cartel.Without plot-spoiling, at the start think ... "Resident Evil", the above ground scenes at Umbrella Corp., at the moment of the shut-down; think ... "Memento", think waking-up and wondering where all the blood came from, the back-tracking, re-tracing your steps, this time with the aid of discarded video camcorders and tapes - which show you shocking and graphic depictions of you, yourself, over the last three days; a time you cannot remember...a time you do not want to remember!In the opinion of this reviewer, "A Serbian Film" is a lot less shocking than some current offerings that have gone unscathed by the reactionary fury that has hammered this film. For example, there is the recent French horror film, "Martyrs". It is a lot harder to watch. It's about inflicting as much pain as possible on a person, whilst keeping them alive, so as to achieve a modern martyrdom, after a year or more of intense suffering, to briefly 'see' what lies beyond death, and to impart that news to the corporate-like cult that has induced the endless agonies - before the poor victims are finally, thankfully dying. "A Serbian Film" is not easy viewing but it is not showing pain for pleasure's sake. It does not show the skinning of a a living girl by religious fanatics, as "Martyrs" does. It is a stark commentary on what is happening today, not just to Serbia and other post-war Balkan states, but to Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, Syria; and in Saudia Arabia, to name but a few!Warning: this is not for the faint-hearted. There is plenty of blood and a lot of sexual violence, against men as well as women.Get past your conditioning and you'll see it as a masterpiece.
J**J
No english
Only got french or serbian subtitles. Was hoping for english but looks like the reviews are the same for different discs. Lucky there isnt much dialog and i know the storyline, but i had to explain it before watching with my boyfriend. We like shock films but can say if u get off on this film, there is something wrong with u :)
E**E
Cut to ribbons by BBFC, but still "enjoyable"
After reading many, many reviews on "A Serbian Film", I finally got around to buying the UK DVD and watching it today. It was perhaps my excessive research into the film - which I had learned had a reputation as being one of the most sickening and disturbing of all time - which ultimately made my watching of the UK DVD somewhat disappointing: much of the "grotesque" images have been excised by the BBFC to save our souls.The film is undoubtedly original and provocative. The allegory of life/capitalism being synonymous with pornography/prostitution (which in the UK DVD is explained by the director before the film begins) is one which the viewer can understand, although, for me, is not at all convincing. I therefore felt, going into the film, that I was watching something which had some underlying meaning, other than gratuitous violence and pornography.As others have said, the acting is very good and the soundtrack superb. Milos, the main character, is convincing and quite terrifying at times.Unfortunately, the UK DVD failed to shock me; this may well be due to knowing a fair amount of the content before watching! However, much more is actually due to the BBFC cutting almost five minutes of original footage from the UK version. The infamous "baby scene" almost passed me by; after watching the film, I even looked at details of the original cut to find out what this was meant to entail! I do not deliberately seek out scenes of this kind, but I had an expectation that this would be in the UK version (to some degree), and was looking forward to being thoroughly shocked and repulsed (isn't film meant to evoke emotion?), but instead I found myself thinking that the UK DVD is actually rather uneventful, compared with some other extreme horrors.It is not only the "baby scene" which has been all but removed, but almost every other graphic scene has been edited by the BBFC in some form or other. I therefore finished the film feeling quite angry that I had spent money on what is ultimately an incomplete DVD. I do not like adults being told what fictitious material they can and cannot watch. I am also confused that a film such as "Martyrs", which features prolonged, explicit violence perpetrated by a man against a woman, and which made me feel very uneasy, passes completely uncut by the BBFC! Likewise, I understand that "Irreversible" (which I have not yet seen) lacks BBFC intervention.That said, the UK version still has some fairly repugnant moments (the themes of incest and necrophilia haven't been completely omitted), but it all just feels a bit too short, so the impact is lessened. Perhaps I am just desensitised to such material. Maybe the film-maker is deriding us for seeking out violent/pornographic images. Who cares? I went into this film wanting to be shocked (this is why I "enjoy" horrors, much the same as why people "enjoy" theme-park rides), and that didn't really happen because of the BBFC's concern for adults' welfare. But anyway, contrary to the BBFC's intention, I will probably look to get a copy of the uncut version now!
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3 weeks ago
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