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Friday, 19 December 2014

Sweet Movie


How do you start to describe Dusan Makavejev’s 1974 avant-garde art house comedy drama Sweet Movie? The simplest way would be to say that the movie concerns two very different women, a Canadian beauty queen known as Miss World 1984, who represents the destructive force of American consumerism, and Anna Planeto a captain aboard a ship laden with sweets and sugar who represents revolution, but that would be too simplistic. A better description could probable be an anarchic look at sexual repression, communism and economics?

The film ‘is carnivalesque with vengeance, aimed at overthrowing every arbitrary rule, regulation and tradition it can find, including the conventions of cinema itself’[1] and Makavejev succeeds with plenty to spare! Since its release the movie has been described as uncouth, uncivilised, and offensive and has been banned, or severely cut in many countries. A film guaranteed to course lively debate whenever and wherever it’s shown.

Makavejev was forced to move from Yugoslavia to Europe following his political satire WR: Mysteries of the Organism (1971) to allow him to continue to make films, but still finance, even in Europe, was difficult to come by, but he managed to raise the funding for Sweet Movie from Canada, the Netherlands and France as well as Sweden and West Germany.  
 
Anna Prucnal.
There were even more serious consequences for Polish actress Anna Prucnal who plays Captain Anna. The Polish authorities deemed the film to be pornographic and anti-Communist and took away the actresses passport exiling her from her homeland for seven years, not even granting her a visa to visit the country when her mother passed away!

For chocolate lovers only!
The narrative for Sweet Movie, which like WR: is allegedly based on the theories of sexually liberation put forward by psychologist Wilhelm Reich, starts with the Crazy Daisy Show introduced by the Director General of the Chastity Belt Foundation (Jane Mallet) who is running a competition to find the prettiest virgin for Miss World 1984. Her prize is marriage to Mr Dollars (John Vernon) the world’s wealthiest man. But when the new bride (Carole Laure) discovers that her husband has a gold plated penis and a ‘morbid fear of sex related disease’ she rejects him. In response the family bodyguard takes her to the giant milk bottle on the roof of Mr Dollars milk emporium, sexually humiliates her, packs her in a suitcase and sends her to Paris. Waking up on the Eiffel Tower she has intercourse with a Latin singer, ending up in hospital when the pair cannot be separated! Miss World 1984 goes on to join the Therapy Commune of Otto Muehi who performs exaggerated bodily functions. She takes part in a meal, which includes vomiting the food you have just eaten followed by one of its members performing regression therapy, a rebirth experience where he cries, urinates and defecates over himself. The group then clean, powder and pamper him. We finally see Miss World 1984 take part in the filming of an advert for chocolate in which she totally immerses her naked self.
 
Survival on the canals of Amsterdam. 
Meanwhile in Amsterdam Captain Anna’s boat Survival, with the enormous head of Karl Marx on its bow, sails on the canals of the great city with its cargo of sweets and sugar. She picks up a young sailor from the Potemkin (Pierre Clementi) who professes his love, but she warns him that she kills all her lovers, excepting this condition he moves onto the boat and the pair begin their lovemaking on a large suspended vat full of sugar. Also invited onto the boat are a group of pre-pubescent boys who she seduces. (It’s this scene that got the film banned from the UK)
 
Lovers beware?
Is there life after birth? A fantasy sure enough but one that’s rich in political references, not always recognised by viewers from the west admittedly, and phallic symbols, mainly penises including the Eiffel Tower – intellectual cinema about ideas and multi-layered references. The film is interwoven with documentary clips including some disturbing footage from a German film showing the victim’s of the Katyn Massacre when the Russian Army executed Officers from the Polish army, a brave move by the director for 1974 considering we were still in the midst of the cold war. 
 
Carole Laure.
Dusan Makavejev was part of the Yugoslav Black Wave a movement of the 1960’s and early 1970’s that was known for its non-traditional approach to filmmaking, which included black humour and a critical examination of the Yugoslavian society. Director of photography is Pierre Lhomme. The film's music is composed by Greek composer Manos Hadjidakis.




[1] David Sterritt – Wake Up.

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