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Female revenge films arent exactly an unknown quantity, especially in the exploitation circuit. Pam Grier was one of the genres superstars in the early 1970s; in films like Coffy and Foxy Brown, she coolly dispatched any number of corrupt pimps, politicians, and pushers. Hong Kong had its share of tough women then too, most notably Angela Mao Ying, who kicked, punched, and slammed her way through an army of men in movies like Deadly China Doll and Deep Thrust. Trashier examples appeared throughout the 70s as gender politics got more heated. The 1978 I Spit on Your Grave is considered the apex (or nadir, depending on your view) of the genre. In that film, the victim of a gang rape methodically murders her attackers ("This woman has just cut, chopped, broken and burned five men beyond recognition... but no jury in America would ever convict her!") The erratic Abel Ferrara also tossed his two cents worth in with Ms. 45 (1981), where the titular heroine includes male dogs in her victims.
Baise-Mois street credentials are impeccable. Codirector Coralie Trinh Thi is a former porn star, as are the two leading actresses. The film has the look and feel of Denmarks Dogme school; its shot in video rather than film; employs natural light; and uses "normal people" instead of high-falutin stars. Most daring, it includes many scenes of penetrative, close-up sex, with a particularly brutal rape scene that has brought the wrath of censors around the world. Canada, always free with the scissors, has simply lumped it in with the porn, refusing to let it be shown in Ontario in mainstream theaters despite an enthusiastic reception at last Septembers Toronto International Film Festival and testimonials by such luminaries as Atom Egoyan. That its getting a release in America at all is more than a little surprising.
Nadines curse is an anal roommate who bitches constantly about Nadine pilfering her beer. Manu is involved with a noxious pack of slackerboys who abuse her regularly. Nadine eventually gets tired of her roommates complaint and slams her head into a wall in a bloody murder. Manu watches her alleged friends kill her best friend on the street; then shes raped. Serendipitously, the two join forces to fuck their way through the byways of France, in the process killing a slew of men and the occasional woman who foolishly crosses their path. Nadine and Manu kill the way they fuck, with a mix of the methodical and the passionate. Some of the killings fit the feminist schema, for example, when Manu blows the brains out of one of her tormentors. Others are gratuitous, as when she robs and then kills a woman at an ATM machine. Most troubling, at first glance, is a John Woo-style balletic assault on a sex club, with innocent revelers dispatched mid-fuck. This scene, along with the ATM murder, would seem to undermine the films feminist/liberationist stance. But theres ultimately more nihilism than party-hearty here, with the nonstop killings laid squarely at the doorstep of a society thats dehumanized its citizens. While some critics (and certainly the censors) have objected to the rape scene as "gratuitous," its hard to fault the films insistence on showing the gruesome details of this event to capture its ugly reality. Codirector Despentes has commented, "We had to go to a place that everyone tries to avoid. We had to be so in your face, that we will end up in your mind with images that you just cant ignore." This is not to say its all grim, grainy reality. Some of the encounters are warm, almost sweet, particularly when our heroines, who seem most alive during sex, pick up two hunks that they dont kill. (Size queens will be happy to know that, at least in the world of Baise-Moi, every man in France is well hung, a fact perhaps traceable to the filmmakers porn background). The film provides another respite in a scene in which the women, clad in fetishy black bras and nylons, dance together in a hotel room. Theres a joyousness and abandon here that hints at another, more pleasurable world, always close but never quite here, beyond the brutality. The actresses ease with their sexuality may be partly responsible for making such scenes, which could easily degenerate into foolishness, work. Some of Baise-Mois scenes are overlong and lack dramatic punch, a criticism that can also, of course, be leveled at life, as Dogme-ites and their followers would no doubt remind us. And the film plays a risky game with the audience in alternating hardcore sex scenes with violence. Its hard not to feel voyeuristic, even complicit in what transpires onscreen. But this is undoubtedly the directors intent, and the films ability to foster this sense of complicity in the viewer makes it a disturbing but worthwhile ride. July 2001 | Issue 33 ACCESS: Best hie thee to a Big City where you might have a chance of actually seeing this film at one of the nervier venues. Alternatively, there are high-priced European versions/dubs for auction on ebay. And for those who can sit still long enough, expect a directors cut on DVD probably late in 2001. ALSO: More film reviews |