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Love
Rites
Dir. Walerian Borowczyk, France, 1988
Cult Epics (www.cultepics.com), $24.95
Love Rites,
Walerian Borowcyzk’s artsmut Brief Encounter
from a short story by surrealist André Pieyre
de Mandlargues, gets rolling with a chance frottage
on the Paris Metro between bourgeoisie Hugo (the
pert, dry, and very bland Mathieu Carričre) and
streetwalker Miriam (Marina Pierro). She smoothes
her lipstick over her mouth with a lively, rolled
tongue; he brushes her thigh. Flirtation becomes
conversation, and for a second, as these characters
reveal life stories from opposite train platforms,
cars flickering between them, the movie lifts
off to an odd, engaging improbability, like something
out of top-drawer Bertrand Blier. But the obtuseness
of their rapport keeps up, fizzling flat when
the principles are side-by-side. Hugo and Miriam
talk past one another right across the city, through
a rote sex scene, a perverse power role flip-flop—she
rakes him with dagger-like nail extensions in
a scene of unconvincing violence—and a rather
uninspired, classically arthouse head-scratcher
finale.
Italian actress Pierro (this was her fifth outing
with Borowcyzk, though Jean Rollin’s Living
Dead Girl is her shot at immortality) is consistently
the most—often only—compelling image that the
film has to offer; her odd, symmetrical beauty
is narcotic where the rest of Love Rites
is narcoleptic—or hypnotic, if you prefer. But
if you can keep a straight face through Jean Négroni’s
coital play-by-play, by turns lip-smacking and
ontological, there is something pleasantly soporific
about these soft-focus proceedings, though I say
this as one who ranks Jess Franco’s Female
Vampire the quintessence of the undervalued
asleep-on-the-couch genre. Borowcyzk’s movie lets
its attention wander plenty, leaving the narrative
to go slack while following tangential objects,
quotidian street scenes, an ex-con here, a pigeon
there—why not?—and then a shutterbug Japanese
tourist who occupies an alarming amount of screen
time and speaks with a bizarre, sped-up voice,
in a true “What the fuck?” moment.
Cult Epics, who recently gave Borowczyk’s great,
gonzo La Bęte a rather excessive three-disc
treatment, load Love Rites with no excess
of special features (Ooh, a photo gallery! Has
anyone ever browsed one of these things?). Aside
from that we get a double-sided presentation that
offers alternate “Director’s Cut” and “complete”
versions of the film (the difference in running
time is about 10 minutes, the difference in content,
negligible—Borowcyzk just whittles down the digressions),
a fair-to-middling 1.66:1 transfer with clean
sound, and liner notes by the enigmatic and appropriately
Eurotrash-sounding Rayo Casablanco. The insert
epitomizes the pitfalls of most writing from over-defensive
acolytes of art-exploitation hybrids (Borowcyzk,
Rollin, Andrzej Zulawski, et al), who always seem
over-inclined to hitch their subject to some recognized
artist or manifesto (De Sade, Artaud, The Story
of O) in a bid for legitimacy. So we learn
that “Like George Bataille, the father of postmodernism
(?), Borowczyk incorporates sex into his work
in an unflinching light. Sadly, this has led his
work to be misconstrued as ‘pornographic.’” Sad
only if you assume pornographic is a pejorative,
and if you’ve got a monster chip on your shoulder
about justifying your prurient tastes with a patina
of pseudo-intellectuality. But then that’s a rather
moot point—as porn, art, or erotica, Love Rites
is decidedly minor.
—NICK PINKERTON |