| 
    | 
 
| (http://www.challenges.fr) | 
- Also Known As:
 - Version:
 - needed to precede following dl
 - Languages:
 
- Length:
 - 92 minutes (Uncut)
 - Review Format:
 - DVD
 - Year:
 - 2001
 - Countries:
 - Predominant Genre:
 - Comedy
 - Director:
 
- Outstanding Performances:
 - Entire cast
 - Premiss:
 - Woman is in love with a man in love with another woman - and all three have designs on a young man raised as an ape.
 - Themes:
 - Advertising | Alienation | Christianity | Courage | Curative | Destiny | Emotional repression | Empathy | Equality | Erotophobia | Family | Free Speech | Friendship | Grieving | Guilt | Gynophobia | Humanity | Identity | Individualism | Loneliness | Love | Loyalty | Mankind | Materialism | Narcissism | Nostalgia | Personal | Personal change | Political | Political Correctness | Pornography | Propaganda | Redemption | Sadomasochism | Schizophrenia | Science | Self-Esteem | Sex | Sexism | Sexual Repression | Society | Snobbery | Solipsism | The State | Stereotyping | White culture | White supremacy
 - Similar to:
 
 
The Hubris of White Supremacy
Like A Clockwork Orange and L’Enfant Sauvage, this film reveals why Whites are so deeply repressed - although it offers no practical solutions to their lifelong trauma - especially when confronted with the invidious nature of those who are not so afflicted.
Operant conditioning is here shown as a substitute for genuine, ethically-based family values; while all attempts at conflating civilization with the suppression of healthy human instinct inevitably leads to an anally-retentive obsession with that very instinct.
The actors are fully-engaged and make us believe that the emotional traps within which most of their characters exist are the result of lived experience. Everyone plays it deadpan; successfully emphasizing the comedy because of the frequently absurd things their unsatisfied human needs make them say to one another.


No comments:
Post a Comment