
Trishna
over 13 years ago
over 15 years ago ...more
over 15 years ago
Out presents a domination/ submission scene set in a mundane living room. The increasing pain prompts the sub to spew out not only cries of pleasure and pain, but also sentences. The scene thus connotes both confessions under torture, and rituals of exorcism. The utterances of the demon who speaks through the sub are all quotes of Avigdor Lieberman, one of the most extreme right wing politicians in Israel. The ritual is framed by two scenes. A preceding interview with the two participants seems at the beginning to be a straightforward documentary, but transforms into an exposition of the narrative premise by which one is possessed, the other an exorcist. The final musical scene is a song set to the words of the Russian poet Esenin’s Letter to Mother. Executed as a one-shot, the song is a direct, if twisted, homage to the final scene of another film that deals with radical sexuality and politics: Dusan Makavejev’s WR, The Mystery of the Organism.
Out
2010
over 13 years ago
over 3 years ago
over 4 years ago
almost 16 years ago
over 30 years ago
almost 4 years ago
over 6 years ago
over 25 years ago
almost 14 years ago
about 40 years ago
almost 15 years ago
over 29 years ago
over 9 years ago
over 3 years ago
almost 45 years ago
over 10 years ago
about 9 years ago
about 27 years ago
almost 6 years ago
almost 36 years ago
over 15 years ago ...more
over 15 years ago
Out presents a domination/ submission scene set in a mundane living room. The increasing pain prompts the sub to spew out not only cries of pleasure and pain, but also sentences. The scene thus connotes both confessions under torture, and rituals of exorcism. The utterances of the demon who speaks through the sub are all quotes of Avigdor Lieberman, one of the most extreme right wing politicians in Israel. The ritual is framed by two scenes. A preceding interview with the two participants seems at the beginning to be a straightforward documentary, but transforms into an exposition of the narrative premise by which one is possessed, the other an exorcist. The final musical scene is a song set to the words of the Russian poet Esenin’s Letter to Mother. Executed as a one-shot, the song is a direct, if twisted, homage to the final scene of another film that deals with radical sexuality and politics: Dusan Makavejev’s WR, The Mystery of the Organism.
Out
2010
over 13 years ago
over 3 years ago
over 4 years ago
almost 16 years ago
over 30 years ago
almost 4 years ago
over 6 years ago
over 25 years ago
almost 14 years ago
about 40 years ago
almost 15 years ago
over 29 years ago
over 9 years ago
over 3 years ago
almost 45 years ago
over 10 years ago
about 9 years ago
about 27 years ago
almost 6 years ago
almost 36 years ago