Genre: Crime Comedy
Director: Rémy Belvaux, André Bonzel, Benoît Poelvoorde
Starring: Benoît Poelvoorde
Language: French
Duration: 95 min.
Summary:
A camera crew follows a serial killer around as he exercises his
craft. He expounds on art, music, nature, society, and life as he offs
mailmen, pensioners, and random people. Slowly the filmmakers find themselves caught up in the increasingly chaotic violence.
Man Bites Dog is a Belgian film created by Rémy Belvaux, André Bonzel, and Benoît Poelvoorde. It premiered in the Critics' Week section of the 1992 Cannes Film Festival, where it received the SACD award for best feature and the Special Award of the Youth.
The film is a black and white mockumentary that follows filmmakers Rémy (Rémy Belvaux) and André (André Bonzel) playing themselves, as they follow serial killer Benoît (Benoît Poelvoorde) as he goes on a reckless murdering spree, all the while explaining his methods to the camera and philosophizing about the world.
Along the way, the film crew gradually become involved in the crimes, first by innocuously aiming a spotlight to help Benoît locate a victim, but eventually they become full on accomplices helping to dispose of bodies, and finally in the film's most gruesome and unpleasant scene, they cross the line to become perpetrators as well. It's a clever jab at the real media and how complicit they are at glorifying violence and crime for ratings and advertising dollars. One of the funniest moments occurs when they encounter another film crew following a rival criminal.
This is a brilliant work, taking realistically graphic and gratuitous violence to an extreme, along with a wonderfully twisted and charismatic performance from then newcomer Benoît Poelvoorde, who is now a major star in Belgium and France, and turning a subject that should be utterly disturbing into a hilarious dark comedy.
— Bonjour Tristesse
11 comments:
I definitely loved the psycho monologues and the ridiculous poetry.
Yeah it does get a bit boring but just when you are thinking 'not this again' the film ends rather quickly.
Yeah it is. There isn't a scene like that in the film though.
No matter how realistic the events were filmed, I just could not take Poelvoorde's Belgian accent seriously.
As Tiresome as it inevitably becomes, I really enjoyed this intriguing thriller, especially the disturbing monologues and the sudden ending.
I've seen this. It gets awfully boring at times, but overall is a pretty good movie.
I must see this film. That is all.
This looks insane. Is that a baby pacifier in the movie poster/cover up there?!?
I have my moods for dark comedy pretty often, I might wanna see this one. To the list with it.
hmmm, i wonder how this will end. ;)
It's a very convincing film and as such I couldn't bring myself to like it despite the comic moments like the rival film crew. Despite the fact that Benoît Poelvoorde puts in an excellent performance I am more familiar with his comedies and I totally forgot that he was the lead in this one.
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