3/01/2013

"Conspirators of Pleasure" by Jan Svankmajer (1996)


Conspirators of Pleasure is a surreal comedy and Czech-Swiss-British co-production

The story focus on the idiosyncratic sensual compulsions and obsessions (aka fetishes) of six different characters: a couple of neighbours, a couple formed by a policeman and a newsreader, a newsagent, and a postmistress. The film mixes surreal scenes, deadpan humour, hallucinogen and gory images, and human-sized puppets. The film has no dialogues, the terrific music and street/ambient noise being the only sound. However, the characters express themselves by non-verbal language. 

Svankmajer's surrealism is both social and individual, not psychological. The exploration of the subconscious world of the characters is not the point of the story; in fact, we see two of the characters hiding in a closet (a metaphor of their personal subconscious), where they find a world of deep secrets that generate their fetishes, but the camera does not go inside and we do not know why, exactly, they develop their specific compulsions. In fact, the fetish objects in the story are objectively quirky, ridiculous, and comic, made of normal things, but they become something pleasurable and erotic because of the personal wishes of each person. In a way, the personal pleasurable compulsions of the characters appear as a clumsy imitation of the human physical contact that the characters do not have but crave. There is no real human interaction between them, and invisible walls of lack of communication prevent them from relating to each other, so at least they have their little pleasures.
 

Despite the story being highly erotic at times, there is not even one sex scene in the movie, and there is limited nudity. The supposedly raunchy scenes have nothing explicitly raunchy; all it is hinted, never explicitly shown. The most brutal scenes in the movie use human-sized straw articulated puppets with facial movement, so there is a detachment and softening of them.
 

Despite its surreal oddity, the story has inner logic and organicity, and the circular interconnection of the story and of the characters makes perfect sense; in fact, the ending of the movie is the beginning of another turnaround - The beginning of of a new round of borrowed fetishes. 

All the characters are wonderfully played by all the Czech actors: Petr Meissel (as Mr. Pivoine), Gabriela Wilhelmová (as Mrs. Loubalova), Barbora Hrzánová (as the postmistress), Anna Wetlinská (as Mrs. Beltinska), Jirí Lábus (as the newsagent), and Pavel Nový (as Mr. Beltinski).

The movie will unsettle and puzzle you, confront you, visually slap you, and put a smile on your face if you have a wacky sense of humour or you are in one of those days in which you fancy anything weird.
The result is a thought-provoking film that is still daring and surprising despite its age. However, I would dare to say that you will not find it that erotic, in the traditional sense of the word.