Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye

2004 "Based on work of George Bataille"
3.3| 1h21m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 22 September 2004 Released
Producted By: ARM/Cinema 25 Pictures Inc.
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Based on the 1928 novella written by Georges Bataille, the film takes place in a seemingly abandoned house where a group of people engage in bizarre wordless acts. Just as the book does, the film spans several vignettes.

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ARM/Cinema 25 Pictures Inc.

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Reviews

Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
Micransix Crappy film
Tacticalin An absolute waste of money
KnotStronger This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
ifindthisimperative Having just recently read the novella "Story of the Eye" by Bataille... I wonder what exactly this film was referring to in Bataille's work. I am aware he did a reworking of his novella in the '40s that is different from the '28 original publication (the version I read). Perhaps this film references the later version? This film DOES cover two things that were in the original novella, and nothing more. 1) urine 2) sexI liked the book. I like pornography. I like films that push the audience to appreciate the work of the filmmaker or dare you to enjoy something "out-of-bounds." This film is a poorly crafted attempt at exploiting Bataille's name as a method of trickery to dupe unwitting cinephiles into suffering an arduous, content-less film. The film is un-arousing, and would shamefully and incorrectly fool viewers into thinking Bataille is a hack. Please remove this film from existence. Sincerely, X
christopher-underwood What can I say?! An assault upon the senses, certainly and I feel I should have read the book first. Or maybe not. Artily shot and still erotic, although the continuous walking up the stairs in the deserted building, towards the end stretches one's endurance, as does the 15 minutes or so of static at the end. Thank goodness for fast forward on the remote. Still at least I was pressing forward and not stop. Before everything seems to slip into a nightmare scenario there are, for the record, a surprisingly erotic gay sex scene and a similarly effective lesbian one. The turn for heterosexuals comes in the deserted building and is a tawdry affair with coughing and pissing. Also the examination of what I assume to be caesarean scars remind one of the hard to watch forceps assisted birth at the start. The casual violence with a snip here and a wrench there perhaps foreshadowing what is to come. Narrative may be the scourge of the middle class but total lack of any certainly makes life a little difficult. Mind you being the son of a mad, blind and violent father I don't suppose life was a bowl of cherries for Mr Bataille.
ImmortalityBlues Okay, the sex scenes (read: the entire film minus one boring staircase walking scene) were well done (by porn standards), "classy", "artsy", etcetera. Having not read the novel yet I was hoping that there would have simply been more to this film other than pornography. I knew that the novel was supposed to be very erotic and unapologetically so, but is that all there is to it? Does the novel simply narrate a bunch of screwing and blow jobs? Here's how simply this film can be broken down, scene-by-scene, without leaving anything out: --Stock footage of a woman giving birth while the narrator reads a brief biography about Georges Bataille.--Two guys have sex.--Two women have sex.--Girl stumbles up flight of stairs for like 15 minutes while other women scream from somewhere.--Girl pisses on the floor/stares out filthy window.--Two girls and some guy have sex.--10-15 minutes of black screen and electronic noise.--The End.Perhaps if there were at least some interesting narration from the novel during this stuff it would have had more of an impact as a piece of compelling art rather than a slightly artsy porn flick. I guess I just need to read the book.
justinrkirk George Bataille's Story of the Eye is a nearly silent film with just music, drones and noise (the only dialogue is some voiceover at the beginning and the name `Jackie O' which one of the women mutters as a phrase three times about half way though the film), its shot on DV as if in Dario Argento Technicolor, the sound design rivals Eraserhead and, most unusually the film features hard-core sex acts (gay, straight and bi) which serves to illustrate the physiology of the film's characters.The actors are all incredibly beautiful (the tap dancing girls are HOT!) and brave (no one seems to be faking anything) and the fluid camera studies them like a Victorian naturalist lost in an overheated, imagined Punked-Out Congo. It's dream-like and narcotic it its personality but also rather witty and dry and `English.' My girlfriend was really into the scene with the Sailor and the Black Leather Man but her best friend found it `really too weird and smutty' and left the room about 20 minutes into the film. I think it helps to know George Bataille's essays on sex, sensuality, spirituality and death or really like films like `Salo,' `The Pillow Book,' `Eyes Wide Shut' or `Romance.'I've never seen a flick like this; a friend of mine lent me an advance video screener which might have been missing the final 10 minutes because the screen goes black and there is just chaotic sound then color bars.I close my eyes and pictures from this movie flood my mind so clearly -- I can't wait to see this on the big screen. It's a big turn on for both the mind and body.

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