Anatomy of Hell Movie Review
Anatomy of Hell Review

"Anatomy of Hell" Overview

Rating: NR
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Catherine BreillatProducer : Jean-François Lepetit
Screenwiter : Catherine Breillat
Starring : Amira Casar,Rocco Siffredi
It’s almost never fair to reduce a film, even a very bad film, to one single
image or scene – out of context, almost anything can unfairly seem offensive,
moronic, or just plain clueless. However, in the new Catherine Breillat
provocation, Anatomy of Hell, you can fairly easily isolate one scene as being
emblematic of the whole piece: The character known only as “the man” enters the
room where he’s been spending a whole lot of time staring at “the woman,” takes
a look at her naked body, slowly inserts the handle end of a hoe-like garden
implement into her vagina and then walks off screen, leaving it there sticking
out from her body. They both watch. In a better film, this could have been
played as an act of extreme sexual obsession, the work of a near-psychopath, or
just a bored boyfriend looking for new kink. In Breillat’s clumsy hands,
however, it just looks like desperation; having stuck her two nameless actors
in a four-night-long battle between the sexes, Breillat seems at a loss for
some other way to violate her actress. So, to the garden shed he goes.
Anatomy of Hell starts off just dandy in a gay nightclub where the techno is
thudding as we see “the woman” (Amira Casar) watching her boyfriend make out
with some guy. She goes to the bathroom and slits her wrists, only to have “the
man” (porn star Rocco Siffredi) walk in on her. He hauls her off to the doctor
to get stitched up, they have a nice, tense walk, and after going down on him,
she says she’ll pay him to come watch her: “Watch me where I’m unwatchable.” It’
s all rather dark and disconnected, but there’s an insistent, punishing quality
to these early scenes that highlight writer/director Breillat’s abilities as a
filmmaker. She has a slithery way with the camera – especially in a scene shot
from above where Casar sidles across the nightclub dancefloor, grabbing hands
and shouldering past the dancing men with a liquid malevolence – which should
have made this a more enthralling film. As it stands, though, Breillat lets her
talents as a sensual visualist go to waste in the name of sheer agitprop of the
dullest kind.
Once you get past the rather opaque desire of the woman to have the man watch
her for four nights, the body of the film boils down to the two of them, a
mostly bare bedroom in a decaying house on a stormy ocean cliffside, reams upon
reams of proto-feminist speechifying from her, and lots of blood. The camera
pokes and prods at Casar’s body as she lays herself out for display, doing its
best to provoke a reaction from the audience. The man is strangely malleable to
her words, the bulk of which are gnomic utterances along the lines of “the body
of women calls for mutilation,” “still you know nothing about women” and a long
soliloquy on the patriarchal oppression of Tampax. Somehow, all this
wooly-headed discourse – like getting slapped in the head by an especially
badly-written Intro to Women’s Studies textbook – gets to the man, who is both
attracted and repulsed by her sacrificial masochism (Breillat even throws in a
shot of a crucifix in case we miss the point), to the point where he gladly
drinks her menstrual blood. Worse than using the woman as a font of faux
profundity, though, is the film’s view of the man, who is shown as being gay
essentially because he’s afraid of women (as all men are, according to the
woman), which is where the film moves from being merely acting stupid to
propagating offensive clichés.
Anatomy of Hell tries, in its egghead French way, to get at something crucial:
the root of the twinned fear and desire that’s behind male violence against
women. It wants to ask, in all the references to veils and the Old Testament,
what exactly is it that so many men, especially of a religious disposition, are
afraid of? Unfortunately, using a garden implement in that manner doesn’t
really get us any closer to the answer that Breillat, and many others, want.
Aka Anatomie de l'enfer.
Thank you for shaving.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





