Within the audience of a rock concert at Brixton Academy, American student Lisa meets Matt, and so begins their highly charged, passionate relationship... Contains explicit scenes of a sexual nature. Read more
| Starring | Kieran O'Brien, Margot Stilley |
|---|---|
| Director | Michael Winterbottom |
| Genres | Drama |
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Within the audience of a rock concert at Brixton Academy, American student Lisa meets Matt, and so begins their highly charged, passionate relationship... Contains explicit scenes of a sexual nature.
| Starring | Kieran O'Brien, Margot Stilley |
|---|---|
| Director | Michael Winterbottom |
| Studio | HIGH FLIERS |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 9 mins Blu-ray: 1 hr 11 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English Blu-ray: English |
| Dubbed | None |
| Hearing-impaired | None |
| Subtitles | DVD: None |
| Released | DVD: 27 Jun 2005 Blu-ray: 20 Jul 2009 Production year: 2004 |
| Format | DVD |
Heralded as the first British film featuring frequent strong real sex to receive an 18 rating, 9 Songs is director Michael Winterbottom's ode to physical love. Unfolding against the backdrop of a series of concerts (from artists including Franz Ferdinand and Primal Scream, most of which were filmed at London's Brixton Academy), this explores the sexual relationship between lanky American student Lisa (newcomer Margo Stiller) and British research scientist Matt (Keiran O'Brien). Instead of a lesson in how hedonistic two people can be, their romp-fuelled four months together demonstrates how a generation deals with loneliness. From the hot, blurry chaos of the gigs to the sparsely-furnished flat where the couple unite, this is very much an exercise in style over content. As such, some will find it a rewarding art-house experiment with much to recommend it, others watching simply for the explicit and unsimulated lovemaking may well find it boring and pretentious.
It is hard to decide which is the most anaphrodisiac, the music or the copulation; both are repetitive to the point of monotony.
What better way to monitor the relationship between two people than through their sex life? This film does exactly that, watching the different ways the couple explore & abuse each other as their feelings are born, grow, change & in the end die. You could say the sex is another way of charting the life of the average person. The backdrop of the gigs also follows this pattern. They provide a distraction from the sex & time for the viewer to reflect on what the film is saying about the couple at that point in time. The sex is strong, graphic & real. It is most certainly not for the prudish. The film is interesting, sexy & touching in places.
I rented this movie out of curiosity and after watching it I can say don't bother renting it, it is one of the worst movies I have seen for a long while. As an 'art house' movie the cinematoraphy is terrible, with most of the 'story' filmed in a dingy grotty flat in harsh daylight. This would have been fine if there was interesting dialogue to carry the film along but the main characters have boring uninteresting crap to say interspaced with sex scenes (which we will get to) and clips of music at gigs. The whole hype surounding this movie are undoubtedly are the sex scenes, but sadly this fall short too. There are a few boring/unintresting, although admittedly explicit, sex scenes. The arguement about the sex being so graphic to interpret the intense relationship between the characters goes out of the window as many films have depicted strong relationships way better without having resorting to, lets face it, art house pornography. So to finish off, aside from the initial 'are they really doing that in mainstream cinema?' and great sound track there is nothing to really to recommend about this movie and can only conclude that the only reason it even got released is because of the publicity. Just terrible.
Censors have approved the most sexually explicit film ever released in Britain to go to screens uncut. Given an 18 rating, 9 Songs will be released next year in UK cinemas containing scenes of real, on-screen sex between actors. Directed by Michael Winterbottom, the movie was deemed fit for public consumption by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) because the sexual content is "exceptionally justified by context". The movie caused uproar when it was first screened in... Read more