Lunacy details

Lunacy
Format: 18 DVD
Starring: Pavel Liska, Jan Triska, Anna Geislerova, Jaroslav Dusek, Martin Huba, Pavel Novy
Director: Jan Svankmajer
Genres: Drama - General, Horror - Thriller, World Cinema
Studio: FUSION MEDIA SALES
Name Discs
Lunacy
18 Feature

DVD Information

Run time: 1 hour 58 minutes
Rental release: 25 Jun 2012
Main languages: Czech
Write your own review

Most helpful review Lunacy

  • Living in the past

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By PeterSays (108 reviews) from Romsey , 08 Jun 2007

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    The BFI says that Lunacy, Svankmajer's fifth film is 'the apotheosis of his career, if not his masterpiece'. They know best, I suppose, but I remember being more impressed by another of his films I saw more than a decade ago (I think it may have been Faust). There again, the first cut is the deepest.

    If you haven't seen any of Svankmajer's brilliant, surreal and idiosyncratic movies, I would highly recommend them. They are best known for their animated sequences. In the case of Lunacy, dead animal meat, tongues, eyes and innards crawl across dusty floors to reunite and reanimate sheep skulls. It's supposed to be horrid. Cribbing again from the BFI notes: 'the filmmaker has expounded the virtues of an active pursuit of repulsion'.

    What really struck me about Lunacy is that it was like a film made decades ago. I don’t think this is a deliberate retro look, it's just Svankmajer doesn't seem to have changed his style over the years. So Lunacy is more of the same but there’s a bit too much of it: the film's a tad too long; some editing wouldn’t have gone amiss. It was a bit too slow in saying what it had to say.

    What it had to say is that there are two ways to treat lunatics: total freedom or total control? Take the worst of both systems and that's what the World is like today. I'm not writing a spoiler here because, for some reason, Svankmajer tells the audience this in a piece to camera before the film starts. Except he wasn't balanced in his view of treating the unbalanced: total freedom was nice and benign, with a large dose of 'let’s laugh at the loonies'; total control was totally nasty and sadistic.

    In his pep talk, Svankmajer also tells of his borrowings from Edgar Allen Poe ('The Premature Burial' and 'The System of Dr. Tarr and Dr. Fether') and (those BFI notes once more) 'the libertine spirit and rhetoric of the Marquis de Sade'. On the subject of borrowings, the squinting sadistic grin of the Marquis, as well as the sex scenes, reminded me very much of that other de Sade-inspired movie, Salo (1975). The early scenes in the Inn also put me in mind of a much more recent and excellent adaptation of Kafka's 'The Castle', though I don’t remember the details of this film.

    Whether you think Lunacy is Svankmajer's best or not, the great thing is you don't have to make the trek to London on the few days a decade it's showing at the BFI, you can rent it from on this web site. So, go mad, and add Lunacy to your 'queue of unique titles'!
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (13) Yes |
    •  No (2)

All reviews

(4)
  • The Butches Have Taken Over the Asylum

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By Cato (715 reviews) from Lydbury North , 17 Aug 2012
    With all the chops and hunks of meat floating about throughout the film it looked as though the local butcher had been doing some very good business. I think they were supposed to symbolise the rank and fetid nature of humanity and indeed the whole film was a violent and disapproving critique of the nature of the world. Of course the acting was very good and how could it not have been given the material the actors had to work with, madness aplenty with lashings of sado masochism - the eyes hardly stopped rolling throughoiut the whole film. The guy with the part based on de Sade was particularly good - he looked like the straight man who used to work with Benny Hill. All in all, not the kind of film you'd take your maiden aunt to see.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (0) Yes |
    •  No (0)
  • sort of ok

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By a customer from ENGLAND , 13 Jul 2012
    It certainly is INSANE and the Monty Python style aminations made it feel even worse.

    Tbh the story wasn't bad,but the last 10 minutes left me a little disapointed as i'm still unsure whether the whole sanantarium was insane,the guards/doctors were sedistic or what.

    Overall though if you like the mad insane type films,this is worth a watch i think.
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (0) Yes |
    •  No (1)
  • Living in the past

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By PeterSays (108 reviews) from Romsey , 08 Jun 2007
    The BFI says that Lunacy, Svankmajer's fifth film is 'the apotheosis of his career, if not his masterpiece'. They know best, I suppose, but I remember being more impressed by another of his films I saw more than a decade ago (I think it may have been Faust). There again, the first cut is the deepest.

    If you haven't seen any of Svankmajer's brilliant, surreal and idiosyncratic movies, I would highly recommend them. They are best known for their animated sequences. In the case of Lunacy, dead animal meat, tongues, eyes and innards crawl across dusty floors to reunite and reanimate sheep skulls. It's supposed to be horrid. Cribbing again from the BFI notes: 'the filmmaker has expounded the virtues of an active pursuit of repulsion'.

    What really struck me about Lunacy is that it was like a film made decades ago. I don’t think this is a deliberate retro look, it's just Svankmajer doesn't seem to have changed his style over the years. So Lunacy is more of the same but there’s a bit too much of it: the film's a tad too long; some editing wouldn’t have gone amiss. It was a bit too slow in saying what it had to say.

    What it had to say is that there are two ways to treat lunatics: total freedom or total control? Take the worst of both systems and that's what the World is like today. I'm not writing a spoiler here because, for some reason, Svankmajer tells the audience this in a piece to camera before the film starts. Except he wasn't balanced in his view of treating the unbalanced: total freedom was nice and benign, with a large dose of 'let’s laugh at the loonies'; total control was totally nasty and sadistic.

    In his pep talk, Svankmajer also tells of his borrowings from Edgar Allen Poe ('The Premature Burial' and 'The System of Dr. Tarr and Dr. Fether') and (those BFI notes once more) 'the libertine spirit and rhetoric of the Marquis de Sade'. On the subject of borrowings, the squinting sadistic grin of the Marquis, as well as the sex scenes, reminded me very much of that other de Sade-inspired movie, Salo (1975). The early scenes in the Inn also put me in mind of a much more recent and excellent adaptation of Kafka's 'The Castle', though I don’t remember the details of this film.

    Whether you think Lunacy is Svankmajer's best or not, the great thing is you don't have to make the trek to London on the few days a decade it's showing at the BFI, you can rent it from on this web site. So, go mad, and add Lunacy to your 'queue of unique titles'!
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (13) Yes |
    •  No (2)
  • Living in the past

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By PeterSays (108 reviews) from Romsey , 08 Jun 2007
    The BFI says that Lunacy, Svankmajer's fifth film is 'the apotheosis of his career, if not his masterpiece'. They know best, I suppose, but I remember being more impressed by another of his films I saw more than a decade ago (I think it may have been Faust). There again, the first cut is the deepest.

    If you haven't seen any of Svankmajer's brilliant, surreal and idiosyncratic movies, I would highly recommend them. They are best known for their animated sequences. In the case of Lunacy, dead animal meat, tongues, eyes and innards crawl across dusty floors to reunite and reanimate sheep skulls. It's supposed to be horrid. Cribbing again from the BFI notes: 'the filmmaker has expounded the virtues of an active pursuit of repulsion'.

    What really struck me about Lunacy is that it was like a film made decades ago. I don't think this is a deliberate retro look, it's just Svankmajer doesn't seem to have changed his style over the years. So Lunacy is more of the same but there's a bit too much of it: the film's too long; some editing wouldn't have gone amiss. It was too slow in saying what it had to say.

    What it had to say is that there are two ways to treat lunatics: total freedom or total control. Take the worst of both systems and that's what the World is like today. I'm not writing a spoiler here because, for some reason, Svankmajer tells the audience this in a piece to camera before the film starts. Except he wasn't balanced in his view of treating the unbalanced: total freedom was nice and benign, with a large dose of 'let's laugh at the loonies'; total control was totally nasty and sadistic.

    In his pep talk, Svankmajer also tells of his borrowings from Edgar Allen Poe ('The Premature Burial' and 'The System of Dr. Tarr and Dr. Fether') and (those BFI notes, again) 'the libertine spirit and rhetoric of the Marquis de Sade'. On the subject of borrowings, the squinting sadistic grin of the Marquis, as well as the sex scenes, reminded me very much of that other de Sade-inspired movie, Salo (1975). The early scenes in the Inn also put me in mind of a much more recent and excellent adaptation of Kafka's 'The Castle', though I don’t remember the details of this film.

    Whether you think Lunacy is Svankmajer's best or not, the great thing is you don't have to make the trek to London on the few days a decade that it's showing, you can rent it from LOVEFiLM! So, go mad, and add it to your 'queue of unique titles'!
    • Was this review helpful to you?
    • (4) Yes |
    •  No (1)
 

Agree or disagree? Write your own review

Please sign in to LOVEFiLM to write your review

Sign in to LOVEFiLM

Not a member yet?

Sign up to start your 30-day FREE trial