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A Selection Of My Reviews

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- Attack Of The Blind Dead (1973)
- Battle Royale (2000)
- Bay Of Blood (1971)
- The Boondock Saints (1999)
- Boy Eats Girl (2005)
- Brick (2005)
- The Descent (2005)
- Dust Devil (1992)
- Enter The Dragon (1973)
- Equilibrium (2002)
- Evil (2003)
- The Goonies (1985)
- Grindhouse (Planet Terror / Death Proof) (2007)
- Hard Candy (2005)
- Hot Fuzz (2007)
- Hundra (1983)
- Joint Security Area (2000)
- Mad Max (1979)
- Man Bites Dog (1992)
- Memories Of Murder (2003)
- Near Dark (1987)
- Night Of The Living Dorks (2004)
- The Poseidon Adventure (1972)
- Pump Up The Volume (1990)
- Rabid (1977)
- RoboCop (1987)
- Shall We Dance? (1996)
- Showgirls (1995)
- The Slit-Mouthed Woman (2007)
- Slither (2006)
- Strip Nude For Your Killer (1975)
- Tokyo Drifter (1966)
- The Untold Story (1993)
- The Wizard (1989)


Ryan / Movies At Midnight



Last Updated: 7/24/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 31
Sign: Scorpio

City: PLAINSBORO
State: NEW JERSEY
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/23/2006

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
MAN BITES DOG (1992)


A small film crew, consisting of a director/interviewer, a cameraman, and a sound engineer have been chronicling the exploits of a serial killer, Ben, in Belgium. Ben is well-groomed, well-spoken (even if quite misled), poetic, and above all charming. He works his way from town-to-town, killing and choosing his victims at random, waxing on how to properly dispose of a body, speaking about the de-evolution of towns, and always funding the film crew with the money he takes from his victims.

There is a catch though. As Ben's murders progress, he involves the film crew more and more in first the body disposals, and then the murders themselves. At first, the crew is excited to be a part of the murders even begin to like what they are doing, but as Ben's ambitious slayings, which have no boundary or reason, begin to pile up, the crew realize that they have become part of a horrible experiment of their own creation, and only their footage may survive to tell the tale.

This pseudo-documentary, which is shot in black and white on grainy film using handheld cameras (the fictional crew is also the film's actual crew) can in retrospect be seen as a harbinger for the clout of reality television shows and increasingly exploitative news programs and stories that started plaguing the airwaves only a few years after the film's release. For that, the writing and character arc here is borderline genius.





Ben (played with panache by Benoît Poelvoorde, who eerily resembles comedian Ryan Stiles in a bizarro world kind of way), much like the reality TV stars who would follow, believes that the world revolves around him, and expects those around him to hang on his every word, whether he be eloquently speaking poetry about pigeons, or going on and on with quite misinformed racist remarks. But as with all short-lived, brightly burning stars, his very remarks and actions that lead him to where he is ultimately become his downfall.

Both the English re-name MAN BITES DOG, and its original title C'EST ARRIVE PRES DE CHEZ VOUS (roughly It Happened in Your Neighborhood or It Took Place Close To Your Home) call to mind the shocking and eye-grabbing headlines of newspapers vying for attention. The film, which takes itself quite seriously, subtly leans toward parody and exaggeration of what at the time was being sold as newsworthy stories, and the spectacle given to evil. At one point in the film, Ben and his crew cross paths with another serial killer who is being followed by a film crew, which can be taken as a mockery of the copycat and bandwagon mentality of entertainment.

As a whole, MAN BITES DOG plays out as a pitch-black comedy. This can be attributed mostly to Ben's performance and fantastic monologues. One of the many highlights involves Ben explaining to the crew the proper ballast ratios to keep a body underneath water, depending on if they are man, woman, child or midget (their bones are denser, and thus need less rocks) and speaks as if it were the most normal thing in the world. The cut-aways between ultra-violence and conversations also serves as a shocking jump that one can not help but laugh at.





Originally released on VHS in the states by Miramax, which cut out two of the more gruesome scenes, it has since been released uncut on DVD by Criterion. These two controversial scenes involve Ben murdering a child, and Ben and the crew following a woman home and raping her. These scenes are obviously difficult to watch, but they are important to the overall insanity that dwells in his mind, and his complete influence over the film crew. More importantly, they are shown as the brutal and unforgivable acts that they are, and not glamorize in the least.

Since the film's release, news stories, television "documentaries", and the horrible plague of reality television shows which continue to pour out, have since far surpassed the extremes of entertainment that MAN BITES DOG was trying to bring attention to, and watched with fresh eyes today, MAN BITES DOG is almost quaint in how it documents and portrays its subject. Still, this is an important piece of cinema which deserves to be seen, and can still be effectively used as a warning about just how far someone can go when the camera is on them.


Rating Key

Jerry

 
I really need to see the Criterion version now. Thanks. Excellent review. I saw this back in the VHS era along with La Haine on the same day. Quite a double feature. Those were the days.
 
Posted by Jerry on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - 3:31 AM
[Reply to this
Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
Wicked cool.  I think I saw this, LA HAINE (that's HATE for all you Yanks) and TETSUO: THE IRON MAN over the span of a few weeks.  Needless to say, the effects are still visible to this day.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - 3:33 AM
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Jerry

 
Tetsuo: The Iron Man--OMG-- that film stays with you forever.  
 
Posted by Jerry on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - 4:14 AM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
Just watched the trailer for BEHIND THE MASK and i'm sold.  Now I'm off to beg for a screener copy.
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - 3:42 AM
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The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire

 

Loved this film, great review! There was a recent horror film (2003) that tried to copy this one a bit called "The Last Horror Movie" in my opinion not quite as effective as Man Bites Dog, but still quite good. Have you seen it?

Also I believe that Man Bites Dog was actually feeding off of Henry Portrait of a Serial Killers premise in some ways. Actually it took some elements from Henry (like the video taping of their murders) and elaborated upon them making a whole feature film about it. Still, they did it well, so kudos to them for that.


 
Posted by The Dude - Movie Reviewer Extraordinaire on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 - 8:45 PM
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Mike Watne

 

Badass! You can bet I'm adding this one to the queue.

I have made an executive decision to put all new P2C viewing on pause until I get to watch, on my own, the film BATTLE ROYALE. I've been waiting for that one since I read your post on it months ago...but I've been letting it slip further and further down the list. But no longer! I think I might add this one as well. Two flicks just for the fuck of it.


 
Posted by Mike Watne on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 - 3:40 AM
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Ryan / Movies At Midnight

 
I'm looking forward to your thoughts on it!
 
Posted by Ryan / Movies At Midnight on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 - 3:50 AM
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♥Kelsey [Silly Sally™]
Kelsey Zukowski

 
sounds pretty intense, I will have to check it out
 
Posted by ♥Kelsey [Silly Sally™] on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 - 3:41 AM
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I think this came on IFC a long time ago. I blew it off because the title seemed dumb. I'll do that search thing through directtv to see the next time they'll show it because that review got the blood flowing
 
Posted by on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 - 8:36 PM
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PushnDown Hippys - Reviews of Pop Culture
Mike Garcia

 

I can't agree with you more.  I loved this film, though it was uneven.  The use of the active film crew creates an intimacy with the character that wouldn't exist if we were to view his acts in a more traditional film setting watching his interaction with the crew from a third-person vantage.  I was particularly disturbed by the recreational scenes they shared together.   In these scenes the humor was bitingly funny, but peppered with an unease that was reminiscent of the uncomfortable turn an evening of drinking with that questionable friend brings, when you realize he's had one or two too many and is about to start looking for a fight.  I  also agree the scene with the child murder and the rape are necessary.  I found they grounded the viewer and took the movie back a step from being pure exploitation, by giving an even look at the repercussions and brutality of the acts they are involved with. 

On an interesting side-note, I watched this film in '94 on VHS, but these scenes did exist on that print.  I am not sure if it was distributed by Miramax or if perhaps it was a more rare directors cut, but it is worth noting. 

Excellent review.


 
Posted by PushnDown Hippys - Reviews of Pop Culture on Wednesday, February 07, 2007 - 2:26 AM
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