☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Berberian Sound Studio (2012) -- P. Strickland
It is probably best to
view Peter Strickland's loving homage to the Italian giallo movies of the 1970s
as an experimental film rather than a narrative one. Coming at it knowing that you will be exposed
to a playful, wicked, masterful and extreme use of sound -- and that this is
the central point -- will remove all the tension or frustration that might
otherwise be experienced as the plot simply dissipates (as often happened in
giallos themselves, come to think of it).
Toby Jones plays a meek sound man who arrives in Italy not knowing that
he'll be working on a gruesome horror film (focused on the brutal interrogation
by the Church of those accused of being witches, but also perhaps on the
reincarnation of those witches in a modern girls academy -- a clear nod to
Argento). We never see the film -- we
only hear it. Instead, we see the foley
artists (slashing watermelons and destroying other vegetables) and the dubbing
process -- everything is analog.
Gradually our sound man goes rather insane and the sound and images of
the film follow suit. I saw this on the
big screen with the audio cranked -- probably the only thing better than
headphones. The soundtrack is by Brit
band Broadcast, whose singer sadly died from pneumonia in the middle of the
project, and it fits right into the genre-love.
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