September 16, 2006

TIFF Report: Princess Review

(Posted In Animation Continental Europe and Russia Cult Drama Reviews Toronto Film Festival 2006 )

princessstill.jpgAnders Morgenthaler's Princess is an unusual beast: an anti-exploitation exploitation film, a virulently anti-porn treatise that is itself sexually graphic and more than a little bloody. It is a rape revenge picture in which the raped is a five year old girl armed with a crowbar being encouraged to exact her retribution by a retired priest plagued with guilt and shame. It is surprisingly serious minded, deeply argumentative, entirely heartfelt and completely unlike anything else you have ever seen. It's also animated.

Princess is the story of August - a missionary priest who has given up his vocation - and Mia, his five year old niece, who August has taken custody of following the death of his sister of unspecified causes. August's sister Christina is better known as The Princess, a porn starlet whose only surviving friends are prostitutes who were raising Mia in the back room of their brothel until August came to claim her. Mia herself is bruised all over her body, old beyond her years, and shows all the signs of having been sexually abused. Plagued with guilt at not having taken Mia away from the pornographers and prostitutes who ruined his sister's life years before - not to mention the guilt at his own possible complicity in Christina's having turned to pornography in the first place - and not wanting Mia to ever have to see her mother in that context ever again, August sets out on a mission to have all pornographic materials featuring his sister destroyed, by whatever means necessary which ultimately leads him on a bloody, violent rampage.

The basic premise of a priest on a violent anti-porn rampage - never mind that the priest is animated - immediately conjured images of a riotous, instant cult classic film filled with shocking imagery, violence and sex, and Princess is certainly that, albeit most likely not in the sense that you are expecting. Morgenthaler's film is played entirely without irony; played as a tragedy wreaked out on a defenseless child; played out almost as though he is daring you to get off on the sex and violence, daring you to make youself into one of Mia's tormentors. It is abundantly clear that Morgenthaler made this film because he means it. Fuck the freedom of speech argument, he's saying, let's talk about the human cost of the sex industry.

Powerful and uncompromising Princess has stirred up controversy wherever it has played for a very simple reason. Everyone is complicit in Morgenthaler's world, everyone is to blame, no one is pure. By making a little girl the focal point of the film Morgenthaler poses the debate in the basest, most fundamental terms. What if Mia was your daughter? Would you want her in this world? It's a scenario that catches many in a basic conundrum, both upset that they've been so effectively manipulated into a corner and yet still cheering loudly when the crowbar comes down.

» Posted by Todd at September 16, 2006 01:06 PM
Digg This / Add To del.icio.us

Reader Comments

Wow. Reading that description, I am unsurprised to learn (via Googling) that Morgenthaler comes from the land that gave us Lars von Trier and anti-Muslim political cartoons. Talk about pushing free speech near the limit.....

» Posted by Justin Slotman at September 16, 2006 01:55 PM

I can't wait for this on DVD!!! Please keep us up to date on who picks this sweety up. Thanks for the great review Todd

» Posted by Farrell Kurlish at September 16, 2006 05:26 PM

german anime? sounds fun!

» Posted by will at September 16, 2006 06:23 PM

Denmark, not Germany. Germany couldn't produce a film like this. Also, while it may indeed tackle controversial subjects and do so in a controversial way I'd hardly call it "pushing free speech near the limit". For better examples of that look no further than the Japanese porn industry.

» Posted by Caterpillar at September 16, 2006 07:39 PM

Can't wait to see this.
Funny how people never seem to get the country right. AICN called both Dutch and Swedish and now German. Denmark gets no respect man.

» Posted by Swarez at September 16, 2006 07:50 PM

This sounds incredible. Can hardly wait to see this one!

» Posted by jon pais at September 16, 2006 11:40 PM

I'm surprised I've never heard of this before. Sounds very interesting.

A great read as usual.

» Posted by Halcyon at September 17, 2006 06:34 AM

Tartan's already picked it up for North Amnerica. No word yet on a release date, but it'll be coming fairly soon.

» Posted by Todd Brown at September 17, 2006 11:44 AM

Post Your Comments

Remember Me?   

(You may use HTML tags for style.)

  

Buy DVDs At The Twitch Store

Stuff We Like

Shop at our affiliated sites and support Twitch while feeding your pop-culture addiction.

Find your favorites


eThaiCD