Melancholie der Engel
Melancholie der Engel (English: The Angels' Melancholia) is a 2009 German independent experimental horror film directed, shot, and edited by Marian Dora and co-written by Dora and Carsten Frank (under the pseudonym Frank Oliver, used due to artistic disagreements).
Melancholie der Engel | |
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DVD cover | |
The Angels' Melancholia | |
Directed by | Marian Dora |
Produced by | Georg Treml |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Marian Dora |
Edited by | Marian Dora |
Production company | Authentic Film |
Distributed by | Shock Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 158 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language | German |
It was planned since 2003 though the shooting was delayed due to monetary issues. It premiered at Weekend of Fear Festival in Erlangen and Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, on 1 May 2009. It was also screened at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival in New York City on 27 October 2009, where it won Best International Feature Film – Arthouse Genre. It was later screened at BUT (B-Movies, Underground, and Trash) Film Festival in the Netherlands on 7 June 2013. The DVD was released on 30 July 2010 in Austria.[1]
The film received largely negative reviews. While some commended the cinematography, it was seen to be an exploitative hardcore film with repetitive and meaningless depravity communicating its nihilistic message.
Plot
The film opens with a woman named Katja giving birth to an infant which is immediately beheaded by two mysterious figures. Depressed, feeling his mortality, and fearing he is reaching the end of his life, Katze decides to meet his old friend Brauth, who has a Christ-like appearance, at an old house in which they used to delve into dark pleasures. They meet two sixteen-year-old girls, Melanie and Bianca. Together they enter a bar where a woman, Anja, joins the group. Katze also finds two other old acquaintances of his are attending: Heinrich, an elderly artist who claims to be a dead man, accompanied by a young woman named Clarissa who is tied to a wheelchair. Clarissa can only excrete through a urine bag or artificial bowel outlet.
The group decides to allow Katze to go out in style as their fun turns increasingly more depraved and horrific. The film contains explicit representations of coprophilic and urophilic actions: one scene involves a man defecating on a woman while taking her panties off, wiping himself, and shoving the pair in her mouth, all the while gesturing harshly to put her finger in his soiled anus.
During the same evening, the protagonists begin to consume alcohol, opium, and cocaine, and to think about different philosophical approaches. Katze, Brauth, and Anja reveal their nihilistic nature to the two girls, claiming they do not believe in heaven, and they will not be missed after dying. Then Katze, using a scalpel, deals cuts on Anja's breast as she vomits semen while cutting herself under the enthusiastic look of Brauth and the perplexed facial expressions of Melanie and Bianca.
The following morning, the group travels to a pond near a factory, where Brauth reveals that Katze does not have much time to live. During this, Melanie and Katze move away from the others. Near a farm, he meets a nun (Martina Adora) who leads him to a neighboring church. The nun begins to pray and then undresses and masturbates while Katze enters the crypts, watching the tombs with morbid curiosity; at the same time, Melanie assists hunting and slaughtering a pig and Brauth rapes Anja. Several newts, frogs, rats, cats, and snails are also killed throughout the film.
That night, Katze has an illness whose cause is attributed by Heinrich's indifference of God towards him. Brauth becomes tired of Clarissa's laments, slams her into a basement, and tortures her by ripping her colostomy device off and jabs his fingers into the hole, then throws her down from her wheelchair and abandons her. During the night, Bianca awakens and claims that she "heard the voice of the dead." Katze checks and finds nothing but a rabbit hanged by Heinrich, beheaded and thrown by Katze himself.
The next day, Brauth connects with Melanie and Bianca and locks them in a stable before sending Heinrich to abuse them. However, the two girls succeed in escaping from him - Heinrich later abuses Clarissa, who commits suicide the next morning, throwing herself off a cliff; at the same time Anja finds the remains of the pig discarded by the butchers and is sexually excited by touching them while having a goat lick between her legs.
Young Bianca, derisively called Snow White, is also murdered by the group. After her womb has been removed with a knife, her skull is thrown. Heinrich is murdered by Katze and Brauth by having his entrails stabbed out of him. Afterward, an orgy takes place in which the four remaining members of the group burn Heinrich, still alive, at a pyre while the participants engage in sexual acts and urinate into the fire.
Anja finds Katze in a confused state, bruised and pained. Bianca comes crawling from the old house, while Melanie looks at a tiny skull inside a pendulum clock and finds a tape containing the scene shown at the beginning of the film; the figures who killed the infant are shown to be Katze and Brauth, and the skull found in the clock is shown to be that of the infant itself. Melanie crushes the cassette and uses the tape to masturbate while Bianca is reached and beaten by Anja, Heinrich, Katze, and Brauth. The latter then knocks her with a knife and abandons her to death. From the flames, there is a flash that hits Katze's face, blinding him permanently. There are only a few hours left for him to live and the following afternoon, Anja accompanies him to his tomb where he speaks. Anja honors Katze by ornamenting his tomb before reuniting with the nun and walking away silently.
Cast
- Zenza Raggi as Brauth
- Carsten Frank as Katze
- Janette Weller as Melanie
- Bianca Schneider as Bianca
- Patrizia Johann as Anja S.
- Peter Martell as Heinrich
- Margarethe von Stern as Clarissa
- Martina Adora as Nun
- Marc Anton as Monk
- Tobias Sickert as Tall Man
- Ulli Lommel as Katze as Angel (voice)
- Jens Geutebrück as Priest
Release
Reception
Sean Leonard of HorrorNews.net stated that, even though it was beautifully shot, its "pretentious dialogue", and focus on shock rather than story got in the way of any real enjoyment.[2] Severed Cinema's Ray Casta panned the film, highlighting the pacing and runtime, calling it "a depraved, perverse and nihilistic endurance test."[3] Collider selected the film for their list of "The Most Disturbing Movies of All Time".[4] Taste of Cinema placed the film at No. 22 in its list of "The 25 Most Disturbing Horror Movies of All Time", stating: "Often described as having beautiful cinematography and being an art house style movie, it suffers from a bloated running time of 165 minutes and a very weak narrative."[5]
Awards
Melancholie der Engel won the Best International Feature Film – Arthouse Genre Award at New York International Independent Film and Video Festival in 2009.[1]
References
- "Melancholie der Engel". Schnittberichte.com (in German). 14 January 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2017. "Melancholie der Engel". Moviepilot.de (in German). Retrieved 2 October 2017. "The Angels' Melancholia". FilmAffinity. Retrieved 2 October 2017. Cornett, Justin (28 January 2015). "10 Amazing Movies − Not Fit For Human Consumption". Moviepilot. Retrieved 10 October 2017. "Feature Film: Melancholie der Engel (2009)". Manchester: Starbust. 30 May 2017. Retrieved 10 October 2017. Dickson, Evan (25 April 2012). "The Profane Exhibit Becomes The Announcement Exhibit With Several New Additions". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 29 December 2013. Dora, Marian (2014). The World of Marian Dora (DVD) (in Dutch). Breda: BUT (B-Movies, Underground, and Trash) Film Festival. ISBN 978-90-817798-6-9. Retrieved 18 October 2017. Blomdahl, Magnus. Äkta skräck 2. Malmö: Vertigo förlag, Maj 2017, 155 s., ISBN 978-91-86567-78-1. (in Swedish) Bordage, Tinam. Les dossiers Sadique-master: Dissection du cinéma underground extrême. Rosières-en-Haye: Éditions du Camion blanc, Mars 2017, 540 pp., ISBN 978-2-35779-937-0. (in French) Keesey, Prof. Dr. Douglas. Twenty First Century Horror Films: A Guide to the Best Contemporary Horror Movies. Harpenden: Kamera Books, March 2017, 264 pp., ISBN 978-1-84344-906-5
- Leonard, Sean (5 February 2020). "Film Review: Melancholie der Engel (2009)". HorrorNews.net. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- Casta, Ray (11 April 2011). "Melancholie der Engel (The Angels' Melancholy) Review! - Severed Cinema". Severed Cinema.com. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- Lawrence, Gregory (31 July 2020). "The Most Disturbing Movies of All Time (Y'know, Some Light Reading!)". Collider.com. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- Vantassle, Raul (15 September 2016). "The 25 Most Disturbing Horror Movies of All Time". TasteofCenema.com. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
External links
- Melancholie der Engel at AllMovie
- Melancholie der Engel at IMDb
- Melancholie der Engel at Rotten Tomatoes