Walerian Borowczyk Movies
Polish animator-cum-soft porn director Walerian Borowczyk resuscitates a question posed by a key New York film critic in the early '70s: "If an acclaimed director such as Jean Vigo or Andrzej Munk dies young, is the loss as great when a four-star filmmaker goes on to helm some of the world's poorest motion pictures?" Suffice it to say that rarely has the cinematic community seen a bona fide artist launch his career with such brilliant promise and tumble as dramatically off the slopes as Walerian Borowczyk did during his last few decades, leading one to wonder if, perhaps, he shouldn't have bowed out of the cinematic realm years prior in life.
The Kwilcz-born surrealist catalyzed his career in the '50s and '60s, with subtly erotic, witty, and subversive animated shorts, their style utterly unlike anything seen up through that time. Highlights include Les Astronautes, a satire of space exploration co-authored with Chris Marker, which exudes a zesty slapstick sensibility, and the famous Théâtre de M. et Mme. Kabal (1967). The latter concerns an ever-bickering animated married couple. Borowczyk toys with his characters, constantly altering the head of Madame Kabal by replacing it with insane objects such as a bomb and the head of La Gioconda; later, the director enters the film and is nearly seduced by the bitchy cartoon housewife in her husband's absence. In many ways and on many levels, the nutty, free-for-all surrealism of Kabal anticipated the work of Bill Plympton by several decades.
Many additional shorts by Borowczyk, though equally inspired and intelligent, wax pessimistic and cynical, and unveil a dark, almost demonic, glimpse of the world gone awry. Les Jeux des Anges (1964), the best known, ekes out a vision of hell on earth; it features a monstrous and macabre trip to a prison camp where angels of death gun down and slice up corpses, accompanied by a soundtrack of ecclesiastical music. The dynamic 1966 short Rosalie (which Borowczyk adapted from a story by Guy de Maupassant) combines live action and stop-motion animation, and reveals the delight that Borowczyk took in toying with an audience. It dramatizes the title character's in-court confession of a back-alley abortion, while the camera lingers, voyeuristically and fetishistically, over the tools implicated in this crime. Borowczyk (and the lead actress, Ligia Branice -- who would become the director's wife) succeed, astonishingly, in enabling the audience to empathize with the girl. So persuasive is she that viewers invariably find themselves defending her crime in their minds and hearts, before Borowczyk suggests that the entire confession is a delusional invention. The filmmaker has thus revealed (with malevolent giddiness) his own ability to manipulatively shift the viewer's sense of right and wrong.
The director segued smoothly into live-action features with the 1968 Goto, l'Ile d'Amour, a gritty sexual allegory set in an island penal colony, and the 1971 Blanche, the story of a nobleman who shuts his wife up in a castle tower. With Blanche, Borowczyk impressively captures the look, cinematographically, of a 13th century medieval tapestry. Both earned broad critical adulation; reviewers perceived, in these titles, the same childlike machinations, demonic invention, and stunning intelligence of the early animated shorts.
Borowczyk's critical response (and quality) flagged just a bit with the issue of the 1974 Immoral Tales (Contes Immoraux), a French film a sketch, with four episodes (all directed by Borowczyk) on historical perversion through the ages. The effort has its defenders (Tom Milne praised it as "an iconography of perverted desires") and its detractors; most tagged it as uneven, but viewers poured in, in droves, and turned it into the second biggest French box-office smash of 1974. The 1975 effort La Bête (The Beast, which Borowczyk originally wanted to use as a fifth segment in Contes Immoraux) appalled more conservative viewers and critics (and even a few more progressive critics), with its lewd and crass depiction of a hairy, gorilla-like creature's attempt to rape a young woman. As the beast lumbers through the woods toward his prey, with outstretched arms and a massive, constantly visible erection, Borowczyk exaggerates the visual indications of "an animal in heat" (and the creature's desire to impregnate the woman) to the point of comic grotesquerie. Dzieje Grzechu (Story of a Sin) proved less controversial, and mirrored the same year's Truffaut effort, L'Histoire d'Adèle H., with its similar period tale of a young woman in pursuit of a not-completely-reciprocal romance with an older man; critics adored it.
Dzieje Grzechu marked one of the final occasions that Borowczyk tackled material less than completely sexual; his subsequent efforts, from 1978's Interno di un Convento to 1981's Docteur Jekyll et les Femmes, descended, by all accounts, into lurid, violent, and misogynistic softcore porn. The writing was on the wall as early as Contes Immoraux -- in which Borowczyk's camera lingers uncomfortably on the breasts and rears of his actresses -- but whereas this and other early features of his are often erotic and witty, and bear a thoroughly intelligent subtext, critics branded the later films, quite rightly, as empty-headed and exploitative.
Borowczyk turned out his next-to-last movie, Emmanuelle 5, in 1987. It represented a nadir to end all nadirs for a filmmaker who opened his career with such a passionate display of intelligence. His final cinematic effort, the 1989 feature Love Rites, tells the story of a young man who picks up a seemingly normal woman, follows her home, and makes love to her. Following intercourse, she suddenly displays monstrous, razor-tipped claws and emasculates her bedmate. Needless to say, critics ignored this effort as well. Walerian Borowczyk wrapped his career in the late '90s, with some minor work in European television, and spent his final years in a period of inactivity. He died of heart failure on February 2, 2006. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
Hugo Arnold (Mathieu Carrière) is a young hedonist who meets actress and prostitute Miriam Gwen (Marina Pierro) in this erotic and violent drama. After heavy petting and foreplay throughout the Paris subway and a church, she takes him to an apartment for the sexual favors she has promised. Hugo is subjected to a humiliating emasculation and wanders dazed on the banks of the Seine following his ordeal. A young woman emerging from the river after swimming stabs herself to death, and the hapless Hugo is blamed for her murder. Josy Bernard also co-stars with Isabelle Tinard. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
- Starring:
- Marina Pierro, Mathieu Carrière, (more)
Another sequel to the French film about the bored wife of a French diplomat who found excitement through erotic adventures. In this one, Emmanuelle is kidnapped from her yacht during the Cannes Film Festival and forced into a sheik's harem. ~ Rovi
- Starring:
- Monique Gabrielle, Dana Burns Westberg, (more)
This low-grade sex farce is set in Roman times, with Ovid holding forth to a group of young Romans about the pleasures of the flesh, while an ostensible story about a young housewife and her lover illustrates Ovid's lectures. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
- Starring:
- Michele Placido, Marina Pierro, (more)
A bizarre Euro-kink variation on Robert Louis Stevenson's classic, this intriguing film from Polish director Walerian Borowczyk takes place almost exclusively in the palatial home of Dr. Henry Jekyll (Udo Kier), where the good doctor is being feted prior to his engagement to the austere Miss Fanny Osborne (Marina Pierro). The guest list -- comprised of various dignitaries, officials and symbols of bourgeois respectability -- could easily have strolled in from a Fellini film, complete with a closetful of perverse habits and barely-repressed sexual urges. At the onset of the festivities, it is learned that a young girl has been murdered on the streets that night -- an event somehow linked to Jekyll's insistence that his estate be willed to the yet-unseen Mr. Hyde. It comes as no surprise that Jekyll's infamous potion transforms him into a crazed sexual predator with desires so aggressive that his victims cannot survive... but the real twist comes when young Fanny joins Jekyll in his bath while he is transforming into Hyde, and the formula's malevolent effects are spread to her as well. Before long, the entire affair devolves into an orgy of sexual sadism and bloody violence as the evil is spread throughout the house. Borowczyk has imbued this quirky exercise with a doomed, nightmarish quality, contrasting the opulence of the festivities with dimly-lit, smoky rooms where the lecherous Hyde stalks his victims. Patrick Magee borrows a bit from his arch performance in Marat/Sade as the swaggering "General" who gets taken down a few notches at the end of a bullwhip. Released in the U.S. as Blood of Dr. Jekyll, then later on video as Bloodlust. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi
- Starring:
- Udo Kier, Marina Pierro, (more)
Based on stories by Frank Wedekind, this undistinguished erotic film recounts the sexual exploits of free-spirited Lulu (Ann Bennent) as she goes from one lover to the next. First she becomes involved with an artist and then eventually with an important editor (Heinz Bennent) who unsuccessfully tries to get out of her clutches. Lulu's biggest mistake is to be in London just when Jack the Ripper is making his scalpel-wielding presence known among the prostitutes of that city. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
- Starring:
- Heinz Bennent, Anne Bennent, (more)
Each of the three women in this film shows a tendency to kill their human lovers, and two of them evince a sexual attachment to their pets. In the first story, the model for artist Raphael seduces and kills Raphael and another man. In the second, a girl with a suspiciously satisfying relationship with her pet rabbit murders her parents for killing her bunny. Finally, Marie has a dog whose unusual means of effecting her rescue not only saves her from a kidnapper, but gets her out of an unhappy marriage. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Marina Pierro, Francois Guetary, (more)
Three short films are gathered together in Collections Privées. The first is L'Ile Aux Sirenes (Island of the Sirens), directed by Just Jaeckin. In the story, a wealthy lout who is out yachting is washed overboard and winds up on an island where his sexual whims are catered to by four beautiful women. He is having a truly paradisiacal time until he discovers what they really relish about him. The second is Le Labyrinthe d'Herbes, directed by Shuji Terayama. The prostitute mother of the young man in this story used to sing him to sleep as an infant and toddler with a certain song. Now that he is approaching sexual maturity, he is obsessed by the need to find out what the words were to her song. The last film included is L'Armoire, directed by Walerian Borowczyk. In it, a Folies-Bergère dancer rents herself out to a wealthy and jaded Parisian who is shocked to discover where she has hidden her child in order to accommodate his sexual pleasure. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Laura Gemser
Before it became possible (in the late 19th and early 20th centuries) to imprison young heirs and heiresses in mental institutions in order to gain control of their inheritances, greedy families had for centuries "given" their daughters to convents without the girls' consent. Usually, such nunneries were only nominally religious, and their involuntary inhabitants lived a life of relative ease and luxury compared to their genuinely religious (or poorer) sisters. In the film Interno di un Convento, a zealous, handsome priest, who is the confessor for a convent full of such women, encourages the equally zealous abbess of one such institution to enforce the same strict rules on these unfortunate women that are applied to others. In doing so, they uncover a snake pit of sexual couplings, both lesbian and heterosexual, as well as many tools for masturbation. At the same time, a particularly disturbed inmate manages to poison herself and many of the other novitiates in yet another scandal which is covered up by church authorities. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Marina Pierro
Sigismond (Joe Dallesandro) is a man lost in an erotic haze which clouds his judgment. Early in the film, it is evident that the man has a physically passionate relationship with his wife, with whom he has a son. While on a business trip to Paris, he comes under the spell of a famous, beautiful prostitute (Sylvia Kristel) who resembles his wife. However, his efforts to monopolize her attention are not appreciated by her pimp, and he is severely beaten. When he gets a letter informing him of the death of his wife and son, he is totally devastated. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Sylvia Kristel, Joe Dallesandro, (more)
In this story, a young nobleman with an unusually strong interest in horse-breeding is being prepared to marry the wealthy niece of an American Cardinal. (Noble families which are growing impoverished try to marry off their younger generations to the heirs of wealthy commoners.) When the girl arrives at the nobleman's family mansion the day before the wedding, she is shown around the house and its treasures and is told the story of an ancestor's legendary battle against a beast. That night, she dreams of an erotic encounter with a man/beast which culminates in the death of the beast. On awakening, she finds that she has been in bed with her fiancé, who is now dead. When mysterious bandages on his person are removed, he is seen to have a tail and one hand which has turned animal-like. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Sirpa Lane, Lisbeth Hummel, (more)
A beautiful Polish girl whose lover has gone to Rome to seek a divorce from his previous wife travels around Europe in search of him and suffers a variety of tragic adventures as the men around her try to fit her into their own selfish schemes. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Grazyna Dlugolecka, Jerzy Zelnik, (more)
In this visually stunning drama, the many faces of extreme eroticism are explored. In four episodes, beginning in the present, dreamy glimpses into the minds of unknown and famous erotic villains are screened without ever becoming pornographic. In the first episode, a girl accedes to her cousin's wish for ritualized oral sex. In the second, a very religious young woman has an erotic awakening which she cannot separate from her religion. In the third, the notorious Countess Bathory murders young girls in order to gain eternal youth by bathing in their blood; in the final episode, the daughter of the Pope, Lucrezia Borgia, has elaborate quasi-liturgical sex with male relatives. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
- Starring:
- Paloma Picasso, Lise Danvers, (more)
Walerian Borowczyk's Blanche is a tragic romantic tale set in 13th century France. While visiting the castle of an old landlord (Michel Simon), both the king (Georges Wilson) and his philandering page Bartolomeo (Jacques Perrin) try to seduce the landlord's young, naive wife Blanche (Ligia Branice, the director's wife). The landlord's son Nicolas (Lawrence Trimble), who's secretly in love with Blanche, seeks to defend her honor and stays on the watch by her bedroom door. When the king tries to sneak to Blanche's bedroom at night, covered by his page's cloak, Nicolas wounds him in the hand, being certain that he punishes the page. To save the king's reputation, Bartolomeo cuts his own hand and admits he was trying to get to Blanche's bedroom. The outraged old master wants to punish the page himself, but the king won't let him. The old landlord blindly seeks vengeance, and tragedy follows. Some critics consider Blanche the director's masterpiece and a metaphor of imprisonment, as Blanche is compared to a white dove kept in a cage. Others point out that the film's main virtues lie mostly in its beautiful photography and loving attention to period detail. ~ Yuri German, Rovi
- Starring:
- Michel Simon, Ligia Branice, (more)
This unusual comic tragedy is filmed both in color and black-and-white and concerns the residents of the mythical island of Goto. Goto III (Pierre Brasseur) is the pompous dictator who allows children to witness public execution and has criminals fight it out in a theater to resolve their differences. Everyone is assigned a menial position, leading to full employment but aimless pursuits and no chance of social advancement. A man scheduled to fight on stage runs to the dictator's wife and begs for mercy. The man is given a job in the stable but ends up killing the local flycatcher. He tells the dictator that his wife is having an affair with a lieutenant. The informer is given a gun and ordered to kill the lieutenant, but he shoots the dictator instead and assumes power. After the new dictator professes his love for the unfaithful woman, she jumps onto the stage rather than subject herself to his amorous advances in this bizarre story of social isolation and compliance. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Ligia Branice, (more)








