La ville des pirates

  • 111'
  • France
  • 1983
City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. There is no city of course, just a spooky castle on a rocky island. There are echoes of the quintessential Surrealist film, L'Age d'or. Perhaps it should be read as a film fantastique, sharing something of the trance-like, morbid poetry of Maya Deren and the paranoid Manicheism of early '60s English SF cinema. The tumescent, terrible sexuality that drives the narrative takes on a vampirish quality. Oral sadism and cannibalism underpin its images.Much of the pleasure comes from the aesthetic means Ruiz employs to suggest the Surreality inhabited by his desiring machines. His maniacs live in, and for, contradiction. Surprise, invention, paradox are his touchstones. He believes in affirmation through irony, the clarity of enigma, deferred resolution, outlandish change of mood. What binds Ruiz's lost souls to each other's desire is an Oedipal, narcissistic quest for identity. Desire depends upon creating an unbridgeable distance to ensure infinite pursuit of the object. Cinema is the ideal location for such doomed searches for the cathartic image, for recapturing the eternal, dangerous moment of looking. -Paul Hammond
  • 111'
  • France
  • 1983
Director
Raúl Ruiz
Countries of production
France, Portugal
Year
1983
Festival Edition
IFFR 2004
Length
111'
Medium
35mm
Language
French
Producer
Les Films d'Ici
Sales
Gemini Films
Screenplay
Raúl Ruiz
Cinematography
Acacio De Almeida
Editor
Valeria Sarmiento
Sound Design
Joaquim Pinto
Cast
Melvil Poupaud
Director
Raúl Ruiz
Countries of production
France, Portugal
Year
1983
Festival Edition
IFFR 2004
Length
111'
Medium
35mm
Language
French
Producer
Les Films d'Ici
Sales
Gemini Films
Screenplay
Raúl Ruiz
Cinematography
Acacio De Almeida
Editor
Valeria Sarmiento
Sound Design
Joaquim Pinto
Cast
Melvil Poupaud