AnhartLinkin
This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.
Voxitype
Good films always raise compelling questions, whether the format is fiction or documentary fact.
filippaberry84
I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Keeley Coleman
The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;
Alex Deleon
Bibliothèque Pascal, 2010 Dir. Hajdu Szabolcs, Hungary Los Angeles Film Festival, LAFF, 2010 image1.jpegAnother film from Berlin was the new Hungarian entry, "Bibliotheque Pascal", the fourth feature from director Szabolcs Hajdu who made a big international splash with a gymnastics film entitled "White Palms" in 2006. Where "White Palms" was basically a semi-autobiographical docudrama firmly rooted in reality, "Bibliotheque" is an hallucinogenic excursion into the kinkiest recesses of the mind, brilliantly lensed by DOP Andras Nagy, but firmly rooted in sexual surrealism, excessive sadism and masochism, and weirdness for weirdness sake. This is the kind of film that makes you wonder if the agony is ever going to end but keeps you glued to your seat just because it's impossible to take your eyes off of the main actress, Orsolya Török-Illyés, a rare beauty of a special type, who is shown constantly in lingering closeups.Plot: In order to regain custody of her daughter, whom she left in the care of her fortune- telling aunt, Mona (Török-Illyés) has to tell a social worker her story. The tale she spins--- and the movie we watch---is a wild, surreal adventure in which people are able to project and enter each other's dreams, and our heroine is sold into slavery in a debauched literary brothel in Liverpool where the patrons act out their literary/sexual fantasies with Lolita, St. Joan, and Desdemona.Though this is in theory a Hungarian film, the story is set largely in Romania and most of the dialog is in Romanian delivered by a mainly Romanian cast, except for the extended sequence in a British brothel where what dialog there is is in a kind of weird Englishl. The story centers on an hypnotically beautiful single mother Mona (Orsolya Török-Illyés) who is half-Hungarian, half-Romanian and speaks both languages when necessary. At the beginning and at the end of the film she is trying to convince a Romanian social worker that the young daughter she left in the custody of a flaky fortune-telling aunt when she took off for England to work as a prostitute (i,e., sex slave) should be returned to her -- and what happens in between is her incredible tale of suffering and bondage in a grotesque British brothel in Liverpool, borrowed, it would seem from Genet's Balcony with a little input from Dreyer's Passion of Joan of Arc.In this super kinky whorehouse which gives the film its title, clients pay to live out literary sex fantasies and Mona is, in fact, assigned to a room called "Joan of Arc". What she suffers there is so unspeakable that you wish they would put her out of her misery already and just burn her at the stake. The story she tells the social worker (which forms the body of the film) is so beyond belief, starting with a handsome psychotic killer who emerges from the sand on a seaside beach and makes her pregnant in an extremely bizarre one night stand at gun-point, then segueing from there via weird train station encounters, over the White Cliffs of Dover to the Pascal Library in Liverpool where the sexual depravities visited upon the poor girl stagger the imagination --except that she seems to enjoy being tortured in a very passive way -- so that her official confessor feels compelled to make her tale sound more "normal" in his final report, because he really wants to restore the kid to her and knows damn well that the naked truth as she has described it will not cut the mustard.And so she gets her child back and starts telling the kid a fairy tale that seems to be leading into another bizarre movie --well -- well --What can one say? "Not for every taste" to say the least. Some will think its the worst movie they've ever seen, others that they have witnessed an incredible work of art. In any case, this film is definitely over the top and out through the roof, but has some pretty hot cinematic fireworks and a heroine who really has to be seen to be believed --Orsolya Török-Illyésis unforgettable even if the film is a wall-to-wall nightmare. Director Szabolcs was there for a Q and A after the screening, which turned out to be mainly a lecture in Hungarian almost as obscure as the film itself, and evoked few questions from people who seemed to be too stunned to leave the theater just yet. Who knows what evil lurks around the next corner ....Sent from my iPad
writeyibo
I consider this a master piece! It is a rated adult fairy tale. It is a dream projected to the viewers. It has distinctive story telling. The sound compilation and cinematography are both great. The film creates such an impact you either love it or hate it. Sex and violence always catches viewers attention.But it has never been done this way!The film is absurd and surreal. Director Szabolcs Hajdu is not afraid of taking the risk.And be who he really is! I haven't seen something raw powerful and original like this movie for a while.
soapta
they say picture is worth a thousand words, but often words make the difference. i'm fortunate to speak most of the languages in this movie and it seems to make a difference. therefore i'd like to outline some details relevant only if you've seen the movie already.*** spoiler start ***the first one is about the bureaucrat at the child protection services: his report/evaluation is a very important/decisive factor in Mona getting back her daughter. at first he's the typical formal bureaucrat, but after hearing Mona's fantasy story he practically forces her to face reality (by telling her that her daughter would be easily adopted by Italian families) and make a clear choice. then he even makes her statement "officially better sounding" by dictating additional text to the typist. an added bonus is the approving smile of the typist when he dictates his final recommendation.the second one is the blunt/real story of Mona: after what seems a one-night-stand she's pregnant, the father disappears, she raises her daughter alone having various low income jobs (you don't make a fortune selling sunflower in a train station) ... and gives in to the temptation of "easy" money, leaving for an "erotic job" in england. after facing reality there, she returns home. so the blunt reality is that she didn't return for her child but because she got fed up ... and is therefore clearly an unfit parent.now to the reason i liked this movie so much: while we know for sure that her initial fantasy story is just a way to cope with her own guilt, we get to see the firemen orchestra (no police, no special forces) "escaping" from her daughters dream to save Mona ... which is probably the reason that convinced the bureaucrat to see a potential good mother in Mona. we don't get a lot of second chances in life ... but sometimes, if we're lucky enough, it happens.*** spoiler end ***also, for the reasons described above, i think a comparison to Lilja 4-Ever is rather forced. both movies are excellent, but they're too different.
Rindiana
If you think this is going to be one of those sprightly bright Balkan ethnic panoramas in the superficially entertaining Kusturica mold, you're in for a surprise: Beneath all the visual pizazz and eccentric characterizations lies a deeply disturbing portrait of a society marked by physical and mental exploitation as well as moments of human kindness.Director Hajdu spins an intriguing web of shifting and merging narrative levels of reality versus imagination, both grim and light. By doing so, he gets a better grip on the imponderability of life than most "real" social dramas put together.Some may find the way he's handling the brothel scenes way too florid, but bear in mind the narrative's fantastic underpinnings and all fits into place.8 out of 10 literate pimps