5.9 | / 10 |
Users | 3.5 | |
Reviewer | 1.5 | |
Overall | 2.4 |
Milos is a former porn star who is down on his luck financially. When he receives a call from his long-time movie actress partner, Layla, he welcomes her call. Apparently she's heard that a new film director wants to hire Milos to star in his "artistically-designed" porn film for a very generous price. He is easily lured form his semi-retirement by the lucrative offer, agreeing to meet the director in an isolated mansion. As the filming progresses, Milo begins to suspect that the director's intentions may be darker than mere pornography. As the film begins to devolve into a horrifically violent production, Milos finds escape may not be an option.
Starring: Srđan Todorović, Sergej Trifunović, Jelena Gavrilović (I), Slobodan Beštić, Katarina ŽutićHorror | 100% |
Foreign | 28% |
Thriller | 20% |
Erotic | 14% |
Psychological thriller | 13% |
Surreal | 11% |
Drama | Insignificant |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Serbian: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0
English
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Digital copy (as download)
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (locked)
Movie | 1.5 | |
Video | 4.5 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 0.0 | |
Overall | 1.5 |
There’s only so far high minded rhetoric can take you, and Srđan Spasojević’s perhaps (perhaps) believable insistence that his A Serbian Film is an allegorical indictment of the horrors the Serbian people have suffered at the hands of a “monolithic,” abusive government only goes so far to make this evidently intentionally disgusting film understandable. It can never be palatable under any circumstances and it similarly can't be dressed up and/or toned down with any strategy of apology, supposed context, or other exegetical methods. A Serbian Film has been banned in a large number of countries, and I can’t say I’m that upset about it. I don’t take that position lightly. There’s no finer freedom than that enjoyed by artists seeking to express themselves. I may disagree with supposed creative types who drown crucifixes in urine and the like, but shock tactics like that seem almost quaint when thrust up against the horrors that await the viewer in A Serbian Film. Were some of the film’s more hideous elements staged? No doubt. Does that make them any more acceptable? Certainly not. The film tells the story of a washed up porn star named Miloš (Srđan Todorović) who has managed to more or less retire into a life of happy domesticity, with a beautiful, highly intelligent wife named Marija (Jelena Gavrilović), and an adorable little boy named Petar (the child playing this role is uncredited, something he may thank the Gods for as he grows up). The film opens with Petar evidently hypnotized by watching some of his father’s old porn movies, and if you think that’s a questionable scene, it pales in comparison to any number of horrors which are yet to come, including Petar himself involved in both a sadistic scene where the child is brandishing a mutant sized dildo and a much later scene where the child himself is the victim of sodomy. The basic plot (if it can be called that) has to do with Miloš being lured back into his old profession with promises of untold riches if he agrees to participate in an “art film” about which he can know nothing. This premise may remind astute film historians of like-minded fare such as Dead of Winter, but in this case, Miloš’ ignorance doesn’t lead to the amputation of a finger (as it does in the Mary Steenburgen film) but to the desecration of both male and female genitalia, among other shockingly gruesome images.
A Serbian Film is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Invincible Pictures with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 2.40:1. Shot with a digital RED camera, A Serbian Film boasts an incredibly strong transfer, which actually helps to make the film all the more repulsive. This is so filled with blood, gore and depravity that the sharpness (and typical smoothness redolent of the RED image) actually may make the film even more disturbing than it would normally be. Spasojević goes for an intentionally drab color palette most of the time here, with an emphasis on browns which are only broken up by the rust colored blood that dots so many scenes. The film does exhibit some crush issues in many of the dimly lit interior scenes, notably several in the bunker where the "art film" is being produced. Because of intentional desaturation and filtering, flesh tones are often pallid and other colors rarely pop vividly. But within the context of a heavily filtered RED image, this Blu-ray is a solid presentation which boasts impeccable clarity and sharpness.
A Serbian Film is presented on Blu-ray with its original Serbian track offered in an excellent DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 mix. There's not much to report with regard to this soundtrack, as the film features fairly sporadic dialogue and lets its horrific images do most of the talking. Everything is well presented with the narrow confines of the 2.0 mix (the UK edition evidently sported a 5.1 surround mix). Dialogue is cleanly presented and the sound effects, which generally have to do with either violence or sexual activity (or frankly a combination of the two), is well rendered with strong fidelity.
No supplements are included on this Blu-ray.
The reigning question on our Forum devoted to A Serbian Film seems to be whether this is the uncut version. While the box lists a 103 minute running time, it actually clocks in at 1:41:57, i.e., just short of 102 minutes. That said, from what I can glean from online commentary, this version has at least most of the incredibly questionable footage intact. The fact that this subject is what is deemed most pressing about A Serbian Film simply makes my point for me, albeit probably unintentionally. Those who will want to see this film seemingly couldn't care less about any ostensible allegorical content, content the film's director insists is its sole reason for being so exploitative. Some people at least are in it for the shock value, and that's it. For those people, have at it. There's certainly no more shocking film available than this one. For those wanting some meaning behind the horror, keep on looking.
Day of the Woman
1978
1990
2008
2011
Unrated Edition
2006
1990
2009
2007
Standard Edition
1971
2011
2009
2015
2015
2019
1977
Warner Archive Collection
1962
2015
2009
Ta paidia tou Diavolou
1976
2009