Dream City (1973)
DVDRip | MKV | 698x572 | x264 @ 2588 Kbps | 118 min | 2,35 Gb
Audio: Deutsch AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English, Русский
Genre: Fantasy, Horror
DVDRip | MKV | 698x572 | x264 @ 2588 Kbps | 118 min | 2,35 Gb
Audio: Deutsch AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English, Русский
Genre: Fantasy, Horror
Director: Johannes Schaaf
Writers: Rosemarie Fendel, Alfred Kubin (novel)
Stars: Per Oscarsson, Rosemarie Fendel, Olimpia
A married couple of artists move to a utopian town known for its absolute freedom, but behind the surface perversion and violence are spreading.
One never quite knows what they're getting themselves into when they venture into the outsider 70's cinema of Eastern Europe. Films by the likes of Krystoff Zanussi or Miklos Jansco can be quite maddening, adventurous efforts. Well, the same can be said for Johannes Schaaf's "Dream City". Part horror movie, part apocalypse film but mostly just an angry allegory of man's inherent ability to destroy everything he touches, "Dream City" stars Per Oscarrson as a writer who receives an invitation from an old school friend to travel to his city where everyone lives in peace. The writer and his wife make the trip and end up in the dilapidated city where not everything is as peaceful as it seems.
"Dream City", released in 1973, is one of those wild films whose ideas are swirling in every frame. After arriving in the city, the writer and his wife become pawns in an ever-shifting game of human chess. The writer's attempts to visit Patera, his old friend and seeming sole oligarch of the city, is met with bureaucratic blindness and ineptitude. In fact, the civil servant the writer goes to see for his "audience pass" makes him come into his office not once but twice just so he can repeat his practiced lines several times…. since he interacts with so few people. The writer's wife, played to shrill perfection by long time actress Rosemarie Fendel, meets an even odder fate…. first, caught as the unwitting victim in a massive theatrical performance where everyone in the city seems to be play-acting their own fantasies (and featured as the film's crazy centerpiece of sound, camera movement and chaos) then secondly slowly becoming he voice of reason to her husband that this paradise is far from normal. It's as if a Grimm fairy tale were updated to the swinging 60' with a violent anarchic bent. As one can tell, this brief synopsis barely scratches the surface of Schaaf's weird allegory, but one that demands to be seen by anyone searching out the undiscovered, dark efforts of European cinema.
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