To Palfi's credit, he never attempts to titillate. His mind-boggling visual imagination is ably supported by Gergely Poharnok's camera and the art direction.
Taxidermia (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:44
Fresh:35
Rotten:9
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: Surreal and visually striking, Taxidermia is, at times, graphic and difficult to watch, but creatively touches on disturbing subjects with imagination and wit.
Rated: 18
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:13-07-2007
Synopsis:
Taxidermia contains three generational stories, about a grandfather, a father, and a son, linked together by recurring motifs. The dim grandfather, an orderly during World War Two, lives in his...
Taxidermia contains three generational stories, about a grandfather, a father, and a son, linked together by recurring motifs. The dim grandfather, an orderly during World War Two, lives in his bizarre fantasies; he desires love. The huge father seeks success as a top athlete -- a speedeater -- in the postwar pro-Soviet era. The grandson, a meek, small-boned taxidermist, yearns for something greater: immortality. He wants to create the most perfect work of art of all time by stuffing his own torso.
Historical facts and surrealism become intertwined as magical realism, like in the works of Gabriel García Marquez or the Hungarian writer Lajos Parti Nagy; the script is based on two of the latter’s stories. Palfi added the third story, that of the grandson the taxidermist.
The first section begins with a disembodied voice pontificating obliquely about creation and three generations, explaining that if something has to end, the beginning has to be important. Immediately we see the grandfather, Vendel Morosgoványi (Csaba Czene), who is berated by his lieutenant in a remote outpost, with only the lieutenant’s fat wife and two beautiful daughters around. He retreats into the realm of gratification, no matter how extreme. He peeps in the daughters’ bath, drinks the girls’ dirty bathwater, masturbates until his penis emits flames of fire, and sleeps with the lieutenant’s wife. She becomes pregnant and the lieutenant blows off Vendel’s head — but raises his child, Kálmán.
In the second part, Kálmán (Gergő Trócsányi) has become obese and competes for Hungary in eating competitions that their backers hope will be recognized by the International Olympic Committee. Against a backdrop of empty Communist spectacle and military poseurs, Kálmán strives to win. He meets up with an oversized woman, Gizella (Adél Stanczel), another speedeating competitor, and the two get married, although she has sex with his teammate during the wedding party. She and Kálmán embark on a long honeymoon, returning to their respective factories to practice. Gizella gives birth to a tiny, tiny son, Lajos.
Section three, which is contemporary, is calmer, less manic than the previous two. Lajos (Mark Bischoff) has become a quiet taxidermist who has no prospects in love; he is rejected by the supermarket cashier, for one. He is as frustrated in his way as his grandfather was in his, but Lajos’s fertile imagination will prove to work in a very different way. His father, Kálmán, has reached enormous proportions and can no longer move. Kálmán’s wife has long ago left him, so Lajos brings food and cleans the apartment where Kálmán (now Gábor Máté, in a fatsuit) sits amidst boxes of food and the three cats he pushes to overeat. One day Lajos finds Kálmán dead, possibly having exploded from overeating or having been mauled by one of the cats. He stuffs him, and immediately after, begins stuffing himself by locking his body onto a board surrounded by perfectly attuned machines. At the end of the procedure, a glass blade he has set up decapitates him and an electric saw severs his right arm. The two men are found by a customer, Dr. Regőczy (Géza Hegedžs D.), who puts them on display at a chic art exhibition. Dr. Regőczy, whose lecture is a continuation of the voiceover at the very beginning of the film, maintains that one can mount one’s father and oneself but can not mount the essence, that being what Lajos felt at the moment the blade cut off his head. The camera moves into the black void beyond Lajos’s bellybutton. --© Regent Releasing
Starring: Gergo Trocsanyi, Adel Stanczel, Marc Bischoff
Starring: Gergo Trocsanyi, Adel Stanczel, Marc Bischoff
Director: György Pálfi
Director: György Pálfi
Studio: Tartan Films
Reviews for Taxidermia
It's an allegory of sorts, and very different from the fastidious golden age of Hungarian cinema in the Seventies and Eighties.
The new film will ambush the unwary, appal the squeamish and get unwanted attention from the prurient. But it has a signature, a wit and a kind of grim strength.
It's one of the most astonishing, energetic, chaotic films you'll ever see. And best of all, it could make you decide to give up the diet forever.
What is most impressive is Palfi's imagination and the way he develops it on the screen. Gross-out it may be, but there's rather more to it.
It breaks taboos with an insouciance that makes Last Tango look like Mary Poppins.
THE advantage of being The Sneak is that sometimes you can also sneak out of a film screening.
Overall, this is a desultory, schizophrenic film that doesn’t seem to know what it is.
Director György Pálfi is a talent to watch with your fingers over your eyes, but he’s also a proper filmmaker, fascinated by his characters’ hereditary fetishes and finding consistently clever ways to surprise us with his camera.
Taxidermia is a visually striking, provocative dish served up with the most horrid ingredients imaginable: greed, revulsion, alienation and loneliness.
There is, no doubt, a serious social commentary under all the vomit, but it takes a committed viewer to dig it out and hose it down.
A real cinematic oddity, Taxidermia is assured cult status thanks to its disturbing scenes of sex, violence and body horror. It's somewhat slight but it marks Pálfi as a director to watch.
Where Hukkle's circle-of-life surrealism had a certain twisted charm, this film's sense of the grotesque is more glum than fun. On the tail of such a promising debut, it can't help feeling like a hiccup.
Keeping it surreal has never been so nauseating and, at times, hilarious.
‘Taxidermia’ undoubtedly has its own unsavoury humour and gratuitous shock value, but its extremities and enormities yield less than the sum of their dismembered parts.
For those who can handle it, a viewing is an experience not soon forgotten.
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