Sedmikrasky
The sixties
do seem to be the decade of experimentation. Here is another experimental movie,
this time a Czech one, and so I get the usual, difficult task of working out
what I have just been watching.
This time I
was reasonably happy with the beginning of the movie. It did not make much
sense, but there was something fun and happy about it that had to make me happy
as well. Unfortunately, this did not last. The happiness wears off and is
replaced by annoyance. Annoyance because these girls not only appear stupid but
also completely nihilistic and this is…fun?
Over the
course of the movie the two girls (Blond and Red, because I have no idea what
they are called) go out of their way to annoy people. They sabotage a Charleston
show in a restaurant. They go on dates with older men, make scenes in the
restaurant and then dump them on trains. For the grand finale they crash a
dinner party before the guests arrive and trash it all, food, plates,
decoration, all is lost so these girls can have some fun.
This seems
to be the purpose for the two girls. In a movie with no actual plot and no
storyline, Red and Blond have no other agenda than doing what they feel like in
the moment and they do that with a childlike glee. It does not matter if it is
cutting up the bed or terrorizing other people. It seems to all be for kicks.
Obviously,
when we are talking art or experimental movies, there are deeper stories than
the apparent one. Here I am at a loss. I simply do not know what that deeper
story is. I can guess, though, and somethings are not too difficult. At one
point the girls are cutting sausages up while they are talking with one of the
ditched men on the phone. It is not difficult to guess that they are
symbolically cutting up his genitalia. With a smile of course.
Another
potential meaning is political, this being shortly before the “spring in Prague”.
Exactly how to read that though I do not know. Ruining everything pleasurable was
a habit of the communist party, so maybe there is a clue there. Acting with silly
abandon could be reflect a poorly led country. Maybe.
Or maybe we
are just supposed to be convinced that acting as if there are no consequences or
pricetag is very annoying and offers no long-term reward, even when done by two
sweet girls.
There is a
lot of nice filming with vibrant colors and fast montages. There is some
interesting editing and color filter choices and the soundscape is inventive
too.
Ultimately however,
it does not change the end result: general annoyance. Silly girls ruining
things for other people has a very short shelf life.
If you
intend to watch this you can stick to the first 10 minutes. That is enough to get
the picture. Beyond that I would not recommend this movie.
I can't say this was a favorite of mine either.
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