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The
Opposite of Sex
Anatomy of Hell
Dir. Catherine Breillat, France, 2004
CATHERINE BREILLAT:
“Pornography doesn’t really exist. It’s the invention
of a puritanical society, what produces pornography
as such is the way our society looks at the product:
this feeling of obscenity exposes women and reduces
her capacity to occupy positions of influence in our
society. We live in a pornocracy (as opposed to a democracy).
Women have two kinds of power, historically: as the
courtesan and as the whore. The courtesan seduces men
without giving them sex, exterminating the man without
giving him a single taste of her body. In our society,
women are condemned to be either courtesans or whores.”
Catherine Breillat’s films spring from a defining paradox:
to denounce men’s privileged exploitation of the female
body as an object of consumption/penetration and to
retain the male body as a space of female sexual satisfaction.
This fulfillment is, however, always temporary. It must
never last. The female subject, if wanting to preserve
her independence, must always rule out the trap of monogamy
that locks the woman’s body under a single male’s slave
belt. From the spasmodic instances of impossible reciprocity
of Sale comme un ange (1991) to the cold-hearted
and calculated elegance of Brève Traversée (2001)
to the disturbing appearance of cock-brutality in Fat
Girl (À Ma Soeur!, 2001), Breillat draws
an unequivocal diagram of love, lust, desire, and (lack
of) guilt that prescribes a simple, and yet, provocative
anthem: the ephemeral is the only guarantor of jouissance.
Female desire is always flowing, unbound, defiant in
relation the heteronormal thirst for fixity. The female
body breathes her revenge through the transgression
that contingency opens up and encounters its fulfillment
away from the prison-house of articulate language.
BREILLAT: “Rossellini asked me once a question: ‘What
do you think you can add to the view of adolescence
in cinema being a woman?’ My answer was: ‘The male’s
gaze. The man is who throws this gaze but the woman
is the one who knows it.’”
Her latest film, Anatomy of Hell, is, in her
own words, “like throwing a gaze to that that cannot
be looked at, a theorem of obscenity. Something I’m
not fully sure that really exists. I show things that
cannot be shown, I attempt to discover that that no
wants to discover.” We might indeed not want to discover
it. If her previous films, like the controversial Romance
(1999), construct a carefully woven different concept
of “sexy cinema,” revealing the Puritanism that condemns
the view of male and female genitalia to the offscreen
space of mainstream cinema or the falsely named marginal
space of pornography, this new effort is a senseless
fiasco that instead of provoking or transgressing the
dominant views on sexuality, bores the spectator to
death. Anatomy of Hell tells the story of a woman
(Amira Casar) that, after failing to commit suicide,
offers a strange deal to a man (Rocco Siffredi): she
will pay him for looking at her where she cannot be
looked at, for four nights. The man accepts. Slowly,
their bodies and psyches start deciphering each other
in the lonely confines of her isolated house. Breillat
too often devolves into silliness: Casar extracts a
tampon out of her womb, dissolves its blood in water,
and shares an uncanny toast with Siffredi, drinking
the “water of life,” in her own words. Later, Siffredi
delivers the line, “All stony matter is inert” with
Sylvester Stallone-like poise.
BREILLAT: “I always have difficulties working with
a male actor that has to become like an adolescent,
completely in my hands, when we are shooting. Rocco
doesn’t have all the characteristic learned vices of
trained actors. He is like clay. He belongs to me. My
first novel is narrated in first person, from the point
of view of a male character. Never until working with
Rocco had I felt such a control over the male body.”
For some, Breillat might have pushed the limits of provocation
she established in her previous narratives, for others,
Anatomy of Hell is nothing but a self-indulgent
“fuck you” to Puritanism that, wrapped in its own silver
plate of delinquent transgression, renders an empty
spectacle of female and male nudity. What could have
been a twisted exploration of voyeuristic desire and
exhibitionist lust becomes, through Breillat’s clumsy
storytelling devices, a cold, hallucinatory trip into
the realm of perverted psychological games. Breillat
refuses to involve the spectator with a reliable entry
point into the self-centered universe that unfolds before
us.
BREILLAT: “I have both been praised and attacked
by feminists. My discourse is feminist but also against
women. I prefer to call it a feminine cinema. It is
a discourse that should make men run away but the purpose
is the opposite: to retain him… It’s a feminist cinema
because it is from the point of view of women since
there are certain things that are forbidden for women.
I want to show these things, explore them beyond their
limits …Is the provocation in my films intentional?
I don’t focus on provocation. We live in a world in
which there are many moral laws that people are obliged
to conform to. Cinema allows us to have a transgressive
weapon to break these rules. … My provocation is innocent.
I started writing when I was 17. I wrote a book that
was prohibited for people of less than 18 years. I was
forbidden to read the same book I had written. If you
consider that this is a provocation, this is what I
do.”
All quotes from Breillat at the Cinema
Jove Film Festival in Valencia, Spain, where she received
a career award.
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