Showing posts with label Livide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Livide. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 June 2012

Sydney Film Festival 2012


The SFF has kicked off for another year, and this time around I'll be posting a few quick capsule reviews of some of the films I see.

Unfortunately the fest got off to a lousy start for me when the screening of Maury and Bustillo's Livide turned out to be a complete fiasco. A word to the French distributors who provided the print: next time you send a film to a festival in a non-French speaking country, you might want to consider sending a print WITH FUCKING SUBTITLES. It was a theatre-full of righteously pissed off patrons who exited the screening five minutes into the film... but none more so than me. I've been dying to see this film for two years now, so needless to say I was LIVID with rage. Sorry.


Back tomorrow with reviews of Despite The Gods and Rampart!

Saturday, 14 May 2011

Maury & Bustillo Update


Anyone who's been following the EYE for a while should be well aware by now that I'm a huge fan of Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo's highly dramatic, art/gore masterpiece Inside (A L'interieur).

I've been frothing at the mouth in anticipation to see if they can repeat that magic on their sophomore effort, Livide, now in post production. There's still precious little info available online - a Wiki page HERE, and an earlier post of mine that points to a detailed behind the scenes video (in French) HERE.

A couple of days ago a few images surfaced online, scanned from French magazine Mad Movies. The two images of the bloody girl have been around for a while, albeit in lower resolution, but the image of the clawed crone below is new. If any of my readers speak French, you can find the whole article HERE, and I'd be eternally grateful if you could leave a comment regarding any juicy details therein.


Thursday, 25 November 2010

Livide


Alexandre Bustillo & Julien Maury, the french duo behind the stomach churning (and heart rending) À l'intérieur, are definitely two new genre talents to watch... and if you're a fan, you're gonna want to see this...


They've been hard at work on their sophomore project - Livide - for some time now. It looks to be a major departure in tone from Inside (i.e. less violent), something I was initially torn about when the project was first announced. Inside is one of my most revisited and loved films of the last decade, so a big part of me wanted them to keep treading similar gore-drenched territory, especially if they could find that same perfect balance between all out carnage and strong, sympathetic characterisation. But I also respect filmmakers who don't rest on their laurels after a successful debut.

Livide looks to be considerably less gory... but not entirely bloodless. The production design is steeped in Gothic atmosphere, eschewing the realism of Inside for a dark fairy tale aesthetic that is clearly evident in the few stills that have surfaced (particularly the eerie image at right, which made a big splash when it hit the major horror sites a few weeks ago). I've been scouring French blogs and websites since, looking for fresh news on the production, and my exhaustive search payed off this week when I found a recent 25 minute behind-the-scenes vid on the CANAL+ site.

It's in French of course, but it features an exceptionally detailed look at the film's production design and location. There's also a good look at the creation of some makeup FX, and what appear to be some bizarrely creepy animatronics (see above). Amongst the footage of various scenes being lensed (including a look at the shooting of that eerie "floating girl"), there's a few tantalising glimpses of the film itself. Interestingly, a key point in a lengthy interview with Maury and Bustillo refers to Suspiria, and they seem to be drawing a comparison between their film and Argento's.


Check out my screenshots, and then take a look at the whole video HERE. It briefly shifts it's focus to other films a couple of times, but keep watching as it returns to Livide, and some of the coolest stuff is near the end.