Watched: 03/21/2024
Format: Criterion
Viewing: First
Director: Paul Joyce
So, I posted on the 1971 Ken Russell film, The Devils, and old college chum and podcast contributor, Ryan M popped into my social media to recommend this documentary (I'll link to his letterboxd review).
I'm glad he did. The movie is not your usual US or British cinema offering, and hearing what the thinking was, and what happened in production and upon release was fascinating. The doc captures several of the folks involved in the picture 30 years on, still vibrant, and with clear memories of what they all considered a massively important film that was brutalized by a few critics and rejected by audiences.
Were this Holy Mountain, I'd get some of the rejection by audiences and critics - Jodorowsky is brilliant, but his films are straight work to watch. The Devils challenges a lot, but is not a puzzlebox to view. As can happen, it seems The Devils may have simply spoken right past the critics who were concerned with "taste" and a lot of external factors rather than the film in front of them. Which I absolutely understand, but that doesn't mean it isn't a failure of the critic or reviewer if you can't meet the film where it lives (and this is something even at this dumb ol' blog I try to do, and I know I still fail routinely).
So, I'll leave it to you to read what Ryan M has to say on the key scene that was cut, it's re-discovery, and how it's handled over at his review (I agree with every word he writes). I'll add in that if you think that scene is a blaspheme, you're missing the point of the film, and it would have been an absolute exclamation point on the film's major themes to keep it in.
But also I'll chime in with how pompous the reviewer was and remains who dismissed the film. And I deeply enjoyed watching him absolutely get owned by the documentary while refusing to give an inch.
Not many movies get to enjoy this kind of retrospective or get to return to what amounts to the scene of a crime as it were, and get a chance to see something they thought lost. I have 100,000 words on the complications of art and commerce, anti-censorship, et al. But if you've been kicking around the blog long enough, you can probably guess my stance on these things (art and commerce is complicated! Censorship = bad!). Add in the peculiarities of 1970's British censorship, US-based censorship, dumb people and poor media literacy, and it makes for an interesting confluence of events vis-a-vis The Devils.
If I have one last note - and the doc came out before the show, there's some real Garth Marenghi's Darkplace energy to the host and his presentation style. I am guessing this was just a BBC thing at the time.