A hat stand, a disreputable-looking pink brocade sofa, a selection of excerpts from an Austrian erotic novel, published anonymously in 1906. And men, a hundred of them, aged between 16 and 99, who have responded to an open casting for the latest film by Ruth Beckermann, a project which is based on the controversial and salacious book, Josefine Mutzenbacher or The Story of a Viennese Whore. What the men don’t initially realise is that the audition process – they are asked to read and engage with chunks of explicitly sexual literature – will become the film itself. In a sly role reversal, the lens is trained on men – squirming, preening, performing – on Beckermann’s overstuffed casting couch, while, off camera, she scrutinises and interrogates. It’s a playful and revealing device, and the film, which won the prize for Best Picture in the Encounters section of the Berlin Film Festival, unpeels ever deeper and often darker male sexual secrets and admissions like a Russian doll.
Wendy Ide, Screen Daily
Mutzenbacher
Mutzenbacher
L
Genre
Documentary
Director
Ruth Beckermann
Run time
1h 40min
Genre
Documentary
Director
Ruth Beckermann
Run time
1h 40min
A hat stand, a disreputable-looking pink brocade sofa, a selection of excerpts from an Austrian erotic novel, published anonymously in 1906. And men, a hundred of them, aged between 16 and 99, who have responded to an open casting for the latest film by Ruth Beckermann, a project which is based on the controversial and salacious book, Josefine Mutzenbacher or The Story of a Viennese Whore. What the men don’t initially realise is that the audition process – they are asked to read and engage with chunks of explicitly sexual literature – will become the film itself. In a sly role reversal, the lens is trained on men – squirming, preening, performing – on Beckermann’s overstuffed casting couch, while, off camera, she scrutinises and interrogates. It’s a playful and revealing device, and the film, which won the prize for Best Picture in the Encounters section of the Berlin Film Festival, unpeels ever deeper and often darker male sexual secrets and admissions like a Russian doll.
Wendy Ide, Screen Daily
Wendy Ide, Screen Daily
Info
Rating
For All Audiences
Production year
2022
Global distributor
DocPoint Tallinn MTÜ
Local distributor
DocPoint Tallinn MTÜ
In cinema
2/2/2023