|

Reviews:
DVD reviews
Book reviews
Music reviews
Culture reviews
Features
& Interviews
Galleries:
Cult Films & TV
Books & Comics
Burlesque
Ephemera
& Toys
Video
Hate
Mail
The
Strange Things Boutique
FAQ
Links
Contact
|
"WE'VE
WARNED YOU ABOUT THIS MAN"
A goodbye to Jess Franco, one of the titans of Exploitation
Cinema
by Nigel Wingrove

The Marquis
de Sade wrote ceaselessly during his long, ten year incarceration
in Paris's infamous Bastille prison, and when as a punishment
his writing implements were confiscated, de Sade turned to writing
on his sheets in red wine, then escalated to using his blood
and finally wrote on the walls of his cell using his excrement.
Such was his mania for committing his thoughts to words.
Jess Franco, who died today, the 2nd April 2013, aged 83, was
a filmmaker in much the same vein as de Sade was a writer, a
man so obsessed with film that he would secretly film a secondary
feature while shooting a commissioned work, a man who in his
later years would shoot almost nonsensical 'films' in his front
room, seemingly happy so long as he had a camera in has hand
and could see a woman through the lens.
Prolific to the point of absurdity Franco's prodigious output
varied from the truly creative (Succubus,
Vampyros Lesbos), to the fabulously exploitative
( Female Vampire, The Demons,
Justine), through to the tedious (Esmeralda
Bay, Snakewoman) to the virtually
unwatchable (Paula-Paula, Al Pereira
vs the Alligator Women) et al. Yet Franco's place in
exploitation cinema's pantheon of heroes is deserved, not for
his prodigious output, but for the passion with which he made
his films, for like de Sade, Franco would, if he had to, have
filmed in his own blood and shit.
Franco, was in many ways, a more accomplished film director
than the impression given by some of his lesser films, and had
he perhaps remembered the wise saying that sometimes less is
more might have concentrated on making one good film rather
than ten bad ones. For when Franco got it right, as he did with
titles like Justine, Succubus
and Virgin Among the Living Dead, he showed
a real creative and artistic flair coupled with moments of surreal
brilliance. This was a man who, like his contemporary Jean Rollin,
was his own worst enemy.
His reputation progressing from minor critical acclaim, to accusations
of misogyny for titles like Exorcism
and its later reincarnation, The Sadist of Notre Dame,
through to dislike and pariah status as the sadism of films
like Sadomania and Woman Behind Bars
alienated genre critics, mainstream horror fans and pushed Franco
more and more into the ghetto of sadistic pornography. Indeed,
by the late nineteen seventies and early eighties Franco was
effectively finished as a commercial film director and should,
as he was in his now in his fifties, have heralded either a
slow exit, a career change or retirement - and this is perhaps
where Franco's obsessional film making and the precarious nature
of the film business merged.
For the film industry has no pensions, no retirement plans and
attracts mavericks and dreamers - and exploitation and sexploitation
cinema attracts more than most. All Franco could do was make
films, and like Jean Rollin, Lucio Fulci and others, they were
his life and without them he was creatively castrated and financially
barren. That, plus his at times detrimental and obsessional
need to make films, meant that Franco could not fade gracefully
into the sunset but rather lingered in the wings long after
the curtains had closed, a bit like a guest at cocktail party
that refuses to take the hint that its time to go after all
the other guests had left.
When
I eventually met Franco he greeted me with something along the
lines of 'thank god for Redemption', not because Redemption
is particularly wonderful, but because, as we had with Rollin
and other directors, by releasing and bringing their films to
a new audience for the first time since their cinema release
we were reinvigorating their careers and bringing their work
to a new audience.
Yet in Franco's case it almost didn't happen. Twenty years ago
Redemption Films released Succubus and I received
a written warning from the British Board of Film Classification,
that Jess Franco was a director whose films the BBFC regarded
as bordering on criminal. I was told that were I to attempt
to release other films by him or to bring them into the country
there would be consequences… A year later I submitted
Demoniacs and Sadomania and
both were categorically banned with the implicit threat that
by pushing the work of Jess Franco I was, indirectly, championing
criminal sexual material and that if I continued I too would
face not civil, but criminal proceedings. I mention this for
the first time because I want to get across just how much of
a pariah Jess Franco was considered to be.
These are two quotes from the BBFC to my solicitors which show
just how close to having criminal proceedings issued against
Redemption we were for trying to champion Jess Franco:
SADOMANIA: … "it is grossly
unsuitable for viewing in the home. Few, if any, of the sex
scenes are consenting,… women that persistently refuse
to succumb to the sadistic prison regime are systematically
tortured, humiliated or degraded, often for the purpose of arousing
the impotent male governor and through him the male viewer of
the video work. … There is no doubt in our minds that
the erotic presentation of such scenes would be found depraving
and corrupting by a British jury".
DEMONIAC: … "The Board has never
granted a BBFC certificate to any film or video which seeks
to encourage sexual sadism, and this film is clearly sadistic
in that it seems 'to have no purpose or justification other
than to reinforce or sell the idea that it can be highly pleasurable
to inflict injury, pain or humiliation (often in a sexual context)
on others' (Home Office Report on Obscenity and Film Censorship,
Williams, HMSO, 1979)….|
…The work of this particular film maker has often fallen
well outside the parameters of BBFC standards because of the
manner in which it presents scenes of vicious sexual violence
or of violence to women in a sexually arousing context, offering
little pleasure to the viewer other than a conscious vicarious
gratification of misogyny. Where such emotions focus on the
harming of others, the Board must always consider drawing a
line, as we have in refusing a video certificate to DEMONIAC".
Redemption
Films challenged the banning of these films, along with Bare
Behind Bars legally, and lost. We then sought and won
leave to judicially review the BBFC's entire operation, a massive
undertaking and one which would, had we pursued it, opened up
all the machinations of the BBFC's internal workings to public
scrutiny, however, we ran out of money and had to wait until
our battle over pornography several years later to finally oust
the BBFC chairman James Ferman which in turn heralded in a period
of more liberal censorship.
We did though release two more Jess Franco films in this period,
She Killed in Ecstasy and, most memorably,
Vampyros Lesbos, which became a massive seller,
sales ironically not driven by the films visual content, but
by its soundtrack. Released as Vampyros Lesbos: Sexadelic
Dance Party, Franco's work was suddenly trendy in a
whole new way, attracting a whole new audience among Europe's
burgeoning dance and club scene.
Now Jess Franco is rightly something of a legend and for all
his contradictions, successes and failures, accusations of sadism,
and inability to produce anything of real worth for the last
twenty or so years, Franco was, and is, a true hero of exploitation
cinema. A man who loved, ate and slept film. A man who, despite
the BBFC's vicious accusation that he was a misogynistic sadist,
loved and enjoyed women, as anyone who saw his puppy like devotion
to Lina Romay over nearly 40 years would know, and who in his
heart was an artist and like most artists he had his flaws and
weaknesses but ultimately what made him an artist was that he
could do nothing else but make films. He may have used a camera
rather than a paintbrush and film instead of a canvas, but that
was because film was his blood, and he only stopped filming
when his blood stopped flowing and his heart, like his camera,
finally stopped.
Jess Franco, reunited with Lina Romay, for one last kiss.
Fade to black.
© Nigel Wingrove 2013
|
|
|