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Querelle (1982)

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Querelle
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Directed byRainer Werner Fassbinder
CastBrad Davis, Franco Nero, Jeanne Moreau, Laurent Malet and Hanno Pöschl
Theatrical ReleaseNovember 30, 1981
DVD ReleaseJuly 10, 2001
Running Time109 minutes
MPAA RatingR (Restricted)
UPC Code043396067455
Buy this item$17.99 at Amazon.com
As of Sep 7 9:29 EDT (details)
1 DVD, DAVIS,BRAD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Languages: German (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
Or 35 new from $12.80, 15 used from $10.91
 

About Querelle

No Description Available.
Genre: Foreign Film - German
Rating: UN
Release Date: 10-JUL-2001
Media Type: DVD Product Description

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User Reviews

Average user review: 3.5 (35 reviews)

rating: 3 QuoteThis is a sad movie.....Quote
This movie reflects a really bad name for the gay community. I wanted to watch it. I did. Won't watch it again. Brad Davis should have turned down this role. July 5, 2008

rating: 5 QuotequerelleQuote
It's a wonderful example of gay culture not just for gays.
But for straight people as well.
I am a straight guy, and I adore this movie.
It's a film about passion, which power is so strong,
that human soul and human flesh don't survive.
November 28, 2007

rating: 2 QuoteIs it camp or is it serious....Quote
This was Fassbinder's final film, and I didn't like very much about it. I saw in a pan and scan VHS copy, and thought it was one of the silliest, most pretentious things I've ever seen. Seeing it in a widescreen DVD has altered my opinion only slightly. I do love the photography and the hilarious set design, which is overly phallic and rivals Ken Russell's films. It's hard to tell whether Fassbinder meant this as camp or as a serious film. The performances are really over the top, especially Hanno Poschl and Franco Nero's performances. There's a hilarious scene in which Poschl and Querelle (Brad Davis) are fighting, and they are interrupted by Jesus carrying the cross. The film is very homoerotic, more so than any other Fassbinder film, but it doesn't make it any better or more interesting. It's a shame this was his final film, but it doesn't diminish his legacy at all... September 22, 2007

rating: 3 QuoteA semi-surreal odyssey into sexuality & human natureQuote
Fassbinder's "Querelle" translates as more of a filmed play than an actual film: characters speak stilted dialogues, the narrator delivers philosophical passages and thoughts of the characters, and so on. The late Brad Davis stands out as Querelle, a darkly hunky French sailor who can "never fall in love with a man", yet can give himself to one sexually. The characters intertwine in a tale frought with homoeroticism & violence.
My reaction: I became bored with this film's pretentiousness about half-way through it. Not Fassbinder's best, but it's interesting the way he uses lighting to bathe a character or the orange skies prominent throughout the film. I found the occasional narrative dialogues annoying and intermittently funny. The European artsiness of the film dominates this tale. There are interesting moments of symbolism here & there.
But for my taste, it was just a bit too hokey and campy in places. April 10, 2007

rating: 3 QuoteIs this who we are?Quote
"QUERELLE"

Is This Who We are?

Amos Lassen and Cinema Pride


"Querelle" according to director Fassbinder is about "a guy whose soul transforms in a crocodile's one". Querelle the man is a modern mythic man, a narcissist, an opium dealer and a murderer, a mariner and a thief. He is the best and the worst of all worlds. In the film Jeanne Moreau sings in her throaty voice what seems to be the theme of the movie, "All men kill those who love".
Fassbinder ended hi career with "Querelle"; it was his swan song. It was also a film of memories for him as he seemed to cast all of the characters of his former movies into it--in disguise and if you are not alert you may miss them.
Based on Jean Genet's book "Querelle de Brest", Fassbinder chose to use the language of the book as dialog and as somewhat of a masturbatory narration in order to give the movie a certain atmosphere that begins to feel like poetic graffiti.
Querelle (Brad Davis) is a sailor in search of himself and in danger of finding out just who he is. He is strong and this commands respect from those that he knows. He is beautiful of countenance and this raised desires of others. He is so conflicted internally that he drives himself to self destruction while he explores his own deviant feelings. His lust brings him to violence and his denial degrades him, sex for him becomes violent and violence becomes love for him. He is simple and complex at the same time. He is both vulnerable and malevolent and this is what the action of the film revolves around. Yet the star of the film is the port of Brest that is pornographic in its very existence. The men that frequent the port are archetypes as familiar as the men created by the notorious Tom of Finland.
Unlike the overt homosexuality that pervades the films of today, "Querelle" is soaking with covert masculinity and it explores the conflicts and complexities in the relationships that exist between men when they discover desire for each other.
After Brad Davis was diagnosed with AIDS, he could not find work in Hollywood. He went to Europe to work and Fassbinder cast him as Querelle. As Davis portrays the sailor, he breathes life into him. And "Querelle" is not per se a gay movie but rather a discourse on the nature of homosexuality. Querelle, the man, does not believe that two men can love one another but they can enjoy each other sexually. Querelle and his men show no affection, they just mate sexually.
What an intriguing film this is! It is so sexual while not being excessive and it is both amoral and decadent. It is explicit and delicate and outrageous. As direct as it is there is still much to infer in its portrayal of homosexuality. It ages like fine wine. Whenever I watch it I am amazed that it still rings true. Even with its flaws it represents the decadent mind. It will make your head spin and send you thinking. Is this really who we are?
January 16, 2007

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