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January 11th, 2009
Ruggero
Deodato’s film Cannibal Holocaust has a reputation that precedes
itself. An air of uneasiness and intimidation surrounds the film
preventing many who know of the film’s reputation from viewing it.
However, those brave enough to watch it hail it as one of the most thought
provoking horror films in the history of the genre. A predecessor of
modern ultra-violent films such as Hostel, Saw and House
of 1000 Corpses, the world wasn’t ready for Cannibal Holocaust
when it was released in 1980, and nearly thirty years later, it is
questionable if the world is ready for it now.
Growing up amongst
the film sets of Rome, Ruggero Deodato started his career in films as an
assistant to notable Italian directors Roberto Rosellini and Sergio
Corbucci. In the 1960’s and early 70’s Deodato directed a number of
films, but it wasn’t until 1977 that he gained attention with horror fans
when he recreated the dormant cannibal film genre with the first of his
jungle pictures, Jungle Holocaust. Jungle Holocaust was a
minor success, putting Deodato on the maps with horror fans. However it
would be his follow up film, Cannibal Holocaust, which would make
him a legend.
While
watching Italian media coverage of the Red Brigade terrorist group,
Deodato began to notice that the media was willing to disregard
journalistic integrity over capturing graphic scenes of violence. Deodato
decided to work the media’s savagery into his next cannibal picture.
Cannibal Holocaust is Deodato’s story of a
New York film crew who enter the
Amazon jungle in order to film a documentary on two warring tribes of
cannibals but never returns. Months later an anthropologist reenters the
jungle and finds the crews lost footage. However, it is when the footage
is viewed back in New York that the horror really
starts, and the question of who are the real savages, the cannibals or the
“civilized” film crew, is pondered. In a realistic hand held film style
preceding modern horror films such as The Blair Witch Project and
Cloverfield, Deodato presents unforgettable and mind numbing scenes
of rape, torture, murder, animal mutilation, madness and death in a way
that is not only horrendous, but intelligent. Cannibal Holocaust
is a film experience that you never forget. It’s one of those films that
kicks you right in the gut, and leaves a mark that lasts forever.
Cannibal
Holocaust was released in Milan in February 1980 to
critical praise. However, ten days after its release the film was seized
by Italian officials and Deodato was arrested for decency charges and
murder. Upon the release of the film a rumor broke out that Cannibal
Holocaust was actually a snuff film and that Deodato had killed five
actors on screen for the film, including his four American stars and the
film’s icon, an impaled teenage girl. Facing the threat of life in
prison, Deodato was forced to bring his American actors to Italy and
presented to the court to prove they were alive. However, location of the
teenage girl, who was recruited on location in the Amazon, proved more
difficult, but Deodato was able to clear his name by revealing the special
effects secrets to her iconic performance. Deodato was cleared, but the
film would not be released to him until 1984. Upon being released,
Cannibal Holocaust proceeded to be banned in numerous countries, and
heavily censored and edited in others in order to be released. Still
banned in a number of countries today, the film is still the record holder
of the most banned film in movie history. Ruggero Deodato continued to
make
films
throughout the 1980’s and 1990’s in various genres, including horror,
comedies, thrillers and even at least one family film. However, nothing
has been able to bring him the same level of fame as the legendary
Cannibal Holocaust.
Meeting fabled
directors like Ruggero Deodato is a once in a lifetime opportunity. I was
thrilled to meet Ruggero Deodato when he was in Toronto during the summer
of 2008 promoting his next film, Cannibals, which will be his first
jungle film since 1985’s Cut and Run and is to be released in 2009.
Ruggero Deodato is a small man who has aged considerably in the last
number of years. He has a demeanor which is not as intimidating as his
reputation. However, deep in his
eyes
is a kind of certain intensity and fire that is unmistakenable. There is
no doubt that Deodato is the kind of man who can lead a film crew into the
deepest darkest jungles and look madness in the face, and come back to
tell the tale.
As a result of
Deodato’s busy schedule my time with him was incredibly brief, and I was
only able to ask a handful of questions. However, realizing that an
encounter with such a controversial and legendary director like Ruggero
Deodato was a once in a lifetime opportunity, even being able to ask a few
questions became
an honor on its own. Also, while Deodato is fluent in English, he chose
to do our interview with the help of his assistant, Paolo Zelati, acting
as translator so he could best express himself.
Come and join me in
my encounter with a true cinematic visionary as
CONFESSIONS OF A POP
CULTURE ADDICT PRESENTS
JUNGLE MADNESS:
A CONVERSATION WITH CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST'S RUGGERO DEODATO
I spoke with Ruggero
Deodato in Toronto, Ontario on August 23rd, 2008
Sam:
Thanks for taking this time out of your busy schedule to talk with me.
Now, like most North Americans, I am most familiar with The Jungle
Trilogy. These films are criticized a lot because of the use of
violence yet the violence used in these films is no worse then what we see
on television and in films today. What do you feel that your films are
attacked the way they are?
Ruggero Deodato: The
[reality] of these accusations are not the violence, but that in
Cannibal Holocaust I attacked the media. The persecution was because
of my attack on journalism.
Sam: When
Cannibal Holocaust was released and you were arrested for killing your
actors, where were you and were you shocked by the allegations? How long
did it take for you to be cleared?
Ruggero: I was in
Italy. The trial was twenty days long but the [reality] was that
Cannibal Holocaust won in the highest level of Italian justice but the
movie was banned for four years afterwards.
Sam:
One of the themes of the jungle movies is that the deeper that the
characters go in the jungle, the madness takes over them. This was a very
similar theme in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Was that book
an inspiration for your films?
Ruggero: No.
I am not connected with that book. I learn from the jungle itself. Most of
all in shooting Last Cannibal War. I take inspiration during the
shooting form the locations I choose, and do not prepare the inspiration
before, but by listening to the environment during the shoot.
Sam: Did you
experience real madness in the jungle amongst the crew or actors, or even
yourself?
Ruggero:
Regarding Last Cannibal War, the real problem was that it really
brought the crew and the cast into the real jungle s o it was a logistic
problem. People get mad in that kind of location. The environment was
not that easy to deal with. In Cannibal Holocaust the problem came
from that that place in the Amazon where we shot was kind of a crossroad
for cocaine trafficking so it was dangerous. In Cut and Run the
main problem was that a lot of the crew were abusing drugs so I had a lot
of problems with that crew.
Sam: What do you
think of the new ultra violent horror films, such as Saw and
Hostel? Your films are very smart and there is a real social message,
but a lot of the more modern films seem to be violence for the sake of
violence, and mindless shock value. Or do you think there is a social
message in these new breed of ultra violent films?
Ruggero: Mainly, the
difference is just what you told me. With Cannibal Holocaust I
tried to give a social message. As I told you before, the movie was
against media most of all, more then asking for a shock. Nowadays it’s
very difficult to find a connection between violence, splatter and a real
social meaning behind it.
Cannibal
Holocaust isn’t a film for everybody. It is a brutal film to watch, and even a
viewer like myself who is rarely shocked, is forced to look away from the
screen a number of times during the film. However, the film is truly one
of the most intelligent horror films ever made. Despite the scenes of
ultra violence, the entire film has a social message running through the
story, and makes you question the true nature of mankind. What becomes
far more disturbing isn’t the graphic violence and horror presented on the
screen, but the way that the film forces the viewer to think, as well as
contemplate the sanity of their own soul. Furthermore, Cannibal
Holocaust is beautifully filmed and imaginatively pieced together, and
is a film that sticks with you for the rest of your life. Cannibal
Holocaust will be Ruggero Deodato’s legacy, and despite the
controversy and reputation of his film, it will remain to be one of the
most important horror films, as well as social commentaries, ever created.
POP CULTURE ADDICT
NOTE: I want to send a special
message of gratitude to Paolo Zelati for his important role in making
this interview happen. Thank you for helping set up this interview, as
well as for acting as a translator between myself and Ruggero Deodato.
Your involvement in this interview was essential to it's success, and I am
extremely grateful.
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