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October 6, 2009

ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers - the jelinski and buttgereit vhs video sleeve

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 11:50 pm

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designed by martin

ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers - the original video sleeve

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September 11, 2009

variety reviews Ten Monologues From The Lives Of The Serial Killers

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July 11, 2009

apocalypse massacres

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June 7, 2009

rada sesic on ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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mark duursma reviews ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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June 6, 2009

stan lapinski reviews ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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doom reviews the dead man & ten monologues

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ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 12:18 am

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May 11, 2009

hans beerekamp on ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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May 3, 2009

Ten Monologues From The Lives Of The Serial Killers

By Mike Everleth ⋅ May 1, 2009

Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers

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Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers is an older film (1994) by South African filmmaker Aryan Kaganof back when he was known as Ian Kerkhof. (He changed his name after meeting his biological father.) The point of noting all this up front is that knowing it adds an extra dimension to watching what is essentially an hourlong meditation on identity.

The film is pretty much what the title says, even if not all of the monologues come exactly from serial killers. Each monologue is like its own short little movie, but connected through both the tone of each monologue’s delivery and through a cohesive visual style. Apparently, all serial killers talk in a slow drawl, almost as if they talk while perpetually half-asleep. Their statements are both concrete and obliquely hazy at the same time, with a loopy kind of logic that makes sense once you can figure out what they’re talking about. They’re also almost uniformly obsessed with the past.

Visually, Ten Monologues looks much older than its fifteen years due to a grainy, high-contrast look, almost as if we’re watching home movies. One monologue actually is old home movie footage cut up and processed to look more deteriorated than its washed out tint implies. The set-ups also vary from monologue to monologue. Sometimes we see the speaker and sometimes we don’t. Some set-ups are simple, such as one person in one shot, to other more complex visual “stories,” such as the one that has a little “plot” about a man watching children in a playground then stalking a woman walking by. Nobody in the film is seen being killed, although one woman seems close to meeting her final reward.

While the monologues are all drawn from various sources, some from real life and some literary, one gets the idea that this is a very personal film and that Kerkhof / Kaganof has pulled out passages that most reflect his state of mind — at least the part of his mind that skews towards darker thoughts. None of the monologues talk about death directly and are instead musings on identity and how the past has shaped the present. The ultimate expression of the film’s intimate nature is the segment where a completely naked Kaganof masturbates while a porno movie is projected onto his abdomen and an actual recording of Ted Bundy discussing his sexual hangups plays on the soundtrack.

Other serial killers whose words are used in the film are Edmund Emil Kemper (”The Co-Ed Killer”) and Kenneth Bianchi (one-half of the Hillside Stranglers). Meanwhile, the literary sources of the monologues come from J.G. Ballard (The Atrocity Exhibition and Crash), Roberta Lannes (Goodbye, dark Love) and Henry Rollins.

The monologues vary enough from each other so that the film is successful as a whole. None seem too long nor too short, although some are memorable just from the visuals or some by the audio. The least memorable monologue is the Henry Rollins one where the visuals tell a little story, i.e. the park stalker mentioned above. The overall film is more successful when the visuals are more abstract, but still closely connected to the monologue subject matter they’re connected with. For better or worse, Kaganof pleasuring himself is memorable. It’s shot in a high light and dark contrast and the shots are never still for more than a few nanoseconds. Also, the innocent home movie footage paired with author Lannes’ fictional dark childhood reminiscence is a terrifically sad and successful pairing, as is strangely the Geto Boys rap song played against a plain red screen.

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The absolute best monologue out of the bunch is the one using the words of Charles Manson — technically not a serial killer — delivered by performer Lorand Sarna. A musician by trade, Sarna delivers Manson’s monologue directly to the camera with a slow, sing-song-y and utterly convincing delivery. He’s comes across as very thoughtful and heartfelt, as if he’s just coming up with his philosophies on life on the spot. If one didn’t do a little Internet research on who Sarna really is, one might go so far as to believe that Kaganof had gone out and found a real-life serial killer to interview. It’s a powerful and compelling performance.

Although Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers focuses exclusively on unpleasant issues, it’s still an eloquent meditation on the nature of identity. Not only does our past inform our present, but we also define ourselves through the words of others that we identify with as being our own. That these concepts come from a filmmaker who has at the least symbolically changed his own identity through the changing of his name makes the film all the more intriguing.

this review first appeared on badlit.com, the journal of underground film

May 1, 2009

ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 11:22 am

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April 29, 2009

variety reviews ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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April 7, 2009

gerdin linthorst reviews ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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March 23, 2009

ten monologues from the lives of the serial killers

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October 12, 2008

j.g. ballard: an autopsy of the new millennium

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 11:27 pm

Marató de films ballardians

La nit del 10 de setembre al CCCB s’exhibiran atrocitats en pantalla. I és que el Centre de Cultura Contemporània se suma a La nit en blanc de TV3 que celebra la televisió pública catalana per commemorar els seus vint-i-cinc anys. De les 20h a la 1h tothom qui ho vulgui podrà entrar gratuïtament a l’exposició J.G. Ballard. Autòpsia del nou mil•lenni, i en el mateix horari se celebrarà a l’auditori una Marató de films ballardians. Durant cinc hores es projectaran non-stop llargmetratges inspirats en l’obra literària de l’escriptor britànic a l’auditori del centre. Al Hall també es podran visionar vídeos en sintonia Ballard.
Cal destacar que Solveig Nordlund, directora de Low-Flying Aircraft presentarà personalment el seu film a l’Auditori del Centre a les 20:30, i que es podrà visionar, entre altres, The Atrocity Exhibition de Jonathan Weiss.

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PROGRAMA
Exposició J.G.Ballard. Autòpsia del nou mil•lenni oberta de 20h a 01h

20:00h Hall, projecció
“Organism” Hilary Harris, 1975
“Cadillac Ranch Show” Ant Farm, 1974-1994, 16′40″, VOanglès
“Media Burn” Ant Farm, 1975-2003, 23′02″, VOanglès

20:30h Auditori, projecció
“Low-Flying Aircraft” de Solveig Nordlund, 2002, Portugal-Suecia, 80′, 35mm, VOSAnglès amb subtítols en català. Presentació a càrrec de l’autora.

22:30h Auditori, projecció
“The Atrocity Exhibition” de Jonathan Weiss, 2001, USA, 80′, Vídeo, VOSE

24:00h Auditori, projecció
“Ten Monologues from the lives of the serial killers” de Ian Kerkhof (Aryan Kaganof), 1994, Alemanya, 60′, 35 mm, VOSC

more information here

October 8, 2007

the divinity review

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 12:02 pm

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October 5, 2007

banal sensationalism

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October 1, 2007

the great masturbator

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September 4, 2007

serial killers in rotterdam

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August 13, 2007

serial killers in rimini

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 11:02 am

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August 10, 2007

serial killers in madrid

Filed under: 1994-ten monologues from the lives of the serial killer — ABRAXAS @ 12:35 am

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August 9, 2007

the serial killers in rimini

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July 24, 2007

serial killers

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July 11, 2007

Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers Synopsis

Run Time:
58 min.
Cast:
Rodney Beddal, Kain, Lorand Sarna, Ian Kerkhof, Mark Bellamy
Director:
Ian Kerkhof
Genre:
Crime

Psychopaths and sociopaths are the focus of this Dutch film which is based upon a blend of written facts and fiction to create ten haunting vignettes. The most disturbing episode involves a young sexually molested boy who watches his father’s murder in a city park and finds himself drawn to the corpse. Also included are passages from J.G. Ballard’s book Crash, interviews with murderers, and the Geto Boys singing “Murder Avenue,” a rap inspired by Jeffrey Dahmer. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

this synopsis first appeared on fandango.com

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