Martyrs

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Lucie, a frail, frightened, adolescent girl flees an abandoned slaughterhouse. Her opaque skin suggests she has been missing for many months. She is found filthy, starved, and unresponsive. Something horrific has happened to her. But what? Flash-forward 15 years later when the quiet tranquillity of a home nestled in a sparsely populated French forest is interrupted by a knock at the door - it’s Lucie, embarking on a gory quest for revenge. Pascal Laugier’s 2008 sophomore feature garnered a notorious reputation after audience members attending the premiere at the Festival de Cannes were left wide-eyed and mouth agape. Its reception so shocking, it was immediately threatened with censorship in its home country, with calls for the director to be imprisoned. Martyrs is a brutally confronting and provocative example of the French New Extremity a work of dark brilliance and vile beauty. A genre-defining classic so profoundly traumatising, it transcends all constraints of your average horror film and dives into the murky depths of human degradation and suffering. (Umbrella Entertainment)

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lamps 

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English Definitely one of the most ambitious and interesting horror films of the past decade. An unpleasant and intense experience at first, formally almost perfect – from the tantalizing gore and dense atmosphere in the first half to the crystal clear psychological terror in the second half. The film visibly tries to go deep and shock with its unpredictable story, which creates quite a contrast with the ubiquitous and sometimes unnecessary brutality (although it’s certainly not the most brutal horror film in history), but at least it gives the action on the screen a much more coherent structure, which is strengthened by the stupid but at the same time excellent final twist. I confess that I considered all possible ratings while watching it, and I had to go to sleep to sort it all out in my head. Martyrs is a challenging film, at first glance made for effect and money, but internally far more mature than the vast majority of modern exploitation horror. But only Pascal Laugier knows what it was all supposed to mean. 60% ()

Remedy 

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English As a whole, I found Martyrs to be considerably uneven. The first 45 minutes is an absolutely brutal, naturalistic, bloody, intense, and thus excellent ride that if it had continued to the end (and been cut down a bit) might have earned 4 stars. But at the moment it starts to talk too much, explain, and perhaps even outline to the viewer the possible message or meaning of what they are witnessing, it's actually quite boring and the "serious" angle just doesn't fit. Conceiving of it purely as an exploitation film and leaving a lot of the context open and rather just hinting at it gradually would have been a much better choice. After all, such an extreme conception cannot be seen as something thoughtful or philosophical. ()

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Othello 

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English The added value of Martyrs is its demonstration of the freewheeling and encompassing nature of horror itself. The film moves from exploitation, to haunted, to torture porn, to monster horror, to body horror, to the religious sector, not mixing the subcategories together but instead, thanks to the unpredictable script, allocating them in sequence, with almost none of them brought to a satisfyingly conclusion. As a result, from the animated beginning (or 1st half), all shot handheld, where the average shot length is about 1 second, even given the nature of the violence (from wild, unpredictable, and messy to methodical, purposeful, and utterly cold), the shot lengthens and the image calms down. The final infuriating (non)point is brilliant in its underhandedness to the viewer, who has had to go through a lot just to be told to "keep doubting." _______ Make-up artist Benoît Lestang couldn't have bid a better farewell. ()

POMO 

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English Martyrs is a painful experience that doesn’t leave any positive memories. The filmmaking is good, with an unpredictable script. The attempt to convey some sort of a deep message in the ending fails and does not turn the film into a serious work, but at least it’s there. Without this attempt, the extent of the protagonist’s suffering would be unacceptable for the audience and completely off-putting. ()

Isherwood Boo!

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English This is the essence of screenwriting idiocy that refuses to make the characters anything more than pieces on a chessboard of slaughter. These are one of the best things I love about the current French exploitation wave, but when you spend the first half desperately looking at what jerks the main characters are and the second half looking at what jerks those around them are, you kind of start looking forward to the end. But then comes the final point, and I just helplessly wonder how much Western critics must have seen that made them yelp so much. It left me completely cold, desperately bored, and kind of... pissed off. Laugier is a very decent craftsman, no question about it, but as a screenwriter he sucks! ()

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