At 01:30 PM 9/21/98 -0500, you wrote: >While on the subject of Lenzi, can anyone see the parallels between >_Cannibal Ferox_ and _The Cook The Thief His Wife & Her Lover_ pointed out >by Phil Hardy? I've only seen the latter, and considering what Video >Watchdog said (and showed) about _Cannibal Ferox_, I don't think I want >to, een though it sounds interesting enough in structure. > >Scott Well, in The Overlook Film Encyclopedia: Horror, Hardy (or one of the other contributors) says The Cook is like Cannibal Ferox remade by Visconti. Not so much parallels between the two films as a general sense of nastiness or taboo-breaking. In any case, Cannibal Ferox (better known in the US at least as Make Them Die Slowly & which I actually saw in a multiplex theatre of all places) has little in the way of structure or plot. Like the other Italian cannibal films, a framing sequence sets up a series of violent occurances that are far beyond horror film conventions. Unlike, say, the work of Romero, Argento and Peter Jackson or such Hong Kong efforts as The Untold Story or Run and Kill, there's no sense of humor/wit or any style or any thematic development. The cannibal films are almost pure sensationalism. The best discussion of them is in Kim Newman's Nightmare Movies while the films themselves are easily available from the gray area companies that advertise in places like Psychotronic Video Magazine. ------------------------------------------------------ Lang Thompson http://www.tcf.ua.edu/wlt4 New at the Funhouse website: Did Elvis Steal Rock 'n' Roll?, The X-Files Movie Bites!, music reviews ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama.