Careful (film)

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Careful
Directed by Guy Maddin
Produced by Greg Klymkiw
Written by Guy Maddin
Starring Kyle McCulloch
Gosia Dobrowolska
Sarah Neville
Paul Cox
Brent Neale
Cinematography Guy Maddin
Editing by Guy Maddin
Release dates 1992 (Canada)
1993 (U.S.)
Running time 100 min.
Country Canada
Language English

Careful (1992) is the third feature film directed by Guy Maddin. It is Maddin's first colour film, shot on 16mm for a budget of $1.1 million.[1] At one point, Martin Scorsese had agreed to act in the film, as Count Knotkers, but bowed out to complete Cape Fear. Maddin pursued casting hockey star Bobby Hull, but ended up casting Paul Cox.[2]

Plot

Careful is set in Tolzbad, a fictional mountain town under constant threat of devastating avalanches that can be hair-triggered by any loud noise or even a too-large expression of emotion. The people of Tolzbad thereby suppress their emotions as much as possible, living in constant vigilance against losing self-control. An opening lecture cautions common advice ("Think twice!") alongside stranger warnings ("Don't stand so close to the walnut tree!"). The greatest ambition of the citizens of Tolzbad is to become a good servant for the reclusive Count Knotkers.

Johann and Grigorss are brothers and butlers-in-training who desire this very dream. Both are beloved of their mother Zenaida, although she hates their brother Franz, who they do not speak of and who has been exiled to the attic. The ghost of their dead father, blind since an infant, when his eyes were poked out as he was hugged by his mother, who was wearing an unpinned brooch (Maddin's own father lost an eye in this same way),[3] appears to warn the incapacitated Franz of impending doom in the family, yet Franz (paralyzed and mute and covered in cobwebs) can do nothing. The ghost complains to Franz that Zenaida never loved him and harboured love for Count Knotkers instead, although forbidden to marry him by the Count's mother.

Johann is betrothed to Klara, daughter of Herr Trotta, and although Grigorss harbours secret love for Klara he says nothing. Johann, meanwhile, becomes incestuously attracted to his own mother Zenaida. He spies on her through the walls of the chimney (hanging upside down inside of it like a bat) as she undresses and bathes. He then concocts a love potion for her, and as she drifts into sleep he assaults her, kissing and groping her breasts. Horrified at himself, Johann burns off his lips with a hot coal, cuts off his fingers with garden shears, and throws himself off a mountain.

Grigorss becomes infuriated when Zenaida reveals that her passion for Count Knotkers has been rekindled since his mother has died, so that no obstacles stand in the way of their union. She reveals that the reason she hates Franz but loves her other sons is because Franz reminds her too much of her hated dead husband, but when she conceived Grigorss and Johann she was thinking about the Count. Grigorss challenges the Count to a duel to avenge his father's honour, but Zenaida talks him out of it by promising to finally accept Franz into the family.

However, Klara convinces Grigorss to go through with the duel. Possessed like Johann with incestuous love for her parent (her father, Herr Trotta, who ignores Klara but lavishes attention on her sister Sigleinde), and inspired after viewing the enchained wild mountain girl Gerda, this duel is the first step of her plan for revenge. The duel takes the form of a strange contest where each must unbutton the other's coat and drawn out a dagger. The cold mountain air makes this quite difficult, since they have to keep blowing on their finges to keep them from going numb. Finally, Grigorss managed to stab Count Knotkers. He heads home, where Zenaida tends to Grigorss after he collapses from exhaustion. However, when she discovers he has killed her beloved Count, she throws him out of the house and goes to the attic to hang herself in front of Franz.

Grigorss is taken by Klara to a mountain cave she once hopefully prepared as a love den for her and her father but which she now claims can be their new home. On the gondola ride there, while the two yawn incessantly due to the thin air despite having a dramatic discussion, Klara tells Grigorss that he father raped her and they must plan his death. Grigorss takes Herr Trotta on a sleigh ride, during which they plan, with a pistol shot, to start an avalanche to bury Trotta. All goes according to plan except that Klara throws herself into the sleigh to die while kissing her father.

Alone, Grigorss retreats to the mountain cave. A single teardrop causes another avalanche, that traps him inside, where he freezes to death while hallucinating a happy reunion with his parents. As the film ends, Franz and Sigleinde join together to search the mountains for their lost family members, not realizing they are dead.

Cast

Kyle McCulloch as Grigorss
Gosia Dobrowolska as Zenaida
Sarah Neville as Klara
Brent Neale as Johann
Paul Cox as Count Knotkers
Victor Cowie as Herr Trotta
Michael O'Sullivan as Blind Ghost (Dead Husband of Zenaida)
Vince Rimmer as Franz
Katya Gardner as Sigleinde
Jackie Burroughs as Frau Teacher
Ross McMillan as Chief Steward
Leith Clark as Butler Blore
Glen Hubich as Butler Schrammel
Brendan Carruthers as Mortician
George Toles as Countess Knotkers

Release

Careful premiered at the New York Film Festival and, although it was not a commercial success elsewhere, "single-handedly saved a struggling art-house cinema in Missoula, Montana" where "sell-out crowds had filled the house twice every night for two weeks."[4]

Careful was released to home video in 2000, on a DVD that also includes an hour-long documentary on Maddin, Waiting for Twilight, directed by Noam Gonick and narrated by Tom Waits.[5] Careful is also included on the DVD boxed set The Quintessential Guy Maddin: 5 Films from the Heart of Winnipeg, released by Zeitgeist Video, alongside Archangel, Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary, Twilight of the Ice Nymphs, and Cowards Bend the Knee.[6]

Critical Reception

The film received generally positive reviews, with review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reporting an 83% approval rating based on 12 reviews.[7] A critical essay on the film by Will Straw was included in the book Canada's Best Features: Critical Essays on 15 Canadian Films.[8]

Awards

Careful won "Best Canadian Film" at the 1992 Sudbury Cinéfest.

References

  1. Beard, William. Into the Past: The Cinema of Guy Maddin. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2010. Print. ISBN 978-1442610668
  2. Vatnsdal, Caelum. Kino Delirium: The Films of Guy Maddin. Winnipeg: Arbeiter Ring Publishing, 2000. Print. ISBN 1-894037-11-1
  3. Beard, William. Into the Past: The Cinema of Guy Maddin. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2010. 92. Print. ISBN 978-1442610668
  4. Vatnsdal, Caelum. Kino Delirium: The Films of Guy Maddin. Winnipeg: Arbeiter Ring Publishing, 2000. Print. ISBN 1-894037-11-1
  5. Maddin, Guy, dir. Careful. Zeitgeist Video, 2000. DVD.
  6. Maddin, Guy, dir. The Quintessential Guy Maddin: 5 Films from the Heart of Winnipeg. Zeitgeist, 2010. DVD.
  7. "Careful (1993)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved 2012-12-28. 
  8. Walz, Eugene P., ed. Canada's Best Features: Critical Essays on 15 Canadian Films. Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi B.V., 2002. Print. ISBN 978-9042015982

External links


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