The Pervert's Guide to Ideology

The Pervert's Guide to Ideology

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Sophie Fiennes
Produced by Sophie Fiennes
Katie Holly
Martin Rosenbaum
James Wilson
Written by Slavoj Žižek
Starring Slavoj Žižek
Music by Brian Eno
Cinematography Remko Schnorr
Edited by Ethel Shepherd
Distributed by P Guide Productions
Zeitgeist Films
Release date
  • 7 September 2012 (2012-09-07) (Toronto)
Running time
136 minutes[1]
Country United Kingdom
Language English

The Pervert's Guide to Ideology is a 2012 British documentary film directed by Sophie Fiennes and written and presented by Slovene philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj Žižek.[2] It is a sequel to Fiennes's 2006 documentary The Pervert's Guide to Cinema. Though the film follows the frameworks of its predecessor, this time the emphasis is on ideology itself. Through psychoanalysis Žižek explores "the mechanisms that shape what we believe and how we behave".[3] Among the films that are explored are Full Metal Jacket and Taxi Driver.[4] The film was released in the United States by Zeitgeist Films in November 2013.[5]

Synopsis

Žižek appears transplanted into the scenes of various movies, exploring and exposing how they reinforce prevailing ideologies. As the ideologies undergirding cinematic fantasies are revealed, striking associations emerge: from nuns advising following your desires at The Sound of Music to the political dimensions of Jaws. Taxi Driver, Zabriskie Point, The Searchers, The Dark Knight, John Carpenter's They Live ("one of the forgotten masterpieces of the Hollywood Left"), Titanic, Kinder Surprise eggs, verité news footage, the emptiness of Beethoven’s "Ode to Joy", and propaganda epics from Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia all inform Žižek’s psychoanalytic-cinematic argument.

List of films discussed in this documentary

Also included is some news footage of the September 11 attacks, 2011 Norway attacks, and 2011 England riots. Images are shown of a Rammstein concert.

Awards

Reception

"Though its ideas are indeed heady and high-flown, they are presented in a way that's consistently engaging and accessible. And the bearded, bulky, Slovenia-born Žižek comes across as a born raconteur and explainer, the kind of professor whose courses are deservedly his department's most popular. You don't have to share his materialist philosophy to find his analyses of culture and movies witty, insightful and usefully thought-provoking." —Godfrey Cheshire, RogerEbert.com[6]

"What remains? You will get a lot of answers to questions you never knew you had." —Anne-Katrin Titze, Eye for Film[7]

"Intellectual rock star Slavoj Žižek dishes out another action-packed lesson in film history and Marxist dialectics with The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology, a riveting and often hilarious demonstration of the Slovenian philosopher’s uncanny ability to turn movies inside out and accepted notions on their head." —Jordan Mintzer, The Hollywood Reporter[8]

"Žižek’s romp through pop culture feels like a strange dream, with a mad professor re-enacting our favourite movie moments through the eyes of a therapist. The Pervert’s Guide to Ideology is invigorating, zany, completely memorable and often hilarious. Žižek goes from praising Coca-Cola to analyzing what the shark attacks really mean in Jaws." —Matthew Hays, Rover Arts Review[9]

Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 92% based on reviews from 24 critics.[10]

See also

References

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