Cine-Excess V: Subverting the Senses: The Politics and Aesthetics of ExcessItalian acting legend Franco Nero (Django, Keoma, Die Hard II) and controversial cult director Ruggero Deodato (Cannibal Holocaust, House on the Edge of the Park) headlined lastyear’s Cine-Excess V International Cult Film Conference and Festival. Cine-Excess V featured filmmaker discussions, exclusive UK theatrical premieres and a 3 day conference with over 30 separate talks on cult controversies from around the world. The theme of last year’s Cine-Excess was ‘Subverting the Senses: The Politics and Aesthetics of Excess’, which examined the theme of the controversial cult image in its political, historical and aesthetic contexts. With the resurgence of critical interest in the 1980s ‘video nasties’, as well as a whole new generation of films being subject to state control, the cult image is now a crucial index between the censor and the censored. The event featured a wide range of discussions from the topics of realist footage in Cannibal Holocaust and gender politics in 1970s sexploitation, to considerations of Franco Nero’s cult roles and the crime cinema of Enzo G. Castellari. Other topics covered in the event included the social politics of Rob Zombie’s cinema and the cult of controversy surrounding A Serbian Film. Both Franco Nero and Ruggero Deodato discussed their prolific careers at separate events at the festival, which were open to the public. Cine-Excess V also featured a screening of Deodato’s controversial classic Cannibal Holocaust. Deodato’s controversial cult catalogue was also discussed by Professor Martin Barker (Aberystwyth University). Professor Barker delivered a keynote address on audience responses to controversial cult material such as Deodato’s House on the Edge of the Park at a historic debate session between Ruggero Deodato and Senior BBFC Examiner Craig Lapperwhich may be seen as an extra on the recent Shameless Screen Entertainment release of House On The Edge Of The Park. Italian screen legend will also addressed the Cine-Excess V audience in a special career retrospective that included an exclusive screening of Sergio Corbucci’s spaghetti western classic Django (1966). Cine-Excess also joined forces with the Italian Cultural Institute to present:
|
Franco Nero accepts his Cine-Excess Achievement Award |
