Cine-Excess
  • Home
  • eJournal
    • eJournal Panel
  • Conference
    • Cine-Excess I
    • Cine-Excess II
    • Cine-Excess III
    • Cine-Excess IV
    • Cine-Excess V
    • Cine-Excess VI
  • Releases
    • Amsterdamned
    • Suspiria
    • Viva
  • Cult Content Creation
  • Cult Film Archive
  • Contact

Viva (2007)

"A LOVING PARODY OF EARLY '70s SEXUAL LIBERATION THAT SHOULD HAVE RUSS MEYER GOING 'HUBBA HUBBA!" IN HIS GRAVE." The Guardian Guide.

The first full-length feature by LA-based artist and filmmaker Anna Biller (The Hypnotist; A Visit From The Incubus), Viva is "a spot-on spoof of low-grade late 60s/early 70s sexploitation flicks" (Variety) that joyously and faithfully pays homage to the classics of the genre.

Written by, directed by and starring Biller, the film is a highly stylized, super-colour-saturated, satirical romp through the kind of camp sleaze and nudge-nudge wink-wink jocularity that will be all too familiar to fans of Herschell Gordon Lewis' Suburban Roulette, Radley Metzger's Camille 2000 and Russ Meyer's Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls. Biller's remarkable attention to detail and painstakingly accurate recreation of the trash aesthetics that make the sexploitation genre so enjoyable have led to Fangoria magazine describing Viva as "incredible, experimental, hilarious and hotter than hell in June… a film that needs to be seen by any self-respecting trash movie enthusiast."

Biller stars as Barbi, a voluptuous, bored suburban housewife with a workaholic husband, Rick (Chad England), who, although perfect in most ways is indifferent to her physical and emotional needs. To get through the monotony of her days, Barbi turns to the companionship of her wealthy, swinging neighbours, Sheila (Bridget Brno) and Mark (Jared Sanford). It's not long before both couples decide to split up, prompting the newly liberated Sheila to drag Barbi headlong into the middle of the burgeoning sexual revolution. Changing her name to Viva, the once innocent housewife embarks on a wild ride in search of love and adventure. It's a journey that takes her into a world full of new experiences, from bisexual liaisons to psychedelic, drug-fuelled orgies and from bohemian nudist colonies to high-class brothels.

Looking like a lost film from the late 1960s, Viva is a fun and loving tribute to the pre-porn era of cinema, when copies of "Playboy" could be found alongside "Time" magazine on the coffee tables of gaudily decorated living rooms all across America. For fans of B-movie exploitation cinema, kinky softcore, high-camp comedy and all things retro, Viva is a must. 

Special Features include: "Viva La Vita: Canapés, Cabaret and the Carnal" booklet by Beth Johnson; behind the scenes with narration by director Anna Biller; exotic slide show; original theatrical trailer; "This is Cine-Excess"
Picture
Buy Viva on DVD 
Cine-Excess is an annual international film festival and conference, which is attracts global filmmakers, scholars, distributors and exhibitors to an event which features filmmaker discussions, a themed three day conference and 5-7 UK theatrical premieres/exclusive screenings. Cine-Excess is open to the public, who can book can either book screening delegate passes for individual films, or full delegate passes for the conference, lunches and all Cine-Excess screenings.