The Nerve Insider
A daily pick of what's new and hot at Nerve.
Scanner
Your daily cup of WTF?
Nerve@SXSW 2006.
Blogging the Roman Orgy of Indie-music Festivals.
Coming Soon!
Coming Soon!
Coming Soon!
The Daily Siege
An intimate and provocative look at Siege's life, work and loves.
Kate & Camilla
two best friends pursue business and pleasure in NYC.
Naughty James
The lustful, frantic diary of a young London photographer.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: kid_play
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Super_C
The Nerve Blog-a-log: ILoveYourMom
A bundle of sass who's trying to stop the same mistakes.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: The_Sentimental
Our newest Blog-a-logger.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Marking_Up
Gay man in the Big Apple, full of apt metaphors and dry wit.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: SJ1000
Naughty and philosophical dispatches from the life of a writer-comedian who loves bathtubs and hates wearing underpants.
The Nerve Video Blog
Deep, deep inside the world of online video.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: charlotte_web
A Demi in search of her Ashton.
The Prowl, with Ryan Pfluger
Nerve @ Cannes Film Festival
May 16 - May 25
ScreenGrab
The Nerve Film Blog
Autumn
A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
The Modern Materialist
Almost everything you want.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: that_darn_cat
A sassy Canadian who will school you at Tetris.
Rose & Olive
Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other's lives.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: funkybrownchick
The name says it all.
merkley???
A former Mormon goes wild, and shoots nudes, in San Francisco.
chase
The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Nerve's TV blog.
Brandonland
A California boy capturing beach parties, sunsets and plenty of skin.
61 Frames Per Second
Smarter gaming.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Charlotte_Web
A Demi in search of her Ashton.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Zeitgeisty
A Manhattan pip in search of his pipette.
Date Machine
Putting your baggage to good use.

The Screengrab

Forgotten Films: "Love Is a Dog from Hell" (1987)

Posted by Phil Nugent

This week, the Screengrab is honoring "the 15 Top Bars of Cinema", which provides us with a handy occasion to remember many filmmakers' favorite literary drunk, Charles Bukowski. Aside from the best-known Bukowksi-based movie, the 1987 Barfly (which Bukowski wrote in tribute to himself), the man has been well-represented on-screen in such films as the 1981 Tales of Ordinary Madness (in which his alter ego--"Charles Serking" he's called this time--is playing by an enthusiastically rutting Ben Gazzara) and the more recent Factotum starring Matt Dillon, as well as the posthumously assembled documentary Bukowski: Born Into This, which is full of footage of the man himself, explaining the world to the camera to kill time while wondering when his good friend Peaches is going to call. Worth tracking down: J. J. Villard's 2003, award-winning animated short Son of Satan, a heart-warming tale of cruel youth based on a Bukowski story. (We're still holding out hope that we might someday get to see the 1977 Supervan, in which Bukowski is said to have a small, uncredited role as "Wet T-Short Contest Water Boy.") The real ringer in the Bukowski filmography is the 1987 Belgian feature Love Is a Dog from Hell, a sensitive three-part story about a man with a romantic spirit who longs to be in love and to be loved but whose inability to meet the real world halfway dooms him to a life of terminal loneliness. It was directed by Dominique Deruddre, who used Bukowksi's story "The Copulating Mermaid of Venice, California" as the basis for a short film and then came up with the other two episodes as lead-ins to the concluding episode so that he could expand it to a feature. It's about how the adult Harry (Josse De Pauw), a ruined drunk in his early thirties, finds one night of bliss with a beautiful woman who can't reject him--a corpse (Florence Beliard) that he and a buddy swipe from the back of a hearse.

All the major Bukowski movies have been made by foreign directors--the Italian Marco Ferreri (Tales of Ordinary Madness), the Swiss-German Barbet Schroeder (Barfly), the Norwegian Bent Hamer (Factotum). Probably they see his work as giving them a chance to explore the parts of America that don't make it into Hollywood movies, and part of the fascination of those movies has been seeing where those guys have gone when they've landed in L.A. with Bukowski as a tour guide. Love Is a Dog from Hell is different in that it transposes the material to a European setting, and it feels very different. In the opening sequence, the twelve-year-old Harry (Geert Hunaerts) is starting to feel sexual urges which are all mixed up with the soaring, unattainable romantic feelings he experiences watching a movie, in which the princess in need of rescuing is played by the same blonde actress who'll later turn up as his necrophiliac soul mate. And in the middle section, with De Pauw as the adolescent Harry, a dead man walking as the high school graduation dance approaches. The dance is the high point of the movie. Harry the teenager expresses his hopeless romantic feelings by writing poetry, but his body seems to be expressing its gnarly desires by bestowing on him a case of acne that makes him look like something out of a David Cronenberg movie. In his peak of daring, Harry wraps his exploding-pizza face in toilet paper in the men's room and then successfully asks his dream girl to dance with him. It's as lucky as he'll ever get until he starts dating the newly deceased.

In the movies that others have shot on Bukowski's home turf, the directors have celebrated the wildness and low-rent hedonism that are the pay-off for his acceptance of himself as a "failure" by the standards of polite society; those directors probably see him as one of the last embodiments of the American frontier spirit. But Love Is a Dog from Hell concentrates on the reject's sorrow and rage over what he's being denied, and it has a gentle, heartbroken quality that goes with the country-village look of the settings and the soft light and the slight off-ness of the high school band's versions of American pop songs from the 1950s. It's an art movie, but of a special kind: it's one of those foreign films that, because of its subject matter, was thrust not into the art theaters but into the grindhouses. It played there under the title Crazy Love, and that's the title under which it's now available on DVD.


Comments

No Comments

in
Send rants/raves toscreengrab@nerve.com

Archives

  • July 2008 (133)
  • June 2008 (146)
  • May 2008 (241)
  • Bloggers

    • Paul Clark
    • John Constantine
    • Phil Nugent
    • Leonard Pierce
    • Scott Von Doviak
    • Andrew Osborne

    Contributors

    • Kent M. Beeson
    • Pazit Cahlon
    • Bilge Ebiri
    • D.K. Holm
    • Faisal A. Qureshi
    • Vadim Rizov
    • Vern
    • Bryan Whitefield
    • Scott Renshaw
    • Gwynne Watkins

    Editor

    • Peter Smith

    Tags

    Places to Go

    People To Read

    Film Festivals

    Directors

    Partners