
Gwendoline (1984)
(บรรยายอังกฤษ)
Directer:
Just Jaeckin
Writter:
Just Jaeckin,
Jean-Luc Voulfow,
John Willie
Running time: 105
min
Country: France
Language: English |French
Genre:
Action | Adventure |
Fantasy
Subtitle:
English
Starring: Tawny Kitaen ... Gwendoline
Brent Huff ... Willard
Zabou Breitman ... Beth (as Zabou)
Bernadette Lafont ... The Queen
Jean Rougerie ... D''Arcy
Just Jaeckin
ผู้กำกับที่โด่งดังสุดขีดกับ
ภาพยนตร์ต้นตำหรับอีโรติกที่ไม่ใครไม่รู้จักอย่าง
Emmanuelle
(1974)
กับผลงานฟอร์มใหญ่ แนวอีโรติก ผจญภัย สไตล์ อินเดียน่า
โจนส์
Gwendoline arrives in China in a box, and is helped out
of her immediate predicament by a female contact and a
devil-may-care adventurer. She''s on a mission to find
her father, who was last seen searching for a rare
butterfly in the Land of the Yik Yak. They confront the
evil Cheops in an attempt to find Gwen''s lost father and
the butterfly, and face many other challenges to their
mission.
Gwendoline arrives in
China in a box, and is helped out of her immediate
predicament by a female contact and a devil-may-care
adventurer. She''s on a mission to find her father, who
was last seen searching for a rare butterfly in the Land
of the Yik Yak. They confront the evil Cheops in an
attempt to find Gwen''s lost father and the butterfly,
and face many other challenges to their mission.
This has been called INDIANA JONES meets BARBARELLA but
it''s so much more. By ignoring the comic book, Jaeckin
has, ironically enough, preserved the graphic form on
film. He is, after all (and first and foremost) a
fashion photography so his arrogance of story structure
leads to the best eye candy you''ll see in a long while.
Sequences from this film may have resembled Jodorowsky''s
aborted Dune project had it ever have been made! Sure
the first half is pretty slow but it leads into the
strangest and most mind-blowing balm-pottery ever to hit
celluloid, as Gwendoline and her pals go on a mission to
find a rare butterfly, her missing father and a lost
civilisation. The city of Yik-Yak itself is some of the
best visualisation I''ve ever seen, not unlike an S+M
party in a salt mine. Forget the acting (PLEASE forget
the acting) just sit back, listen to the vaguely Michael
Nyman-esquire score and watch the mind-blowing images
unfold. Otherwise, just pretend you''re watching TINTIN:
THE MOVIE, as rendered by Peter Greenaway. |