... aka: Mountain of the Cannibals
... aka: Primitive Desires
... aka: Prisoner of the Cannibal God
... aka: Slave of the Cannibal God
Directed by:
Sergio Martino
Italian jungle / cannibal films have always been polarizing; not so much for the graphic gore and plentiful nudity, or for an underlying cultural ignorance / racism I see a few complaining about, but almost entirely because many of them include scenes of real animals being killed. Should any living creature die simply to enhance the shock value of a film? Beliefs usually fall into two very vocal camps and I seldom see the grey area in between mentioned, though there is a lot of it. The first group claim it's no big deal, and usually follow their defense by stating that those who have an issue with it are either being overly sensitive or - in the case of the meat-eating dissenters - huge hypocrites. To them, there is no difference between being a regular human being; a carnivore by nature, and being a filmmaker slaughtering animals simply for the sake of entertainment. The animals die either way, right? Who cares about specifics? Most in this group simply do not think an animal's life is equal to that of a human life; a point-of-view grounded in the majority of religious beliefs. To many, animals can be used in the same way one would use layers of latex, a rubber leg or a gallon of fake blood.
The second faction consists of people who find this all beneath contempt; cruel, sadistic and completely unnecessary. Some will go so far as to question the sanity of those who enjoy watching such things. Others wonder why these scenes had to be real. Couldn't they just imply them, or simulate them with special effects? As far as I'm concerned, I hate seeing it. It just makes me feel bad. I don't find it entertaining. I can't say "Ew!" and laugh it off. I simply gain nothing positive out of seeing anything die. However, I also have distinct memories of renting all of the Faces of Death and equivalent tapes in my youth with some friends from school. There have been times in my life I've felt the need to quench my own morbid curiosity so it would be unfair of me to bemoan others for doing the same exact thing. So no judgment calls here from me either way. If you want to see this stuff, fine. If you don't want to see this stuff, fine as well. I do personally take heart in knowing that these films are pretty much a byproduct of the past.
All that said, there are scenes in Mountain of the Cannibal God
that go into a realm I'm personally uncomfortable with. Sorry, but nothing
- no human, no animal - should be tortured for the sake of a film.
There are several real animal killings in this one where the animals have
clearly been pitted or forced together simply so a slow, gruesome,
torturous death is guaranteed. Forget National Geographic-style
observational documentations of nature at work, these are staged scenes
orchestrated by the filmmakers themselves with one sole purpose in mind.
This film feigns wanting to capture the natural world at work, but what it
really does is go against nature because 'civilized' man has stepped in to
force this stuff to happen. This no doubt hits its low point when a small
monkey is thrown at a huge, hungry boa constrictor. The scene is
completely gratuitous and the camera lingers over every disgusting detail.
Monkeys are very lively creatures with highly expressive faces, which
makes this even harder to take as the animal in this scene is clearly
terrified as it dies a very slow, painful and agonizing death. It's
disturbing, almost impossible to watch and harms what is essentially an
old-fashioned adventure tale that did not even need such scenes in the
first place.
All watching Sergio Martino's interview on the DVD did was further incense
me. Though he's talented and I've enjoyed many of his earlier films, I
didn't appreciate listening to him lie through his teeth like we're all a
bunch of idiots. He admits to filming the monkey scene and claims he
regrets it but he also says that the snake kept showing up on set and the
monkey just happened to stroll along at the wrong time when he just so
happened to be filming. Actually watching this scene tells another story
entirely; one where the monkey - perhaps unwisely entrusting these
filmmakers enough to be handled - was clearly tossed to the snake. In the
same interview, Martino claims the movie isn't erotic, which doesn't account for an X-rated female masturbation scene - complete with finger insertion - wedged in at the end. He may have had in mind the
heavily censored print (Slave of the Cannibal God) when he talked
about the film but either way his interview is an insulting load of crock.
I'm glad there are laws now in place from allowing people like Mr. Martino
from doing things like this in the future. And at least other filmmakers
in the sub-genre have owned up to what they filmed and not blatantly lied
about it. Ruggero Deodato for instance has stated in numerous interviews
that the animals who've died in his films were immediately eaten by the
natives who'd have killed them anyway. Death is part of the circle of
life. It's sustenance. It's protection. It's sometimes kill or be killed.
And, it's entirely natural. But killing animals for "entertainment" is an
entirely human endeavor and one I personally neither like to participate
in nor see on film.
Despite my above ramblings, I'm not going to really penalize this
otherwise fairly entertaining exploitation jungle adventure just because
it has a few unfortunate and cruel scenes. The same can be said for most
other films in this sub-genre and I've given many of them (Jungle
Holocaust [1977], Cannibal Holocaust [1980]) good scores. Even
here recently I gave a positive review to Man from Deep River
(1972), which itself had a scene of a mongoose and cobra staged strictly
for shock value. Mountain's score is strictly a reflection of it
being compared to others of its type. While it's not as good as the above
mentioned titles, it's not the worst of this type either.
Searching for a husband who disappeared in the jungle months earlier,
Susan Stevenson (Ursula Andress) arrives in New Guinea with her
obnoxious, ill-mannered brother Arthur (Antonio Marsina) in tow.
After unsuccessfully trying to get help from the British consul there, she
decides to take matters into her own hands and enlists the aid of local
American doctor Edward Foster (Stacy Keach), who'd previously spent
some hellacious time in the jungle himself, in putting together an
expedition. They gather up a small group of local natives and have a
helicopter drop them off deep in the jungle. From there, they must trek
through dangerous territory until they make it to the ocean. And from
there, it will be an even more dangerous venture onto a mountainous island
whose top peak is rumored to occupied by a tribe of cannibals. Along the
way, they make a pit stop at a mission run by Father Moses (Franco
Fantasia), where Susan encourages Manolo (Claudio Cassinelli)
to join them. Manolo will soon have no choice since the group of outsiders
bring death to the peaceful village and he's promptly ejected.
The rest of the film plays out as your standard lost world adventure with
our heroes trying to avoid vicious animals, the elements, water rapids,
steep rocky cliffs, booby traps set by the natives and the like. After all
of their native help die in one way or another and several of the
principles have been killed, the surviving two find themselves abducted by
a slew of stone age cannibals, who keep them prisoner in their cave
dwelling and subject them to various tortures. Being fair-haired, Susan of
course gets the "Blonde Goddess" treatment. Though the film starts out
relatively slow, the final half hour tries to make up for it by piling on
the nudity, gore and tastelessness in huge doses. Ignoring the frequent
animal death, this - in its uncut form - has lots of spearings, a
decapitation, a castration, guts and hearts being ripped out of bodies, an
arm bitten off by an alligator, a sadistic dwarf, rape and a scene of a
man simulating sex with a huge boar (!), among other things. The Sri Lanka locations are great and the photography and score are both decent.
I doubt Swedish actress Andress, who became an international sex icon
thanks to her performance as deadly bikini-clad sexpot Honey Ryder in the
James Bond flick Dr. No (1962), knew what she'd signed up for when
she agreed to appear in this one. Then in her 40s, Andress' career was
starting to sag by this point so I'd venture a guess and say she felt that
taking on this sexy role (which somewhat echoed the title character she's
played in the successful Hammer fantasy-adventure She [1965]) would
revive her career. Needless to say, being featured in scenes where she has
to consume native vomit and get the juicy remains of her decomposing
husband rubbed all over her face did nothing of the sort. The moment most
people is remember is when she's stripped and covered with some kind of
orange goo by two nude native women. Though Keach receives star billing,
he's not really the actual star. It's quite possible that none of them
knew the animal scenes would be added later since all they do is look off
to the side and gasp, which is when that footage has been inserted. I do
have to praise the actors for one thing: this does not look like an easy
shoot and the leads appear to have performed many of their own stunts. It
also showed a level of bravery for Andress to have a real boa wrapped
around her and for Cassinelli to handle what appears to be a real cobra.
The
DVDs are from Anchor Bay and Blue Underground, which feature the extended
103-minute print. The original U.S. theatrical release and most of the earliest
VHS releases use the heavily censored R-rated cut, which runs just 86 minutes.
In the UK, it was banned for years as part of the 'video nasty' list.
★★1/2
4 comments:
Yep, unnecessary and repulsive was that scene. Sergio himself is as repulsive for those lies as the scene itself.
I'm not a fan of animals dying with a camera that obsessively lingers on the whole gory display.
One scene I'm conflicted about is in Cannibal Holocaust because it does prove a point. The American crew not only kill this turtle, but they butcher it savagely for kicks. It is an early precursor to what they would do savagely to the jungle tribe. So it served a purpose, even if it explicitly shows an animal torn apart on screen in graphic detail.
But, so often, these animals are killed as you said, for shock value.
If it weren't for that monkey's disgusting murder, I think this is a fun jungle cannibal adventure, with Andress looking awfully good as she was entering her 40s.
I was a bit shocked at Martino's interview. Knowing nothing about him but enjoying many of his movies that was a bit of a disappointment. I was also surprised the people who put together the DVD actually analyzed the scene to disprove his claims as opposed to doing the usual turning-a-blind-eye and ass-kissing.
As far as animal killing for film goes, it's just something I don't care to see though the damage has already been done. When the animal is quickly put out of its misery it doesn't seem quite as horrible as what happened to, say, the monkey in this one. That was just cruelty cranked up to a disgusting level.
Yep, that turtle scene is also a tough one to watch, especially since it keeps moving (minus a head) WHILE it's being butchered. Hopefully it ended up being turtle soup and didn't go to waste. And Andress did indeed look great for her age.
I really like that hand drawn poster,I use it as wallpaper for my phone!
It's also great as a jungle adventure film
I love all of those older posters. The background on my tablet is actually the poster for Up from the Depths and I haven't even seen that yet.
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