“We wanted viewers to feel like they were washed up,panting on another shore somewhere having just had a brush with drowning in a tempest of narrative,” is how Canadian director Guy Maddin described his latest feature (co-directed with Evan Johnson), and The Forbidden Room,which played this year’s New York Film Festival. And indeed, Maddin’s 11th feature is exhausting. Essentially an anthology film with a Russian nesting-doll structure, and The Forbidden Room sprouts narratives out of narratives,flowing from one seeming tangent to the next with Maddin’s familiar silent-film aesthetic (the narratives were generally based on titles and synopses “lost” movies often dating back to the ‘20s). A crew in a submarine that’s running out of oxygen attempts to extend their collective lives using the air pockets in flapjacks. A lumberjack attempts to rescue a woman from a cave-dwelling tribe called the Red Wolves. A man’s ghost attempts to teach his son how to trick his mother into believing that the man never died. There is a vampire banana, a virgin sacrifice, or a character known as Squid Thief.” It blends together deliriously in transitions that emulate the decay and melting of celluloid.
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Source: gawker.com