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I Spit on Your Grave

 
Movies:

I Spit on Your Grave

  • Director: Meir Zarchi
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sadistic Horror, Sex Horror
  • Themes: Woman In Jeopardy, Thrill Crime, Out For Revenge
  • Main Cast: Camille Keaton, Eron Tabor, Richard Pace, Anthony Nicholls
  • Release Year: 1977
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Camille Keaton, grand-niece of Buster and star of the thriller Cosa Avete Fatto a Solange?, appears here as Jenny, an aspiring novelist who rents a cabin in the Connecticut woods. Three rednecks at a local gas station and a retarded delivery boy seem quite friendly at first, and many viewers wonder just where director Meir Zarchi is going with the story. Then he drops them 200,000 feet right into the center of Hell for the longest, nastiest, and most brutal gang-rape in motion-picture history. Zarchi takes his time with this scene, not for the sake of titillation, but to make the audience feel the absolute horror of Jenny's plight. She is humiliated, sodomized over a rock, and brutally beaten in the middle of the woods. Then she crawls home, naked and bruised, only to get a repeat performance with her new novel shredded, her stomach kicked, and a bottle rammed violently inside her. The experience leaves Jenny shell-shocked, a cipher completely detached from reality. She hangs the delivery boy from a tree, gorily castrates the ringleader in a bathtub, and dispatches the other two rapists with an axe and an outboard motor. Eron Tabor, Richard Pace, Anthony Nicholls, and Gunter Kleeman co-star. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Review

There's a reason why this one is commonly described as a "cult classic": its smallish audience has maxed out and will not grow beyond the number of admirers it has now. I Spit on Your Grave, like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Last House on the Left, will never have the semi-mainstream audience of Night of the Living Dead or Sam Raimi's Evil Dead series because it is too gut-wrenching for the public at large. Look at what happens to poor Jennifer (played with total realistic abandon by Camille Keaton, who made a few B-movies before vanishing in 1989). The harrowing, near-pornographic torture she is put through for the first 30 minutes is excruciating to watch, and to do so requires a degree of third-person sadism few people will willfully admit to. It's disturbing as anything committed to celluloid. But it's all done to set up the revenge motif, and boy does it work. When Jennifer regains her strength and sets out to even the score, it is impossible not to respond with an authentic adrenaline rush of one's own. Shot on a budget of about 87 cents on leftover film stock seemingly hand-cranked through an antique camera, I Spit on Your Grave makes other low-budget independent horror films that came after it seem quaint. While its audience numbers may not expand, it will always remain stable because there is always another crop of budding horror fans who have heard of its reputation and will go out of their way to find out what everyone in their circle is talking about. And once they see it, they'll never forget it. ~ Buzz McClain, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Camille Keaton - Jennifer
  • Eron Tabor - Johnny
  • Richard Pace - Matthew
  • Anthony Nicholls - Stanley
Gunter Kleeman - Andy; Alexis Magnotti - Attendant's Wife

Credit

Michael Penland - First Assistant Director, Meir Zarchi - Director, Meir Zarchi - Editor, Yuri Haviv - Cinematographer, Meir Zarchi - Producer, Joseph Zbeda - Producer, Meir Zarchi - Screenwriter

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Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer; The House on the Edge of the Park; Last House on the Left; Lipstick; Maniac!; Ms. 45; Daddy's Deadly Darling; Axe; Cannibal Holocaust; Dirty Weekend; The Untold Story; Baise-Moi; I Will Dance On Your Grave: Savage Vengeance; Hitch Hike; I Will Dance On Your Grave: Cannibal Hookers
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Wikipedia: I Spit on Your Grave
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I Spit On Your Grave
Directed by Meir Zarchi
Produced by Meir Zarchi
Joseph Zbeda
Written by Meir Zarchi
Starring Camille Keaton
Eron Tabor
Richard Pace
Anthony Nichols
Gunter Kleemann
Cinematography Yuri Haviv
Editing by Meir Zarchi
Spiro Carras (re-edited intl. version)
Distributed by Cinemagic
Release date(s) November 3, 1978
Running time 100 min.
Country USA
Language English
Followed by Savage Vengeance

Day of the Woman, better known by its re-release title, I Spit On Your Grave, is a controversial rape and revenge movie. Prominent movie critics lashed out at this movie for its graphic violence and lengthy depictions of gang rape, and the picture remains controversial to this day.

This movie earned an R rating upon its original American release in 1978. Camille Keaton (the grand-niece of Buster Keaton) won a Best Actress award for her role in this movie at the 1978 Catalonian International Film Festival in Spain.[1]

Contents

Synopsis

New York magazine writer Jennifer Hills (Keaton) is writing her first novel, and decides to spend the summer in a cottage on a lake in the countryside, where she can write it undisturbed.

Three local men, two ne'er-do-wells and a gas station manager, are disturbed by Jennifer's independence, and periodically harass her by driving by her cottage in their speedboat, or making sounds at night. One day, while Hills is relaxing in her canoe, two of the men surprise her in their speedboat, grab her boat's towrope and tow her to shore. As she tries to escape, she's met by the other two men in their group and she realizes that they had planned this abduction. It appears they have done so ostensibly so their mildly-retarded friend Matthew can lose his virginity. Jennifer fights but is chased by the men through the forest. They capture her and brutally sodomize and rape her repeatedly in a lengthy and graphic sequence. After she crawls back to her house they attack her again. Matthew finally rapes her after drinking alcohol, but says that he can not climax with the other men watching. While she is being tortured, the other men ridicule her book and rip up the manuscript. As she passes out, the men order Matthew to stab her in the heart, and then leave. Matthew cannot bring himself to do this, and dabs the knife lightly in her blood so it looks as if he killed her.

In the following days, a traumatized Jennifer pieces both herself and her manuscript back together. She goes to church and asks for forgiveness, and then begins carrying out a plan.

First, she lures Matthew back to her cabin and entices him to have sex with her under a tree. As he becomes oblivious to the surroundings around him, she strings a noose around his neck and hangs him. She then cuts the rope and drops the body in the river.

She picks up one of the men at the gas station where he works—he thinks she is attracted to him and wants him. She then stops halfway to her house and turns a gun on him. She orders him to take off all his clothes. He tells her that what happened was all her fault and he feels no guilt—she enticed all of the men by walking around with sexy legs and low-cut tops. She acts as if she believes him, and lowers her gun. She invites him back to her cottage for a hot bath. She manually stimulates him in her bathtub, and tells him she killed Matthew. He doesn't believe her. As he nears orgasm, she picks up a knife she has hidden under the bathmat (which she took from Matthew—he had brought it with him to kill her) and cuts his genitals. He screams and calls out for his mother while bleeding to death. Calmly, she leaves the room and locks him in from the outside. He dies from blood loss and she disposes of him in her basement. She burns his blood-stained clothes in her fireplace.

The two remaining men take their motorized boat to Jennifer's cabin, with an axe in hand. As they attack her, she escapes with the boat and the axe. She then swings the axe into one man's back. The other man swims up, grabs hold of the motor, and begs Jennifer not to kill him, telling her that their treatment of her was the other men's idea. She quotes back to him what he said when she asked for mercy: "Suck it, Bitch!" and turns on the motor, disemboweling him before speeding away.

Name changes

The movie was originally released under the title Day of the Woman (the title preferred by Zarchi), although it was also shown under the title I Hate Your Guts and The Rape and Revenge of Jennifer Hill. The title was finally changed to I Spit on Your Grave in a 1980 re-release.

The movie is followed by 1993's Savage Vengeance. Camille Keaton reprises her role as Jennifer.

Controversy and criticisms

As I Spit on Your Grave, the movie was censored and released in the United States in 1980. Many countries, such as Ireland, Norway, Iceland, and the former government of West Germany, banned this movie altogether, claiming that the movie "glorified violence against women". Canada initially banned the movie, but in the 1990s, decided to allow its individual provinces to decide whether to permit its release. Since 1998, some provinces (such as Manitoba, Nova Scotia, and Quebec) have released this movie, with a rating that reflects its content.

This movie was originally released in Australia in 1982 with an R 18+ rating, though it was the censored American version. In 1987, the movie survived an appeal to ban it. It continued to be sold until 1997, with yet another reclassification that led to its ban in that country. Even though Australian censorship law forbids the release of movies that depict scenes of sexual violence as acceptable or justified, in 2004 the full uncut version was awarded an R 18+, lifting the seven-year ban. The Office of Film and Literature Classification justified this decision by claiming that castration is not sexual violence.[2] In the United Kingdom, this movie was branded a "video nasty", and it appeared on the Director of Public Prosecutions's list of prosecutable movies until 2001, when a heavily-cut version of the movie was released with an 18 certificate. This British Cut version was released on DVD in New Zealand in 2001, with an R18 rating.

Movie critic Roger Ebert wrote that this was the worst movie that he had ever seen, referring to it as "a vile bag of garbage...without a shred of artistic distinction," adding that "Attending it was one of the most depressing experiences of my life."[3]

The initial criticism has recently given way to a second appraisal of the movie among some viewers. Michael Kaminski's 2007 article for the website "Obsessed with Film", titled "Is 'I Spit on Your Grave' Really a Misunderstood Feminist Film?" argues that, when understood within the context in which director Zarchi was inspired to make it, the movie may be equally appropriate to analyze as "feminist wish-fulfillment" and a vehicle of personal expression reacting to violence against women.[4]

One reappraisal was made by Carol J. Clover in the third chapter of her 1992 book Men, Women, and Chainsaws. Clover notes that she and others like her "appreciate, however grudgingly, the way in which [the movie's] brutal simplicity exposes a mainspring of popular culture." Clover further argues that the movie's sympathies are entirely with Jennifer, that the male audience is meant to identify with her, and not with the attackers, and that the point of the movie is a masochistic identification with pain used to justify the bloody catharsis of revenge. Clover also wrote that in her opinion the movie owes a debt to Deliverance.

Zarchi's inspiration and responses to criticism

In the commentary for the Millennium Edition, Zarchi said that he was inspired to make the movie after helping a young woman who had been raped in New York. He tells of how a friend of his and his daughter were driving by a park when they witnessed a young woman crawling out of the bushes bloodied and naked (he later found out the young woman was taking a common shortcut to meet with her boyfriend when she was attacked). They took her with them, took his daughter back home, and talked with the friend on whether they should take her to the hospital or to the police. They decided to take her to the police first, which they soon afterwards discovered was a mistake — the officer, whom Zarchi described as "not fit to wear the uniform", delayed taking her to the hospital and instead insisted that she answer questions about her assailants, even though her jaw had been broken, and she could hardly talk. Finally, Zarchi insisted to the officer that they take her to the hospital right away. Zarchi said that soon afterwards the woman's father wrote him a letter of thanks for helping his daughter, and wanted to give him a reward, which he turned down.

In the same commentary, Zarchi denied that his movie was exploitative, and that the violent nature of the movie was necessary to tell the story. He described actress Camille Keaton as "brave" for taking on the role.

2009 Remake

CineTel Films has acquired rights to remake I Spit on your Grave 2009 and had initially planned a 2010 worldwide theatrical release. The movie is being produced by CineTel president and CEO Paul Hertzberg and Lisa Hansen, with Jeff Klein, Alan Ostroff, Gary Needle and Zarchi as executive producers.[5] Filming began on November 2, 2008, with Steven R. Monroe directing.[6]

Cultural references

In "Lisa the Vegetarian", a seventh season episode of The Simpsons the marquee of the Springfield drive-in advertises a double feature of I Spit On Your Grave and I Thumb Through Your Magazines.

References

External links


 
 
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