| Index | 5 reviews in total |
12 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
MARVELOUS!!, 22 January 2003
Author:
chadelle (chadelle.jb@aliceadsl.fr) from france
Jabberwocky is one of the apotheosis in the complexity of animation and
amount of work.
Very atmospheric with strange music and weird old toys from the east of
Europa. See it again and again with the same pleasure.
Watch the dancing knife, i still ask myself how they do this...
4 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Language Practice, 27 October 2002
Author:
tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Spoilers herein.
Svankmejer's work ranges from the obvious and tedious to the rich and
deep.
This is his best in my estimation. His entire career can be seen as
experiments leading to his feature-length `Alice,' punctuated by
unsophisticated, uninteresting social commentary. `Alice' is fatally
flawed,
however, because he grossly misunderstands the richness of the
story.
But this project is not so limited. The little known origin of Carroll's
poem is his father's membership in a society to `restore' the English
language to its Saxon origins by expelling the French influence. Along the
way, Dodgson goofed in all sorts of linguistic jokes based on non-specific
sounds. It is the first poem whose images aren't bound to the intent of
the
poet.
Svankmejer surfs this territory by making his own touchstones that have no
meaning, but which tap subtle controversies and give us subtle traction on
which we can build our own film. It is not as expert as the Quay's `Are We
Still Married?' which is the very best of this type. But it is the best of
Svankmejer.
Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 4: Worth watching.
Jabberwocky in Academia, 12 July 2010
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Author:
m-eileen125 from United Kingdom
I understand avid Carroll fans and parents of young children might be
disappointed in this film since it seemingly has so little to do with
the Jabberwocky poem. But from an art/film theory perspective this film
is brilliant. Knowing that this is not a narrative, but a semi-
experimental stop motion short animation before watching it might help
people critique it by its own standards.
There's been a recent surge in considering children's literature, fairy
tales, and fables in regards to contemporary social anthropology. I
personally study this through visual arts but it's very relevant for
scholars varying from gender studies to linguistics. Reading authors
like Carroll and relating its historical context to contemporary
studies is the sort of thing I geek out on. Svankmajer, through some
incredible stop motion animation, has certainly veered off the original
poem. In doing so he's developed not a narrative, but a bazaar world
that is unsettling and repetitive.
Part of the original appeal of the Jabberwocky poem (and much of
Carroll's writing) was that he used so many gibberish words. They
allowed for ideas of different or parallel worlds. The Jabberwocky is
often discussed as a personal foe, what we most fear, and the vorpal
sword is the tool by which we overcome that fear -- if indeed we do
overcome it. This broad notion means that the jabberwocky doesn't have
to be a dragon or a monster, it can be public speaking or a fear of
rejection. In the case of Svankmajer's film, childhood itself is scary.
The content of the film may be a problem for children viewers. I
particularly find the blade dancing in the table cloth and eventually
stabbing itself quite "adult". And there are indeed savage notions of
dolls eating other dolls. But this isn't meant to be a kids film. It's
*visually* beautiful but its subjects are entirely uncomfortable, dark,
and bordering on morbid. Just as traditional fairy tales were quite
gruesome, Svankmajer is returning to the horror of a childhood nursery
-- even if the horrors are in the imagination. Ideas of dolls and
objects coming to life are common themes in children's stories, from
the Nutcracker to the Velveteen Rabbit. Children seem to intuitively
imbue these items with life of their own. As adults we find it creepy,
disturbing, haunting, and warped. Stop animation is a very effective
visual display of this imagination. The repetition in the toys and
their keenness to destroy each other is very un-childlike. It's far
more similar to the harsh monotony of adult life. Other interpretations
of the film discuss it as quite angsty -- the line in the maze trying
to break free and once it does it scribbles all over the portrait of
the old man (the authority figure) and then exits out the window and on
to freedom. I'm not sure I fully agree with this reading of the film,
but it's one of many ideas to consider.
I admit that it's relationship to lewis Carroll is a tad nebulous but
its significance in animation and visual technique is overt. I'm
approaching this as an academic not as a parent, but I think the film
is pretty damn amazing.
10 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
Interesting and enjoyable but it caused me to wonder why Svankmajer has not progressed since 1971, 30 July 2004
Author:
bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
As the poem Jabberwocky is read out, various toys come to life and
dance all around the room and through the furniture. The only thing
that seems to be able to stop their fun is a black cat who periodically
turns up to overturn them or burst through them.
I saw this short film as part of a collection and I was interested in
it because I had seen the very recent film Otesanek by Svankmajer and
was curious to see what he had been like over 30 years ago but more
of that later. This film opens with the poem Jabberwocky being read out
this I liked because it is a rhythmic and enjoyable little piece.
However the visuals bare little or no relation to the words, although
this is not a major problem, just something that struck me as odd that
the poem should have been selected in the first place. Instead the
visuals are an enjoyable mix of toys moving and all manner of weird
things occurring; I would have struggled to place this as being Czech
if I hadn't known the director but it is unmistakably Eastern European
in origin.
This to me was part of its problem that I could recognise it as being
Svankmajer's work. Baring in mind that the only other film I saw of his
was from the late 1990's, I did have to wonder why the animation looked
the same 30 years earlier and why he had not manage to adapt or mature
his style over several decades it is rare to see this as most people
grow over the time. This is not so much a criticism as it is an
observation but it did distract me from the short for a while.
The short itself is interesting but it is all a bit weird ad the
animation is not THAT great (even for the period). It is very Eastern
European in its rough nature so I guess if that's not your style then
don't bother with this. However it is still worth seeing due to the
sheer imagination behind it and the number of strange images it throws
into your face. It may not be that good but it is interesting and
enjoyable in a rough sort of way. The only thing that really bugged me
was the fact that Svankmayer seems to have just stayed where he was in
the 1970's but I reserve judgment until I get the chance to see more
of his work.
4 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
This film sure got my hopes up--too bad it wasn't what it advertised, 23 February 2008
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
Considering that the English title for this short film is JABBERWOCKY
and it began with a recitation of the Lewis Carroll poem, you'd think
that this film was going to be "Jabberwocky". My daughter, a huge
Carroll fan, sat in restless anticipation...and then, nothing!! Instead
of Jabberwocky, the action on the screen had nothing to do with the
poem and after a minute or so they even stopped reading the poem. From
then on, it was a very fast-paced and super-weird stop-motion film set
in a child's room circa 1900. For what seemed like an eternity, toys
danced and moved in crazy manners. Some were even very creepy
images--such as soups being made of assorted doll body parts. Now some
of this stop-motion was very clever--especially the imagery and
metaphors. But, at no point was it Jabberwocky. So what we have is
passable entertainment and nothing more.
By the way, this film is part of the CINEMA 16: European Shorts DVD. On
this DVD are 16 shorts. Most aren't great, though because it contains
THE MAN WITHOUT A HEAD, COPY SHOP, RABBIT and WASP, it's an amazing DVD
for lovers of short films and well worth buying.
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