| Index | 8 reviews in total |
15 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Relentlessly heart-breaking, 2 June 2005
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Author:
Jiji-3 from Bulgaria
As someone who is trying to help a 23 year old recover from that
lifestyle, I can say the film is a very accurate representation of not
just boy prostitution in Prague in the 1990s but of boy prostitution as
such. I saw it, along with many other films on that subject, because I
wanted to educate myself as much as possible and had exhausted all
other sources of information I could think of. Of the docos I saw,
"Body Without Soul" was the most in-depth. The 2 hours (maybe 2+, I'm
not sure) went in the blink of an eye, the film draws you in. In that
sense, it's easy to get through but otherwise it's beyond painful, it
hits very close to home and it hits repeatedly. The fate of one of the
boys being interviewed - the youngest, most articulate and most
beautiful, of course - is particularly heart-breaking. I finished
watching the movie a few hours ago and I'm hurting almost physically.
Contrary to what other reviewers have said, I would recommend this film
to anyone and everyone because the truth of the matter is that however
unsavory, the subject "Body Without Soul" deals with is one people
should be a lot more familiar with than most currently are. I find
myself wondering what those who voted 5 or worse are evaluating
exactly, said subject matter or their own reaction to the film. If it's
the former, I can only advise them to direct their negative energy
elsewhere. The movie didn't invent prostitution, adult males did. If
it's the latter - if Body without Soul made them feel bad enough to
hate it - then they should have given it a 10.
14 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
This film is deeply flawed, 2 December 2005
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Author:
didier-20 from london
Aside from the jaw dropping sensationalism of this film making, which left me speechless at several points......Once i came back to earth i feel it has to be said that this is "auteur" film masquerading as documentary. As documentary film, it remains irresponsible. The film maker went on to make three films about this subject, and it's more about the film makers own obsessions than anything else. Was it a film about a period in a drug crazed pornographer's monstrous life and how he moved from beyond horror and into the absurdly grotesque.(dark, dark,black comedy) ?? As documentary, i thought this was it's most successful subject. To say it is a film about under age male prostitution in Praha is incorrect. Only part of that reality is ever revealed, so much of what ought to have been explored simply remains absent.To have done all these boys honour & justice, he would have had to expand the true context of their lives and humanised them as much as possible. In the very least abandon a sensationalist and mythologising approach in favour of level headed factual survey. He did not. To say it is a film about pornography in Praha is also incorrect. Again only a small part of that reality is seen, and most left out. No other geographical or social context was explored, no interviews with police or other pornographers. No context of what life is like now in the city of Praha, concerning these matters. To this extent you can charge the director with exploitation of these boys as much as anybody else. This film is a pornographic documentary about sex, drugs and death which happens to be set in Praha . The audience manipulation is phenomenal. I really had to re-check in myself a number of realities after it had finished. Be critical and don't just take this highly disturbing film at face value.
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Dark Passage, 14 June 2005
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Author:
thinker1691 from USA
Wiktor Grodecki's " Body Without Soul " invites the courageous to the prequel of his sensationally dark film, Mandragora. This graphic film depicts the appalling process by which young prepubescence and teen age boys in Prague are so skillfully lured into the eviscerated life of a male prostitute. Candid interviews with both predators and victims alike allow the visitor to observe how deftly and skillfully an unsympathetic pimp/promoter/and oftentimes executioner, can entice, convince and then blackmail his victims into becoming porn stars. Systemic of a life of poverty, the boys recall how easily they and their peers became street hustlers. Converging at a well-known swimming pool in the city, unsuspecting victims are attracted by the promise of money, and too often find themselves defending the tragic lifestyle of the walking dead. This film is not for the faint-hearted, but rather for those wishing to obtain the remnants of humanity on the verge of self-destruction.
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
not for the timid., 20 June 2003
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Author:
chris miller (chris@aptpupil.org) from davis, california
not for the timid. probably the most brutal documentary i've ever seen. it's about boy prostitutes in prague. they make their living by turning tricks and acting in gay porn films. we meet several of the kids and one of the most popular porn gay porn directors in the region. this film truly is not for the faint of heart. it's tough to get through, but brutality and depravity are a part of life and that's easy to forget when you have a frig full of food and live in a city of 60,000. artistically the film was shot well, with a score that works well, but is probably over-used. the structure really does a good job of juxtaposing certain images and motifs to rather shocking results. B.
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
A Brutally Powerful Documentary: Wiktor Grodecki's Precursor to MANDRAGORA, 21 September 2005
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Author:
gradyharp from United States
Wiktor Grodecki is a brave filmmaker, one who is unafraid to address a
controversial subject, yet one who is able to make a powerful
sociological statement by creating a metaphorical art film that demands
respect.
Grodecki interviews young boys (ages 14 - 17) who are male hustlers in
Prague: he wisely removes (for the most part) the interviewer questions
allowing the individual boys to make spontaneous, searing comments.
These young lads discuss why they became male prostitutes, how they
deal with selling their bodies, where they find their business (the
train station, the swimming pools, etc), how they feel about the johns
and about their fellow hustlers, the manner in which they do business
including the way in which the financial aspects come to play - all in
a way that burns the faces of these young lads into our psyches.
About half way through this film Grodecki introduces Pavel Rousek, a
man who by day is a pathologist performing autopsies in the Prague
morgue and in his off hours (using the pseudonym Hans Miller) creates,
casts and directs gay porno videos in his home. Rousek is shown at the
autopsy table gowning, gloving, and grotesquely performing an autopsy
on a real cadaver while discussing both professions. There are moments
while he is gloving that he explains why he doesn't allow his boys to
wear condoms (the buyers of his videos don't want to see condoms), and
the contrast between his self protection vs the enforcement of
prevention of sexual protection of his actors is devastating.
Rousek as Miller is then shown filming the boys in his home, explaining
the details of achieving the visual effects of pornography:
simultaneously we again hear the boys views of that aspect of their
'careers', creating a pitiful tension. There is almost no total nudity
in this film and when it does occur the lighting is so dark as to
obscure it - making the overall effect even more dense and effectively
tense. Under all of this lurid talk Grodecki uses classical music -
Albinoni, Mahler, Mozart - which again provides a contradiction that
makes the topic digestible.
The final question Grodecki poses to his subjects involves the boys
perception of 'soul' and while there is a variety of responses, the
overall message is that these lads sell their bodies as a career, but
the soul is 'what you think', something that cannot be taken from you.
Several of these boys have screen presence and faces that, were they
noticed by regular film makers, would probably give them legitimate
careers. But the power of the film comes from the words of these boys,
knowing completely their choice of life, and therein lies the sorrow.
This is a tough but very fine piece of film-making. Interestingly,
Grodecki absorbed this material and used it to create his subsequent
feature film MANDRAGORA (reviewed under that title). This film is the
more powerful of the two. Not a movie for everyone, but certainly an
important document about a way of life few know and fewer understand.
Grady Harp
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Powerful, Sickening, and Very Disturbing, 22 April 2005
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Author:
gftbiloxi (gftbiloxi@yahoo.com) from Biloxi, Mississippi
Some are ugly, some are attractive; some use drugs, some do not; some
are stupid, some are average, some are smart. And all of them are
teenage male prostitutes working the streets of Prague. Their clients
consist largely of German, Swiss, and Dutch tourists in search of cheap
sex--and for additional income they make pornos on the side. And along
the way they are ripped off, abused, and degraded until they simply
wear out.
Wiktor Grodecki's documentary BODY WITHOUT SOUL is a dark and
disturbing look at life on the streets of Prague. The film consists of
interviews with a dozen or so teenagers describing how they first began
on the streets, how they drifted into prostitution and pornography.
Some of the subjects seemed drugged; others are surprisingly
articulate. The centerpiece of the film, however, is an extended
interview with a pornographic film director who at first attempts to
gloss over the unsavory aspects of his work--and who ends by
unintentionally revealing just how vicious he actually is. The
pornographer is also a pathologist, and the camera follows him into the
autopsy room and films him at work. Grodecki then intercuts these
scenes with scenes of him directing his latest film, thus making the
point that these boys are no more to those who use them than so much
meat.
Although it is exceptionally well done, I would hesitate to recommend
BODY WITHOUT SOUL to a casual viewer. It is a moving film, a powerful
testament re the old, old story of man's inhumanity to man... But many
will find the autopsy scenes repulsive beyond their toleration, and I
cannot imagine that many will watch the film more than once.
Recommended, but as a rental rather than a purchase.
Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
A documentary, which should be seen by everyone, 21 December 2005
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Author:
ninoguapo from Middle of Nowhere
First I watched "Mandragora" an excellent, trough very depressing
movie. Than being found of documentary movies I decided to watch "Body
without Soul " based on other user comments I expected this to be
another dark and depressing masterpiece of Wiktor Grodecki. Instead it
turned out to be very powerful documentary, with a lot of life lessons.
You might be surprised by my statement above and so was my grandmother
when I discussed the film with her. She asked me why was I watching
such movies anyway and my answer was because I rather see it on the
screen than get a real life experience like the boys shown in " Body
Without Soul " . If some of them had seen similar movie before they
decided to cell their bodies may be they wouldn't have made the steps
which brought them in the hands of the porno producers
That is why my
opinion is that movies such as Body without Soul should be viewed by as
many people as possible as they are sure to make them think about
what they had just seen and if they could do something to prevent it
happening to them or their friends or relatives.
Some of the boy prostitutes interviewed in this movie seemed to deal
pretty well with their lifestyle and profession, other were making just
the opposite impression. In the movie you can see an the interview with
a pornographic film director to my surprise he wasn't shown as the
absolute evil but rather as a person who makes his living from
shooting porno( and working at the morgue ) with his sins and
mistakes , but still real and accurate character as all characters in
this documentary are...
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
gritty documentary of male prostitution in Prague, 17 February 2005
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Author:
dionysos_9 from Fishing Creek, NJ
This film consists almost entirely of interviews with boys involved in male prostitution. They are all pretty glum about it and they seem to lack the natural gaiety of youth. Only when they are together in a group do their spirits seem to lift a bit. Pardoxidly, most of the boys do not admit to being homosexual despite their sexual activities. The pornographer has a day job and it appears he makes movies more for the turn-on and any free sex he can wheedle out of boys than the financial rewards. Wiktor Grodecki has made two other films with this subject including Mandragora which is presented as a drama rather than in interview fashion and Angels but not Angels which I have not seen. At this point I am beginning to wonder about his motives in pursuing this subject but if it does anything to aid the boys then it would be a good thing. Life in Prague seems pretty free and easy with plentiful drugs. One of the boys makes what I would consider a rash statement in admitting to enjoying sex with prepubescent boys but this kind of openness about the subject may be what the director is hoping to expose. I thought the classical music score a poor choice and would have preferred music the boys would have been listening to. The overall effect is grimy and the only redeeming value would be to alleviate the plight of these unfortunates.
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