Lack of good storyline.
... View MoreFrom my favorite movies..
... View MoreFantastic!
... View MoreTrue to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
... View MoreA typically exploitative '70s shockumentary, made by those darned Italians who apparently cornered the market during the decade by making sick variants on MONDO CANE. These films were designed to gross out and disgust the viewer whilst hiding behind the "safe" genre of the documentary, allowing the film-makers to fill their movies with more sex and violence than is usually witnessed in similar US or British productions. MONDO MAGIC is a particularly strong and graphic example of the genre, focusing almost totally on native and primitive life in Africa and South America.Viewers bear witness to such pleasant sights as decapitated chickens being used for divination, healers urinating on the ill as a method of healing, and that old favourite, the breast-feeding of puppies. In central America we see children having parts of their mouths removed and their skin mutilated due to age-old customs. Elsewhere in the Philippines there are some genuinely impressive and inexplicable examples of "psychic" healing in process, where a healer pulls foreign bodies from the sick and ill and leaves no wound, despite copious amounts of bloodshed. In South America, jungle natives cook large poisonous spiders for their Sunday lunch and eat the bones of old witch doctors to protect their tribe.Over in Africa, children shower liberally in cow pee and witch doctors are left to rot back into the earth after death. Cow dung is used as an insect repellent and in a particularly repulsive interlude, we see an elephant being used as a pincushion as the natives spear it to death. Listening to the screams of pain and watching the blood stream from this proud and giant creature is a test for any emotional or squeamish viewer and to make matters worse, this moment seems to go on forever as the elephant refuses to die. Elsewhere we have a man suffering from a "genital disturbance" being treated by herbs (am I the only one who found this hilarious?) and a possessed child having his genitals wrenched from his body by a rope. The focus of the film seems to be on naked native tribe members going about their business, all loosely linked into some magical element.At around the hour mark, the film seems to lose focus and instead concentrates on the usual round of gyrating native dances, guys lying around on beds of nails, and sex rather than violence. Don't think that for one moment the sight of two sweaty and naked natives fondling each other is titillating though, as this footage is perhaps even more gruesome than the earlier violence that the film offered up. I don't know which is worse. The repulsive barbarity of the first half of the film, or the poorly-shot out-of-focus dullness of the second. I enjoyed the cool familiar song they keep repeating through the film though, it definitely adds a sense of class to some of the scenes they don't really deserve to have. I don't know how much of this film was faked or whatnot, but at the end of the day it's a run-of-the-mill addition to this in-your-face sub-genre.
... View MoreFrom a ethnographic perspective, these "staged" performances are rare glimpse into tribal customs that were, in essence, an adaptation to the land. Hunter gatherer societies around the world, have been "practicing" their lifestyles for over 40 000 years.I viewed the 93min Italian dialog version, and I do not speak the language so relied on the "archival footage" to tell the story. I will leave it to the viewer to discern between the real and "fake" footage.The anthropologist/documenter, is still the "guest" amongst these tribes, and as such, has the rights, roles and responsibilities of an uninitiated child. And are only shown the everyday world of these people and not their secret sacred lifestyle.The "perfect circumcision" is a result of practices that surpass the written record. eg Aborigines in the desert regions of Australia practice circumcision and subincision.I think you will find these tribes in Africa are no longer living there traditionally. (I hope I am wrong!) What was their land, has too much gold, diamonds, and those rare elements that are needed for mobile technology, and as such, has been taken over by governments and corporations.Some might say exploitation I say culturally significant
... View MoreHad trouble watching this one. The obsession with bodily fluids went more than just a tad overboard. Although I personally am a fan of Mondo films, this one didn't make the "I wanna see it again" list. Supposedly, it also offended the unoffendable (Is that a word? It's my word now.) John Waters.Since it came out in 1975 after the first Mondo wave, I get the impression the producers were just piling on the grossness. I won't go into detail here, (Some of you may be eating.) But some of those first scenes almost made ME puke. And I'm a card carrying fan of the Italian Cannibal-Zombie films. It had some decent cinematography. That's the one compliment I'll give it.
... View MoreMONDO MAGIC will make you lose your lunch. After spending considerable time with a filthy African tribe, the "producers" cross the water to find another equally filthy South American tribe. Animals are slaughtered, prepared and eaten by hand; bodily fluids and excreta are glorified and liberally distributed across the screen; nearly everybody is naked, nearly all the time.The narrator says this is all tied in with "magic," but MONDO MAGIC is hardly a serious study of primitive magic or religion. It's more like a montage of disgusting scenes that are probably 100% authentic. (Circumcised African tribesmen don't shock me since the rite is ancient and originated in Africa, whence came the Israelites).The Intermedia DVD version I saw this evening was "re-edited," and clocks in at 84 minutes -- the "sex magic" seems to have been cut from the film. Crude anatomy lessons are plentiful, however.
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