“Eat the rich” or some variation of poor people uprising against or just straight up murdering or burning down “the establishment” has been a plot-point in film since damn near day one. And if it isn’t eating the rich - it’s an outside force disturbing the peace of a seemingly happy privileged family (
Teorema/Sitcom, Funny Games, etc aren’t “eat the rich”, but their definitely “eat the rich” adjacent). In my personal opinion, Bruno Dumont’s
Slack Bay is one of the few examples of how absurd and sometimes fake that can be. To be clear - I’m not caping for rich people or the establishment, but at the end of the day most people aren’t about that revolutionary life (myself included). It certainly sounds nice but at the end of the day “Eat the rich” is something fashionable for Twitter leftists to say when in reality, if given the chance, they would gladly switch places with the rich people they’re advocating to be eaten (and the funny thing is - some of them are in fact rich and/or privileged).
Parasite is the perfect example of this. I don’t love
Parasite like the general public. It’s very well made and I understand the hype behind it. I also understand why folks clung to it so hard. The inconsiderate privileged people get their wake up call by getting hustled and eventually murdered. It’s also understandable how “the message” was a little lost on the viewers. The director gives mixed messages. It’s fine to give a mixed message or not have a clear stance on something that’s complicated but Bong Joon Ho sort of plays both sides. During the promotion of the film he cited Karl Marx in interviews and painted his protagonists out to be these desperate people with their backs against the wall and no other option but to hustle a rich family.
But at the end of the day, the poor family just wanted the same money and privileges of the rich family they took advantage of. There wasn’t anything noble. We’re not even going to get in to how they screwed over another poor couple in order to get access to the rich folks. I understand that’s part of the issue with the haves and have-nots. The have-nots are manipulated in to adopting a crab in the barrel mentality. My problem is
Parasite nor the director do a good job at emphasizing that. It’s like every shitty decision or evil tactic exhibited by the poor folks is never fault. If you think I have it wrong that’s fine. But you can understand how one could interpret
Parasite in the way I laid it out.
This isn’t about
Parasite but the recent New York Times list of the best movie of the 21st century gave the film relevancy again because it took the #1 spot. Everyone’s praising it again like when it first came out and it got me to thinking about Bruno Dumont’s
Slack Bay which is sort of like the “anti-
Parasite”.
Bruno Dumont understands the absurdity of the idea behind “eat the rich” in these modern times so he went and made a truly absurd film. In
Slack Bay, two investigators are looking in to the unsolved disappearances of rich tourists on a small French island. All clues lead the detectives to a local poor (and possibly inbreed) family of cannibals that are clearly behind it all.
In
Slack Bay, the poor family that literally eats the rich doesn’t want their victim’s money, homes or resources. They’re just evil and mentally ill. It should be mentioned that this movie is not only absurd but a slapstick dark comedy. Instead of taking the subject matter super seriously like other “eat the rich films”, Dumont gets very surreal.
This is definitely another film that belongs in the same conversation as not just
Parasite but
Martyrs, Funny Games, The Maids, The Housemaid and
La Ceremonie (a far superior film than all the movies listed). It’s also in that group of absurd films where an outside force ruins the lives of a seemingly well-off family like Pasolini’s
Teorema or Francois Ozon’s remake;
Sitcom.
Dumont also borrows heavily from his regular sources of inspiration like Jean Epstein and Fellini…
I am simply doing the same thing that Pharaon de Winter did by including in my film people from northeast France, as [Jean] Epstein also did - Bruno Dumont, Cineaction Issue 51, Feb. 2000
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay |
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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Le Tempestaire / Slack Bay
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Le Tempestaire / Slack Bay
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The Three Sided Mirror / Slack Bay
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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L'Or Des Mers/ Slack Bay |
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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Finis Terrae / Slack Bay
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L'Or Des Mers/ Slack Bay
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You start doing things by learning and you learn from people who have done it before you. They become your masters. Cinema is an art that comes with big history. I have learned and been influenced by Fellini - Bruno Dumont, film companion
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8-1/2 / Slack Bay
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Dumont steps outside of his Epstein/Fellini comfort zone and also takes from silent comedies…
I did watch a lot of Max Linder films, and the character in many of his films is this very bourgeois character who is made fun of - Bruno Dumont
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Max In a Taxi / Slack Bay |
I know Dumont hates the Bresson comparisons but between the plot which sort of takes from L’Argent and its source material and certain isolated moments - there is some Bresson in the film…
He [Bresson] uses close-ups in a way that's very strong and that leads us, as viewers, to reflect on what we see - Bruno Dumont
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L'Argent / Slack Bay |
I feel like this with every Bruno Dumont film I write about but I cannot stress how much this movie is not for everyone. But at this point it’s become semi-obscure. You don’t really hear people bring this movie up that much even though it isn’t that old and has legitimate movie stars like Juliette Binoche (Dumont is known for working with non-professional actors but I find that his movies work best when there’s a combination of professional and non-professional actors working together like in
Slack Bay). You’d have to be familiar with Dumont’s work or make some kind of an effort to seek it out. If you have somewhat of an open mind and looking for an alternative to something
Parasite - this might be a good substitute.