The Witman Boys
Had Kafka been from Budapest, lacked genius and a sense of humor, and been
afflicted by morbid Catholicism, he might have come up with a grim and obvious
parable like The Witman Boys. Based on a story by Kafka contemporary
Géza Csath, director János Szasz's dour descent into
psychopathology begins with the sudden death of the title two boys' sturdy
burger father. An Oedipal tragedy of sorts unfolds, as their mother (the
striking Maia Morgenstern, resembling the Wicked Queen in Sleeping
Beauty) takes on a crass lover and her sons -- who resemble Edward Gorey
characters -- seek comfort in ceremoniously killing stray animals. When
plucking the eyes from an owl (captured from its perch on their father's
headstone, no less) fails to do the trick, they turn to the charms of a
prostitute, with predictable results. Relentlessly dark both in mood and
lighting, the film at its best evokes the poignant spirit of René
Clément's brilliant Forbidden Games. For the most part, however,
the heavy-handed nihilism and depravity of Boys is merely puerile.
Screens at the Copley Place Thursday, September 17 at 5:15, 7:30, and 9:45 p.m., Friday, September 18
at 10:30 a.m. and 1 and 3:15 p.m., and Sunday, September 20 at 7:15 and 9:30 p.m.
Film Festival Feature Films
|
The Witman Boys |
The Cruise |
Confessions of a Sexist Pig |
Melting Pot |
Pleasantville |
Clay Pigeons |
Waking Ned Devine |
Blood, Guts, Bullets, & Octane |
My Name is Joe |
Six Ways to Sunday |
The Theory of Flight |
A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries |
Down in the Delta |
Children of Heaven |
I Married a Strange Person |
20 Dates |
Bandits |
More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times
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