Sizzling Euro film fizzles
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Mike Swanson
Imagine driving through the uninhabited country and finding a young,
beautiful, forward woman who first wants to give you flowers, then
her body, then her life.
Sounds at first inviting to the average single heterosexual male,
but there’s a catch. Sylvia’s as sexually aggressive as anybody on
the block, but she’s a human praying mantis, so a hot night between
the sheets -- or between dancing vines in the greenhouse in this
flick -- comes only in exchange for your life.
“The Feast of the Praying Mantis,” which had its first screening
Saturday at the Newport Beach Film Festival, will get its second,
final viewing Thursday at noon at the Edwards Island 5. It’s perfect
for those who agonize over the choice of Bravo versus Cinemax when
watching late-night TV.
The Belgian film is overwhelmingly European in its beautiful
cinematography and its artsy treatment of a plot Hollywood would have
likely turned into a gratuitous bloodbath. True to European form, the
director chooses eroticism over violence. The plot is unquestionably
silly, but it’s executed in such a restrained manner (which borders
on the painfully slow) that the viewer stays interested in more than
the next sex, or at least breast scene.
Julien thinks he’s struck gold upon meeting and moving in with
Sylvia, but it doesn’t take him long to learn who, or what she is.
Sylvia won’t sleep with Julien because, of course, she loves him and
doesn’t want him dead, so the pair proceeds to independently court a
host for her needs. They find one in the free-wheeling daredevil
Patrick, and away the movie goes ....slowly.
“The Feast of the Praying Mantis” looks and feels like a free-love
‘70s film, so much so that the viewer’s left waiting for the Pink
Floyd soundtrack to kick in. Legendary French director Roger Vadim
likely would have loved this movie, but Vadim certainly doesn’t
represent the average Newport-Mesa filmgoer, even among the South
Coast Village-frequenting crowd.
If you’re free around lunchtime Thursday and have been waiting for
a film that crosses “And God Created Woman” with “Red Shoe Diaries,”
then a ticket for “The Feast of the Praying Mantis” is highly
recommended.
* MIKE SWANSON is the assistant city editor. He may be reached at
(949) 574-4286 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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