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TEN
MONOLOGUES FROM THE LIVES OF THE SERIAL KILLERS
DVD region 0. African Noise Foundation.
Opening
in stark black and white on the prison captured portrait of a
man drawing on a cigarette. A whine emanates off the soundtrack
– familiar to those of us who’ve heard the legendary
Murder seven inch singles – and as the
camera begins to move around him in a slow arc, Ed Kemper’s
chillingly lucid account of his crimes joins the disquieting drone
on the soundtrack. The figure on screen, killing only time in
a prison cell, stares away into nothing as the camera pulls in
tight on his face, and Kemper’s voice breaks down into sobs.
The screen then bleeds into saturated red and the verbally punishing
rap of the Gheto Boys, eulogising on the messy fineries of rape
and murder, burns into your ears like the muzzle blast of an Uzi
going off around your head.
And so begins Aryan Kaganof’s
1994 film meditation on murder, which – as one might expect
from this provocative filmmaker – impresses into its subject
matter to a depth that draws blood. Utilising an eclectic range
of both fact and fiction, Kaganof has removed his verbal and literary
source material from its original context and married it, within
the respective vignettes, to images that are wholly his own, compositing
a fracture line on the facets of his film’s themes: Ted
Bundy, trapped in his last corner, spills the blame of his desires
on pornography, while Kaganof – the trooper that he is –
can be seen masturbating as images of a pretty blonde girl, bound
and gagged, are projected onto his torso; Kenneth Bianchi, arrogant
and flaunting no feelings of remorse, casually picks his way through
police murder files admitting to their content. Extracts from
Henry Rollins’ diary are used in a sequence expressing isolation
that chills with its narrator’s outsider stare; J.G. Ballard’s
The Atrocity Exhibition and Crash
are used in sequences that neatly evoke the emotional duality
of the serial killer in society – murder and the desire
to murder is unending and it’s frisson is something
that attracts the curiosities of more than just killers.
Certainly, this is at times a demanding film to watch –
as are the majority of Kaganof’s – with the pace moving
from extremely fluid to near static through its stylistically
eventful course. It is surprising, though, that considering its
nature, autopical imagery is near to none existent, overwhelmed
by sexual imagery – the emotional heart of this film –
and its relation to the broken individual.
ANGUS MACKENZIE
www.kaganof.com
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