A WICKED TALE
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ABOUT
THE MOVIE
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- NIL
Genre:
Short/Thriller
Starring: Evelyn Maria Ng, Johan Ydstrand Director: Tzang Merwyn Tong Rating: NC16 Year Made: 2005
Languages:
English
Subtitles: English Aspect Ratio: 16x9 Widescreen Sound: English Dolby Digital 2.0 Running Time: 45 mins plus bonus feature e'Tzaintes (53 mins) Region Code: 3 Distributor: Comstar Home Entertainment
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SPECIAL
FEATURES
TECHNICAL
SPECIFICATIONS
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SYNOPSIS:
From the filmmaker of [e’TZAINTES] comes “A WICKED TALE” – a dark psycho-erotic re-imagination of the Little Red Riding Hood story. An adolescent with a curious fascination for the unknown meets a mysterious stranger who lures her into his game of seduction and manipulation. Set in an enigmatic fantasy world where nothing is the way it seems, cult director Tzang Merwyn Tong retells the fable of innocence lost through a series of very strange montages
MOVIE REVIEW :
This is Tzang Merwyn Tong’s retelling of the Grimm brother’s “Little Red Riding Hood”, where the tale gets really bloody and erotic. Beth is Little Red, a nubile Lolita dressed in proverbial virginal white and the essential red cape, sent off by her mother to her grandmama’s. Louis le Bon is the wolf, a predatory and self-admittedly amoral amalgamation of man’s every primal desire. The sexual tension between them is disturbing and crude, culminating in a climax that will confound and illuminate the darker aspects of Beth sexuality. The vulgarity of the film’s eroticism is not without reason: Tzang is seeking to debunk the stereotype of the wolf and expose the equally violent sexuality that Beth is not only fascinated by, but in control of.
There is no limit as to where Tzang is willing to take the darkness of the story and he handles this well; “A Wicked Tale” is shot in such enterprising angles that it stays offbeat and indeed injects new blood to a story that has been retold to death. Taking such risks as Tzang does assures him an audience torn between abhorrence and amazement at his interpretation, yet it is obvious that only a stylistically confident director will be able to see this production through.
As mentioned, what culminates is brutally crude and arguably necessary but perhaps the violence is in itself social commentary. A lot has been said by Tzang about Singaporeans’ conformist and conservative attitudes and “A Wicked Tale” certainly breaks out of that mould, but are we ready for such a bold film? Probably not. It’s too in-your-face and out of this world to create comfortable relevance but this film WILL stir up the underground and cement Tzang’s indie status, and that’s perhaps enough for now.
SPECIAL FEATURES :
This DVD includes a limited edition bonus feature: Tzang Merwyn Tong’s “no-budget teenage black comedy that started it all”, otherwise known as [e’Tzaintes]. This feature is longer than “A Wicked Tale” itself, which should make you think that you got your money’s worth, but “e’Tzaintes” is an amateur film of such horrendous ventures that it’s almost kind of good. The disclaimer on the sub-menu says it all: “No budget. No technical experience. Bad sound. Lousy acting.” You’ll have to give them credit for daring to trash this out, get it made and be able to laugh at themselves for it.
AUDIO:
The
DVD only has English Dolby Digital 2.0.
VISUAL:
My
favourite aspect of “A Wicked Tale” would be the way it was
shot. Tinged in shades of amber and maroon, the film is appropriately dark,
seductive and dangerous.
MOVIE
RATING:
DVD RATING:
Review by Angeline Chui
This review is made possible with the kind support from Comstar Home Entertainment
Alternative Opinion:
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. Unleashed
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