Calvaire; The Ordeal



"Ah Belgium... Home of the weird, the sick and the sexually perverted!" -Coventry


The notorious bar dance scene.



Official trailer

Calvaire, a.k.a The Ordeal is mainly a Belgian production and – being a Belgian myself – I'm rather proud of that, although it also once again illustrates that the only cult and controversial horror films coming from this country pretty much all revolve on sexually perverted characters! Lucker served us the diary of a necrophiliac and the ultra-rare film Vase de Noces (which I haven't seen yet) handles about the sexual relationship between a farmer and his pig. At several points in the film, Calvaire hints at bestiality as well and the least you can say about all the characters, even the unimportant ones, is that they're heavily struggling with their hormones all together. The honest and hard-working singer Marc Stevens is on his way to a Christmas gig when his van breaks down on a rural road near a remote village. A loyal young man guides Marc to Paul Bartel's godforsaken hotel and that's where the madness really begins. Bartel is obtrusive and overly friendly at first but gradually his traumatized mind begins to mistake Marc for his own adulterous wife who left him. For Marc begins a nightmare in which he's dressed up in woman's clothes, tortured and forced to have sexual intercourse. Even when he manages to escape into the forests he isn't safe, as all the local rednecks are deranged deviants as well.

The subject matter of Calvaire sounds pretty devastating, but it actually comes across as a black comedy most of the time. It's an absurd film with disturbing undertones and grisly images, yet the surreal atmosphere and the overuse of stereotypes almost makes it a comical experience. You can summarize this film as being a demented and typically European interpretation of classic backwoods-thrillers such as Deliverance and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. The hillbillies are crazier, the situations are more grotesque and the perversion is a lot less subtle. Especially considering Calvaire was the debut project for most of the crew members involved, the film is exceptionally well-made! The cinematography is stunning to observe most of the time, with beautiful images of large and ominous forests, and the interior filming locations are dark & creepy. The acting performances are a bit weak sometimes but still endurable. Regretfully, the script also features a couple of tedious moments and it leaves quite a bit of questions unanswered when the film is finished. Nonetheless, Calvaire is destined to be a cult favorite in the near future (if it isn't one by now) already and fans of odd, offbeat cinema can't afford themselves to miss it! -imdb


Full length found on YouTube.


Calvaire @ IMDB
Fabrice Du Welz (director/co-writer) @ MySpace
Vincent Cahay (score) @ MySpace
Calvaire @ Amazon


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