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Sex Murder Art: The Films of Jörg Buttgereit

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Sex Murder Art is the definitive book on the controversial German director whose films Nekromantik (considered to be the most bootlegged video of all time), Nekromantik 2, Der Todesking and Schramm have earned him a reputation as one of the most original, innovative and dangerous of all modern filmmakers-banned the world over. Included are detailed analysis of the movies, Buttgereit's music-videos, extensive interviews, plus tribulations with the law, moral crusaders and Warner Brothers.

177 pages, Paperback

First published August 1, 1994

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David Kerekes

35 books22 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Alysa H..
1,381 reviews74 followers
March 26, 2013
On the back of this book, it is called "possibly the ultimate testament to the obsession, paranoia and politics of underground filmmaking."

Remove the word the "ultimate" and the sentence is not too far from the truth. One must only tack on some context: underground filmmaking in Europe in the late-1980s/early-1990s, because this book and Buttgereit's feature films are a sort of time capsule of cult movie production in a very specific pre-internet time and place.

Although I'm not sure how interesting this book would be to anyone who's not already interested in Buttgereit's work - or at the very least, in charting the cinematic precursors to what came later in the 1990s and 2000s (especially the "torture porn" phenomenon) - it does have something to say about politics and censorship.

It is also something of a closed text, since Buttgereit basically stopped making movies for a long time following the period that this book covers. (I'd be interested to see some of the work he's done more recently, since the cultural climate has changed so drastically, but that's another story!)



Profile Image for Jan Kjellin.
352 reviews25 followers
May 15, 2012
Det står nåt i beskrivningen av boken om "detailed analysis" och hur detta är "possibly the ultimate testament to the obsession, paranoia and politics of underground filmmaking". Det stämmer väl sådär.

De detaljerade analyserna begränsas för det mesta till hyfsat utförliga beskrivningar av handlingen i filmerna och det är bara ibland som beskrivningarna eller intervjuerna med Jörg och de andra glider in på den analytiska planhalvan.

Jag tycker att det är dåligt skrivet, rörigt och inte alls så intressant som det kunde ha varit. Jörg Buttgereit är en unik filmskapare och hans filmografi innehåller nästan bara klassiker. Nekromantik I och II, Der Todesking, Schramm... Var och en av dessa en fullträff i solar plexus.

Buttgereits komplicerade förhållande till skräck- och splattergenrerna är bara det värt en bok, istället för det relativa ointresse för detta Kerekes visar i sin bok. Han vill inte förknippas med det den typen av filmer, trots att han hela tiden använder dem som referenspunkter i sitt språk. Han vill heller inte tillhöra art-house klicken, eftersom den är för pretentiös. Samtidigt drar han sig inte för att namedroppa filmskapare som Jean-Luc Godard och Louis Malle. Det här är för mig både ett sympatiskt drag (eftersom jag kan känna igen mig själv och min filmkonsumtion i den här dynamiken mellan sleaze och "finkultur") och en grundläggande konflikt att bygga en beskrivning av Jörg Buttgereits filmskapande på.

Sett till hans senare teaterproduktioner är det här i högsta grad fortfarande en drivkraft för Buttgereit och jag hoppas därför verkligen att den här ganska undermåliga och sensationslystna dokumentationen kompletteras/ersätts av en mer välskriven och genomtänkt bok.

Såväl Jörg Buttgereit som hans samlade produktion förtjänar det.
Profile Image for Justice4Gaza.
12 reviews1 follower
June 27, 2025
Human beings are imperfect... and David Kerekes’s innate honesty will not permit him to draw a fetid veil over the ferality-flecked flaws his unblinking post-voyeuristic gaze engages in terms of the close-knit counter-cultural community clustered around toxico-Teutonic auteur of anomie Jörg Buttgereit...

From Buttgereit’s own tic to an actor’s sliminess to the faux bonhomie of an über-famed rock/pop icon to (arguably most disturbing of all viz-à-viz unsettlingness) the woman who sits next to strange men at the cinema – committed corpse-culture curator Kerekes observes and records all of these and more, determinedly deploying them as a gritty garnish on his incisive interrogations of Berlin-based Buttgereit’s emetico-erotic explorations around that universal human flaw: our mortality...

Yup, death, decay and dead-sex are at the heretico-heart of the Austro-adjacent atrocity-aggregator’s nauseatingly noxious nekro-narratives, and key corpse-copulation chronicler Kerekes putrefactively probes this terato-toxic triad to its foulest, fetidest and feralest esoterico-essence. Not a book for the squeamish, slime-sniffing septico-scribe Kerekes has corely crafted a visceral vehicle for dedicated death-deviants to purulently pursue the darkest, dankest and disturbingest details of decomposition-drenched depravity...
3 reviews
August 16, 2016
Fink you know from fetid?

Nah.

You don't know from fetid.

Not 'til you've seen a Jörg Buttgereit movie.

His necrophile narratives are noxiously nasty.

Nauseatingly so.

David Kerekes HAS seen a Jörg Buttgereit movie.

In fact, he's seen all of them.

Multiple times.

Sex Murder Art is the rancid result.

Read it and retch.
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