Man Bites Dog

Man Bites Dog (1992)

Genres - Comedy, Crime  |   Sub-Genres - Black Comedy, Media Satire, Satire, Crime Comedy  |   Release Date - Jan 15, 1993 (USA - Limited), Jan 15, 1993 (USA)  |   Run Time - 95 min.  |   Countries - Belgium  |   MPAA Rating - NC17
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Synopsis by John Voorhees

Man Bites Dog is a Belgian faux-documentary and high-concept satire of media violence which follows the lethal exploits of Benoit Benoit Poelvoorde, an affable, and very talkative, serial killer. He kills for money, and he kills for pleasure, and he talks all the while about philosophy and the proper technique for weighing a corpse down underwater. He is followed through his slaughter-fest by the filmmakers, Rémy and André (the actual filmmakers, Rémy Belvaux and André Bonzel), and the line between reporter and subject becomes blurred pretty quickly. The filmmakers become more and more involved in Benoit's actions, starting with the relatively innocent act of holding a flashlight for him. Eventually, when their funding runs out, Benoit hires them to continue making the film, and soon they are accomplices in a gang rape. While this film has the subtlety of a sledgehammer, its message rings true: the media tend to become part of the stories they report upon as surely as a physicist changes a wave by looking at it.

Characteristics

Keywords

killing, serial-killer, violence, brutality, cameraman, crime-spree, France, nudity, sex, robbery

Attributes

Cult Film