Monday 23 February 2015

Adam Chaplin
Dir: Emanuele De Santi
2011
***
Adam Chaplin is probably one of the most goriest films I've ever seen. In fact, it's got to be one of the most goriest films all time. Honestly, if you don't like blood then don't watch. Adam Chaplin, as the title suggests, is the story of Adam Chaplin (Emanuele De Santi), who desperately loved his wife Emily (Valeria Sannino). They had a happy and complacent family life when his wife fell short of a local loan shark, the demented and sadistic city mobster Denny (Christian Riva) and his equally animalistic sons Derek (Giulio De Santi) and Ben (Paolo Luciani). Emily had borrowed a sum of money from Denny but due to her inability to pay her debt on time, she is brutally burned alive by Denny and his sons. Adam is living a secluded and sad life and is all set to exact revenge on the gangsters. For this Adam conjures a demon and promises to give his soul to it once his revenge is exacted. The demon weirdly decides to live in Adam's right shoulder and gives Adam supernatural strength to bring down his enemies. Armed with supernatural strength, Adam is now on the trail of his enemies and will not stop unless he has killed them all. They say revenge is a dish best served cold but not for Adam, he just wants to turn his enemies into tiny little bits. I have to say I loved the characters; the demon on Adams shoulder, Denny and his sons and even Adam to some extent. I liked the way everyone kind of looked like a zombie too, I don't know why they made everyone look so odd but it added to the surreal vibe of the film. I've never seen anything like it to be honest, so all credit for originality but watch at your own peril. It is the ultimate splatter movie, indeed, it is the splatter movie to end all splatters. It was, in all honesty, a little bit too hard-core for my tastes. There are revenge films and then there are autopsies. To call the gory violence extreme would be an understatement. To say all lovers of gore will enjoy it isn’t quite true. I love Peter Jackson’s Braindead of example – someone is chopped up with a lawnmower in that film and it is bloody brilliant – the difference is though is that Braindead is essentially a comedy. I’m not saying that laughing at amputation is better than keeping it serious but for me Braindead is an extreme version of Tom & Jerry. There is always humour in what shocks us, but not in Adam Chaplin’s case. This is a deadly serious film and that makes it fairly dark. There is a bit of humour in some of the characters and none of them resemble real people but the level of violence is so high, that I wonder whether this will really only appeal to psychopaths and film makers who want to get into special effects and make-up. Credit due for originality and there is something uniquely original and striking about the film’s cinematography but my goodness, it took me a while to eat anything after watching it.

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