Polaroid Cocaine

Polaroid Cocaine

📅 Friday, 1 January 1993⏱️ 5m
🎬 Directed by Michel Auder
0.0
TMDB Rating

The thrill of cocaine becomes a metaphor for the consumption of images in this short montage. The title and lyrics come from Auder´s friend and 2001 Prix Goncourt winner Jean-Jacques Shuhl. The piece is composed entirely of still photographs from a variety of books and magazines that simultaneously reveal and feed an addiction to spectacle. With a source that is once removed, Auder's scopophilia is symptomatic of society at large. The song is performed by legendary chanteuse Ingrid Caven. Suffused with a bittersweet melancholy, Canven's seasoned voice compliments Auder's selection of images which dwell on the themes of death, destruction and desire. The melody is classic cabaret performed by a piano/violin duo who dramatically heighten the works already dark eroticism.

Reviews & Comments

Leave a Review

🔐

Sign in to leave a review

✍️
Be the first to review this movie!
← Back to Vistriq