[Film Review] Debris Documentar (2003)

As a lover of extreme horror films, there are times when you must see past the merits of traditional filmmaking to look into the ‘extremity’ of what is being depicted on-screen. There are plenty of depraved and nihilistic films that rather than focusing on the technicalities of the production itself, instead focus on the boundaries that can be pushed on screen. With this comes a set of filmmakers that essentially live by this rule, and one that succeeds time and time again is the notorious Marian Dora. 

Dora’s works are continuously looking to push the boundaries of filmmaking, and show extreme acts of violence, sexual humility and just down-right disgusting in order to provoke the audience and their gag reflexes. And nothing is different in his 2003 film Debris Documentar. The film itself is listed as ‘experimental’, which is clear to see from the direction the film takes and the ways in which the atrocities are translated on screen. 

We follow Carsten (played by Carsten Frank who has starred in Dora’s Cannibal 2006, Melancholie Der Engel 2009 and more) as he meanders through life, hoping one day to release his own film yet never fully committing himself to this achievement. However, Carsten’s biggest problem does not lie within his lack of motivation and productivity, it nestles itself within his need for sexual depravity. His mind is transfixed with flesh, blood, human liquids, visceral and committing horrendous acts on women to satisfy his sick sexual needs. 

As to be expected with a Marian Dora film, there is nothing light-hearted about this, and if you are approaching this film, then do so with caution. Unlike his later Melancholie Der Engel, Debris Documentar feels far grimier and sits itself nicely amongst other extreme films of the 00s such as August Underground and Slaughtered Vomit Dolls, all of which are low-budget, independent and make you feel like you’re watching some disturbing form of home movie. With Debris Documentar it is easy to see where Dora began to develop his style from - the acts of inhumanity stay consistent throughout his latter films, but he develops the stylisation of his works to remove some of the dirtiness, and instead play with showing on-screen atrocities with a much prettier backdrop. 

However, Debris Documentar was not quite there, which results in a film that will truly make you feel sick to your stomach. It has everything you would expect and more including rape, necrophilia, fisting, a ridiculous amount of diarrhoea (which you get to see propelled straight from an unkept asshole), some graphic violence and to top it off, a little bit of cannibalism. If you thought this one was going to tread lightly near all of those soul-shattering topics, then you thought incorrectly.

Debris Documentar is not easy to sit through for two reasons; one being the aforementioned awful scenes you must stomach, but secondly because there really is no concrete plot to this one. In terms of extremity and depravity, the film is pushing boundaries and perhaps racks up the stars unlike many others, however, its aimless plot makes it feel tiresome to watch - more like an endurance test than anything. Dora’s later Melancholie Der Engel might be longer in runtime, but feels like a more polished and aesthetically pleasing version of Debris Documentar and therefore it might be worth skipping to. But with all that said - if you want to test one of your personal boundaries and see if you can handle this one, then it is wholly worth it. 

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[Film Review] Sadistic Intentions (2018)