Inferno Rosso: Joe D’Amato on the Road to Excess (Inferno Rosso: Joe D’Amato Sullva Via Dell’eccesso)

QUICK SNAP: LIVE FROM TRANSYLVANIA

In a strange moment of serendipity, I caught Eli Roth’s Hostel (2005) the night before on my hotel television. It’s that weird mixture of boobs and gore that feels like it comes out of the imagination of a fourteen-year-old child, hitting me very definitely than when I was entranced by the movie as a teenager. But some directors never grow up, attracted to both eroticism and gore right until the very end.

It’s serendipitous because Eli Roth is also an executive producer and interview subject in Inferno Rosso: Joe D’Amato on the Road to Excess, a workmanlike documentary about the ultimate cinematic workhorse. Before his death in 1999, Joe D’Amato directed soft-core and hard-core porn, grotesque horror movies, adventure films and historical films; films for Italian cinema, films for foreign distributors and films in America starring big actors. He had his own production company and mentored others as well, making him the “Roger Corman” of Italy. All in all, he was involved in over 200 films, making him one of hardest working directors of all time, a man who made movies as if he was merely breathing.

He’s a fascinating character, his forays into the smartest risk-to-reward genres, telling typically low-budget porn and horror, making him worth of his own deep dive. We are treated to clips from his classic films, including mutilations, sexual violence, body horror, sacrilegious elements and lots and lots of topless ladies. In one of the few stylistic flourishes in the entire documentary, we are treated to rapid-fire montages of naked bodies in all their writhing, sexy glory, showing off just how far D’Amato was willing to push the boat out in the name of entertainment.

Despite all of this titillation, this film is oddly incurious. Only 70 minutes long, it feels made for television rather than the big screen. It’s curious how a director that made so many films wasn’t captured more often in archive footage, making me wonder if the team behind this didn’t do enough research or there simply wasn’t enough to go on. The same goes for the interview subjects, who are incredible knowledgable about distribution details or the technical details of filmmaking, but betray little emotion about the man himself. His daughter tearily tells us about how he was misrepresented as a mere porno director by the press, or how he put the house up as collateral so he could continue making movies, but the camera doesn’t linger, and we move on to more platitudes, reducing the emotional impact of the moment.

He is obviously a complex figure, but the complexity feels flattened by this tribute film, introduced by Nicolas Winding Refn. In one major misstep, we are told an actress tried to sue the crew of one of his films after she felt traumatised on set. This moment is basically treated as a joke by the men who remember it, who say it was all part of the way films were made back then. That might’ve been true, but a more interested documentary would embrace the different aspects of filmmaking back then, instead of just going down memory lane. If you’re just interested in a primer on a legendary filmmaker, then you’re in the right place. But there’s no genuine interrogation here, making for a flat experience. Horror and eroticism can benefit from a childlike perspective, but documentaries need to be far more grown up.

Inferno Rosso: Joe D’Amato on the Road to Excess plays as part of the Larger Than Life section at TIFF, running from 17th-26th June.

Skin

Running through this as a framing device and very narrow, ongoing thread is Bryon Widner aka Babs (Jamie Bell) undergoing the extensive and painful surgical process of multiple tattoo removal. For the narrative outside of this cinematic device, his head and torso is the site of numerous tattoos. In addition, when he removes his trousers to expose his inside legs to an interviewing lady police officer, they bear the indelible words “snitches get stitches”.

Bryon has been taken in, in more than one sense of the phrase, by Fred ‘Hammer’ Krager (Bill Camp) and his partner Shareen (Vera Farmiga) who run a chapter of white supremacists named Vinlanders. Their basic creed is that white lands like America should be for white people only and that those of different skin colour should be expelled. (Never mind the fact that whites stole the land from native American Indians in the first place.) We watch their m.o. as Fred approaches vulnerable, youthful drifter Gavin (Russell Posner) and offers him home and family in exchange for buying into an extreme right wing ideology, then puts him in Bryron’s care – a charge which Byron, who currently has complex issues of his own, almost immediately abuses.

So what’s going on with Byron? Initially, he’s on a white supremacist march where he badly beats up the black guy unfortunate enough to get picked on by Byron. Which later results in Byron’s being taken in for questioning by racist tension activist worker Daryle Lemont Jenkins (Mike Posner) and Agent Jackie Marks (veteran star Mary Stuart Masterson in a bit part). Outside of rioting and being arrested, Byron indulges in brutal sex with girlfriend April (Louisa Krause) who is likewise a member of Fred and Shareen’s gang.

But then, Bryon attends a rally at which are performing the three children Desiree (Zoe Colletti) Sierra (Kylie Rogers) and Iggy (Colbi Gannett) of single mum Julie Price (Danielle Macdonald). He finds himself defending them in extremely violent manner against fellow gang member Slayer (Daniel Henshall) and striking up a serious relationship with Julie which is destined to end in marriage, although it follows a far from smooth path and subsequently sours.

The film is based on a real life case on which Israeli-born director Nattiv has clearly done a considerable amount of research. It’s a terrific study both on the level of (multiple) character(s) and on the dynamics of US white supremacism as a movement and a phenomenon. Many of the actors dig deep to deliver astonishing performances.

This clearly applies to Jamie Bell. You wouldn’t lightly describe a Bell performance as one of his very best because it’s hard to remember him giving a performance which wasn’t really good, but he really stretches himself here.

The other standout performance is from Vera Farmiga, nothing less than brilliant playing a devious and manipulative woman in whose hands many lesser individuals are putty. In short, this movie is a tremendous piece of work, well worth seeking out while it’s in UK cinemas.

Skin is out in the UK on Friday, September 27th. On VoD in March. Watch the film trailer below: