Rating: R
Genre:
Action
Release Date: 08/30/2005
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 104 min
Flags: Violence, Not For Children
Distributor/Studio: Synapse Video
After being raped as a child by a greasy derelict,
Madeleine (
Christina Lindberg) is left mute. Fifteen years later, she has grown into a beautiful, but very traumatized young woman. After missing her bus one day,
Madeleine is picked up by a smooth-talking man named
Tony Dill (
Heinz Hopf), who hooks her on heroin and forces her into prostitution, slicing one of her eyeballs out with a scalpel in graphic detail (
Lindberg claims director
Bo A. Vibenius used a real corpse) when she revolts. When
Madeleine's parents commit suicide, she snaps, and begins training in karate, stunt driving, and shooting, biding her time for a violent revenge. That's when the shocks really begin, particularly in the original version, which is 15 minutes longer than the truncated print released by
American-International.
Lindberg suffered similar travails in
Gustav Wiklund's smarmy (but less explicit)
Exponerad three years earlier.
~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
An unflinchingly brutal and graphic
cult revenge flick that toiled in obscurity for decades before being exhumed by
Quentin Tarantino as the inspiration for actress
Daryl Hannah's one-eyed murderess in
Kill Bill, Swedish director
Bo Arne Vibenius' sophomore directorial effort is not for all tastes. Of course, not being for all tastes and being effective are two items that are not mutually exclusive, and viewers would be hard pressed not to feel the utter anguish of tragic mute figure
Frigga's plight after seeing her repeatedly subjected to a variety of savage acts -- both sexual and otherwise. Though some may find
Vibenius' choice of utilizing hardcore sexual inserts to document her decent unsavory at best and unforgivably exploitative at worst, there is little question that the visionary director's unique approach was years ahead of its time (the same technique sharply divided critics when used in the 2000 shocker
Baise-Moi), and that it most certainly makes the violation of the already fragile protagonist much more personal and effective. Equally important in making mute
Frigga's slow decent into revenge-driven bloodlust believable is starlet
Christina Lindberg's wordless, expression-driven performance -- and it's fascinating to watch as her heartache slowly gives way to a kill-crazed blood frenzy. Though
Frigga's hard road to the bottom has been documented in the kind of graphic detail that can often be difficult to watch, when she does finally take aim at her tormentors, the eye-patch-wearing angel of death's roaring rampage of revenge is presented in even more graphic detail -- with virtually every kill hauntingly presented in super-slow motion to achieve maximum visceral impact.
~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide