Mute Witness

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Finch
Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 5:09 pm
Location: Edinburgh, UK

Mute Witness

#1 Post by Finch » Wed Mar 27, 2024 4:24 pm

Image

Image

4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS
- 4K restoration approved by director Anthony Waller
- 4K (2160p) Ultra HD Blu-ray presentation in HDR10
- Restored original lossless stereo soundtrack
- Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Brand new audio commentary by writer/director Anthony Waller
- Brand new audio commentary with production designer Matthias Kammermeier and composer Wilbert Hirsch, moderated by critic Lee Gambin
- The Silent Death, brand new visual essay by author and critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, examining Mute Witness and its relationship with snuff films
- The Wizard Behind the Curtain, brand new visual essay by author and critic Chris Alexander, exploring the phenomenon of the film-within-a-film
- Original “Snuff Movie” presentation, produced to generate interest from investors and distributors, featuring interviews with Anthony Waller and members of the creative team
- Original location scouting footage
- Original footage with Alec Guinness, filmed a decade prior to the rest of Mute Witness
- Teaser trailer
- Trailer
- Image gallery
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Adam Rabalais
- Double-sided foldout poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Adam Rabalais
- Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Michelle Kisner

beamish14
Joined: Fri May 18, 2018 3:07 pm

Re: Mute Witness

#2 Post by beamish14 » Wed Mar 27, 2024 5:18 pm

I know some people are absolutely gaga over this, but the male lead is so atrocious that he single-handedly brings down most of the proceedings. You’re better off just rewatching De Palma

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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 4:30 pm
Location: Chapel-en-le-Frith, Derbyshire, UK

Re: Mute Witness

#3 Post by colinr0380 » Wed Mar 27, 2024 6:11 pm

Oh excellent! Here's the (slightly misleading) trailer. I guess what beamish14 is talking about regarding one or other (or both) of the 'male leads' is that one of them (the American director) is a bit of a pompous guy at the beginning as a newbie film director with delusions of grandeur somewhat out of his depth in a foreign country (a self-deprecating, self-insert character?), and then is used more as a bit of a klutz in the second half of the film.The director is actually more doing the classic 'ditzy girl' role in this film, especially in the second half where he along with the gal pal (played by Fay Ripley a few years before she found TV fame in the UK in the Cold Feet series) become the amusing comic relief characters, who are fruitlessly trying to catch up to the chase and not able to do it until the very last moment, but still have to contend with various thugs or landladies also arriving late on the scene! And the other male lead is very much doing the Cold War paranoia espionage thriller type 'is he on my side or or is he one of the bad guys?' thing to the very last moment of the film. But really the thing that makes this film very different from De Palma (whilst its taking a lot of cues from him in terms of setpieces) is that the real lead is the mute heroine and all of the action is filtered through her perspective. So the male characters are somewhat inscrutable, when they are not just being outright silly, probably because they are reflecting some of the heroine's concerns about their reliability towards being able to keep her safe!

I really like this film although I don't know whether it is a particular spoiler to say that it is a film of two very tonally different halves! The first half could almost be a self-contained film in its own right as a brilliantly claustrophobic thriller, as our mute special effects/sound recordist heroine finds herself locked in the studio after hours and witnesses what at first seems like an illicit porno shoot turn into an even more illicit snuff film, and then spends the next 25 minutes or so playing cat and mouse games through the studio trying to retrieve a key and get to the door whilst remaining unseen, until it all climaxes in a brilliantly cathartically edited chase sequence. The second half widens out considerably, and goes from that masterfully tense claustrophobia to an almost just as tense (though more blackly comic) situation of the heroine trying to both prove that the snuff shoot took place to the disbelieving cops and friends; and then once the killers come knocking at her door and a mysterious man offers his services to escape them turns into a very impressive twist-upon-twist chase through the streets of Moscow before everyone double-crosses each other (even Alec Guinness!) in multiple fake-outs. You have to be OK with that severe tonal shift at the mid-point, but I do think that both halves of the film work really well even if I do prefer that claustrophobic and deadly serious first half slightly more.

For a horror-thriller about rather dark subject matter it is also a surprisingly funny film and is full of memorable scenes: the tense build up to the substituted footage for the cops; the desperate attempts by a mute person to first call for help and then when that fails trying to desperately attract the attention of the pervert watching her window from across the street by baring her breasts at him, only to have unfortunately chosen the exact millisecond at which he had broken off his intent observation to do so (not only illustrating her worst nightmare, but that of every voyeur too!); the almost Torn Curtain style amateurish attempts by the director and the gal pal to deal with a random Russian thug; and so on. In terms of the less comedic stuff, I love that after the drawn out tension of the cat and mouse sequence we get to the heroine being chased around the sound stage and being hemmed in by the lights being turned on, all leading up to that magnificent corridor run to the locked door at the end of that section of the film with the Jaws-style zoom in-dolly out move going on. And I love that idea that, for as klutzy as her American companions are, the gal pal is the one who is able to save the heroine by noticing that she is being held back from signing about the danger she is in (and I like that the gulf in communication, and how easy miscommunication is as compared to getting your point across, is the big theme of the film, from the cultural divides between the Americans and the Russians, to the main character being mute and for most of the time being separate from the one other character able to understand her, though that does let her do a bit of bridging the divide meet-cute romantic stuff with the mysterious potentially duplicitous saviour figure who can speak both Russian and English in the latter stages of the film)

I guess my only reservation about the film is that slightly overdone 'pleading look for help of someone at the point of mortal peril' with associated musical sting and push-in, which occurs throughout the film at key moments, first during the snuff scene when it shows that this isn't playacting but for real and then by the heroine in the middle of the film, and then notably at the end. Its a very bold move to do something like that, and it could be seen as a bit hokey, but I could just about handle it, especially as it gets elevated into being the whole crux of the drama running throughout the entire film - the only reaction by anyone that you can rely upon to be the 'real thing'.

(And if you wished to push it even further there is also a, thankfully relatively understated, implication that it is a kind of psychic communication of distress that only women are able to discern between each other, whilst the men around them remain pretty much dopily oblivious to the peril everyone is in!)
Last edited by colinr0380 on Sun Mar 31, 2024 6:28 am, edited 5 times in total.

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zedz
Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 7:24 pm

Re: Mute Witness

#4 Post by zedz » Wed Mar 27, 2024 10:34 pm

Funny, I remember this as an effective but strictly by-the-numbers thriller. I guess any vaguely competent 90s genre film has a cult nowadays regardless of its merits (see also: Bound)!

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therewillbeblus
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Re: Mute Witness

#5 Post by therewillbeblus » Wed Mar 27, 2024 10:44 pm

Never heard of this. At first glance, thought it might be a VS-rivaling UHD announcement of some buried unnecessary sequel to Witness. Glad to be wrong

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colinr0380
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Re: Mute Witness

#6 Post by colinr0380 » Thu Mar 28, 2024 3:22 am

I would argue that this film certainly deserves its cult status. The reason why we have not heard much from the writer/director Anthony Waller since is that he came a serious cropper with his second film, An American Werewolf In Paris, which whilst it captured a similar darkly comic and flippant tone to its horror very well (similar to some of the comic material in Mute Witness, and I would hazard a guess that some of the banter in this film made Waller the natural choice for helming a sequel to John Landis's classic), made the fatal mistake of doing a sequel to a much celebrated film whose entire reason for being was its practical werewolf transformation effects and doing all of its own special effects with quickly dated CGI (the same mistake the 2010s Thing prequel/sequel made).

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Dr Amicus
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Re: Mute Witness

#7 Post by Dr Amicus » Thu Mar 28, 2024 12:25 pm

I saw this at the London Film Festival and really enjoyed it (especially the first half) although haven't rewatched since then. I was quite surprised it didn't do rather better at the box office when it opened a few months later.

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colinr0380
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Re: Mute Witness

#8 Post by colinr0380 » Thu Mar 28, 2024 1:24 pm

It has also been rarely shown on UK television: premiered in a Channel 4 "Scared To Death" season in May 1999 (which season also showed De Palma's Body Double! The only tiny bits of continuity footage from that particular season on YouTube appear to be from the premiere screenings of Candyman 2 - with a brief mention of Mute Witness as coming the following week - and the advert bumpers for Hideaway) and repeated just the once in October 2002. So it has been absent from television screens for over two decades.

For the record An American Werewolf In Paris screened twice too, in January 2002 and May 2003, both times on BBC1! And then never since, so it has been over two decades now since that film last appeared on UK television as well.

jlnight
Joined: Tue Oct 22, 2013 10:49 am

Re: Mute Witness

#9 Post by jlnight » Thu Mar 28, 2024 8:42 pm

An American Werewolf In Paris turns up a lot on either Great Movies or Legend/Horror. Maybe both and certainly recently.

You may be right about Mute Witness, which I remember being reviewed on Moviewatch! Didn't it get overshadowed by Shallow Grave?

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bdsweeney
Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2008 7:09 pm

Mute Witness

#10 Post by bdsweeney » Thu Mar 28, 2024 9:46 pm

I don’t have strong memories of this, having rented it on VHS back in the day. But I remember the tone as being effectively nasty and chilling. The story about how the cameo at the end came about is charming.

I guess it also works as an effective snapshot of sorts of Russia between the fall of the USSR and the rise of Putin and the autocratic regime of today. Of an economy looking for some sort of traction and developing whatever ‘goods’ there may be a market for.

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colinr0380
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Re: Mute Witness

#11 Post by colinr0380 » Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:58 am

Ah, sorry jlnight you are correct! I keep forgetting to look at those more minor digital channels! But it was certainly the last time the film aired on any of the 'big five' channels.

There is a lovely irony about the star of The Ladykillers' final role being as:
SpoilerShow
the ringleader of a snuff film ring! Finally he achieved his aims!
Even if Guinness may never have imagined being in such a role! Though just as the film is two things, his mysterious and speaking-in-coded-terms cameo also functions as a nicely amusing allusion to all of his John le Carré roles too!
bdsweeney wrote:
Thu Mar 28, 2024 9:46 pm
I guess it also works as an effective snapshot of sorts of Russia between the fall of the USSR and the rise of Putin and the autocratic regime of today. Of an economy looking for some sort of traction and developing whatever ‘goods’ there may be a market for.
I agree, and it would make for a great Boris Yelstin-era double bill of the West's (or in particular the UK's) hopes for, and fears of, the new Russia with Leaving Lenin, which is a film that desperately needs to be rediscovered.

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therewillbeblus
Joined: Tue Dec 22, 2015 3:40 pm

Re: Mute Witness

#12 Post by therewillbeblus » Fri Apr 05, 2024 9:03 pm

I really enjoyed this. zedz is right that it's mostly structured as a predictable series of suspenseful set-pieces, brutality, and fake-outs. However, there's an unpredictable sense of style that disrupts our expectations of the formal strategies that'll be used for capturing thrills, which consequently boosts the thrills up a few notches. A few weird POV angle switches, strange manipulations of sections of physical space but not others.. perhaps budgetary restraints caused this, but it's what elevates this from a forgettable Eurotrash neo-giallo (which it's decidedly not, outside of some aesthetic and tectonic dynamics) into a version of that which can stands on its own two feet. The middle section drags a bit, but the first third and looooong last act are basically just series of killer shenanigans, and the film's awesome for cramming this all into a sort-of-'road-movie' when it could've easily been 15 minutes shorter, stripping a lot of its flair and bolder choices, and still made a buck.

And while I agree with beamish re: the male lead, I don't really see any male 'lead' here - they have few lines and are predominately weak or pathetic or banally evil, despite the crimes and sociopathy in display being truly terrifying. It works for me that they are bad actors, because they lack a real utility and the film knows it (the main lower-level baddie is so lazy he doesn't bother chasing a vulnerable couple into a room with a shoddy door that won't close on them! I've never seen anything like it in a slasher - cornering someone and then giving up??)

Any horrible acting job would need to be much more pronounced to usurp attention from Mary Sudina's tour-de-force perf, which is so incredible that witnessing all other speaking parts stand out as 'lacking', and only adds utility to her character. Her friends are okay though, and their acting is pretty okay too to match. Okay, this film is getting more interesting under such theory.. especially when a renowned thespian pops in the back half (I'm glad I didn't review Arrow's blurb/extras list, the surprise is worth it!) and his utility is felt in casting alone, which triggers the narrative jump into a more mezzo context for the horror. I'd love this all to be intentional direction, limiting and skewing the acting ranges based on thematic concerns on where we should place empathy, but that'd a stretch. Still makes the film better either way tho
SpoilerShow
especially at the end, when the film forces us to zoom out and assess the utility in objective terms at our star's sudden 'death' - what a sobering ride! For a minute.. the fake-out is fun because the film can have its cake and eat it too. The movie never sets itself up to be the kind of pic where the hero could never die, so sitting with that horror for a few minutes is effective enough
[Also, while it's seemingly the only cover art ever used for promoting the film, this still might be the worst art to sell it. The image makes it seem like it's going to be an Extremity film or something, and the image doesn't match the film's visual tone either, nor does the character ever appear docile. I don't typically care about this sort of thing, but woof. I only watched this based on word of mouth - would've stayed repelled otherwise]

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The Curious Sofa
Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2019 6:18 am

Re: Mute Witness

#13 Post by The Curious Sofa » Sat Apr 06, 2024 8:57 am

I always thought of this as a great first act in search of a good film. What follows the initial snuff and stalking sequence, feels contrived and doesn't live up to the first 30 minutes. Wasn't this one of these films that started as a short and then got expanded into a feature?

The film got Anthony Waller some attention and it briefly looked like he was going to be the next promising director in horror cinema and then An American Werewolf in Paris put a swift end to that. I recently watched his 2008 horror movie Nine Miles Down, because it's based on the urban legend of the Russian oil drilling venture that drilled so deep that screams were heard from the bottom, implying they had dug into hell. A novel and promising setup, which the film turns into a tedious clone of Event Horizon.

What I remember most about first catching Mute Witness at an afternoon screening is that I was the only audience member in a large cinema. Just as the film was about to start, another man came along and he sat right next to me in what must have been an otherwise empty 400-seat auditorium, which creeped me out more than the movie itself. (I changed seats)
Last edited by The Curious Sofa on Sun Apr 07, 2024 6:08 am, edited 1 time in total.

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therewillbeblus
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Re: Mute Witness

#14 Post by therewillbeblus » Sat Apr 06, 2024 9:04 am

The Curious Sofa wrote:
Sat Apr 06, 2024 8:57 am
I always thought of this as a great first act in search of a good film. What follows the initial snuff and stalking sequence, feels contrived and doesn't live up to the first 30 minutes. Wasn't this one of these films which started as a short and then got expanded into a feature?
That would make sense. The style itself even tempers after this initial segment. It's definitely contrived but also remains somewhat novel by implementing subtly-unsettling surrealist bends (e.g. that cameo leading to no real engagement; the way characters -whether they have a verbal disability or not!- can't seem to communicate effectively with one another throughout, and how much attention this is given). I also bet the ending is far less potent in its implications when you know how it's gonna go.

By no means a Great film, but a pleasant surprise after seeing that cover and expecting something way less creative or interesting

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The Curious Sofa
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Re: Mute Witness

#15 Post by The Curious Sofa » Sat Apr 06, 2024 10:09 am

I used to have it on VHS and that's probably the last I watched it, I'm tempted to give it another whirl. Fay Ripley, who plays the sister, made her debut in this and subsequently became a popular actor in the UK. The thread also brought back a vague memory that the "lead" actor was terribe (and the Russian lead actress was indeed great).

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therewillbeblus
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Re: Mute Witness

#16 Post by therewillbeblus » Sat Apr 06, 2024 2:49 pm

I just can't consider this guy a lead. His sole function is to chase, and then occasionally give up with no cue to motivations for shifts in temperament.. So no matter how prominently-featured in the film, it's a reach to even consider him a character at all. He's like a rote mushroom in level one of Mario, the contrast of which boosts our awareness to Mario's strengths and abilities, just as it does for Sudina here, in terms of both character and performance

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The Curious Sofa
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Re: Mute Witness

#17 Post by The Curious Sofa » Sat Apr 06, 2024 3:21 pm

Hence the quotation marks.

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therewillbeblus
Joined: Tue Dec 22, 2015 3:40 pm

Re: Mute Witness

#18 Post by therewillbeblus » Sat Apr 06, 2024 3:23 pm

I was trying to flesh out my rationale a bit more, didn't mean for it to come across as a corrective response to your post

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Finch
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Re: Mute Witness

#19 Post by Finch » Sat Apr 06, 2024 5:49 pm

I liked the film too and don't really have anything to add that's not already been said other than wishing that Arrow hadn't spoiled the cameo in their press copy! I also preferred the first half (it reminded me a little of the first two Thief games where you had to evade detection and capture by stealth by the games' other characters) but I don't know if it could have sustained that tension for a lot longer. I was a bit bothered by the contrived separation of the heroine from her friends in the second half but am also mindful of the argument that it does allow her to continue to prove her stamina and unwillingness to be the damsel in distress. I loved the bit where
SpoilerShow
knowing that he's going to break down the door for good at the next attempt, she yanks it open at the last moment and the Russian heavy barrels like Wile E. Coyote into the bathroom wall.
For every moment that the movie plays it straight, there is a little narrative tweak or touch that's unexpected and endearing. I won't be buying it but I get why it might be a little cult film for some.

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