Using solely explicit sex to tell a story is something new for a non-triple-X project, but it's not always a pretty sight.
9 Songs (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:91
Fresh:23
Rotten:68
Average Rating:4.4/10
Consensus: The unerotic sex scenes quickly become tedious to watch, and the lovers lack the personality necessary to make viewers care about them.
Synopsis: Matt, a young glacioloist, soars across the vast, silent, icebound immensities of the South Pole as he recalls his love affair with Lisa. They meet at a mobbed rock concert in a vast music hall-... Matt, a young glacioloist, soars across the vast, silent, icebound immensities of the South Pole as he recalls his love affair with Lisa. They meet at a mobbed rock concert in a vast music hall- London's Brixton Academy. They are in bed at night's end. Together, over a period of several months, they pursue a mutual sexual passion whose inevitable stages (familiar to anyone who's ever been in love) unfold in counterpoint to the nine live-concert songs of the story's title. This daring combination has won 9 Songs a devoted following ever since director Michael Winterbottom (Jude; Welcome to Sarajevo; 24 Hour Party People) first screened the film for packed audiences at the 2004 Cannes film-market. Incidental music heard over various radios and CD players throughout the film include an extended disco version of Madan, by Salif Keith, and a pair of piano nocturnes, Sola and Platform, played by Melissa Parmenter. The nine concert songs are, in order of their appearance: Whatever Happened to Rock n' Roll, by the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club; C'mon, C'mon by the Von Bondies; Fallen Angel, by Elbow; Moving On Up, by Primal Scream; You Were the Last High, by the Dandy Warhols; Slow Life, by the Super Furry Animals; Jacqueline, by Franz Ferdinand; Nadia, from the 60th birthday concert of Michael Nyman; and, finally, bringing the story full circle-Love Burns, once again by the Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. While some of these directly comment on the affair as it progresses, others act strictly as a trigger to Matt's memories of Lisa, as he later studies ice sheets. At first, they are consumed with each other, as lovers. Then, with time, an emotional dynamic emerges. Even in the most intimate moments, she (however subtly) gives the orders, and he blissfully complies. They meet strictly at his place. We learn nothing about her work, and almost as little about her past, except that she is American and has had passionate affairs since her adolescence. By contrast Matt, whose arctic career is a running motif, is a comparatively open book as a person-simple in his love of both music, and Lisa. He keeps bringing the word "love" into the conversation. She warmly responds, but just as happily wriggles free of it. What they know they have together is sex, and this is revealed, repeatedly, even graphically, with an uncompromised frankness. "Forget who you are," Matt tells her, blindfolding her in a rare moment of seizing the initiative. "Forget where you are." Yet even as he guides her through this little bit of kinky fantasy, she takes over. Matt lets her, helplessly observing elsewhere: "She was 21. Beautiful. Egotistical. Careless. Crazy." As they move deeper into their respective fantasy lives in one another's arms, can it be helped if they are also moving farther apart? The Antarctic, as described by Matt, may be the one comfortable place on earth from which to remember her: "Claustophobia and Agorophobia in one place-like two people in a bed." And yet - there is all that music, a goad to sense-memory as mobile and abiding as the ice cap itself. -- © Tartan Films [More]
Starring: Kieran O'Brien, Margot Stilley
Starring: Kieran O'Brien, Margot Stilley
Director: Michael Winterbottom
Director: Michael Winterbottom
Screenwriter: Michael Winterbottom
Producer: Andrew Eaton
Studio: Tartan Films
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Reviews for 9 Songs
A surprisingly successful deconstruction of a romance, although fans of the featured bands, as well as members of what used to be referred to euphemistically as the 'raincoat crowd,' will probably enjoy Winterbottom's experiment more than most.
You leave the theater feeling as if you're a part of their sweaty, dizzying affair.
9 Songs is an undeniably sexy film, albeit one with a thin story line.
The sex scenes are clearly filmed with progression in mind, moving ever outward from the characters until their organs take center stage.
This down 'n' dirty disaster deserves a XXX rating: Xplicit, Xcrutiating and Xtremely pointless.
Michael Winterbottom's film is a lyrical, graphically explicit chronicle of an ordinary love affair between two attractive people.
When the sex is as boring as the story and the characters which inhabit it... all we can do is rejoice the entire endeavor is over fairly quickly.
For all its problems and incoherence, 'Nine Songs' is both original and daring. It's worth a dozen 'better' films.
may really just have been about screwing around, both physically and artistically – otherwise, would it really have been necessary to make the running time exactly 69 minutes?
9 Songs is one of those vaguely forged ideas that never stops being vague.
The onscreen ejaculations might be more than mainstream audiences are used to, but Winterbottom's intentions are pure.
The filmmaker has said he wants 9 Songs to be drama about real sex that's not erotic. As if an admission of erotic intent somehow cheapens the aesthetics. And so a viewer's question might reasonably be, Who are ya kidding?
Love it or not, 9 Songs amounts to a common human rite fastidiously caught in amber, giving off no heat or joy but crystallized for the future.
Winterbottom serves up Swinburne's "sexless orgies," passion without a trace of passion.
...graphic sex with spurting sperm, no plot, no acting, no script, awful psuedo-artsy cinematography...This is just hard core porn.
It's as full of explicit, real sex as any porn film, but it's as tedious and ponderous and poorly lit as your average, boring art movie.
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