Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 
  
 Description:
  Bent debuted onstage in 1979 with Ian McKellen starring in the London production and Richard Gere in its later Broadway version. The film  version is adapted by the playwright, Martin Sherman, and closely follows his  play's story of two gay concentration camp victims who are sent to Dachau and  who fall in love, using their relationship as an emotional crutch in their  efforts to rebuff the horror of the Holocaust. Max (Clive Owen), would rather  wear a yellow star and proclaim himself a Jew than be lanced with the pink  triangle that designates homosexuality. Horst, (Lothaire Bluteau) chastises him  for his homophobia. Later the tables turn on Max, who finds--through Horst--the  strength both to keep alive indefinitely and to ultimately embrace his sexual  identity. Initially set in a war-ravaged Berlin, Bent is directed by Sean Mathias, who first directed Jude Law in Indiscretions, and he has crafted  a film that reminds one of Ian McKellen's Richard III with its spare,  stylized, and stark world bombed into rubble and chic theatrical disarray. There  are many poignant as well as harrowing scenes, and the result is a somber work  that stands as a reminder that intolerance cannot overtake individualism and  love. While Bent received an NC-17 rating for depicting Berlin's  decadent, anything-goes-for-a-price nightlife, MGM opted not to edit out the  tone-setting prelude and pushed to preserve the film's integrity  despite a rating that is itself a kind of death for any film that bears it. --Paula Nechak
  |