http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTYOT9_t9DA
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=SFELBG6D
The film is divided into three separate sections, all of which focus on three key moments in the life of Ana, played by Cassandra Foret as a child, Charlotte Eugene Guibeaud as a teenager, and finally Marie Bos as an adult. Each of the three segments have their own unique style, yet they seamless fit together to encompass the overall narrative. Each key moment in Ana's life is a lead up to the films climactic finale.
The first segment revolves around Ana, and the defining moment of her childhood. In essence it is a frightening recollection from the point of view of a child. Ana's caretaker is a mysterious old lady who practices black magic, which begins to put terrifying ideas into the child's head. The entire sequence remains genuinely unnerving whilst also maintaining a surreal dreamlike quality we have come to expect from Italian Giallo films.
The second sequence feels more like a transition between two main set pieces, yet it is still an important event in Anas life. The important thing to note here is that this particular segment is different to the others that it is at this point the viewer realises just how much of a visual treat this film is. After the intense childhood segment, the film begins to wind down and show off the fact that it doesn't need dialogue to provide the viewer with a unique experience. It's here that the mood is set, and begins a build up towards the climax.
Amer is a loose, three-part narrative about Ana (played, respectively, by actresses Cassandra Forêt, Charlotte Eugène-Guibeaud and Marie Bos), who was physically and emotionally abused as a child. The film concludes when she returns to the site of her primary trauma, her childhood home, to exact her revenge. With very little dialogue, time is contracted and expanded. The world through Ana’s eyes is conveyed to us in excessive detail that creates an inescapable claustrophobia.
DVD Artwork:Amer centers on Ana and is divided into three sections; childhood, adolescents and adulthood. Ana’s childhood brings nightmare imagery from the overactive imagination of a child who has seen her dead grandfather laid out in his bed and her parents having sex. Adolescents brings with it Ana’s sexual awakening much to her mother’s chagrin. Adulthood brings Ana back to the abandoned home of her childhood where old neurosis hide in every nook and cranny.
Not a damn thing to be sorry about..Phuzzy4242 wrote:Sorry kev, but it's here already. We'll call this an upgrade.