What has proved alarming to censors isn't just the imagery. What begins as a self-reflexive formal exercise veers off in another direction altogether. The problem is that the storytelling grows ever more intense. As in Peter Greenaway's The Baby of Macôn, he is using extreme imagery for polemical purposes. As in Michael Haneke's films, the director seems to be challenging the audience to question their own voyeuristic instincts. Forty years after A Clockwork Orange, audiences are surely too used to these kind of shock tactics to be affected by them – or so we might think. In the film-within-a-film, Vukmir, the psychiatrist-turned-porn director, may be striving for the ultimate realism but Spasojevic heightens the absurdity. The most notorious scenes (the rape of the new-born baby, the scene in which the star decapitates a woman and continues to have sex with her headless torso) are grotesque but very obviously contrived. The film-making is stylised and self-conscious. That, though, is not the same as saying that it is a repellent film. Much of the imagery in A Serbian Film is indeed quite repellent.
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