Zoo zéro (1979) Poster

(1979)

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Avant Garde train wreck - see it to disbelieve it
lor_21 September 2010
I love experimental and avant garde cinema, even though once one strays past the superstar directors (Bunuel, Cocteau, Robbe-Grillet, Jodorowsky, Arrabal, etc.) it can be tough sledding. Alain Fleischer's ZOO ZERO is one of the dumbest of the failures -it makes Fred Haines's film of STEPPENWOLF look professional.

Fleischer's non-career is littered with these alliterative titles (REGLES, RITES; ROME ROMEO), signalling abstract surrealism, and that's what he delivers up. With an annoying soundtrack that emphasizes Mozart's "The Magic Flute" but includes distorted sounds worthy of Herschell Gordon Lewis amateurish HOW TO MAKE A DOLL, he has created a film designed to test one's patience.

It's shot at night with monochrome or duochrome effects, in an apocalyptic setting of the zoo, lorded over by guest star Klaus Kinski (who speaks only through a trendy vocoder stolen apparently from Peter Frampton but suggesting Stephen Hawking (!)), and a cabaret setting starring the ethereally beautiful & decadent Catherine Jourdan. She's a singer doted on by Pierre Clementi, without whose presence a film like this would feel half empty, while dwarf Pieral looks after Jourdan's career as her mean manager. Add to the mix an endlessly laughing guest star Alida Valli (she provides the project with "instant class" given her previous career). Silliest touch is casting that sturdy French character comedian Rufus as the chauffeur of the vintage Cadillac, who has a part-time career as a ventriloquist with a duck as dummy named Donald (!).

If this sounds stupid, it is, with a capital S. It's all atmosphere, visual allusions, and mucho tedium as Fleischer tantalizes and frustrates the viewer in equal fashion. In my film festival-hopping days (back in the '70s) there were many films like this floating around, of which only the most grotesque (and sexually charged -c.f., WEDDING TROUGH or years later SINGAPORE SLING) got one's attention. Fleischer keeps Jourdan under wraps except for one brief scene, and his film suffers.

The presence of dwarf Pieral, who was so brilliant in the Cocteau classic directed by Jean Delannoy, THE ETERNAL RETURN, hints at Jean Cocteau as the inspiration for this nonsense. Cocteau wrote the guidebook for avant garde effects with his classic ORPHEE, and Fleischer studiously copies.

Staring at Jourdan kept my attention but I was quite disappointed at the misuse of Kinski here - it falls squarely in with his sincere love of working for "manageable" (read: HACK) directors. Shortly after watching ZOO ZERO I saw Gerry O'Hara's 1965 Swinging London movie THE PLEASURE GIRLS, and Kinski was outstanding in that forgotten softcore opus -again able to push the director around. Claire Denis was an assistant director for this one, and she tried her hand at this sort of crap with TROUBLE EVERY DAY.
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8/10
Underrated, rare, needs to be rediscovered
NickKnack6816 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
ZOO ZERO isn't as hard to decipher as most reviews claim. It's obvious France has been overrun with rabies, and most of the population has been infected. The country looks like it's in ruins, so some kind of apocalyptic fate is at hand. We follow nightclub singer Ava (Played by Catherine Jourdan of THE GIRL ON A MOTORCYCLE (1968) fame) who performs in a club called Noah's Ark, as patrons in animal masks watch her sing a song about an interspecies affair. Stuffed animals decorate the club, and this whole opening sequence brings both CAFÉ FLESH and LIQUID SKY (both 1982) to mind. Before long, Ava is running through the city, howling like an animal, obviously convinced she's a lion or perhaps is actually turning into one (a mention of evolution on a radio broadcast had me convinced people were turning back into animals, but by the end I think they were all just going insane from the rabies). She's looking for a strange man who came to see her sing (Yave, played by Kinski, who also runs the local zoo) and she's eventually picked up in a limo by her dwarf manager and his weirdo driver, who likes to give history lessons as a ventriloquist with a bad looking Donald Duck puppet (if you're not getting excited right now you probably don't like bizarro cinema). As the three drive around, we encounter all kinds of off the wall characters before Ava finally meets up with Yave and they head to the zoo, where they eventually let all the animals loose, I'm guessing to help them reclaim the world we humans have taken from them.

Any way you slice it, ZOO ZERO is a very interesting film, gorgeously shot by the great Bruno Nuytten, who, among his impressive body of work is the mighty POSSESSION (1981). There's also a weird sub-story about Ava being part of a family of ogres (don't ask) in a hilarious sequence were Yvonne (played by famous Italian actress Alida Valli) screams and gives maniacal looks at the cast. So, yeah, if you're into out-there cinema you might want to seek this one out (it's available on YouTube and on DVD, but it easily deserves the Criterion treatment). Add a plus here for Kinski, dressed in a tux and constantly smoking and sipping champagne, speaking only through a keyboard-operated voice projector, making him sound like a 1950s robot.
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