| DVD cover artwork for Little Mother. [click photo for larger version] |
Metzger based the film on a Peron biography called Woman with a Whip -- a too-suitable nickname for the ambitious Marina, whose public face of virtue, populism, and caring masks a sluttish and murderous personality. The director is typically convoluted in exploring this life -- past and present gracefully interweave in flashbacks and flashforwards that show the extremes of her personality and her unlimited ambition. The film opens at a decisive moment -- a Christmas rally in the public square for President and Mrs. Minares, at which a body, unidentified, falls over a balcony. From there Metzger skips through his heroine's life, from her early days as a tart-about-town, to a career as a TV weather girl, to her slow climb on the exhausted bodies of a series of lovers of increasing rank and importance, to her ruthless repression of political dissidents and her shameless lobbying of a corrupt cardinal for sainthood before she dies.
One of her many victims is her early best friend, Annette (Elga Sorbas), who somewhat resembles her. Together, they crash haute parties and trade off boyfriends. But Annette represents the fate that Marina might have had -- she's dying of syphilis and tuberculosis. More worrying for Marina, Annette is one of the few people who know about her past and can capsize her plan for canonization. Another victim is revolutionary Riano (Mark Damon), who goes from Marina's lover to her enemy and ends up being tortured. They have a love scene that's one of Little Mother's most inventive, with Marina nude behind a mottled-glass shower door and Riano on the other side, "touching" her through this complex surface.
As in Dark Odyssey, this film has a look that belies its budget. Metzger assembled quite large crowds for some of the scenes of public worship of this evil "little mother." And as always, the trappings have an elegance and power not evident in other such films. A scene in a museum is typical. It's a stylish space but dark, empty except for a series of twisted, grotesque statues that provide dramatic background for a conversation between Annette and Marina, at which Marina subtly writes her friend's death sentence. Brian Phelan's strong script helps here and throughout.
The acting is solid, with even Damon, who was wooden in his previous notable performance in Corman's House of Usher(1960), credible as a scruffy revolutionary. Elga Sorbas's Annette has a powerful pathos, especially in the unsettling scene where she stoically prepares to have sex with a man she doesn't know intends to kill her. Best of all is the icily beautiful Christiane Kruger, the daughter of well-known German actor Hardy Kruger, as Marina Pinares. She's superb as the conflicted but always commanding Marina. In fact, this may be the definitive portrait of the self-possessed, sexually driven, deeply duplicitous, ultimately doomed Metzger woman.
The DVD doesn't contain a trailer, but does contain chapter breakdowns. It was made from an "overseas" print, as a title card says, and presented in its original 1.85 theatrical ratio. With the exception of occasional artifacts, it's a fine transfer.