Montenegro (film)

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Montenegro
File:Montenegroposter.jpg
Directed by Dušan Makavejev
Produced by Christer Abrahamsen
Bo Jonsson
George Zecevic
Written by Dušan Makavejev
Branko Vucicevic
Starring Susan Anspach
Erland Josephson
Marianna Jacobi
Jamie Marsh
John Zacharias
Bora Todorović
Per Oscarsson
Svetozar Cvetković
Music by Kornell Kovach
Cinematography Tomislav Pinter
Edited by Sylvia Ingemarsson
Release dates
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  • 1981 (1981)
Running time
96 min
Country Sweden
Language English

Montenegro also known as Montenegro - Or Pigs and Pearls (Swedish: Montenegro eller Pärlor och Svin) is a 1981 Swedish black comedy film by Serbian director Dušan Makavejev.

Plot

Marianne Faithfull sings "The Ballad of Lucy Jordan" over the opening credit sequence.

Marilyn Jordan (Susan Anspach) is a bored, depressed American housewife, married to a rich Swedish businessman with two seemingly perfect children. She tries to "spice up" her existence by surprising the family when she eats their entire dinner, setting the bedclothes on fire and poisoning the pet dog's milk and then advising it not to drink (the dog does not drink). Eventually Martin, Marilyn's husband, decides to show her to a psychiatrist, but that only serves to further her frustration.

One day, when she decides to accompany her husband on a business trip, Marilyn gets detained by security at the airport on a technicality. After missing her plane, she is befriended by a group of Serbs and is taken to a club they run, bearing the odd name of "Zanzi-Bar." There, Marilyn indulges in their fantastic, surreal world of shovel fighting, lamb roasting, striptease and free love. It all culminates with Marilyn having a passionate fling with a young man named Montenegro (Svetozar Cvetkovic) who works in a zoo.

After spending the night with Montenegro, Marilyn realizes that even though she adores this world, she is a stranger in it. Completely snapping upon this realization, she kills the young man and returns home. Once there, she serves her family a gourmet dinner, followed by a light dessert of fruit, which turns out to be poisoned. The final intertitle states: "The story was based on real events".

Cast

Awards and nominations

Montenegro was nominated for the Golden Palm Award at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

References

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External links