Dutch director Paul
Verhoeven, later to scandalize Hollywood with the sexually provocative one-two
punch of Basic Instinct (1992) and Showgirls (1995), first made noise on
the international scene with Turkish
Delight, an almost-explicit romantic drama that carried an X-rating during
its original American release. Starring Rutger Hauer, the charismatic Dutch
actor who earned global visibility over the course of several collaborations
with Verhoeven, Turkish Delight is a
something of a raunchy cousin to the American blockbuster Love Story (1970). Like that picture, Turkish Delight depicts young love tainted by tragedy. Unlike the
Ali MacGrew/Ryan O’Neal tearjerker, Turkish
Delight is an almost unrelentingly vulgar enterprise, thanks to abrasive
characterizations, in-your-face storytelling, and startling onscreen content
including excrement, full-frontal nudity, murder (in a dream sequence),
projectile vomiting, and seemingly endless variations of sexual coupling.
Verhoeven has always been a peculiar sort of a sensualist, and rarely has he
indulged himself more than he does throughout Turkish Delight.
Based on a novel by Jan Wolkers, Turkish Delight opens on debauched
artist Eric (Hauer). Living in squalor and tormented by grim visions, he spends
all his time wooing women back to his studio for aggressive sexual encounters,
only to discard the women after he’s satisfied his urges. Before long, the film
shifts to an extended flashback depicting Eric’s relationship with Olga (Monique
van de Ven). They meet when Eric hitches a ride in her car. Moments later, Olga
pulls over so they can have at each other. Afterward, Eric accidentally gets
his penis caught in his zipper, leading to a strangely funny scene: Olga drives
to a nearby farm and borrows a pair of pliers, so the farmer and his wife
watch, aghast, as Eric frees himself, then hands over the pliers, now festooned
with a chunk of bloody flesh.
Similar shock-value moments permeate Turkish Delight. Eric finds a horse’s
eye in a bowl of stew. He lovingly handles Olga’s feces, and he offers (twice)
to drink her urine. Close-ups depict a dog taking a dump in one scene, maggots
crawling on rotting food in another. Woven into this extreme material is an
overwrought but well-acted romantic saga. Olga ignores her parents’ disdain for
the penniless Eric because she loves him, but her mood swings drive them apart.
Then, when Eric discovers that the cause of Olga’s emotional changes is a
health crisis, he tries to reconnect with her.
For some viewers, Verhoeven’s visceral
style clearly elevated the experience of the film, because Turkish Delight enjoyed a rapturous response in the Netherlands.
Reportedly the most successful film ever made in that country, Turkish Delight also earned an Academy
Award nomination for Best Foreign Film. Indeed, some aspects of the movie are
beyond reproach. The acting is excellent, the direction is forceful, and the
harmonica-driven score by Rogier van Otterloo is evocative. Yet Turkish Delight is not for everyone.
Some may find the gross-out stuff distracting and juvenile, while others will
accept those elements as germane to a gritty depiction of intense love.
Turkish Delight: FUNKY
1 comment:
Picked this up at Blockbuster many years ago. Watched it dubbed and thought it was the worst piece of "excrement" ever. "How could this be an Oscar nominated film"? Decided to watch the next day with the subtitles. Loved it! There's a lesson in there somewhere.
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