Reviews

1/20/08

Randy Greif’s film “The Three Trials” is a hard pill to swallow, but for this writer it was worth enduring the bitter taste. The film doesn’t follow a traditional narrative structure, instead it utilizes many such as; quasi-traditional narrative, abstract, and a structure similar to what is used in music videos. The fact that writer/director Randy Greif is a musician specializing in experimental music only added to the dreamlike tone of the film.

The film follows Catherine (Molinee Green) a smokin’ hot nun that catches her Mother Superior spanking and anally violating the Father (the priest that heads the convent). She gets really turned on by what she sees and starts to touch herself when the Father sees her and informs her that because of her sins she will have to submit herself to “The Three Trials.” She is then taken to a dirty building where she is taken doggie style in a confessional while she confesses her sins. After this the flick only gets weirder. Catherine finds herself in a castle where she experiences lesbian love, dresses like a fox (has to be seen to be understood), has sex with a Yeti (and gives his doggie cock a hand job). Then the Yeti evolves into a masochistic plastic surgeon that tortures her repeatedly.

The acting is flat a lot of the time, but it doesn’t detract from the sick beauty of the film. Another plus this flick has going for it is the fact that pretty much every chick in the film gets naked (and they are all hot). The music is also very interesting and fits the surrealistic film like a glove. IMDB says the budget is an estimated $100k, which is pretty impressive because every shot of the film looks great. The lighting looks professional, the music is well done, and the sets don’t look like they were shot in the directors basement. “The Three Trials” is a harsh film that is worth a look for fans of art films, it’s not for everyone, but for an indie film with a very low budget it was quite impressive.

VIDEO / AUDIO

Video: Looked great.

Audio: Was loud and clear!

THE EXTRAS

Deleted Scenes

- There are some nice scenes that were cut from the film that make this feature worth checking out.

Trailer - The prerequisite Theatrical Trailer is there for everyone’s viewing pleasure.

LAST CALL

I dug the film, but it is definitely not for everyone. If you're squeamish or get uncomfortable when sexuality is mixed with religion, then this flick is not for you. But if you have an open mind and enjoy a little art in your films give this one a try.

Donny Broussard   JoBlo.com
 

 

January 4, 2008

Subtitled "Adventures in Psychotica," The Three Trials is a near-indescribable trip of a film revolving around the delirious misadventures of Catherine (Molinee Green), a former nun and housewife who experiences narcolepsy during moments of intense ecstasy. Her personal savior and husband, a plastic surgeon, used to be a big hairy yeti, and members of the Church (including a fat masochistic priest and a giggling thug priest) as well as a mysterious meat cult keep trying to drag her back into their fold. The very colorful and imaginative imagery is really the film's reason for existence; you literally have no idea what kind of eye-popping scenario will turn up next on the screen, and the grinding, atmospheric soundtrack (from groups with names like Nurse with Wound, Rapoon, Controlled Bleeding, and Lustmord!) is enough to approximate an acid trip in the safety of your own home. The film itself isn't really all that explicit, but the tone is extremely horrific and erotic throughout and director Randy Greif shows a sure hand at mixing avant garde sensibilities with baroque classicism, with a welcome dash of self-deprecating humor that automatically makes this more fun than your average cult item in the making. The film itself is presented widescreen (non-anamorphic) at 1.78:1 and looks very good considering the source; colors are punchy and vivid throughout, while the stereo audio works very well. Extras include three very abstract short films ("A Fist Full of Stars," "Paraliminal 2" and "Paraliminal 3"), all more or less adapted from footage from the main feature, as well as a reel of deleted scenes (the weirdest involving a screening of a vintage Popeye cartoon), and two different trailers. Freaky fun all around.

http://www.mondo-digital.com/sickpicks4.html



December 08, 2007

Writer/director Randy Greif certainly has a very unique vision, as is amply demonstrated in The Three Trials, the story of Catherine (Molinee Green), a nun with a unique form of narcolepsy. Catherine's troubles start when she stumbles across the priest of her church (Michael Q. Schmidt) indulging in fetish sex with the convent's dominatrix Mother Superior (Sirena Scott). Aroused and in trouble, her troubles start when she is sent to the wonderfully grimy basement of a nearby cathedral to face the first of her trials.The film starts very firmly in nunsploitation territory, but quickly takes a very surreal turn and becomes much, much more as Catherine is forced to confront and accept her sexuality. Moving beyond the religious life, by way of a montage that reflects both the reality of her secular life and the submissive fantasies that are now – and maybe always were – a part of her being, Catherine finds herself living in Blackheart's Castle. In terms of narrative, this is the most explicitly dream-like part of the film. No attempt is made to explain how she arrived here, or even where 'here' is – and, as such, it works more as a fantasy, and a deliberately adolescent one at that. Catherine the nymph, like Catherine the nun, has a deep desire for devotion but this time around the desire is more romantic than religious.Although the narrative here is the most dream-like, the imagery in this part of the film is the least. And Greif does manage to come up with some very striking imagery that does manage to very effectively convey the eroticism of Catherine's personality. The imagery is also often quite erotic in its own right. It also has to be noted that, regardless of the description of the synopsis so far, the film does not follow a linear narrative. It is divided into three broad sections, each of which deals with a different aspect of Catherine's submissive sexuality. But, as with both personality and sexuality, these aspects do impinge on each other and – consequently – the events in the three sections do refer, backwards and forwards, to each other.The end of the second section of the film sees Catherine being rescued by Beast (Maximilien Herholz), a sasquatch-like creature who, by the beginning of the final section, has become a man. And, as this man is more than happy to accommodate Catherine's desires, we see her relationship with him becoming increasingly extreme and masochistic. More than anything, this part of the film made me think of The Story of O and really does capture the same sense of utter submission that is portrayed in the novel. And, as with O, Catherine's journey is one that follows an unrelenting logic of its own and one that is engaging, erotic and more than a little disturbing. Where The Three Trials is unique, however, is in Greif's use of a surreal and genuinely dream-like approach to narrative, along with some deliberately absurdist elements, to obscure the boundaries between reality and fantasy. And, although the imagery does become a little self-indulgent at times, it does come together to generate a very striking, and very memorable, visual experience.This is a film that doesn't sit comfortably in any genre but one that very effectively pulls together elements from a variety of influences to create something that both unique and very powerful indeed.

Paul Pritchard

http://www.pulpmovies.com/reviews/the-three-trials