In a Glass Cage with Günter Meisner: DVD Cover

    In a Glass Cage
    a.k.a. Tras el Cristal, Caged Glass Director: Agustín Villaronga Cast: Günter Meisner, David Sust, Marisa Paredes, Gisela Echevarria

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    • DVD Release Date: 05/25/2004
    • Original Release: 1985
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 33,116
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Features

    Interview with the director; Four-page liner notes; Scene selection; Widescreen version

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Final Blow [4:17]
    2. Opening Credits [1:49]
    3. Iron Lung [1:39]
    4. The Devil Himself [6:08]
    5. Late Night Visit [4:14]
    6. People Are Very Strange [7:43]
    7. Cutting the Power [3:23]
    8. This Is Not a Game [9:29]
    9. Griselda's Death [11:32]
    10. I'm Scared [3:44]
    11. Dismissed [6:02]
    12. Storytelling [4:05]
    13. I Love Death [9:57]
    14. Redecorating [4:22]
    15. I'm the Boss Here [4:59]
    16. Sing [5:00]
    17. Role Reversal [10:31]
    18. Thank You, Angelo [8:02]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Stylistically compelling, morally ambiguous, and profoundly unsettling, this Spanish psychodrama from writer-director Agustin Villaronga stands beside Pier Paolo Pasolini's Salo as one of cinema's most unflinching depictions of human depravity. The story opens in post-WWII Catalonia as former Nazi death camp "doctor" Klaus (Gunter Meisner) consummates his torture-murder of a young man by hurling himself from the roof of his house; this act, motivated either by a sudden attack of conscience or by some form of sexual mania, leaves him paralyzed from the neck down and unable to breathe on his own. We soon find Klaus lying prone in an archaic iron lung, attended by his stern wife Griselda (Marisa Paredes) and young daughter Rena (Gisela Echevarria). When they become unable (or, in his wife's case, unwilling) to look after him, Griselda hires handsome young nurse Angelo (David Sust), unaware that the young man is one of Klaus' former victims, who has maintained a detailed dossier on the "doctor" and his countless unspeakable atrocities. Thus begins a perverse and surreal manipulation of master/servant roles between the immobile Klaus and his equally demented attendant, as the young man attempts to recreate the nightmare world of the camps, even procuring more young victims for his former tormentor's amusement. Though it could be asserted that the stylistically accomplished Villaronga has made a passionate artistic statement about mankind's capacity for unspeakable atrocities, his film may be construed as being one of those horrors in itself. At any rate, Tras el Cristal is not for the faint of heart or weak of stomach. Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    • Viewer Rating:
    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    In a Glass Cageby Anonymous

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    February 16, 2005: Villaronga's shattering study of man's inhumanity to children and the legacy of the second World War and all it's horrors is,like SALO,a film that you can never shake off after viewing...seen by some as exploitation,this is anything but,instead,a serious,artisticaly valid study of the depths of the human soul,with superb acting from all concerned,especially David Sust as Angelo,giving one of the most fearsomely accomplished and morally disturbing performances in all cinema! Not easy viewing,but challenging,powerful and oddly human in it's final analysis,this film stays with you like a bad fever dream for weeks after seeing it...