I’m looking for directors who put you in their world, as that’s what I really love, whether it’s Peter Greenaway, Derek Jarman, Luis Buñuel, John Waters. My thrill in cinema has always been about the way something was edited, the way something was shot. When I watched it on DVD at home later, I was wedded to that physical feeling I had the first time I saw it, and was still trying to recapture that thrill, that anxiety, that claustrophobia. When I saw the film in Athens, I didn’t really understand all the dialogue or some of the nuances of plot. In Noé’s hands, the idea is handled so effectively it’s really powerful and cinematic. As filmmakers, we always crave making something quick and cheap which doesn’t involve many locations, but it’s very difficult to come up with good ideas like that. The film’s concept – dancers disoriented because they’ve had their drinks spiked with LSD – is such a great idea, so simple and contained. I’m not the first to say this, but Climax is like Hieronymous Bosch let loose in a disco. In Athens, I was at the front of the cinema, and because of the frequencies he uses, the pounding, the way the camera was turning, there was a point when I actually wanted to get out. It gets really dark at certain points, and I was not prepared for it. The reviews I read of Climax said how fun it is, so my guard was down. I actually find Climax more disturbing than Irreversible, maybe because of what my expectations were before seeing the film.
There’s the possessed nature of Suspiria, and you can even feel the spirit of Salo in there somewhere. There’s something amazing about doing that so openly, and the energy of those movies is in Climax. With the auditions at the start, he blatantly lays out his influences, Salo and all these other books and films. It’s just one space, and he makes your sense of perspective so altered within this one room. The dancing in Climax is just extraordinary, the choreography of people and camera.
In the first few minutes of Climax, he uses Cerrone’s “Supernature,” a classic disco track, and I was a little bit jealous because I’m working on a disco film and he beat me to it with that song. When I first read about Climax, I thought it was interesting that Noé had made a dance film. I also really love the work he’s done with Lucile Hadžihalilović. There are directors who are focused on creating a voltage in cinema that really ignites an excitement about the form. But strangely, it felt similar to what I imagine it was like at a Swans concert back in the ‘80s people spoke of being pounded and pounded and pounded, and then a catharsis that came from that. I loved Irreversible it was brutalizing, not just emotionally but also because of the bass frequencies he’s using, the camera movement. I love his influences, like Jordan Belson and Peter Tscherkassky, whose work I’m a huge fan of, and you can see elements of those directors in films like Enter the Void. The two areas he’s interested in are psychedelia and disreputable cinema. He clearly comes from a more psychedelic realm. I really like his approach to cinema, which is much more focused on being experiential and transformative, rather than on plot. Because I was struggling with the dialogue, I had a much more visceral response to the film than I would have had otherwise. It had no subtitles, and my French is pretty appalling – my Greek is actually better than my French (I’m half Greek). I saw Climax in Athens at the Athens Film Festival, when I was there to show In Fabric. His new short film, Cold Meridian, is now streaming on MUBI. In the past few years, he has made several radio plays and a concert film for Björk, co-directed with Nick Fenton, and his fourth feature, the Thames Valley January Sales nightmare In Fabric (starring Marianne Jean-Baptiste). He made the Milano-Dorking sonic anguish of Berberian Sound Studio (starring Toby Jones) followed in 2012, followed by the dominant/submissive romance The Duke of Burgundy (starring Sidse Babett Knudsen). The Transylvanian tragedy led to funding from the British film industry. His first feature film, Katalin Varga (starring Hilda Péter) was funded from an inheritance and shot and edited on a budget of £25,000. After a long hiatus, making culinary soundscapes with The Sonic Catering Band, he returned to film in the early part of this century. After directing his adaptation of Kafka’s Metamorphosis for Reading’s Progress Theatre in 1992, he went on to direct a short film called Bubblegum (starring Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn). Peter Strickland started making short films on Super 8 and 16 mm in the early ’90s.