Wednesday, February 25, 2015

O Fantasma (The Phantom)




Young, handsome bin man, Sergio (Ricardo Meneses) is the protagonist in the 2000 Portuguese-made film O Fantasma by João Pedro Rodrigues. The film resembles an intimate fly on the wall documentary, with the use of handheld camera as Sergio is seen roaming the streets of Lisbon both during his job as a waste collector and in his free time as he stalks his prey in search of his next sexual victim.

The title O Fantasma (The Phantom) seems fitting as Sergio, who lives alone in an empty, banal apartment, haunts his city alone at night. Moreover, shot mainly in the dark of the night, each scene including interactions with other characters is followed by various others of him in his solitude, or with Lordes, his company mascot, hiding as he haunts his objects of desire, only being seen when and if he wishes it.

Extra care is also taken in highlighting Sergio’s animalistic nature in line with his apparent “ghostliness” through exaggerated scenes of violence and sensuality such as sniffing the crotch of those he’s interested in, like Fatima and the Policeman, and marking his territory by peeing on the bed of a man he has taken to be his sexual prisoner. This, along with his self-isolation, creates an abjectified character, one who struggles to understand social norms and instead flouts them, deliberately choosing to detach himself from others and live as an outsider alongside Lordes.


Sergio’s lustfulness and homosexual promiscuity further amplify his abjectification – the scenes of him strangling himself whilst masturbating in the shower and soliciting sexual relations with male strangers in public spaces – and further displays his slow descent into a more primal and animalistic being, far from the normal humans around him.





For the average Western viewer, a film of this nature would undoubtedly provoke anger, confusion, even disgust. However, winning the prize for Best Feature Film in the New York Lesbian & Gay Film Festival, implies that a sexually provocative film is what director Rodrigues wanted. By the end of the film, as Sergio takes to the streets in his gimp suit we sense a loss in his human identity, he embraces his solitary and animalistic nature and assumes his self-abjectification, a role in which he appears more than comfortable. From a personal point of view, Rodrigues succeeded in his intentions with the film. For a picture that so closely denotes a week in the life of a gay porn star, Sergio’s obsession with sexual violence, and domination within it, becomes as captivating as it is confusing, so much so that the viewer is forced to ask the question: “Honey, how did you get this way?”