CASFFA
Mel Ade
  • Films
  • About
    • menu arrow
    • Tickets
    • Media
    • Gallery
    • Partners
    • Blog
    • Contact
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
  • Films
  • Aboutmenu arrow
    • Tickets
    • Media
    • Gallery
    • Partners
    • Blog
    • Contact
Mel
Ade
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram
The Cat that Didn’t Get the Cream: On Juraj Herz’s <em>Morgiana</em>
The Cat that Didn’t Get the Cream: On Juraj Herz’s Morgiana
Share
This:
Facebook Twitter

In my first blog post for the Czech and Slovak Film Festival of Australia, I mentioned my fondness for Alice in Wonderland, and especially Jan Švankmajer’s 1987 adaptation. How strange it was that I should then find myself in the cinema, watching something which so evoked Alice – and yet, was so distinct from it. Though laden with hallucinogenic visions, tea parties, the diametrically opposed Black Queen and Queen of Hearts, and an all-knowing feline, Morgiana (Juraj Herz, 1972) is very much its own entity.

The film follows two sisters – both played by the enviably talented Iva Janžurová – Viktoria and Klára. Klára, the younger of the pair, is full of saccharine goodness and innocence; she is the ‘Queen of Hearts’ and has inherited the majority of her father’s assets, including a luxurious estate with exquisite gardens. Her sister, Viktoria, is her polar opposite – pale, witch-like, considered ugly and bursting at the seams with repressed jealousy at her sister’s good fortune and many admirers. Her only affections are reserved for her cat, Morgiana. In an attempt to win back her sister’s inheritance and suitor, Viktoria hatches a plan to dispose of Klára by means of a slow-acting poison.

Morgiana

Morgiana

Morgiana is brimming with Gothic decadence, which is particularly noticeable in the costuming. The sisters are dressed like porcelain dolls in elaborate, fairy tale gowns. Their makeup is highly exaggerated, with long, spidery lashes, neatly-drawn eyeliner and excessive eye shadow. And what could be more Gothic than sibling rivalry turned homicidal amidst rugged beaches and disquieting woodlands? Morgiana is certainly a horror film, in the sense that there is an emphasis on dangerously unsettled psychological states. Yet it functions equally well as a feverish melodrama, which is only heightened by Luboš Fišer’s sublime score. Restlessness and other anxieties are dragged to the surface one by one as events threaten Viktoria’s plan, and alternately, Klára’s wellbeing.

Morgiana

Morgiana

Indeed, with each protagonist having opposing goals, but with both being played by Janžurová, audience sympathies are directed to lie, conflictingly, with the two of them. Despite Klára’s surface goodness, it is Viktoria’s sharp mind that compels us through the film – even as she inflicts harm upon her unsuspecting sister. Perhaps this is why many of the scenes are framed through the point-of-view of an external character, such as the titular cat. The camera mimics the movements of the mysterious feline, further complicating the relationship between viewer and subject.

If nothing else, Morgiana is dreamlike. Klára spends the majority of the film experiencing vivid daydreams as a result of the poison, dancing through kaleidoscopes of colour and talking to a strange shadow version of herself (as though her sister were not already her shadow). Certain peculiar elements, such as liquids – alcohol, lemonade, mineral water, milk – become motifs, wrapped up in an enigmatic tale that could easily have been told more prosaically in the hands of another director. Frightening, wondrous and never dull, Morgiana is a pastiche, and most importantly, a triumph.

Faith Everard

Faith Everard is a writer and an arts student at The University of Melbourne, as well as the podcast producer for film criticism programme Plato's Cave on Triple R. She runs a personal film blog entitled The Fourth Wall, and has also written for 4:3, the ABC Online and the MIFF Blog. In 2017, she was one of the participants at the MIFF Critics Campus.

Post navigation

Twitter
2023 planner
mel 27 Sep - 11 Oct
m
t
w
t
f
s
s
27
28
29
30
01
02
03
0405060708
09
10
11
THE CHAMBERMAID
2023, Mariana Čengel Solčanská
Classic Cinemas , Thu 05 Oct 6.30pm
buy tickets | more info
BIRTHDAY WISHES
2023, Marta Ferencová
Classic Cinemas , Sun 08 Oct 5.00pm
buy tickets | more info
DIAMONDS OF THE NIGHT
1964, Jan Nêmec
Classic Cinemas , Sun 08 Oct 12.00pm
buy tickets | more info
ORDINARY FAILURES
2022, Cristina Groșan
Classic Cinemas , Sun 08 Oct 2.30pm
buy tickets | more info
ALL ABOUT THE LITTLE THINGS
2023, Denis Šafařík
Classic Cinemas , Fri 06 Oct 6.00pm
buy tickets | more info
BRUTAL HEAT
2023, Albert Hospodářský
Classic Cinemas , Fri 06 Oct 7.30pm
buy tickets | more info
BALLAD OF PIARGY
2022, Ivo Trajkov
Lido Cinemas , Sat 07 Oct 6.00pm
buy tickets | more info
BIG DREAMS
2023, Daniel Pánek
Lido Cinemas , Sat 07 Oct 4.15pm
buy tickets | more info
JOURNEY TO YOURLAND
2023, Peter Budinský
Lido Cinemas , Sat 07 Oct 2.00pm
buy tickets | more info
LIQUID BREAD
2022, Alica Bednáriková
Lido Cinemas , Sat 07 Oct 8.00pm
buy tickets | more info
NOTES FROM EREMOCENE
2023, Viera Čákanyová
Lido Cinemas , Sat 07 Oct 8.00pm
buy tickets | more info
HAPPY END
1967, Oldřich Lipský
ACMI , Wed 27 Sep 7.00pm
buy tickets | more info
AN OLD GANGSTER’S MOLLS
1927, Svatopluk Innemann
ACMI , Wed 27 Sep 8.35pm
buy tickets | more info
EVA FOOLS AROUND
1939, Martin Frič
ACMI , Wed 04 Oct 7.00pm
buy tickets | more info
YOU ARE A WIDOW, SIR
1971, Václav Vorlíček
ACMI , Wed 04 Oct 8.45pm
buy tickets | more info
TOMORROW I’LL WAKE UP AND SCALD MYSELF WITH TEA
1977, Jindřich Polák
ACMI , Wed 11 Oct 7.00pm
buy tickets | more info
HEAVE HO!
1934, Martin Frič
ACMI , Wed 11 Oct 8.35pm
buy tickets | more info
subscribe to our newsletter
* = required field
  • Home
  • Films
  • Tickets
  • Media
  • Gallery
  • About Us
  • Partners
  • Archive
  • Contact
© 2023 Czech and Slovak Film Festival of Australasia, Inc.