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Harpya

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Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Country
  
Belgium

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Animation, Short, Fantasy

Screenplay
  
Language
  
None

Harpya movie poster

Writer
  
Raoul Servais (scenario)

Release date
  
May 16, 1979

Cast
  
Will Spoor
(Man),
Fran Waller Zeper
(Harpy),
Sjoert Schwibethus
(Assailant)

Similar movies
  
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,
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,
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,
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,
Paperman
,
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Harpya is a 1979 short Belgian animated film written and directed by Raoul Servais. It stars Will Spoor, Fran Waller Zeper and Sjoert Schwibethus. The film won the Palme d'Or for Best Short Film at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival. Its mix of horror and black comedy has given it a cult following.

Contents

Harpya Harpya 1979 Raoul Servais Foundation

Production

Harpya Harpya Raoul Servais 1979 N2

Servais animated the film using 35mm color front-projection of his characters onto a multiplane filmed, black velvet background.

Synopsis

Harpya Birds

A mustachioed Belle Époque-styled man (Spoor) is walking down a dark street, when he hears the cries of a woman (Waller Zeper) as she is being strangled in a fountain. The man knocks out her assailant (Schwibethus), only to discover that she is in fact a Harpy, a winged white bird, larger than an eagle, having the (bald) head and breasts of a woman. Fascinated, the man takes the beast to his home to shelter and feed it. He soon discovers the Harpy's insatiable appetite. The Harpy eats all his food, then eats his parrot, and begins eyeing her host with a sinister stare. One night, when the man attempts to escape, the Harpy overwhelms him and eats his legs.

Harpya Harpya by Raoul Servais

Later, once the Harpy is asleep, the man crawls out of his house, joyfully finding French fries to eat. The Harpy flies out of the house and discovers him, eating his snack. The desperate, enraged man then attempts to strangle her. Upon hearing her cries, a police officer comes to the rescue and saves the would-be "victim", knocking the man to the ground; the Harpy then looks up at the officer in glee.

Interpretation & Themes

The Harpy, with its human torso and facial features, can be aligned to Freud's primal uncanny and Kristeva's notion of the abject in cinema. The film can also be read as a modern retelling of the femme fatale archetype story - a warning to men captivated by the allure of a dangerous female.

Awards

  • Palme d'Or for Best Short Film 1979
  • References

    Harpya Wikipedia
    Harpya IMDb Harpya themoviedb.org


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