Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 2002


T.T. Syndrome

Buy T.T. Syndrome now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'T.T. Syndrome' is a 2002 Serbian horror film written and directed by Dejan Zeevi.

Plot



In 1958 a disheveled young woman named Margita Karadzic stumbles into a Turkish bath, gives birth in one of the restrooms, and flushes the baby (the result of a rape) down a toilet. Twenty-two years later, a punk couple having sex in the same bathhouse are killed and dismembered by someone, who flushes the victims' remains down a toilet before meticulously cleaning the crime scene.

Nineteen years later, Teodora, her boyfriend Vaki, and their friends Tina and Sale visit the bathhouse (where what sounds like an infant's cries and laughter frequently emanate from the plumbing) to buy drugs from a pair of dealers named Cane and Sle. Aside from those two, the only other people in the building are an attendant, a wino, and a gay magistar named Djordjevic. While Vaki and Sale are purchasing the narcotics from Cane, someone murders both Sle and Tina, the latter in front of a hiding Teodora. After finding Tina's body and the traumatized Teodora, everyone attempts to flee the bathhouse, the exits to which have all been sealed. Convinced that the drunk is the murderer, Cane impulsively shoots him to death; the man is afterward revealed to have been innocent when Sale discovers that his dropped camcorder had briefly recorded the real killer, who is wearing boots similar to Djordjevic's.

The men lock Djordjevic in a washroom stall and explore the bathhouse with Teodora, uncovering the attendant's body (which later vanishes) and a tunnel to the sewers in her living quarters. Vaki and Djordjevic are both murdered by the killer, who is revealed to be the attendant, who is also Margita. Convinced that the baby (called "Cloaca") that she had flushed down a toilet decades ago is somehow still alive and living in the sewers, Margita has spent years murdering visitors to the bathhouse so that she can feed her offspring their body parts by flushing them down the building's toilets. Assisting Margita are a deranged former professor named Dragi HadiToi (who has filled the sewers with traps for catching both people and crocodiles) and Cane, who she had abducted as a toddler and raised as her son.

As the psychotic family prepares to butcher their captives, they begin succumbing to infighting; Margita slits HadiToi's throat because Cane had been accidentally injured by one of his traps, and because he appeared to be attracted to Teodora, who manages to break free of her restraints and stab Margita. Teodora then releases Sale and together the two enter the sewers, pursued by Cane, who Teodora shoves into a pit where he is seemingly eaten by an entity implied to be Cloaca. Upon reaching the surface, Teodora and Sale are confronted by the wounded Margita, but are saved by a passing vagrant, who dies killing Margita (who, with her dying breath, reveals that Teodora is pregnant). The film ends with a scene of Teodora giving birth to a child who is implied to have the same disorder ("T.T. Syndrome") as Cloaca.

Cast



* Sonja Damjanovi as Teodora

* Nikola uriko as Sale

* Bane Vidakovi as Cane Karadzic/Pavle Nikodijevic

* Neboja Glogovac as Vaki

* Fea Stojanovi as Dragi HadiToi

* Duica egarac as Margita Karadzic

* Ljubinka Klari as Tina

* Boris Komneni as Magistar Djordjevic

* Demail Maksut as Merlin

* Radmila Tomovi as Young Margita Karadzic

* Nenad Gvozdenovi as Sle

* Ljuba iprani as Pijanac

* Mihailo Zaverla as Panker

* Suzana Risti as Pankerka

Reception



Frank Lafond of Kinoeye opined that 'T.T. Syndrome' was "a very effective, gruesome and rather gory" film that was one of the "best surprises" of the 20th Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival. 'T.T. Syndrome' was similarly praised by Ain't It Cool News, which called it "a landmark film" and "an outstanding establishing of a potentially great author" with a directorial-style that was comparable to both Dario Argento's and Lars von Trier's. The entertainingly "screwed up" film's style was also compared to Argento's classics by Film Threat, which wrote, "Yes, 'T.T. Syndrome' is loud and obnoxious, and the characters are beyond dumb, but this is what makes the genre work. This feels like a period correct Giallo film in almost every single significant way."

References




Buy T.T. Syndrome now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 2002



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107595561.