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    Landscape Suicide

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    1986     Drama, crime    
    USA
    1h 35min

    For his career-long excavation of the American national character, James Benning found two of his most striking case studies in a pair of murderers whose crimes took place 30 years and more than half the country apart. Landscape Suicide, like many of Benning's films, consists largely of footage of places, landscapes, and roads accompanied by -- or paired with -- speech. The speech, in this case, comes from the court testimonies of Bernadette Protti, who stabbed one of her California high-school classmates to death in 1984 over an insult, and Ed Gein, the infamous Plainfield, Wisconsin, killer who made trophies out of his victim's bodies, read aloud by actors directly to the camera. Benning's America is a country terrified equally by the wilderness to which it's in thrall and the civilization it's set up to keep that wilderness at bay -- and nowhere in his work does that tension become more chillingly clear.

    Directed byJames Benning
    Written byJames Benning

    Starring

    Rhonda Bell
    Elion Sucher

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