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Learn more★★★★☆ (4/5) – A masterwork of unsettling form; a litmus test for the ethics of documentary practice.
The film does not reconstruct the murder, interview criminologists, or debate his guilt. Instead, it confines itself almost entirely to the claustrophobic apartment Sagawa shared with his older brother, Jun, who serves as his primary caregiver. Using extreme close-ups, intimate framing, and a fragmented soundscape, the film documents mundane activities—eating, sleeping, watching television, discussing erotica—intercut with Sagawa’s calm, detailed recollections of his crime. caniba 2017
There is no comfortable answer. That is the film’s unforgiving, radical achievement. ★★★★☆ (4/5) – A masterwork of unsettling form;
Caniba is a non-fiction film that examines the daily life and psyche of Issei Sagawa, a Japanese man who, in 1981, murdered and cannibalized a Dutch classmate, Renée Hartevelt, in Paris. Found unfit for trial due to insanity, Sagawa was institutionalized in France, later deported to Japan, and released from a Japanese hospital in 1986. He subsequently became a minor celebrity, authoring books and making media appearances until his death in 2022. Using extreme close-ups, intimate framing, and a fragmented
Caniba (2017) Director: Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Verena Paravel (Sensory Ethnography Lab, Harvard University) Subject: Issei Sagawa (1949–2022) Runtime: 90 minutes Format: Digital video
Caniba is not a documentary for information but for experience . It refuses to explain why Sagawa killed and ate Renée Hartevelt. Instead, it immerses the viewer in the texture of a life that contains that act—a life of frailty, dependency, quiet recollection, and brotherly devotion.