Decoder

Decoder (1983) - Soundtrack

"information is like a bank
our job is to rob that bank"
----------------------- Genesis P-Orridge in Decoder

In 1983, Dave Ball (Soft Cell) & Genesis P-Orridge (Psychic TV), along with other artists such as FM Einheit (Einstürzende Neubaten) and Matt Johnson (The The) provided a soundtrack for a German film, 'Decoder', that starred William Borroughs, Christiane F, and a cameo from Genesis P-Orridge.

Hamburg, 1983. F.M. is a youngster leading an idle urban life, totally alienated from his environment, and only active when making “sound experiments” in his home studio. Christiana, his girlfriend, works in a peepshow on Reeperbahn. A chronically depressed customer is infatuated by her and tries to get more closely acquainted. The relationship between F.M. and Christiana is cool and distant, except for the moments at breakfast, when they share the muddled visions of their dreams.

One day F.M. suddenly wakes up to the surrounding reality, as he notices how the inconspicuous background music at a hamburger joint may have some connection with the junk food. It dawns on him that muzak is designed to control and brainwash the masses, not unlike lobotomy. On top of its paralysing effects, muzak is also laced with subliminal messages. F.M. decides to go back to the bar and records the muzak for his own purposes. He starts to develop a form of “anti-muzak” in his studio, by playing the original material backwards, or at a wrong speed, or by mixing it with interfering factors like sounds of street riots or squealing frogs.

In a dream of his F.M. receives support for his one-man war from an old shopkeeper (William Burroughs) selling electronics spare parts. He gives F.M. a disassembled cassette with the advice “This is all you need!” While wandering around the city, F.M. runs into members of a shady cult, “the pirates”, who have taken over an abandoned building in order to practice their nocturnal rituals of “black noise”. The core of their high priest’s (Genesis P-Orridge) message is: “Information is like a bank. Some of us are rich, while others are poor. It is our mission to rob that bank�” F.M. and the pirates decide to co-operate. They perform terrorist attacks in Burger Kings and McDonalds, armed with cassette players and anti-muzak. The customers get sudden nausea attacks and start rushing to the exits�

The action continues around the city, until the mighty Muzak Corporation intervenes by sending agent J�ger to track down the tape terrorists. Things get complicated when F.M. finds out that Christiana’s secret admirer and regular peepshow visitor is none other than J�ger himself. All the while, F.M. and the pirates keep copying more anti-muzak cassettes and distributing them to people in the streets. Mass hysteria and general chaos ensue�

Der Zeitgeist
A trashy little low-budget underground movie, Decoder reflects the zeitgeist of its time. The 1984 of Orwell is imminent, and apocalyptic signs can be seen everywhere. In Decoder, muzak represents indisputable evil, the totalitarian, multinational brainwashing masked under an anonymous, seemingly neutral fa�ade. Or, as the producers so succinctly put it: “Decoder shows that film can be more than two dimensional pictures plus the spoken word. Before the script writers Maeck, Muscha, Schaefer, Trimpop started to shoot in slums and fast-food chain-stores they did quite some research on the phenomenon of muzak: music recorded with special filtering and mixing techniques for stimulating productivity and employee morale as well as the comfort of the consumer, used by big industries, warehouses and department stores, restaurant chains and hospitals. This art product of doctors, musicians and marketing experts is only known as background music, whose subliminal effects no one is usually aware of.”

Decoder still manages to baffle today. It is, at the same time, (inadvertently) comical as well as haunting. Its political views on society are extremely black-and-white but undeniably strong as a bleak vision of the world to come. The film combines the instability of the two German nations and the nascent political activism, with Burroughs’ theory of “the information war”. And, as so many times before, reality surpassed fiction. The film crew shot parts of the movie in West Berlin and planned to plant actors with cassette players among the protesters against Ronald Reagan’s state visit, with the intention of editing the footage to create the impression that it is F.M. and his cohorts who are organizing the provocations in the streets. Once on location, they noticed that “audio terrorism” was already being practiced by the local anarchists, who had duplicated and distributed tapes full of frantic sounds of battle from war zones, sounds of descending helicopters, random gunfire and the like. “They put tape recorders in windows, and if you’re in the street and you hear all these noises and you don’t know where it’s coming from and you think where is that fucking helicopter, where is that shooting coming from? People got confused and angrier. It actually worked. They even busted tape recorders. They confiscated 200 tape recorders. It was really funny,” writer/producer Klaus Maeck told Vague magazine in 1984.

Glowing in colours of green, red and pallid blue, Decoder was pieced together by a bunch of enthusiastic first-timers. As Maeck reminisces: “Everybody did everything.” The screenplay was put down to Maeck, Trini Trimpop, and Volker Schaefer. The fourth member of the collective, Muscha, ended up as the director only one day before shooting began, “since he was the loudest and most secure in directing people.” The casting is interesting, to say the least: F.M.Einheit (of Einst�rzende Neubauten) in the leading role is phenomenal as the decadent kool kat. His tired girlfriend is played by Christiane Felscherinow, the original inspiration for the movie Christiane F. (dir. Uli Edel, 1981). The laconic New York actor Bill Rice is the face of the sorely tried muzak detective, whereas Genesis P-Orridge (of Throbbing Gristle / Psychic TV) makes a splendid cameo as the disturbed high priest.

On the trail of boy scouts
Film historian Jack Sargeant sees Decoder as a direct continuum in the beat tradition of Ron Rice, Jack Smith, Robert Frank, Antony Balch and their ilk. With the film The Cut-Ups (1967) directors Balch and Burroughs illustrated their theory and method of random cut-ups, and the result was sheer cinematic terrorism. It is practically impossible to follow the movie � instead, it “sends a message directly into the collective subconscious.”

Decoder takes the concept even further and delves into it with the means of a fictional story. In his novels The Job (1970) and The Revised Boy Scout Manual (1970) the beat icon Burroughs had already introduced his ideas of sounds as potential weapons of political struggle and the technical instructions for that particular brand of terrorism. Despite its brevity, Burroughs’ appearance in Decoder proves to be a key scene, as the whole movie is an implementation of the author’s idea: “Young people in the West have been lied to, sold out, and betrayed. Best thing they can do is take the place apart before they are destroyed in a nuclear war.” In Decoder, Burroughs’ The Wild Boys (1971) have been updated as characters in the post-punk and industrial scene in Berlin. One last matter of curiosity: beat painter Bryon Gysin’s mind-expanding Dreamachine also makes an appearance in Decoder, as F.M. gets acquainted with it in a rite of passage for the black noise cult.
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From here the invistigation will progress chronologically, tracing Burroughs' views and influences on (as well as his pre-empting of) the punk movement, his tape recorder experiments and the importance of his sonic theories, known as ‘The Invisible Generation' concepts, which went on to spawn the birth of industrial music and bands such as Throbbing Gristle (1976-1981) whose focal member, Genesis P-Orridge, had an instrumental role in the latter days of Burroughs life. This links to the German independent film Decoder (1984), which features both Burroughs and P-Orridge and is heavily thematically influenced by Burroughs, in particular Electronic Revolution .
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A film with the simple story subject of a man who wants to oppose the ever present muzak in a hamburger restaurant and other places deserves any credit it can get, surely if it has been made into this remarkable and very stylistic German cult films of the 80's. Inspired by W.S. Burroughs, who also has a cameo, the makers came up with a very tense, very good edited and very rhythmic film that invites the viewer not only to watch, but also to feel the poetry of the film. There is the wonderful cinematography by Johanna Heer, giving in general the film a steal blue colour. Variations are made for the different characters and different situations. In an interview producer Klaus Maeck may have said that to him this style seemed to be exaggerated, I think that the film could not have done without this cinematographic style.
Then there is the very good music that accompanies the film, and adding to the rhythm of the film. The script, simple as it may be, is well written, although there are a couple of flaws, the main being that it takes too long. But do not expect a linear told story, this is not that kind of a film; you have to carefully study and interpret every image to know what is going on. This does not mean that the makers were not able to tell a story, it is part of the overall poetic style: the viewer has to go through this film. Though the acting may not be of greatest importance as the filmed image is main story teller, some of the acting should have been much better. With all due respect to Christiane F., she never comes further than saying her lines. Bill Rice as the undercover agent is the best and seems to have walked out of a Raymond Chandler novel.

The riots you see are actual riots the makers made use of. The riots accompanied President Reagan's visit to Berlin. After seeing this film you probably will not enter any hamburger restaurant again, which to me may be the strongest reason to watch the film. I recommend this to the discriminating film buff. What a pity that this team never produced another one.

[ Releted links]
- Decoder Homepage
- IMDB
- download movie
- More links for downloading movie

[ Video]
[Decoder [1984] full movie on youtube]
[Decoder - William S. Burroughs and Christiane F. ]

Decoder (1983) - Soundtrack
(Download from Rapidshare)

DECODER THE
SOUNDTRACK


muzak for frogs

Dave Ball / Genesis P-Orridge

three orange kisses from kazan
Matt Johnson / The The
© CBS records 1982

dream
Dave Ball / Genesis P-Orridge
voices: Christiane F., W. S. Burroughs
text from "macbeth" & the LP
"nothing here now but the recordings"

main theme
Dave Ball / Genesis P-Orridge

sex & the married frog
Dave Ball / Genesis P-Orridge

riots

information
voice: Genesis P-Orridge

muzak decoding
dream machine
pirates
FM Einheit / John Caffrey / Alexander v. Borsig

compressed metal
Einstürzende Neubauten

main theme - finale
Dave Ball / Genesis P-Orridge
sax: peter horn

source:
decoderblog.blogspot.com//
lechapiteaudesfous.blogspot.com//