(2013) | Wetlands
The film is infamous for its relentless commitment to "scatological, uninhibited, and ribald humour". From pizza-topping contests to graphic hospital procedures, the visuals are designed to shock even desensitised viewers. If you are squeamish about bodily functions, this film will be a difficult watch.
You enjoy subversive indie cinema, "unreliable narrators," or stories that challenge social taboos around the female body. Wetlands (2013)
The narrative uses Helen’s hospital stay as a framing device for her true goal: reuniting her divorced, dysfunctional parents at her bedside. Flashbacks reveal a "troubled personality" shaped by a difficult childhood, suggesting her provocative behaviour might be a coping mechanism for repressed trauma. The film is infamous for its relentless commitment
For more community perspectives, you can browse audience reviews on Letterboxd or check the latest critical consensus on Rotten Tomatoes . ‘Wetlands’ review by Connor Stephens - Letterboxd For more community perspectives, you can browse audience
Directed by David Wnendt and based on Charlotte Roche’s controversial bestseller, Wetlands (2013) is a German coming-of-age film that is as tender as it is repulsive. It follows Helen Memel (Carla Juri), an eccentric 18-year-old whose obsession with bodily fluids and hygiene experimentation lands her in the hospital after a botched intimate shaving accident.
You have a weak stomach or prefer traditional, linear storytelling. As Greg King's Film Reviews puts it, this is definitely "not the type of movie you'd take your grandmother to see".
Beneath the "grime," the film has surprising heart. Critics from Screen Daily note that Carla Juri’s breakout performance is the film's "revelation," portraying Helen with a "verve and intelligence" that makes her complex and oddly endearing.