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  1. Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye is a 2004 experimental film adaptation of the 1928 novel Story of the Eye by the French writer Georges Bataille. The film, directed by Andrew Repasky McElhinney, takes place in a seemingly abandoned house where a group of people engage in wordless acts of passion.

  2. Story of the Eye (French: L'histoire de l'œil) is a 1928 novella written by Georges Bataille as Lord Auch that details the increasingly bizarre sexual perversions of a pair of teenage lovers, including an early depiction of omorashi fetishism in Western literature.

    • Georges Bataille
    • L'histoire de l'œil
    • 1928
    • 127 (Penguin Books edition)
  3. 26 de may. de 2015 · Story of the eye. by. Bataille, Georges, 1897-1962. Publication date. 1987. Topics. Erotic stories, French. Publisher. San Francisco : City Lights Books.

  4. Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye and Ma mère. Film. GEORGES BATAILLE’S STORY OF THE EYE AND MA MèRE. By Steven Shaviro. TRANSGRESSION, no less than its sister, transcendence, was a great goal of twentieth-century art. “The human being arrives at the threshold,” Georges Bataille wrote in 1938.

    • Steven Shaviro
  5. Andrew Repasky McElhinney’s new feature Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye is a new landmark in underground cinema. The film is an artistic assault on both the senses and sensibility. Mixing equal parts of surrealism, eroticism and silliness into a vibrant package rich with lush cinematography and a challenging soundtrack, [ Georges ...

  6. Story of the Eye. Select a format: Paperback Ebook. Retailers: Amazon Blackwells Bookshop.org Foyles Hive Waterstones WHSmith. Summary. A masterpiece of transgressive, surrealist erotica, George Bataille's Story of the Eye was the Fifty Shades of Grey of its era.

  7. Synopsis by Josh Ralske. Writer/director Andrew Repasky McElhinney's follow-up to the critically successful A Chronicle of Corpses is entitled Georges Bataille's Story of the Eye, but it is not based on Bataille's historically scandalous novella.