-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BERLIN (Reuters) - Armin Meiwes, the German cannibal who gained global notoriety for eating a willing victim, is being immortalized in a movie by a gay filmmaker, and the project is already running into controversy.
The film, with the working title "Your Heart in My Brain," has received nearly $25,000 in public funding from a regional film foundation in North Rhine-Westphalia.
Meiwes was sentenced in January to eight and a half years in prison for manslaughter after a trial in which the grisly details riveted Germany.
He admitted killing a Berlin computer specialist he met on the Internet, but was spared a murder conviction because the victim had asked to be eaten in a case of sexual fetishism.
Meiwes recorded the deed on video tape and shocked the court with his matter-of-fact account of how he severed the man's penis at the latter's request, and how they both tried to eat it, first raw and then fried in a saucepan.
Billed as a mix of "grotesqueness, thriller and documentary," the film by critically acclaimed filmmaker Rosa von Praunheim, a man, is stirring up political arguments even before its completion.
"Even the title of the project could scarcely be more tasteless," said Axel Wintermeyer, legal affairs spokesman for the conservative Christian Democrats in the state of Hesse. "This is creating a monument to a perverted criminal."
Von Praunheim, a 61-year-old gay activist who has made over 50 films including an erotic comedy entitled "Can I Be Your Bratwurst, Please?," said the case intrigued him as he had been studying cannibalism for the last 20 years.
"What interests me is the gay aspect, and that it's also about sadomasochistic experiences," said von Praunheim, who teaches directing at the Film and Television Academy at Babelsberg in Potsdam near Berlin.
"I don't know if it will shock people. People tend to react with disgust on the one hand and curiosity on the other. We always say I love you so much I could eat you."
The film has fictional elements because Latvian-born von Praunheim, whose real name is Holger Mischwitzky, has not acquired the rights to the cannibal's story.
Meiwes' lawyer Harald Ermel could not be reached for comment. After the trial, which attracted worldwide media interest, Ermel said Meiwes had received several inquiries from film companies interested in his story.
In von Praunheim's film, Meiwes is confronted in jail by his victim's head, which encourages him to be proud of what he has done and to carry on killing.
"I think it's arguable whether a film like this will glorify him, it all depends how it's done," said Reinhard Boeckh, spokesman for the North Rhine-Westphalia government.
Reuters/VNU
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