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( aka 'The Decameron' )
directed
by Pier Paolo Pasolini
Italy 1970
"The trilogy of The Decameron, The
Canterbury Tales and the Arabian Tales of 1001 Nights create a
mythical world where the nature of sex can be explored. The bawdy nature of the
original stories helps to do this, but the fact that the originals are made up
of many tales is important too. An effect that increases during the trilogy is
the use of the frame. In The Decameron we see Pasolini, playing a pupil
of the artist Giotto framing a scene with his hands. In the next scene we se e
the people in the frame turned into a mural. Even the colors used in the film
are to suggest a Renaissance painting (contrast with the use of color in Dick
Tracy to mimic a pulp comic's ink). Ignoring the content the trilogy are
beautiful to watch. Bu t it was the content that shocked manv people, and is the
reason why The Decameron is still on the Vatican's black list. Those on
the right were shocked by the graphic depiction of sex and those on the left
were dismayed to find a lack of ideology. Pasolini answered them both with the
comment that the 'ideology is really there, above your heads, in the enormous
cock on the screen'. His justification for making an almost pornographic film
was that he wished to show that it is bodies that are the most revolutionary
things of all. They represent that which can not be codified. Yet it was clear
that the people in the films were not sympathetic characters, and it becomes
even more apparent in the later films, that these people are not really human,
but sexual puppets controlled by instincts."
Excerpt Taken from the Review found HERE
Posters
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Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews Decameron Web
Recommended Books on Italian Cinema (CLICK COVERS or TITLES for more information)
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|
Italian Cinema: From Neorealism to the Present by Peter E. Bondanella |
Fellini on Fellini by Federico Fellini, Isabel Quigley |
Italian Film in the Light of Neorealism by Millicent Marcus |
Vittorio De Sica: Contemporary Perspectives (Toronto
Italian Studies) by Howard Curle, Stephen Snyder |
Italian Film (National Film Traditions) by Marcia Landy, David Desser |
Italian Movie Goddesses: Over 80 of the Greatest
Women in Italian Cinema by Stefano Masi, Enrico Lancia |
Italian Cinema by Maggie Gunsberg |
I, Fellini by Charlotte Chandler, Billy Wilder |
Vittorio De Sica: Director, Actor, Screenwriter by Bert Cardullo |
DVD REVIEW: MGM Region 1
All screenshots courtesy of Ashirg. Thanks Gregory!
| DVD Box Cover |
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Click the logos to order from:
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| Distribution | MGM Region 1 - NTSC | |
| Runtime | 1:50:56 minutes | |
| Video | 1.85:1.00
Letterboxed WideScreen / anamorphic Average Bitrate: 5.4 mb/s NTSC 720x480 29.97 f/s |
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| Bitrate: Alliance Atlantis |
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| Audio | Italian
(Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) |
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| Subtitles | English, Spanish, French, None | |
| Features |
Release Information: Studio: M G M, Inc Theatrical Release Date: January 1, 1970 Aspect Ratio(s): Edition Details: |
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| Comments: |
Both BFI and
Image discs used the non-anamorphic transfer in the previous
incarnations of the film on DVD (
http://www.mondo-digital.com/pasolini.html
) . MGM did a brand new anamorphic transfer for this release.
Colors are accurate and blacks are deep, but there's grain in the print.
The print spots some specs, but nothing too major. After Salo discs,
this is very satisfying release. Mono audio is without distortion.
The extras are limited to a very grainy anamorphic US trailer and
optional English, French or Spanish subtitles.
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| DVD Release Date:
November 5, 2002 Keep Case Chapters: 20 |
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Screen
Captures
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