| Pier Paolo Pasolini: The
Erotic Films
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An Aero Theatre Exclusive!
"Cinema is identical to life, because each one of us has a
virtual and invisible camera which follows us from when were born to when we
die." -- Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Filmmaker, screenwriter, essayist, poet, critic and novelist Pier
Paolo Pasolini (1922 1975) was, as Susan Sontag has noted, "indisputably
the most remarkable figure to have emerged in Italian arts and letters since the Second
World War." An artist and thinker of protean talents,
Pasolini was continually drawn to those on the fringes of society:
prostitutes, thieves, religious rebels and the like. He considered himself a Catholic
Marxist (even though the Communist Party had unceremoniously booted him out in the late
1940s for being a homosexual); but his politics, like his life itself, were inseparable
from his impassioned poetic vision, what he referred to as a "desperate
vitality." This vitality reached its peak in Pasolinis "Trilogy of
Life" THE DECAMERON, THE CANTERBURY TALES and ARABIAN NIGHTS
three films that reinterpreted literary classics as epic celebrations of life in all its
uninhibited erotic glory. Although he initially claimed the three films were his most
non-political, Pasolini later switched gears, claiming that the movies celebrated the
naked human body as the only terrain not dominated by the forces of capitalism.
Ironically, the worldwide commercial success of the films took Pasolini by surprise, and
he embarked on a never-finished "Anti-Trilogy Of Life" with his most
controversial film, SALO, OR THE 120 DAYS OF SODOM, a relentless, unbearably
claustrophobic examination of fascism and sadism in the last days of World War II; it was
widely banned, and has only rarely been revived in the United States. Just before the
release of SALO, Pasolini was tragically and brutally murdered by a young prostitute,
robbing world cinema of one of its most seminal artists.
All prints are in Italians with English subtitles, except for THE
CANTERBURY TALES - which is dubbed in English.
Friday, April 3 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
THE DECAMERON, 1970, MGM
Repertory, 111 min. Dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini. Based on Giovanni Bocaccios
classic novel, the first film in Pasolinis "Trilogy of Life" established
the raw, visceral feeling of the series, using gorgeous period locations, mixing
professional and non-professional actors, and combining equal parts poetry, social satire,
slapstick and bawdy sexuality into a unique living tapestry. Pasolini himself appears as a
Renaissance artist, "one of Giottos best students," hired to paint an
enormous fresco on the wall of a church. With Ninetto Davoli, Franco Citti, Angela Luce.
More
SALO, OR THE 120
DAYS OF SODOM, 1975, MGM Repertory, 117 min. Dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini.
Be prepared, SALO is not for the weak of heart. The polar opposite of the "Trilogy of
Life," SALO depicts with cold precision the sexual and psychological atrocities
visited on 16 young men and women, held hostage by a group of depraved nobles at the end
of WWII. Pasolini based the film on a notorious book by the Marquis de Sade, but shifted
the locale to the town of Salo, where Pasolinis brother was killed during the war
(and where he himself was arrested by the Nazis). One of the most controversial and widely
censored films ever made (it took over 25 years for the uncut version to screen in
England), SALO has lost none of its power to shock and disturb. With Paolo Bonacelli,
Giorgio Cataldi, Umberto Quintavalle. Note: Due to the graphic sexual nature of
these films, no one under 18 will be admitted to the screenings. Trailer
Saturday, April 4 7:30 PM
Double Feature:
THE CANTERBURY TALES, 1971, MGM
Repertory, 109 min. Dir. Pier Paolo Pasolini. On a pilgrimage to Canterbury, a
group of travelers agree to share stories to ease the journey and were
treated to a riotous carnival of lecherous old merchants, deceitful young wives, naked
satyrs, houses of prostitution, a handsome devil in rent collectors clothes and much
more. With stunning production design by Dante Ferretti (GANGS OF NEW YORK) and a haunting
score of period music selected by Pasolini and Ennio Morricone. Winner of the Golden Bear
at the 1972 Berlin Film Festival. With Hugh Griffith, Laura Betti, Ninetto Davoli,
Franco Citti and Pasolini himself as Geoffrey Chaucer. The print is the English
dubbed version.
ARABIAN NIGHTS, 1974, MGM
Repertory, 130 min. One of Pasolinis greatest achievements, ARABIAN NIGHTS is
a shimmering, golden dream of a film, drunk on its own beauty, where story after story
unfolds like leaves in an ancient Persian manuscript. Equaled only by Wojciech Has
THE SARAGOSSA MANUSCRIPT in its exquisite, otherworldly tone and intricate, puzzle-box
structure, ARABIAN NIGHTS is simply unforgettable. With Tessa Bouche, Ines Pellegrini,
Ninetto Davoli, Franco Citti, Franco Merli. |