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The Decameron [1972]
Starring: Franco Citti , Ninetto Davoli , Silvana Mangano , Vincenzo Amato , and Gerhard Exel Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini Manufacturer: Bfi Video ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005ATG2 Release Date: 2001-05-07 ![]() |
Customer Reviews:
Passolini explores the narrative tradition.......2005-03-09
Pasolini provides a cavalcade of tales exploring life and death, lust and sex, the materialism of the peasant world, the carnality of life. If there is a moral it is that sex and lust are blessings. Here, sex is presented as a political act - we all have ultimate political control over our own bodies; and here Pasolini explores the nature of belief, contrasting the real, physical, material world of sex and abandonment with the censorship and authoritarianism of religion. Pasolini was fascinated by the interaction of the Marxist and Catholic traditions within Italy ... and with the world of the traditional peasant before they became anachronisms with the growth of cities and the development of an industrialised economy.
'The Decameron' is set in a medieval world which embodies the traditional values of rough peasant sex, duplicity, and conflict with the moral certainties of the Church. We have nuns forsaking their vows of chastity, cuckolded husbands, a celebration of bodily functions. We have comedy, drama, music. It's lewd, it's bawdy, and there are bodies aplenty.
Here we have life, bounded by rules, but rules which are often pure hypocrisy. Pasolini prefers the vulgarity of peasant life and its flexible violation of rules - rules of law, rules of religion, rules of social structure and hierarchy. Guilt is created by the Church ... but can be exorcised by the simple expedient of confession. Surely the peasants are more honest in their human breaking of rules ... particularly sexual ones? He rejoices in their superstition, their ignorance, their selfishness and materialism.
It's a slow paced but exuberant celebration of life in the raw. The visual style is sumptuous in places, aping the colours of medieval art. Pasolini offers characters in his photography - the beautiful and the ugly people, using amateur actors to emphasise the lack of sophistication of the peasant world. His exploration of the nature of storytelling produces overlapping tableau after tableau, short tales which cut straight into the next and challenge the conventional structure of cinema.
It's engaging, it's entertaining, and it will make you laugh.
Part 1 of the Trilogy of Life........2002-11-19
The Decameron is far from his best works- Mamma Roma, Accatone, La Ricotta, The Gospel According to St Matthew, Theorum and Salo- but is worth seeing for a myriad of reasons (not just for those studying Boccaccio). Pasolini was moving towards this kind of film with St Matthew and Medea, the meticulous recreation of the past being a prime factor which will leave you hurtling towards The Golden Bough or The Uses of Enchantment.
In this trilogy Pasolini fused his ever-mutating philosophy with three classic works- here we get excerpts from the vast text- in a similar way that Kieslowki's final work, Heaven, uses aspects of The Divine Comedy. Pasolini is making things more obvious with the 'storyteller' aspect prevalent in this work- this would be continued to the deranged courtesan of Salo; while Pasolini himself makes an appearance as Giotto- as he would appear as Chaucer in The Canterbury Tale. This further confounds the associations made between Pasolini's life and art (JG Ballard defined Pasolini as "sociopath disguised as Saint" in The User's Guide to the Millennium).
The Decameron is an impressive film, though some knowledge of the original text (which I didn't have) would be helpful- to see where Boccaccio ends and Pasolini begins. As ever the composition and design is wonderful- as the costumes- this is partly down to Dante Ferretti (now a Scorsese regular like Michael Ballhaus) and the late Danilo Donati (costume designer and sometime writer/director). Ennio Morricone also contributes some music, as Tonino del Colli offers up fantastic photography.
The Trilogy of Life is well worth watching, not as gruelling or Gramscian as films like Pigsty, Salo & Theorum; though ultimately Pasolini would reject this direction- as he had the early works (Mamma Roma, Accatone) and move to his last broadcast, Salo (another story...).
A fine package for a fine film.......2001-10-13
But most importantly perhaps - this release marks the first occasion Decameron is availible uncut for home viewing in this country - and so comes highly recommended for fans of Pasolini and off-beat Italian film.
The next best thing to a personal discussion with Bocaccio.......2001-09-21
It's a real shame that you do no get films of this calibre anymore....all the great directors of the past are needed now!
but we still have their movies to watch, even after they leave the earth....
my 2 cents: A beautiful film shot in gorgeous colours and tones, a cinematic feast for the eyes, the ears, and the soul.
A CLASSIC!
Average customer rating:
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The Decameron [1972] (REGION 1) (NTSC)
Starring: Guido Alberti , Patrizia Capparelli , Franco Citti , Ninetto Davoli , and Jovan Jovanovich Manufacturer: MGM ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006I04H Release Date: 2002-11-05 ![]() |
Customer Reviews:
Passolini explores the narrative tradition.......2005-03-09
Pasolini provides a cavalcade of tales exploring life and death, lust and sex, the materialism of the peasant world, the carnality of life. If there is a moral it is that sex and lust are blessings. Here, sex is presented as a political act - we all have ultimate political control over our own bodies; and here Pasolini explores the nature of belief, contrasting the real, physical, material world of sex and abandonment with the censorship and authoritarianism of religion. Pasolini was fascinated by the interaction of the Marxist and Catholic traditions within Italy ... and with the world of the traditional peasant before they became anachronisms with the growth of cities and the development of an industrialised economy.
'The Decameron' is set in a medieval world which embodies the traditional values of rough peasant sex, duplicity, and conflict with the moral certainties of the Church. We have nuns forsaking their vows of chastity, cuckolded husbands, a celebration of bodily functions. We have comedy, drama, music. It's lewd, it's bawdy, and there are bodies aplenty.
Here we have life, bounded by rules, but rules which are often pure hypocrisy. Pasolini prefers the vulgarity of peasant life and its flexible violation of rules - rules of law, rules of religion, rules of social structure and hierarchy. Guilt is created by the Church ... but can be exorcised by the simple expedient of confession. Surely the peasants are more honest in their human breaking of rules ... particularly sexual ones? He rejoices in their superstition, their ignorance, their selfishness and materialism.
It's a slow paced but exuberant celebration of life in the raw. The visual style is sumptuous in places, aping the colours of medieval art. Pasolini offers characters in his photography - the beautiful and the ugly people, using amateur actors to emphasise the lack of sophistication of the peasant world. His exploration of the nature of storytelling produces overlapping tableau after tableau, short tales which cut straight into the next and challenge the conventional structure of cinema.
It's engaging, it's entertaining, and it will make you laugh.
Part 1 of the Trilogy of Life........2002-11-19
The Decameron is far from his best works- Mamma Roma, Accatone, La Ricotta, The Gospel According to St Matthew, Theorum and Salo- but is worth seeing for a myriad of reasons (not just for those studying Boccaccio). Pasolini was moving towards this kind of film with St Matthew and Medea, the meticulous recreation of the past being a prime factor which will leave you hurtling towards The Golden Bough or The Uses of Enchantment.
In this trilogy Pasolini fused his ever-mutating philosophy with three classic works- here we get excerpts from the vast text- in a similar way that Kieslowki's final work, Heaven, uses aspects of The Divine Comedy. Pasolini is making things more obvious with the 'storyteller' aspect prevalent in this work- this would be continued to the deranged courtesan of Salo; while Pasolini himself makes an appearance as Giotto- as he would appear as Chaucer in The Canterbury Tale. This further confounds the associations made between Pasolini's life and art (JG Ballard defined Pasolini as "sociopath disguised as Saint" in The User's Guide to the Millennium).
The Decameron is an impressive film, though some knowledge of the original text (which I didn't have) would be helpful- to see where Boccaccio ends and Pasolini begins. As ever the composition and design is wonderful- as the costumes- this is partly down to Dante Ferretti (now a Scorsese regular like Michael Ballhaus) and the late Danilo Donati (costume designer and sometime writer/director). Ennio Morricone also contributes some music, as Tonino del Colli offers up fantastic photography.
The Trilogy of Life is well worth watching, not as gruelling or Gramscian as films like Pigsty, Salo & Theorum; though ultimately Pasolini would reject this direction- as he had the early works (Mamma Roma, Accatone) and move to his last broadcast, Salo (another story...).
A fine package for a fine film.......2001-10-13
But most importantly perhaps - this release marks the first occasion Decameron is availible uncut for home viewing in this country - and so comes highly recommended for fans of Pasolini and off-beat Italian film.
The next best thing to a personal discussion with Bocaccio.......2001-09-21
It's a real shame that you do no get films of this calibre anymore....all the great directors of the past are needed now!
but we still have their movies to watch, even after they leave the earth....
my 2 cents: A beautiful film shot in gorgeous colours and tones, a cinematic feast for the eyes, the ears, and the soul.
A CLASSIC!
UK DVD: