The
Marquis De
Sade's
novel updated to 1945, Italy at the end of the war. Four
debauched
fascists including a magistrate, a duke and a bishop sign a pact
to indulge all of their perversities to their fullest. Beginning
by all four of them incestuously marrying each a daughter of
another.
They have a gang of soldiers out on the hunt to kidnap girls and boys
to
install them in a remote chateau where the four men will abuse and
torture
them to satiate their every whim and desire.
Once
installed at
the
chateau the adolescents are inspected in every detail by the men, told
of the rules which they must obey without fail, and of the punishment
they
will receive if the stray from their demanded path. Now begins their
journey
of perversion, the four whores whom helped procure the girls, beginning
with their tales of their exposures to the perversions and desires of
men
since their youngest years. Explained in their greatest and
most vile detail to inflame the imaginations and desires of the
libertines.
These
stories work
well
on the men, and it is not long before they begin abusing and
brutalising
their chosen victims. One by one the objects of desire start to
breakdown,
bending and breaking the rules closing themselves off from one another,
and telling tales of each other in a futile attempt to escape
punishment.
This
continues
until
the inevitable end, with bombs from aircraft sounding closer and
closer,
the men take a suitably distanced viewpoint, and watch as each of his
friends
has a turn at dispatching their victims in an extremely painful, brutal
and bloody manner to the other world, to the accompaniment of a
haunting,
creepy chant.
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A
very loose adaptation of the incomparable, infamous and
monumentally
brutal novel by The Marquis De Sade. The spirit of De Sade's
ultimate
libertine novel has been encompassed in the movie, but filming the
novel
in its entirety is completely impossible. But with all the
philosophies
of the novel, the narration of most of the perversions by the whore's,
and the display of a great deal of the catalogue of perversions, being
the only adaptation made, it is a reasonable representation of the
novel.
But readers be warned, the novel is well I suppose, 120 times more
brutal
than any film adaptation could ever be.
De
Sade
wrote the
novel
during his internment in the Bastille, before the 1789 French
revolt.
Most of this internment was at the pleasure of his mother-in-law, as
the
perversions for which he was originally imprisoned were only minor
ones.
But as he was an embarrassment to his family, his mother-in-law pulled
some strings to try a make sure he would never get out of prison.
So after so many years when he should not have been in prison, De Sade
may have been rebelling against the society that was keeping him
prisoner,
giving flame to his unconfined imagination at the same time. He,
early on promoted himself from the aristocracy to the republican
movement,
and I suppose if they thought he was an embarrassment for sodomizing a
"whore" against her will, and the accidental poisoning of another with
Spanish fly, maybe he was going to make sure that he would be an
"embarrassment"
worthy of his internment.
De
Sade
wrote the
novel
to try and catalogue every perversion in the world. Explaining
each
one in the minutest detail, thinking of the reasons behind them and
trying
to understand them. This was 100 years before Sigmund Freud came
along and begun the psychoanalyst movement so many of us know
today.
But did De Sade begin that psycho sexual analyst journey 100 years
earlier?
And be warned when I say the novel includes every perversion in the
world
I mean EVERY perversion!
Pasolini
was found
dead
on the 2nd of November 1975, shortly after the release of the
film.
The police investigation said he was killed by a rough trade male
whore,
for which Pasolini had a penchant. Many believe his death at this
time to be a fitting continuation of the final scenes of
Salò.
And as Pasolini had tried and succeeded in making a film he
wanted
to be "indigestible", if he had not been killed, would he have
realistically
ever been able to make another film after this, and believe in what he
was doing?
So
well
you ask is
it
any good, well that will be debated forever. IT IS NOT
intended
to
be entertaining, IT IS certainly not fun. The film is made to
disturb
from start to finish and it does. If you have read the novel, the
film will not pose any great problem for you. If you have not
been
exposed to De Sade or are dipping your toes in the water for the first
time, be very sure. The novel was written during the French
Revolution,
so I suppose a good time for the film to be set was during the end of
WW
II. The brutality is obviously know in wars, and sexual self
indulgence
is well know to be a part of most of the wars, considered for a
long
time to be the "spoils of wars" a treat for the invading and conquering
nation.
The
reason this
review
is being written now is because this film has finally been released in
the UK after 25 years of being banned. I guess our new censor
thinks
that we should be in line with the rest of Europe instead of hanging
around
in Victorian England, which we have been for a long time. Up
Until
recently it was not legal for this film to be sold or shown in cinemas
anywhere in the country. Whereas in France I believe the
certificate
for the film was a 15, and in Sweden a 12.
But
only
now are
adults
from 18 to 88 allowed to watch the film without worrying about breaking
the law, and having their given right of freedom to choose to read and
watch, the books and films that they choose. And it is about
bloody
time this right was given back to consenting adults, instead of what
can
be viewed by us being decided by a bourgeoisie dictator whom in no way
could ever have the experience of each person in the country in his
mind.
How can one man know what another has read or watched or not? How
can he know that 10 people will walk out of the cinema during the film,
and that 70 will stay and be able to deal with the film in its context
and within their own mind? When every persons experience of
cinema
and literature denotes what "they" are capable of reading or watching,
or not, how could this ever be know by one man? So it is
appropriate
I think that a film about fascists should be released and bringing the
beginning of an end to the censors dictatorship that we in the UK have
been subjected to for far too long.
END
NOTES:
What not
to
do and say: -
- DO NOT
take chocolate
into the theatre with you.
- DO sit in
an end
seat just incase you have to make a quick exit.
- DO
SAY "Isn't
she a lovely little snot face".
- DO NOT
Read the
novel if you cannot handle the movie.
- DO
Remember that
in the 1970's a private cinema in London was raided for showing the
film.
- DO
Remember that
up until 1998 Britain was still living in Victorian England.
- DO Go to
the lavatory
before hand.
- DO not
think this
is a sex movie, and take a date with you to impress, Ooh Travis Bickle!
- DO
remember that
the word sadism was taken from De Sade's name for a reason, Oh and
remember
De Sade did not invent sadism as one UK journalist claimed.
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