Showing posts with label Elio Petri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elio Petri. Show all posts

Monday, January 17, 2011

Elio Petri - Indagine su un cittadino al di sopra di ogni sospetto AKA Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion (1970)

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REVIEW
This 1971 winner of the Best Foreign Film award at the Oscars is a controversial, memorable piece of work. The twisty-turny narrative of Indagine su un Cittadino al di Sopra di Ogni Sospetto goes over the top with its political content (comparing police authority and fascism in ways that will make conservative viewers squirm) but its thriller elements work like a charm, creating an almost suffocating atmosphere of paranoia that becomes more intense as it reaches its end. Elio Petri's directorial approach rises up to meet the demands of the narrative, making effective use of lush photography from Luigi Kuveiller and a quirky score from Ennio Morricone to create a setting for the tale that is alluring, horrifying and blackly comedic by turns. However, the most important elements to selling the world of Indagine su un Cittadino al di Sopra di Ogni Sospetto is the performances. Thankfully, they deliver the necessary flesh-and-blood intensity: Gian Maria Volonte is frightfully convincing as the anti-hero, a man whose inner turmoil expresses itself through a desire to twist and control the lives of others, and Florinda Bolkan is seductive and chilly by turns as the free-thinking object of his romantic obsession. In short, Indagine su un Cittadino al di Sopra di Ogni Sospetto remains a disorienting and effective piece of agit-prop, even if one doesn't agree with its messages.
Donald Guarisco on All Movie Guide












http://www.filesonic.com/file/59475937/Indagine_su_un_cittadino_al_di_sopra_di_ogni_sospetto__1970_.part4.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/59475945/Indagine_su_un_cittadino_al_di_sopra_di_ogni_sospetto__1970_.part3.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/59475951/Indagine_su_un_cittadino_al_di_sopra_di_ogni_sospetto__1970_.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/59475957/Indagine_su_un_cittadino_al_di_sopra_di_ogni_sospetto__1970_.part2.rar

Turkish and English subs included
no pass

Monday, November 8, 2010

Elio Petri - Todo modo (1977)

http://img34.imageshack.us/img34/2843/todomodo.jpg

http://img21.imageshack.us/img21/5333/imdbimage.jpg

Summary: Set at an indeterminate time in the near future, this routine, well-acted drama by Elio Petri tackles favorite Italian topics: religion and politics. A bit of macabre fantasy is added to the mix, but the end product remains somewhat muddled. Don Gaetano (Marcello Mastroianni) is a priest who is supervising a group of Christian Democrats on a religious retreat. The objective is to help these politicians purify their past wrongdoings, no matter how large or small, and live closer to God. The retreat takes place in a concrete bunker with plenty of small rooms for contemplation and icons set here and there to offer inspiration. Once the retreat begins, the politicos alarmingly begin to die off one by one. Don Gaetano wants them to get closer to God but did he mean that close?

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http://rapidshare.com/files/229721964/Elio.Petri.Todo.Modo.1976-SMz.avi.001
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http://rapidshare.com/files/229722854/Elio.Petri.Todo.Modo.1976-SMz.avi.013
http://rapidshare.com/files/229722665/Elio.Petri.Todo.Modo.1976-SMz.avi.014

no pass

Monday, November 1, 2010

Elio Petri - Un tranquillo posto di campagna aka A Quiet Place In the Country (1969)

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http://img21.imageshack.us/img21/5333/imdbimage.jpg

Leonardo (Franco Nero) is a painter who retreats to a house in the country to regain his lost inspiration. He is plagued by the presence of an erotic apparition. The gorgeous ghost soon moves the painter to the point he wishes to carry on a relationship with her. Leonardo is several bristles shy of a brush as he sinks deeper into insanity. When his fiancé arrives for a visit, she is murdered and chopped into little pieces by the troubled artist. Vanessa Redgrave and Gabriella Grimaldi also star in this story of madness and horror.









http://www.filesonic.com/file/43890883/Elio_Petri-1969-A_Quiet_Place_in_the_Country.rar
1.32Gb
English subtitles are included in the archive.
no pass

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Elio Petri - La Decima Vittima aka The 10th Victim (1965)

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Description: La Decima vittima (The 10th Victim) tells a campy futuristic tale where people hunt one another for sport.
In this film, Victim and Hunter run around Italy trying to score a kill in front of the movie crews they arranged so they could make commercials from the footage.

Tags: ’60s modernism, Italian cinema, dystopia, cult science-fiction, '60s kitch
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In an unspecified 1960s future, boredom has so overtaken the world that a labyrinthine organization has been created to stage elaborate ten-part hunts. A group of alternating hunters and victims duel with each other to contend for a top spot. The survivor of ten hunts wins the big prize--fame and money.
Adapted from a story by Robert Scheckley, Elio Petri's 1965 sci-fi thriller The 10th Victim is a loose-cannon satire, less concerned with its commentary than it is using what little commentary there is to get away with the sex and violence that form its basis. This is no serious critique, but a fun B-movie that is all the more fun by how much it flaunts that fact that it's not taking itself too seriously.
Marcello Mastroianni stars as Marcello Poletti, a tired loverboy in the middle of his homicidal run. Playing a near parody of the usual Mastroianni character, Marcello is an aging lothario who has just gotten an annulment for his first marriage with Lidia (Luce Bonifassy) and is now trying to dodge a second marriage to his long-time mistress, Olga (Elsa Martinelli). If he can win the hunt and replenish the accounts Lidia has emptied, he can buy his way out of anything, using the cash to get far away from the ladies that hound him.
Bad luck, then, that his next pairing is as the victim to an American hunter, Caroline Meredith (Ursula Andress). The knock-out blonde sidles up to him in the guise of a reporter doing a piece on the love habits of Italian men, and though Marcello suspects that she is the one out to get him, he can't be sure. Killing the wrong person could result in a lengthy prison term--and why get out of the imprisonment of matrimony just to end up behind bars? The two set up various elaborate schemes to expose the other, leading their intended prey into a staged scenario that would allow them to best plug their corporate sponsors when they go in for the final blow. It's a bit like reality TV, though Scheckley and the flick's coterie of screenwriters (including Tonino Guerra, who penned Antonioni's Beyond the Clouds) clearly predicted the trend as being somewhat less exploitative than what we would end up with. It was 1965, how could they know we'd sink so low? Death would practically be a relief at this point.
There are little touches throughout that hint at the more elaborate design of this movie's future world. A brief scene shows that Marcello hides his parents in a secret apartment rather than turn them over to the government. Age is scorned, and so the old and infirm are weeded out, and the hunt is a way to keep overpopulation at bay. At the same time, The 10th Victim doesn't play on any imagined technology, its world is styled in the same mod tailoring as was in vogue at the time it was made. Mastroianni wears slick suits, Andress is tarted up in sexy go-go gear, and Martinelli is a black-and-white fashion plate. It's a vision of cool that is loose in form, The 10th Victim often seeming like a weekend lark by a bunch of pals rather than a well-planned film.
Not that there is anything wrong with that. A celebration of the fantasy is actually part of Elio Petri's intention. In our one look at religion, we see that Marcello is a clergymen of a cult that worships the sun (though it's hard to tell if he really means it or if he's just pursuing another revenue stream), and the religious fanatics who oppose this sect are labeled Neorealists. Elsewhere, Fellini is paid tribute by having a street named after him. Petri is squaring off against the old guard, pitting the new limitless freedom represented by Maestro Federico against the old-school pragmatism of the post-War directors. It's his intention to have a good time, his desire to be less serious, and this makes The 10th Victim more of a goofy comedy rather than a space-age thriller.
Things do get a little serious in terms of Marcello's lovelife, though. Here is a man trying his best to stay one step ahead of anything that would tie him down, and Caroline proves equally dangerous for his heart in matters of romance as she does in actually aspiring to stop it beating. When Marcello tells her, "I knew you were my hunter," it's a love metaphor, not just part of the game. The two have been doing the dance since they met, tumbling into passion in direct violation of the roles they've been assigned--in life, they are also ill-matched, he a commitment-phobe and she frigid and sexless--or perhaps it's because of these conflicting traits that they are undeniably drawn to one another. It's all about sincerity in The 10th Victim. How much does Petri mean it? How much did the Neorealists? Is anyone who they say they are, and what is true versus a trap? Does Marcello truly love Caroline, and vice versa? If life and death can be a game, feeling may have also lost its potency. Thus, in an absurd comic turn, Marcello receives a fate worst than death in the end.
The 10th Victim is a hoot, and despite all the internal debates over meaning, I don't think we're meant to take it for any more than that. Marcello Mastroianni is always worth watching when he plays the weary bounder, and though Andress is a bit of a non-personality, she sure is sexy. The look and feel of 1960s Italy is ever-present, and that alone makes the movie worth the time. Though it may be a struggle for the leads to make it through all their hunts, it's certainly no struggle for us to watch them try.





http://rapidshare.com/files/412008285/Th10thVctm.part01.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412008800/Th10thVctm.part02.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412009213/Th10thVctm.part03.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412009673/Th10thVctm.part04.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412010130/Th10thVctm.part05.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412010601/Th10thVctm.part06.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412011072/Th10thVctm.part07.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412011593/Th10thVctm.part08.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412012187/Th10thVctm.part09.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412012657/Th10thVctm.part10.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412013179/Th10thVctm.part11.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412013745/Th10thVctm.part12.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412014209/Th10thVctm.part13.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412014652/Th10thVctm.part14.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412015110/Th10thVctm.part15.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412015574/Th10thVctm.part16.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/412015754/Th10thVctm.part17.rar

mkv
italian and english language, english subtitles (idx/sub) included

pass: wantan

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Elio Petri - A ciascuno il suo AKA We Still Kill the Old Way (1967)



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Quote:
Paolo Laurana is a kind of leftist intellectual who chances to be intrigued by a mysterious double murder in the Sicily of mid Sixties. In his personal detection for murder's instigators, he will run into a plot in which both politicians and mafia racketeers are involved. So curiosity will become a very dangerous affair. Taken from a novel by Leonardo Sciascia (1921-1989), A ciascuno il suo (1967) is a film where high rank acting is at its top. Cast (Gianmaria Volonté, Irene Papas, Gabriele Ferzetti, Salvo Randone, Luigi Pistilli. Mario Scaccia, Leopoldo Trieste) is perfect and well-combined, direction (Elio Petri, 1929-1982) is powerful and impressive. If compared to the novel, Elio Petri's film (written with Ugo Pirro) may seem short of that illuministic pessimism that breathes through Sciascia's books, but Laurana's rationalistic search for truth retains that `bitter taste of intelligence' which is one of the major feature of Sciascia's characters. A key film to understand historical condition of Italy in the Sixties.








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