Ornella Muti in “La Ragazza di Trieste” [1982 Italy]

Pasquale Festa Campanile was a successful director, even if he is renowned foremost as a writer, having worked with the likes of Dino Risi and Luchino Visconti on some major projects. His 1982 drama, “La Ragazza di Trieste” [Eng. Title: The Girl from Trieste] is also a moving story adapted from his own novel, appreciated to the extent that elements of the plot have been liberally borrowed worldwide in several films since.

Storyline:
Illustrator Dino watches an attractive young woman rescued at the beach in Trieste. Since she seems to have misplaced her clothes, he offers her his blanket, on condition that she return it after use. As instructed, the woman – Nicole, turns up at Dino’s house to return the blanket – only that’s the only robe she’s wearing. With such a forthright signal, things take their course, and they embark upon a relationship. It turns out dear Nicole is a needy character – even exposing herself in public if she feels necessary to get ‘noticed’. But there’s an air of mystery surrounding her that Dino feels compelled to unravel, which will soon become his obsession. We will learn through the course of the film that Nicole is actually a mentally ill patient undergoing therapy for borderline schizophrenia. By the time this is revealed though, Dino had already fallen headlong in love with her, and with the help of the psychiatrist hopes to cure her through his love and commitment, but would those really be enough to bring Nicole back to normalcy…

While the protagonists – Ornella Muti as Nicole, and Ben Gazzara as Dino give a credible enough performance – this being their second film together, and the screenplay is also well thought out, I couldn’t help feeling the direction needed to be a bit bolder to tell an unconventional love story that includes such an extreme character as Nicole. While totally agreeing with the casting choice, I feel Ms. Muti was ridiculously underused – both in terms of emotions and physicality. The camera and lighting is quite conservative, as is the signature sound track (it actually gets a bit annoying after a while) – I couldn’t help thinking this is a great story what would have sparkled in the hands of a Ingmar Bergman or Marco Ferreri. While this certainly isn’t my first choice film for introducing the incomparable Ornella Muti to the site, it remains the very reason I even purchased the DVD. And for Ms. Muti’s sake alone, this is Recommended Viewing.

Amazon DVD Link

About the recommended DVD:
This is not the DVD I have but I’d rather recommend because of these reasons – I’m certain mine isn’t digitally remastered – it is obviously put together from various source material – you also have sudden changes in saturation, and even the sound pitch alters intermittently. Besides, the scenes between Ornella Muti and Ben Gazzara were originally shot in English, and later dubbed into Italian. So you might as well go for a UK version than the Italian-dubbed offering.

 

The Nudity: Ornella Muti, Ben Gazzara, and Mimsy Farmer
Most of the scenes are in English so you should be able to follow without too much effort.

Ornella Muti, Ben Gazzara, and Mimsy Farmer in La Ragazza di Trieste

Ornella Muti and Ben Gazzara work up their chemistry once again in Pasquale Festa Campanile’s Italian drama, “La Ragazza di Trieste” aka “The Girl from Trieste”.

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Posted in Italian Cinema, Ornella Muti | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Reymonde Amsalem in “Lebanon” [2009 Israel, France, Germany]

Israeli director Samuel Moz used his personal experiences as soldier during the First Lebanon War to make the drama “Lebanon”, a Franco-German-Israeli co-production. For a feature-film debut, this wasn’t a bad effort at all, quite commendable as a matter of fact, and it deservedly won accolades at the Venice Film Festival that year. An honest attempt at portraying the general nastiness of war, it stops short of passing any judgement as to whether war is good, bad, or even a necessary evil.

Storyline:
It’s the first day of war, and a solitary tank along with a small company of troops are despatched to ‘clean up’ a town already laid waste from an air raid. It is supposedly a walk in the park, but the tank crew have very little experience, particularly gunner Shmulik who has never fired in combat before, and is initiated into warfare in the most brutal way possible by facing up to his moral and ethical compulsions. Unfortunately for the greenhorn tank crew, things doesn’t go according to plan, and they end up in hostile territory with no means of support, pray a couple of shady phalanges (Lebanese Christian rebels) to usher them to safety. Barring a couple of scenes, the entire film is shot from inside a tank, trying to give us a first-hand account of what it is like to man that cold and anonymous war machine with a seemingly indestructible exterior. “It’s the man that’s made of steel. The tank is only a piece of Iron”, says a slogan in the tank cabin, which pretty much sums up what the story is trying to convey. The claustrophobic atmosphere and a series of unfortunate events strain crew discipline to the limit – will they ‘steel’ themselves to survive the ordeal, because if they don’t, they are in danger of collapsing from within…

Technically the film is quite competent, and I especially liked the sound design that adds to the dramatic impact, whether it is the clanking of metals or the eerie robotic noise while manoeuvring the viewfinder. While some have slammed its lack of attention to detail, and questionable credibility, I don’t think it really matters because the point of the film is not to relate historical events or tell a story surrounding its protagonists. It is to portray one of the dimensions of conflict – the ethical, and that it does admirably no matter what other people may think or nitpick over. This dimension should be experienced by everyone, and it is for that reason that this film is Highly Recommended Viewing..!

Amazon DVD Link
(a good deal going here)


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Bien de Moor and others in “Code Blue” [Netherlands, Denmark 2011]

Talented Polish writer and director Urszula Antoniak impresses again in her second full-length feature, “Code Blue”. It’s an intense examination of loneliness and intimacy in the scale of Michael Haneke’s “La Pianiste”. I’m sure Ms. Antoniak would be pleased with that comparison because she made the film with a fraction of that budget and without a certain Isabelle Huppert, not to mention the class and experience of Haneke himself. The screenplay may be simpler, and the characters and surroundings working class, but her gritty film isn’t any less accomplished.

Storyline:
Middle aged Marian is a dedicated nurse at a geriatric ward, offering solace and affection to elderly patients probably living out their final days. But being independent, single, and also lonely, she craves for some intimacy of her own. Her after work hours are invariably occupied with routine rituals, and in front of the TV, until she notices a neighbour living in her block of flats. She becomes vaguely infatuated, and he, an object of her fantasy. One night they’re both witness to a rape in the nearby marshes. From that moment on, Marian’s carefully-wrapped fantasy figure will develop cracks, from which will not only emerge the true nature of the mysterious neighbour, but also her own feelings of guilt, and her desperate longing to be loved…

This is a painful and relentlessly unforgiving character study that we would rather not face up to, but should. But despite the harsh scrutiny by the director, there is great sympathy (empathy even) for the protagonist, her human needs and condition. As a psychological character study it triumphs, and is aided by some minimalistic cinematography, meticulous direction, and a sincere and heartfelt performance from Belgian actress Bien de Moor who plays Marian. Painful and shocking as it may be to watch, Antoniak’s ‘adult’ endeavour is definitely Recommended Viewing..!

Amazon.de Blu-ray Link


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Posted in Netherlands | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

A quick facelift..!

It is about time I gave this site a facelift..! 🙂

The previous masthead was cobbled up in a hurry because I needed to put something there quickly. I feel the new masthead at least tries to give a fairer and more sincere interpretation of nudity in cinema. It’s an evolution of sorts – after all, a nude scene is one whether it is a male or female in the state of undress.

But nevertheless, let us know what you think, and what improvements could be made to the way the masthead looks. Do we even require an image there? Of course our views will be subjective, but that’s what makes them worth sharing. Don’t you think..? 😉

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Posted in -News & Interviews | 13 Comments

Tania Robledo & co in “El Garabato” [2008 Mexico]

One must appreciate Adolfo Martínez Solares for his resourcefulness – notwithstanding his credentials as writer and director, he produces his own films and even manages to rope in heavyweights like José Alonso and María Rojo (La Tarea, Esmeralda de Noche Vienes) to act in them, along with a generous smattering of some of the prettiest local starlets. For e.g., the cast credits for his 2008 crime drama, “El Garabato” lists the likes of Tania Robledo, Patricia Llaca, María Aura, Andrea García, and Mariana Ávila to name a few. That was enough to persuade me to buy the DVD (now we don’t want anyone else to know that! :)) even if it was only gathering dust on my shelf for the past two years.

Storyline:
I’ll be wasting my time with this – let’s say it is about gangsters, sorry – politicians, corrupt police officers, molls, honey-traps, and you guessed it – journalists. And of course an innocent courier who gets caught in a mess because the person he was delivering to gets killed just before he arrives. To cut to the chase, innocent bloke is declared ‘innocent’, patches up with fiancée and starts living happily ever after.

This is like having the occasional greasy heart-clogging deep-fried meal – it’s alright once in a while, I suppose (damn tasty too..!) 🙂

But if you want to gorge yourself silly, here’s the DVD Link – however don’t expect a high quality transfer – this one was definitely stamped with older television sets in mind.
Amazon DVD Link


Nudity:
Tania Robledo, María Aura, Andrea García, and Mariana Ávila

Tania Robledo, María Aura, Andrea García, and Mariana Ávila nude in El Garabato

Tania Robledo, María Aura, Andrea García, and Mariana Ávila nude in “El Garabato”.

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Posted in Mexico | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments