Ein Mann, der in einer Vulkanwüste umherwandert, bildet eine Bande mörderischer Kannibalen. Ein deutscher Industrieller der Nachkriegszeit erfährt, dass sein Sohn nicht in der Lage ist, Ents... Alles lesenEin Mann, der in einer Vulkanwüste umherwandert, bildet eine Bande mörderischer Kannibalen. Ein deutscher Industrieller der Nachkriegszeit erfährt, dass sein Sohn nicht in der Lage ist, Entscheidungen zu treffen oder Beziehungen zu knüpfenEin Mann, der in einer Vulkanwüste umherwandert, bildet eine Bande mörderischer Kannibalen. Ein deutscher Industrieller der Nachkriegszeit erfährt, dass sein Sohn nicht in der Lage ist, Entscheidungen zu treffen oder Beziehungen zu knüpfen
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Cannibale
- (as Pierre Clementi)
- Julian Klotz
- (as Jean Pierre Leaud)
- Madame Klotz
- (as Margherita Lozano)
- Soldato nel deserto
- (Nicht genannt)
- Servo
- (Nicht genannt)
- Vecchio (scena della sentenza)
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
There are DVD versions out there which have scenes from Porcile in the wrong order, so, at the time of writing, if you want to see Porcile properly you have to have the Region 2 UK Tartan Pasolini box-set.
Porcile, I will say, is a great film. There are two stories that are played alongside each other. Pierre Clémenti is a... well... who knows, a sprite perhaps, in a barbarous medieval setting. It's clear Pasolini has chosen him because he has a hard-on for him, he looks like he's come straight out of a Caravaggio painting. Our sprite and some buddies run around the black slopes of Etna being mad, it's very entertaining, and almost wordless. You can't really believe what you're seeing, it appears that Etna is actually active when they're on it, there is black smoke spewing forth, and the actors run past the most awesomely evil sulphurous cave you've ever seen. So you get to see some fornication, cannibalism, volcanism, and our sprite throwing a human head into the aforementioned evil hole. It's the most purely primal thing I've ever seen, and I've watched Matthew Barney films.
The other half of the movie is set in an Italianate villa in Germany, it concerns on the one hand Mr Klotz and Mr Herdhitze, two industrialists vying with each other for superiority, and on the other hand Julian (playde by Jean-Pierre Léaud), Herr Klotz's son. Julian is portrayed as withdrawing from the human race almost entirely, this is shown to be down to his parents, who self-describe themselves as the type of people who would be painted as pigs by George Grosz, an elitist, although entirely accurate and most wondrous piece of scriptwriting. Julian has no concept of the joy of living or of functional human relationships at all, and so this child of the rich takes to copulating with pigs. Who can blame him as he has only the example of his parents' ruinous and obscure preoccupations, specifically the pursuit of wealth. At one point Julian describes a dream where he walks along a road searching for something at night, the road is filled with shining puddles, and then a little piglet comes a long and playfully bites four of his fingers off, and it doesn't hurt, they come off, as if they were made of rubber. At one point Julian's mother and his girlfriend stand opposite one another describing him, as if he were two completely separate people. And yet he's both. This shows how ideology and prejudice only allow you to see someone, as if through murky water.
Pasolini uses a narrative of contrasting cores, with a core based on text and another in contemplation, when watching the film for the first time it is common to be confused, but on a second look we understand the creative subtleties of pasolini's script, and we understand, above of all the quality of its text and its artistic importance, "Sty" is not a "heavy" film as many claim, it is a film that works entirely on sarcastic metaphors of social criticism. The direction is consistent, with a camera that fluctuates a lot of visual styles between the two cores of the plot and manages to, in a way, even expose Paolini's versatility, one of the great problems of the film for me are two, without fishing the political references, the narrative by itself does not stand, it is necessary to understand this allegory first, and second is that I would like to feel a little more the viscerality of the characters' actions, as Pasolini himself did in some of his future features. 8/10.
It's well-made with several striking images, but it is very slow, very obscure and challenging. It is a bleakly savage satire on human nature, which will certainly not appeal to everyone. In fact it's a film that is easy to admire, but hard to like.
It is certainly a powerful work of art, but certainly don't expect to enjoy it.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesPier Paolo Pasolini offered the role of the young cannibal to Klaus Kinski, who turned it down because the salary was too low.
- PatzerIn one of the shots related to the medieval cannibal plot, we see a dust cloud rising in the distance behind the characters. It is a car driving across the mountain landscape.
- Zitate
Young cannibal: I killed my father, I ate human flesh, and I quiver with joy.
- VerbindungenEdited into Pier Paolo Pasolini (1995)
Top-Auswahl
- How long is Pigsty?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 39 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1