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IMDbPro

La dixième victime

Original title: La decima vittima
  • 1965
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
Marcello Mastroianni and Ursula Andress in La dixième victime (1965)
Ursula Andress, voted the greatest Bond Girl ever, sports another iconic bikini, and this time it literally kills! Set in the near future, the film opens with Andress killing her penultimate victim in “The Big Hunt”, a reality-TV style game show which selects both ‘Hunter’ and ‘Victim’ from participants; the two then chase one another around the globe: kill your 10th victim and you win millions! Andress’ final victim is the cool, sun-loving Italian Marcello (Mastroianni) who also needs to notch up another kill!

Oscar® Winning director Elio Petri’s groundbreaking film heralded generations of films, like “Rollerball” or Schwarzenegger’s “Running Man”, about gladiatorial-death shows and announced our age of increasingly outrageous reality-TV and the latest fascination with “Hunger Games” dystopia.

Its exquisite Pop-Art visuals, and humorous visual observations have influenced countless films, none more than the Austin Powers sets and costumes. Sourced from HD master restored in the original widescreen film format. This truly seminal cult film is released for the 1st time in UK in this definite Numbered CollectorÂ’s Lenticular Edition.
Play trailer1:23
1 Video
99+ Photos
B-ActionDark ComedyDark RomanceDystopian Sci-FiSatireActionComedyRomanceSci-FiThriller

In a future where a human vs. human "Big Hunt" is used as an alternative to war, a veteran huntress' plan to kill a "victim" for a major TV sponsorship deal is compounded by romance.In a future where a human vs. human "Big Hunt" is used as an alternative to war, a veteran huntress' plan to kill a "victim" for a major TV sponsorship deal is compounded by romance.In a future where a human vs. human "Big Hunt" is used as an alternative to war, a veteran huntress' plan to kill a "victim" for a major TV sponsorship deal is compounded by romance.

  • Director
    • Elio Petri
  • Writers
    • Robert Sheckley
    • Tonino Guerra
    • Giorgio Salvioni
  • Stars
    • Marcello Mastroianni
    • Ursula Andress
    • Elsa Martinelli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    5.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Elio Petri
    • Writers
      • Robert Sheckley
      • Tonino Guerra
      • Giorgio Salvioni
    • Stars
      • Marcello Mastroianni
      • Ursula Andress
      • Elsa Martinelli
    • 61User reviews
    • 69Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The 10th Victim
    Trailer 1:23
    The 10th Victim

    Photos119

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Marcello Mastroianni
    Marcello Mastroianni
    • Marcello Poletti
    Ursula Andress
    Ursula Andress
    • Caroline Meredith
    Elsa Martinelli
    Elsa Martinelli
    • Olga
    Salvo Randone
    Salvo Randone
    • Professor
    Massimo Serato
    Massimo Serato
    • Lawyer Rossi
    Milo Quesada
    Milo Quesada
    • Rudi
    Luce Bonifassy
    Luce Bonifassy
    • Lidia Poletti
    George Wang
    George Wang
    • Chinese Hunter
    Evi Rigano
    • Victim
    Walter Williams
    • Martin Tibbett
    Richard Armstrong
    • Cole
    Tonino Cianci
      Ennio Antonelli
      • Furniture Mover
      • (uncredited)
      Jeff Cameron
      • Gladiator
      • (uncredited)
      Pier Paolo Capponi
      Pier Paolo Capponi
      • Terrace Snack Bar Manager
      • (uncredited)
      Jacques Herlin
      Jacques Herlin
      • Masoch Club Manager
      • (uncredited)
      Wolfgang Hillinger
      • Baron von Richtofen
      • (uncredited)
      Mickey Knox
      Mickey Knox
      • Chet
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Elio Petri
      • Writers
        • Robert Sheckley
        • Tonino Guerra
        • Giorgio Salvioni
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews61

      6.65.4K
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      Featured reviews

      7christopher-underwood

      by the end I was smiling broadly

      Very silly, very early 1960s, very Italian, very stylish and in the end very sexy and very amusing. This variant of The Dangerous Game does not start well and is far more confusing than it need be but the more it goes on and the more we saw of Marcello Mastroianni and Ursula Andress the more fun it gets. Having recently seen Andress give a great performance with Stanley Baker in Perfect Friday, I was delighted to see she is just as good here, helping proceedings enormously with her great looks and performance. Mastoianni is as reliable as ever but doesn't look so good with blond hair and doesn't seem 100% comfortable all the time. Hard to classify and also hard to rate because although by the end I was smiling broadly, was not anything like as happy at the start. Very strange film and it sits even more strangely within the output of director, Elio Petri but certainly worth seeing and if you like Andress, you will love it.
      7gftbiloxi

      Clever But Thin

      According to film lore, actor Marcello Mastroianni was so impressed with a short-story by science-fiction author Robert Sheckley that he sent it to director Elio Petri. The result was a groundbreaking Italian film that alternately shocked and amused audiences of 1965--and which, like the 1976 NETWORK, proved prophetic re the rise of "reality television." Set in a future imagined in terms of minimalist 1960s fashion and design movements, THE 10TH VICTIM (LA DECIMA VITTIMA) presents us with a world that has sublimated the human race's hunger for violence into a game known as "The Big Hunt." Register as a member and you become predator and prey, with each player seeking to survive while killing ten others in order to win fame, fortune, and national acclaim.

      American Caroline Meredith (Ursla Andress) is particularly celebrated and--after dispatching her ninth victim via her boobytrapped bra--is eager to win the grand prize by taking out her tenth: Italian Marcello Polletti (Marcello Mastroianni.) But an advertiser promises her even bigger bucks if she can turn it into a television ad for his product, creating a situation in which Caroline cannot simply kill Marcello at will: she must do it at a particular place and time where the cameras will be rolling.

      In order to accomplish this, Caroline decides to seduce Marcello with both her body and the lure of cash--which he badly needs--for a television interview. Marcello is no fool, and even as Caroline plans to blow his head off for benefit of television he's signing his own advertising deal to accomplish her death by crocodile. But there's a further complication: even as they attempt to maneuver each other into death, they also unwillingly fall in love.

      THE 10TH VICTIM was extremely celebrated in 1965; today, however, it reads as slightly thin. We've become used to the idea of people who are willing to do just about anything on television, and the idea of murder by game show isn't nearly so far-fetched as it used to be. The film scores, however, in its specific ideas, which range from exploding boots to a government that occasionally switches out your apartment's furniture whether you like it or not. The DVD transfer is quite nice, but bonuses are limited to cast notes and the theatrical trailer. Recommended, but mainly for fans of 1960s futurism who haven't lost their sense of humor! GFT, Amazon Reviewer
      7claudio_carvalho

      Funny and Entertaining

      In the near future, violence is controlled in societies avoiding wars. Killing is allowed to violent individuals in a game called Big Hunt where the participants are alternatively Hunter or Victim. The winner of each round is awarded with a prize and the survivor after ten rounds, wins one million dollar award (in 1965).

      When the American huntress Caroline Meredith (Ursula Andress) completes her ninth round, she comes to Rome to kill her tenth victim. She negotiates with the sponsor Ming Tea Company to kill his victim in front of the cameras. The cynical Marcello Poletti (Marcello Mastroianni) is her target and has just succeeded in his marriage annulment with Lidia (Luce Bonifassy) but has not disclosed to his lover Olga (Elsa Martinelli). Marcello suspects that Caroline is his hunter, but is not sure; further he falls in love with her and he is reluctant to kill her.

      "La decima vittima" is a funny and entertaining comedy with a silly but cult story. The sexy Ursula Andress is in the top of her beauty and shows a perfect chemistry with Marcello Mastroianni. In the end, the viewer has 92 minutes of fun. My vote is seven.

      Title (Brazil): "A Décima Vítima" (The Tenth Victim")

      Note: On 31 January 2023, I saw this film again.
      chaos-rampant

      Kitsch-art-camp political satire that has lost some of its bite but none of its stylish European charm

      THE TENTH VICTIM might not be the kind of film one readily associates with Italy's foremost political director, Elio Petri, but it sure has his leftist mark stamped all over it. Set in a not-so-distant future, a hodge podge of pseudo-futuristic art installments, snazzy backgrounds and a general air of camp-kitsch than a fully realized world, more A CLOCKWORK ORANGE than BLADE RUNNER in that sense, and involving a peculiar game called The Big Hunt where people are assigned to murder complete strangers and become in turns hunters and victims, an idea that seems to have resurfaced in another form in Robert Altman's QUINTET a decade later, The Tenth Victim is at once a biting critique of capitalism and all assorted paraphernalia and a thoroughly enjoyable absurdist comedy.

      Nothing escapes Petri's ire. Although not particularly profound, his satire makes the rounds firing among other things at the media's obesssion with violence, reality TV, society's fixation on youth and beauty, the ostracizing of the elders, etc. It's all very tongue-in-cheek and vibrant in an irreverent Euro-kitsch way but still quite imaginative for its time. Later in the film, Mastroianni presides in a sun ritual by the seaside, mourning the setting of the sun, which is interrupted by a group of 'neo-realists' throwing tomatoes at the assembled crowd. Petri's stab at Rossellini, De Sica and the rest? Mastroianni's character admits of doing the ceremony for the money and the tears he cried were fake thanks to a 'tear pill' that lasts for 15 minutes.

      That's pretty much the tone set for the entire movie. Petri doesn't seem to dwell on anything for long or take his critique any more serious than he has to. The movie declines significantly in quality in the last 20 minutes, the last 10, an awkward shootout between Mastroianni and his two ex-wives, should've been left out altogether, but overall it's never boring and it's filled with great little moments. The opening titty-shotgun murder in the Masoch Club, students beating each other up as a nonchalant Mastroianni walks through them, other players of the game popping up randomly throughout the movie shooting at each other. If all else fails, you can still oogle at the gorgeous Ursulla Andress and her skimpy outfits.
      jisenhath

      A wonderful example of 60s pop art filmmaking,Italian-style.

      As a wonderful example of 60s pop art filmmaking, Elio Petri has taken many of the decade's most popular culture crazes (the Bond films, Courreges fashions, discotheque jazz, etc.) and used them with great success to give a plausible look to a highly improbable (in 1965!) future world. Petri's digs at Mad Ave advertising and humanity's relentless pursuit of fame and money (no matter the price) are on-target, and his delight in mocking societal idiosyncrasies (the sun worshipers) is priceless. However, at the heart of The Tenth Victim is the old-fashioned battle-of-the-sexes plot (still very popular in the mid-60s), and yet Petri has the upper hand by his spoofing of the romantic-comedy genre and giving us instead a deliciously amusing trifle that is fun to watch for its joking attitude towards everything it depicts, including Marcello and Ursula! To one reviewer who found it outdated, it must be remembered that this film was made 35 years ago and so it naturally has nothing to do with today's standards - and why should it? That's like dismissing Griffith's Intolerance because it's a silent film!

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Ursula Andress was cast only after Ann-Margret was forced to withdraw due to too many commitments with other studios.
      • Goofs
        Marcello claims to have an issue of "Golden Age Flash" from 1935. The Golden Age of comic books ran from 1938-1956 and Flash Comics debuted in January 1940.
      • Quotes

        Masoch Club Manager: The rules of the Big Hunt are quite easy, yet they are of great importance. The 21st Century... shall be the one that has legalized violence! Rule Number 1: each member is obliged to take ten hunts; five as a Hunter, five as a Victim, alternately. Each pair of Hunter and Victim is chosen electronically by a computer in Geneva. Rule Number 2: the Hunter shall know all about his Victim - name, address... habits, too. Rule Number 3: the Victim shall not be told who his Hunter is. He must find out... and kill him! Rule Number 4: the winner of each separate Hunt will win money. The one who comes out alive after the tenth Hunt... shall be proclaimed decathlete. He shall receive honors... and ONE MILLION DOLLARS!

      • Connections
        Edited into Marcello, una vita dolce (2006)
      • Soundtracks
        Spiral Waltz
        Lyrics by Sergio Bardotti

        Music by Piero Piccioni

        Sung by Mina

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      FAQ17

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • February 10, 1967 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Italy
        • France
      • Official site
        • Official Site
      • Languages
        • Italian
        • English
      • Also known as
        • The 10th Victim
      • Filming locations
        • 1285 Avenue of the Americas, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
      • Production companies
        • Compagnia Cinematografica Champion
        • Les Films Concordia
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 32m(92 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1
        • 2.35 : 1(original ratio)

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