
Italy political
1975
min.
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
DVD: $39.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog #
On November 2, 1975, the Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini was
found dead -- murdered, police said, by a young male prostitute. However lurid
its details (the Roman tabloids ran huge front-page photos of the disfigured
corpse), his death struck many as metaphorically apt, and not only because of
Pasolini's known taste for rough trade. He had long had a crush on the idea of
flamboyant death.
Painter, poet, novelist, essayist, filmmaker, semiotician,
gay icon, renegade Marxist, public controversialist, champion of both outlaw
sexuality and of a mythic view of life he termed "epic-religious," Pasolini was
not only Italy's most important postwar intellectual but also a quintessential
20th-century type -- self-indulgent and self-despising, never sure whether to
blame himself or the world for his inescapable alienation. Never keeping to one
style for long, his cinematic career carried him from his gritty early '60s films
about pimps and thieves in the borgate, the impoverished shanty-town
wasteland that circled Rome, to his popular '70s "Trilogy of Life" -- The
Decameron, The Canterbury Tales, and The Arabian Nights --
which seemed the work of a bawdy, life-affirming man.
The happy perception
suggested by the trilogy was changed forever by his final film, Salo
(1975), a one-of-a-kind project that takes no little defending, and may indeed be
indefensible. It's the cruelest, most obscene, and most intellectually toxic work
ever made by a major director. Once seen, it is forever remembered.
Pasolini
began the film during a period of enormous artistic crisis. Filled with
"disappointment in man and God" (as one friend of his described it), he began to
think that all his earlier work was bogus and compromised, merely another length
of the feed-tube through which consumerist repression is shoved down our throats.
His response was to make what he called an "indigestible" film based on the
Marquis de Sade's 120 Days of Sodom, with a smidgen of Dante's
Inferno thrown in. Set in Italy during the waning days of World War II,
Salo tells the story of four debauched Fascists who retreat to a chateau
and begin using innocents to satisfy their basest desires. Beginning with mere
violation in the "Circle of Obsessions" (sodomy is favored), they move on to the
"Circle of Shit" (people forced to eat their own feces) before reaching the
"Circle of Blood," in which skulls are smashed, eyeballs sliced, and victims
ritualistically slaughtered.
Salo is one of the handful of genuinely
disturbing movies ever made; it leaves you shaken, not simply because of what it
is depicting but also because of how. Pasolini presents the most vicious
debasement in a highly formalized style that's as coolly dispassionate as a
geometric proof. There's no room in this death-eating film for human decency or
affirmation: a heterosexual couple is murdered merely for being heterosexual, yet
homosexuality is also portrayed as a form of tyranny. A cinematic ground zero,
Salo confirms the cruel meaninglessness of everything human. Life is
reduced to impersonal fornication, eating and defecating, the inescapable power
of hawks over sparrows -- with no hope of transcendence or redemption. Sparrows
can only hope to become hawks.
In what is probably the most savage twist,
Pasolini implies that watching this movie makes one complicit in its horrific
world -- our own voyeurism is inescapably guilty. At the end, we witness the
ritual murder of innocents through reverse binoculars, a distancing process that
frees us from the sound of their screams and lets us "enjoy" the moment with
proper detachment. There's never been a stronger attack on the deathly voyeurism
lurking in the experience of art -- Pasolini's and our own.
With such a bleak
work for his artistic testament, it's small wonder that many people saw
Pasolini's own murder as Salo's real life climax. Nor was it surprising
that such a film would divide critics and audiences. It was assailed by (among
countless others) worldly men such as novelist Italo Calvino, who saw in it
evidence of the filmmaker's personal corruption, and Richard Roud, the late
director of the New York Film Festival, who wrote, "It is a terminal film in
every sense of the word."
Yet if Salo is not a simple or likable movie,
it does have a terrible kind of grandeur. And this grandeur is inseparable from
its assault on all our most cherished moral beliefs. In an interview with French
television before its premiere, Pasolini explained the aesthetic principle behind
the film: "I believe to give scandal is a duty, to be scandalized a pleasure, and
to refuse to be scandalized is moralism." At a time when movies are routinely
called "shocking" and "controversial," Salo not only lives up to these
words but makes them feel childishly inadequate.
-- John
Powers
CREDITS
Directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini
Produced by Alberto Grimaldi
Screenplay by Pier Paolo Pasolini and Sergio Citti
Based on the Marquis de Sade's novel Les 120 Journées de Sodome
Assistant director: Umberto Angelucci
Photography:
Tonino Delli Colli
Sets: Dante Ferretti
Costumes: Danilo Donati
Music
Coordinated by: Ennio Morricone
Editing: Nino Baragli and Tatiana Casini
MorigiTRANSFER
The Criterion Collection is proud to
presentSalo in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1. This release also
includes new electronic subtitles.