Salome (Carmelo Bene, 1972) TVRip VO

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Salome (Carmelo Bene, 1972) TVRip VO

Notapor buzzywuzzy » Jue Abr 19, 2007 9:37 am

"buzzywuzzy" escribió aquí:



Salome (1972)

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There have been many films of the play "Salome", but none of them are anything like Carmelo Bene's version. The film is so bright, colorful and strange; it will make your head spin. The intro of the film contains a cartoon camel jumping through a loop, women getting spanked with feather paddles, a man slicing a watermelon with a machete and a women with beaded jewelry emerging from the water. Unfortunately, the only copy I could find didn't have subtitles. I really didn't need to understand the dialog to enjoy the strange and weird images. It's as if someone filmed Fellini Satyricon on a fixed budget, cut it into pieces, rearranged it and laced it with LSD style editing. That's why it is so darn entertaining. I first learned about Italian director Carmelo Bene from the book "Film as a Subversive Art" by Amos Vogel. This book changed the way I view films. I go out of my way to find surreal films like "Salome". It is strange, experimental and quite an experience. Don't watch this film on drugs, because the film is a drug in itself. A startling head trip of a film.

On March 18 2002, legendary Italian theatre director, actor and writer Carmelo Bene died at age 64. Between 1968 and 1973 he also made films, five experimental works that marked him as the wildest of Italian cinema's several wild geniuses. When asked why he gave up filmmaking he replied, To relax. The way I make cinema is extremely exhausting. This statement evokes not only the production circumstances of his movies, on which he worked outside the structures of commercial filmmaking as writer, producer, director, actor and decorator, but also the intense energy which animates every scene of his oeuvre. This energy emanates from the cartoonish dementia of the performances, the disorientating speed with which one phantasmagoric image replaces another and the jarringly non-naturalistic use of sound and music. No director has ever come closer to the heightened expressive freedom of animation in live action cinema than Bene.

By the time he made his first film, Bene had been a prominent figure in Italian experimental theatre for a decade. He was born in Campi Salentina near Lecce in 1937. After a brief stint in Rome's National Academy of Dramatic Art he formed his own theatre company. A staging of his adaptation of Camus' Caligula in 1959 had first brought him notice. His subsequent career earned him the reputation of being a provocateur, with the police closing down several of his productions, notably Christ 63 in 1963. His work also drew much acclaim, with Pasolini hailing Bene's autonomous and original theater as the only exciting work being done in an otherwise worthless experimental theatre scene. Bene played Creon in Pasolini's Oedipus Rex (Edipo Re, 1967).

His first film, Our Lady of the Turks (Nostra Signora dei Turchi, 1968), is a fragmented series of scenes centred around the cathedral at Otranto in which the protagonist (Bene) tries repeatedly but unsuccessfully to meet Saint Margherita. It was adapted from Bene's own 1965 novel. His second film, Capricci (1969), works with ideas from Manon and the Elizabethan play Arden of Faversham. The third, Don Giovanni (1971), is taken from a story by 19th century author and dandy Jules Barbey D'Aurevilly, Le plus bel amour de Don Juan, and Salome (1972) is a version of Oscar Wilde's play. The brilliantly titled One Hamlet Less (Un Amleto di meno, 1973) combines Shakespeare with Jules Laforgue.

Bene's films are critical explorations of the texts they are based on. He operates by returning these stories to a sort of primordial dramatic and intellectual state of chaos where ideas, narratives and characters struggle to come into being. As Deleuze pointed out, Bene is concerned not with beginnings or endings, but with the middle, an engagement with a perpetual becoming, a world of constantly shifting potentiality. He achieves this by questioning and throwing off balance every aspect of his films. The frequently hysterical performances of his actors or 'actorial machines' are caricatures amplified to the level of the grotesque. Rather than playing characters, the actors become stylised embodiments of some of their defining characteristics, shrieking, slobbering, whispering and drooling their way through a series of events that resemble variations on certain themes or gestures rather than a developing narrative. Bene described his films as music for the eyes put together with a surgical indiscipline of montage. He constantly strives for a glorious visual excessiveness, with unusual camera angles, shifts between black and white and colour, interesting superimpositions and either overtly theatrical Don Giovanni, One Hamlet Less or otherwise expressionistically employed settings the cathedral in Our Lady of the Turks. This anti-naturalistic approach is further heightened by the asynchronous use of sound, which incorporates heavily amplified sounds such as breathing and coughing, shouted or stammered dialogue and sudden bursts of mainly classical music, most commonly opera.

If Bene's cinema is one of constant becoming, of repetition and incompletion, perhaps the most common recurring theme in his scenes is frustration. Frustrated desire is the key element in the stories of Salome and Don Giovanni and all of his films feature memorable images of frustration victims of a car crash returning to life in order to crash again but with their corpses in more deathlike positions in Capricci; a man in armour attempting to have sex with a woman in Our Lady of the Turks; Don Giovanni repeatedly trying and failing to put down his tea cup in Don Giovanni; a follower of Christ attempting to nail himself to the cross in Salome only to discover he cannot nail his last hand down.

After these five exhilarating films, Bene returned to the theatre and writing. Although his later life was dogged by ill health, his work continued to receive attention and acclaim. Yet the films that comprise his self described cinematic parenthesis are seldom screened or written about, especially in the English-speaking world. For a director whose work matches the visual power and representational complexity of Kenneth Anger or Derek Jarman's best work, this a particularly unfortunate oversight. (Maximilian Le Cain)

Director : Carmelo Bene
Writer : Carmelo Bene (written by)
Cast:
Carmelo Bene ... Erode Antipa/Onorio
Lydia Mancinelli... Erodiade
Alfiero Vincenti... Erodiade
Donyale Luna... Salome
Veruschka von Lehndorff... Santa Prostituta
Piero Vida... Capitano Siriaco
Franco Leo... Cristo/Vampiro
Giovanni Davoli... San Giovanni

Resolution : 640x480
Video Codec : DivX
FPS : 25,00
BitRate : 1550 Kbps
Quality : 0,21 b/px
Audio Codec : MPEG 1 or 2 Audio Layer 3 (MP3)
Channels : 1
Sample Rate : 44100 Hz
BitRate : 80 Kbps
Language: italian
Rip: ???

Imagen
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eD2K link Salome.(1972).avi [848.77 Mb] 
buzzywuzzy
 

Notapor kimkiduk » Jue Abr 19, 2007 4:36 pm

Thanks BuzzyWuzzy :good:
Cualquier consulta o petición mándame un privado. No uso emule ni ningún programa de descarga por el momento, así que no podré recompartir películas.
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Notapor MurnauVsBuñuel » Jue Abr 19, 2007 4:47 pm

interesting experimental film, thanks BuzzyWuzzy
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Re: Salome (Carmelo Bene, 1972) TVRip VO

Notapor kilgore » Jue Ago 06, 2009 8:09 pm

Preguntontas:
¿Subtitulos para las obras de Bene?
saludos
...me gusta el olor a napalm en las mañanas...

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Re: Salome (Carmelo Bene, 1972) TVRip VO

Notapor ElCalatravaFeo » Lun Ago 17, 2009 11:12 am

Thanks buzzywuzyy.
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