The Decameron

1971 [ITALIAN]

Action / Comedy / Drama / History / Romance

24
IMDb Rating 7.0/10 10 12554 12.6K

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Plot summary

A young Sicilian is swindled twice, but ends up rich; a man poses as a deaf-mute in a convent of curious nuns; a woman must hide her lover when her husband comes home early; a scoundrel fools a priest on his deathbed; three brothers take revenge on their sister's lover; a young girl sleeps on the roof to meet her boyfriend at night; a group of painters wait for inspiration; a crafty priest attempts to seduce his friend's wife; and two friends make a pact to find out what happens after death.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 09, 2020 at 01:24 PM

Top cast

Monique van Vooren as Queen of Skulls
Silvana Mangano as The Madonna
Pier Paolo Pasolini as Allievo di Giotto
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1022.32 MB
1280*694
Italian 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 18
1.85 GB
1920*1040
Italian 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 51 min
Seeds 13

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by solediagosto 8 / 10

The first movie of "Trilogia della vita"

This movie is the first of the Pasolini's "Trilogia della Vita" (trilogy of life) movies. The other two movies are "Il fiore delle mille e una notte" e " "I racconti di Canterbury". With this films Pasolini's want to describe essentially the joy of life, in all shapes, in difficult moments too. He based this movies on three middle-age novels in which there's a main novel that contain other novels. "Decamerone" is a XIV century novel by Giovanni Boccaccio and is the most ancient of the three novel. Teen girls and boys, living in a Tuscany isolated house to escape from the Black Death, tell each other symbolical stories. Some of these stories compose the movie. As the novel was in the past, so the movie was considered a immoral thing in the seventies. The movie had many not-official sequels: erotic B-movies with no relation with the symbolic messages of the first one.

Pasolini essentially was a poet and his movies was image poems. Pasolini could only start the "Trilogia della Morte", the trilogy of death, because he was brutally killed during the post-production of "Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma". So Italians lost one of his greatest artists.

Reviewed by valadas 7 / 10

Eros in Middle Ages

The erotic and more or less picaresque stories of which this movie is composed is based upon a collection of tales written in the 14th century by Bocaccio an Italian writer already called the Voltaire of 14th century. In the Middle Ages there was a tendency later abandoned, of considering erotic adventures under a humoristic point of view. The most common "hero" of those tales was the cuckold husband. I'm not a great fan of Pasolini. However this movie is more or less successful in depicting a series of funny situations related with erotic entanglements. Its merit is more due to the narrative form than to the stories itselves some them less funny than others. But the composition of the successive scenes develops in a series of pictures full of colour and movement portraying the people in the streets in a realistic way, showing popular types such as peasants, merchants, priests, nuns, etc. most of them with no make-up at all which contributes to create a vivid atmosphere that really puts us in the middle of a mediaeval scenery. Not a masterwork but something worth to be seen anyway.

Reviewed by Quinoa1984 8 / 10

the sly and slightly crazy satire of church and sex

Pier Paolo Pasolini has with the Decameron what is supposedly one of his "happiest" movies. This is not to say the film is always cheery- matter of fact a couple of the stories deep down are pretty dark and sad and cursed thanks to the repression of religion and mortal sins- but Pasolini's comedy here is sharp and his wit comes out in the obscene or in the random. It's a little like Bunuel only with a more earthy sensibility with the locations and slightly less surreal situations; it doesn't mean that Pasolini is any less ambitious with treating the foibles and stringent ways of the Catholic Church.

The Decameron's only big liability, in my estimation, is that it could be easy to get lost in the structure Pasolini sets up; it's nine stories, ranging from a Sicillian being swindled after finding out he's a brother to a sister of royalty until he's covered in feces, to a supposedly deaf-mute boy who becomes the sex toy for a bunch of sex-starved nuns, to a supposed 'Saint' who fools a priest into thinking he's such with his lackluster confessional, to a girl being met by her boyfriend on the roof and then being (joyfully) caught by her parents since his family is wealthy. They're all interesting stories, more often than not, with even a really short piece like the priest attempting to seduce his friend's wife providing something amusing or eye-catching visually.

But, again, all of these stories go from one into the next without much warning, and one may wonder when the next story really begins or if it's a continuation of the last. As it turns out, like the Phantom of Liberty, it's very stream-of-consciousness and one skewering of morality and sex can bleed easily into the other. And yet some may find this to be a more daring strength than others; certainly it's a very funny movie (if not quite as funny as Pasolini's masterpiece The Hawks and the Sparrows), like with the bit of the guy caught in the tomb, to the frankness of the parents asking the boy to marry their daughter on the rooftop - even just the strange feeling one gets watching the painter (played by, I think, Pasolini himself) in the act of creating an unusual but unique work on a church wall.

The greatest thing of all, for fans of the subversive, is that nothing is out of bounds for Pasolini, via his source material of the Boccaccio book, and he never is one to ever shy away from sex. That's also another asset this time around- unlike Arabian Nights we get some actually erotic bits thrown in the midst, if unintentionally, and on occasion (i.e. the shot following Lorenzo as he runs by the fence) the director conjures something powerful amidst the medieval/surreal/neo-realist pastiche. 8.5/10

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